CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears aren’t resting on their laurels. General Manager Ryan Poles shipped veteran receiver DJ Moore to the Buffalo Bills earlier this month, securing a 2026 second-round draft pick. The message out of Halas Hall rings clear: it is time for the youth movement to take total control.
Erasing the Sophomore Slump
Chicago stunned the league with an 11-6 finish and an NFC North crown in 2025. They even exorcised old demons by sending the Green Bay Packers packing in the Wild Card round. Yet, their rising offense hit a brick wall in the Divisional round against the Rams. To push past that barrier in 2026, head coach Ben Johnson needs elite production from his 2024 first-round pick.
Rome Odunze stumbled last year. The dynamic playmaker from Washington struggled to find a consistent rhythm with quarterback Caleb Williams during his second NFL season. Dropped passes and missed route assignments plagued his stat line. Now, with Moore wearing Bills blue, Odunze steps into the WR1 spotlight. He faces zero room for error.
“That’s something we’ll talk about. I don’t think that was a thing for him coming out. I don’t want to speak that into existence. That’s something we’re going to emphasize in the spring: getting back to basics.”
— Ben Johnson, Bears Head Coach
Johnson spoke with Dan Wiederer of The Athletic this week, shedding light on the team’s internal plan. The coaching staff refuses to let bad habits fester. They demand the sharp, explosive receiver who dominated the Pac-12 and burned defenses en route to the 2023-24 National Championship game. The chilly winds off Lake Michigan couldn’t cool off Odunze during his rookie camp; you could feel the raw electricity in the building every time he touched the ball. The Bears need that guy back.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Bears own the capital and the quarterback to make a deep January run. Trading Moore frees up targets but shifts the defensive crosshairs directly onto Odunze. Chicago faces a critical juncture with the NFL Draft approaching in late April. They hold extra draft ammunition from the Buffalo trade and must decide whether to surround Williams with more rookie pass-catchers or beef up the offensive line.
If Johnson’s “back to basics” approach reignites Odunze’s spark, defensive coordinators across the NFC North will face endless nightmares. If the slump bleeds into year three, Chicago’s offense might stall out before Halloween.

