Alright Bears fans, let’s cut the crap. You’ve been burned. You’ve watched a franchise that’s made offensive football look like rocket science. You’ve suffered through QB busts, O-line disasters, and coaching staffs so incompetent they could screw up a Madden franchise mode. Yesterday I had my pessimistic hat on, but today? We’re flipping the damn script. This year might actually be different — and no, this isn’t just offseason hopium. This is about cold, hard, statistically-backed optimism.
Here’s why the Monsters of the Midway are actually built to roar this season.
Ben Freaking Johnson: A Real Coach with a Real Offense
Let’s start with the biggest news since Ditka: the Bears hired Ben Johnson. Not some retread. Not a “leader of men” who claps a lot and mismanages timeouts. An actual offensive architect.
Johnson engineered a Detroit offense that slapped around defenses for three straight years. From 2022-2024, his Lions averaged 29.0 PPG — first in the league. First in yards (394.8 YPG), passing (258.0 YPG), red zone TDs (66.7%), and QB rating (103.1), per CBS Sports. These aren’t cute metrics. This is “we’ll bury you on third-and-eight” kind of dominance.
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And if you’re worried about Caleb Williams being the next Trubisky, take a breath. Johnson rebuilt Jared Goff’s entire career. The dude went from L.A. discard to NFC title game quarterback. Now he’s got a Ferrari in Williams instead of a Honda Civic.
And the toys? DJ Moore. Rome Odunze. Luther Burden III. All gas, no brakes. This isn’t just a step forward — it’s a quantum leap from the Eberflus era of “let’s punt on 4th-and-2 from midfield.”
Lions offensive NFL ranks under Ben Johnson, 2022-2024
The O-Line Went from Junkyard to Juggernaut
Last year’s offensive line was a war crime. Sixty-eight sacks. Twenty-seven combinations. If you blinked, someone else was playing right tackle. That’s not a line — that’s a turnstile.
So Ryan Poles got pissed and did something about it.
They traded for Joe Thuney, a two-time All-Pro with a PFF grade that never dips below 74. He’s the kind of guy who makes blitzers disappear. Jonah Jackson’s back from injury and was a pass-blocking brick wall when healthy (98.5% win rate), according to ESPN. Then they added Drew Dalman, a top-5 center by PFF who fits Johnson’s zone scheme like a glove.
PFF already ranked Chicago’s O-line as the most improved in the entire NFL. And they’re not just guessing — they’re measuring actual efficiency and win rates.
CBS Sports clocked Williams with an averaged 3.13 seconds per throw last year — fourth-longest in the league. Translation: he was running for his life and trying not to die. With this new line? He’ll finally have time to go through reads without seeing God.
Caleb Williams Is Ready to Cook
Let’s talk QB development. Everyone wants instant results, but most greats don’t pop in Year 1. Peyton Manning threw 28 picks. Josh Allen looked like he was throwing with his left hand. Hell, Goff was a punchline before he got coaching.
Williams, even in a shitshow of a rookie season, put up 3,541 yards, 20 TDs, and just 6 INTs. That’s with no O-line, a rotating cast of play-callers, and one reliable wideout. Now he’s got a real line, a stacked WR room, and Ben Johnson in his ear.
Oh, and he set a franchise record for total offense (4,030 yards) as a rookie. That ain’t nothing.
Expect a big leap in 2025. Not just because of talent, but because the infrastructure is finally competent. Rookie tight end Colston Loveland, with his 96th percentile route stats, per PFF — could be the safety blanket every young QB needs.
ben johnson
Jun 3, 2025; Lake Forest, IL, USA; Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams (18) looks to pass the ball during minicamp at Halas Hall. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images
Dennis Allen’s Defense Is Built for Chaos
While the offense is getting headlines, the defense is quietly getting dangerous. Dennis Allen was a damn steal. This guy made Saints defenses respectable — even without elite pass rushers.
His 2023 unit was surgical on third and fourth downs, despite having a bottom-tier pressure rate. Allen doesn’t need Pro Bowlers to make plays — he schemes them up. Blitz disguises. Rotating coverages. Mental warfare.
And now he’s got some pieces. Grady Jarrett in the middle. Montez Sweat off the edge. A young secondary with room to grow. Expect more turnovers, smarter play, and far fewer drives where you scream “WHY ARE THEY IN PREVENT AGAIN!?”
Saints deffensive NFL ranks under Dennis Allen, 2016-2024
The NFC North Is Ripe for a Power Shift
Let’s zoom out. The division? It’s vulnerable.
Detroit lost both Ben Johnson and Aaron Glenn. That’s like cutting out your brain and spine and expecting to keep dancing. The Lions are still solid, but they just handed Chicago their playbook.
Minnesota? Rolling the dice on a rookie QB. Cool story, but rookie QBs don’t win divisions. And the Packers? They’re stuck in neutral with a roster that hasn’t upgraded meaningfully since their Wild Card exit.
Even Vegas sees it. Aaron Schatz has the Bears as his #2 worst-to-first candidate based on FPI upgrades and schedule analytics.
Speaking of schedule: Chicago’s isn’t a cakewalk (.571), but it’s manageable. They’ve got winnable home games and a perfectly timed early bye week for recalibration. You could do worse.
Final Verdict
This isn’t your cousin’s Bears team. This isn’t “hope and a prayer” optimism. This is data, tape, and real football decisions pointing toward a legitimate rise.
They’ve got the coach. The quarterback. The line. The weapons. The defensive mind. And for once, a clear identity.
Are they Super Bowl-bound? Calm down.
But if you’re asking whether this team can win 10+ games and punch a playoff ticket? Hell yes. And if things click faster than expected, don’t be shocked if they’re still playing deep into January.
So strap in, Bears fans. The future might not suck anymore.