Jets RB Breece Hall
Getty
Jets RB Breece Hall
After a 1,000 yard season fromD’Andre Swift and a late season surge fromKyle Monangai, the run game almost stopped being a question for theChicago Bears.
But a recent mock trade fromSports Illustrated’s Ryan Shea gave the Bears an opportunity that might be too good to pass up… AcquiringJets running backBreece Hall in exchange for D’Andre Swift and a 2026 third round pick.
And once you layer in production, age, contract status, scheme fit, and what head coach Ben Johnson asks of his backs, the idea starts feeling like a move that could take the Bears to the next level.
Why Breece Hall is different from what the Bears already have
Jets RB Breece Hall
GettyJets RB Breece Hall
With the New York Jets in 2025, Breece Hall put up:
1,065 rushing yards
350 receiving yards
1,415 yards from scrimmage
And 4.4 yards per carry
He became the first Jets back since Chris Ivory to top 1,000 rushing yards, and he did it without the benefit of spacing, quarterback play, or consistent box relief. That context is really important.
Cause D’Andre Swift, meanwhile, thrived with the Chicago Bears:
1,087 rushing yards
9 rushing touchdowns
34 receptions for 299 yards
And 4.9 yards per carry
Swift was efficient, reliable, and productive. He did exactly what the Bears needed. But his production was often the result of the environment. Hall’s production camedespitehis.
The contract reality that makes this plausible
Jets RB Breece Hall
GettyJets RB Breece Hall
Breece Hall is set to play 2026 on the franchise tag at roughly $14.3 million after stalled negotiations with the Jets. New York has said it will revisit talks after the draft, but there’s no guarantee progress will be made.
That leaves the Jets with a decision: Commit long term money to a running back… Or convert Hall into multiple assets while his value is high?
D’Andre Swift plus a third round pick gives New York:
A proven starter
Immediate backfield stability
Draft capital they currently don’t have
Flexibility instead of another expensive RB negotiation in 2027
For the Jets, it’s a roster balance move. For Chicago, it’s a ceiling-raising move.
Here’s another layer to this: Breece Hall has publiclypraised the Bears’ offense on social media. He’s commented on how easy Chicago makes scoring look. He’s watched Johnson’s system. And it seems like he wants to be a part of it.
Now the Bears don’t need a running back by any means. Swift was productive and Kyle Monangai emerged late. But Hall isn’t about stabilizing the run game. He’s about changing how defenses have to play the entire offense.
Sure a third round pick would be tough to give up. But for a contender trying to move from “very good” to “stressful to defend every snap,” it’s a reasonable price.
Hall is two years younger than Swift. More explosive in space. A more natural fit for Johnson’s spacing philosophy. And the kind of player who can flip games with one touch.
That’s an identity upgrade. And that’s why this trade pitch makes too much sense for the Chicago Bears to ignore.