CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears aren’t interested in moral victories anymore. Ben Johnson’s debut season as head coach shattered expectations—an NFC North crown, a Wild Card demolition of the Packers, and a team that finally looked the part. But the 20-17 Divisional Round loss to the Los Angeles Rams didn’t just end the season; it exposed the roster’s glaring hole.
When the Rams needed a stop, they got it. When the Bears needed to bury Matthew Stafford in the fourth quarter, the pressure vanished. General Manager Ryan Poles knows the clock is ticking, and according to a new report, he’s looking at Cincinnati for the solution.
The Target: Trey Hendrickson
Greg Auman of Fox Sports connects the Bears to Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Trey Hendrickson, arguably the most polarizing name on the 2026 free agent market. On paper, it’s a terrifying upgrade. Hendrickson has 81 career regular-season sacks and a reputation for wrecking game plans. He posted back-to-back 17.5-sack campaigns in 2023 and 2024, terrorizing quarterbacks with a blend of hand usage and pure motor.
But the 2025 season told a different story. A core muscle injury in December limited the 31-year-old to just seven games and four sacks. He watched the Bengals’ season fade while he sat on the sidelines.
Auman notes that Hendrickson’s market value is the biggest wild card of the offseason:
“Hendrickson… doesn’t have the luster he had a year ago… He got a one-year, $29 million deal from the Bengals last year, but isn’t likely to draw as much this time around. ESPN has him as the league’s No. 1 overall free agent, but will he get more than one year guaranteed, and at much more than $20 million a year?”
— Greg Auman, Fox Sports
Why Chicago Pulls the Trigger
The math is simple. The Bears’ defense was good in 2025, but it wasn’t lethal. You don’t beat the elite NFC contenders without a closer off the edge. Hendrickson brings 15 career forced fumbles and 162 solo tackles to the table. He isn’t just a pass-rush specialist; he sets the edge against the run.
Poles has money to spend, and Hendrickson’s injury-shortened 2025 might actually play into Chicago’s hands. If his price tag drops below the $25 million annual range due to health concerns, the Bears could secure a blue-chip talent on a “prove-it” structure. He needs 19 sacks to hit the century mark for his career—a milestone he could reasonably crush in two seasons at Soldier Field.
“We were one play away. One sack away. You watch the film against the Rams, and you see it. We have the dogs, but we need that alpha who ends the game before the two-minute warning. If we get that, we aren’t just winning the North. We’re taking the whole thing.”
— Anonymous Bears Defensive Starter
Playoff Implications
This move signals a shift in the Bears’ window. They are no longer rebuilding; they are loading up. Signing Hendrickson would force opposing offensive coordinators to pick their poison. Do you double-team Hendrickson and leave Montez Sweat one-on-one? Or do you slide protection and let the interior eat?
If Hendrickson returns to his 2024 form, the Bears become the immediate favorites to repeat in the NFC North. If the core muscle issues linger, it’s an expensive gamble that could handcuff the salary cap. But in a conference dominated by high-flying offenses, standing pat is the only guaranteed way to lose.

