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Bears GM Ryan Poles eyes draft picks to remake defense in coordinator's image

PHOENIX — Bears coach Ben Johnson tried to argue Monday morning his roster was deep enough that the team could afford to draft the best available player next month.

“I think we can go any direction we need to, and stay true to that,” he said, “and feel pretty good about it.”

Deep down, he must know better. So must general manager Ryan Poles. Because this year’s draft cries out for the Bears to draft a defensive player in Round 1. And maybe two more in Round 2.

It’s essential to the team’s future on and off the field. They haven’t picked a first-round defender since Roquan Smith in 2018 and are set to pay $166 million, the fourth-most in the NFL, to their 2026 defense alone. That’s unsustainable. The Bears need an influx in young defensive talent on the field who collect a reasonable paycheck off it.

“We talk about that a lot,” Poles said Monday at the NFL’s annual meeting.

Poles just told the world what he, Johnson and defensive coordinator Dennis Allen thought of the team’s defense. He traded linebacker Tremaine Edmunds and let starting safeties Kevin Byard and Jaquan Brisker and cornerback Nahshon Wright leave via free agency. No NFL team gave any of their defensive backs more than a one-year deal.

The Bears swapped them out for players who they think better fit Allen’s defensive mindset — but need to add more in the draft.

“If you go back and see the teams that D.A. has had, specifically the defenses in New Orleans, there’s an aggressiveness, there’s a violence and there’s a speed that they play with,” Poles said. “So we’re trying to match that …

“That’s part of our evaluation process with the rookie class — prioritizing the guys that fit perfectly or that kind of borderline fit and need some development. And then we really try to push aside the guys that don’t fit.”

The hard part about drafting someone who fits Allen’s prototype is that the Bears are picking so late. Poles looks to two late-round stalwarts for inspiration — the Steelers and Ravens.

Since 2000, there have been 109 seasons in which a defensive player drafted between 20th and 32nd overall made the Pro Bowl. The Ravens are responsible for 11 of them — nine for safety Ed Reed and two for linebacker Patrick Queen. The Steelers claim 14 — eight for edge rusher TJ Watt and six for defensive tackle Cam Heyward.

Bears defensive end Montez Sweat is another. So is Cam Jordan, Allen’s former standout edge rusher in New Orleans. But those defensive linemen were the exception, not the rule.

“For the D-line it gets more difficult as you get further along in the draft,” Poles said. “You’re definitely going to have to develop (them).”

That’s been a problem for the Bears for a generation. Acquiring them has gone better — Khalil Mack and Julius Peppers were stars — but proved only to be a patch. Maxx Crosby seems to be staying with the Raiders after the asking price of two first-round picks was too rich for Poles’ liking.

There’s nothing wrong with taking a high-floor player at No. 25 rather than someone with “this mythical high ceiling that maybe you never reach,” Poles said. Miami’s Rueben Bain Jr. and Texas A&M’s Cashius Howell, two of the most productive edge rushers in college football, have short arms that could hurt their draft status.

“Just a good football player that plays with the right mentality — a high motor, can overcome their short-comings, whether they have short arms or it’s a height thing or size thing,” Poles said. “That’s what we’re going to be taking into consideration.”

So long as it’s a defensive player.

“If all things are equal, that usually clinches it in a way, in terms of our needs,” Poles said. “But we need to be true to the board and true to the talent to make sure they truly are equal.”

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