The [Bears](https://chicago.suntimes.com/bears) have had coach Ben Johnson in their building for seven months, and so far he’s been exactly as advertised. Team president Kevin Warren called him “everything we had hoped for.”
The real test will come when the games start, but Johnson already has sent a desperately needed jolt through Halas Hall with his exuberance, confidence and [insistence on bringing old-school ferocity back to the Bears](https://chicago.suntimes.com/bears/2025/08/05/bears-coach-ben-johnson-brings-smashmouth-football-back-to-halas-hall-with-intense-practice-tuesday).
“That’s one thing you’ve noticed: that intensity level,” Warren said Friday after watching a scrappy Bears-Dolphins joint practice. “When you’re able to have intense practices at this time in training camp, it says that the players respect the coaches, and especially the head coach.”
The organization needed this after Matt Eberflus’ unremarkable tenure and Matt Nagy’s rah-rah antics before him. Johnson, along with defensive coordinator Dennis Allen, has everyone’s attention in the best possible way.
He arrived with credibility despite having never been a head coach. When the Bears host the Dolphins in the preseason opener Sunday, it’ll be his first time calling all the shots at any level.
His reputation — and results — preceded him, though.
Unlike Eberflus, widely unknown when he got hired, Johnson was by far the hottest candidate in the league. And unlike Nagy, he had autonomy as an offensive coordinator while steering the Lions to the top five in scoring each of the last three seasons.
As Johnson waited for the right job, he formed a style that integrates ingenuity and grit. He envisioned an eclectic staff that could keep his perspective fresh. He looked for, and seems to have found, the right balance between championing his players and confronting them with accountability.
“They know he knows ball,” chairman George McCaskey said. “And they know that he can make them better.”
That’s what quarterback Caleb Williams and others craved after wasting last season wandering under Eberflus and offensive coordinator Shane Waldron. There was no hiding their shortcomings, and the Bears fired both of them by the end of November.
That staff was bad not only on game days, but everything in between. Eberflus couldn’t own his mistakes and learn from them. Waldron couldn’t guide Williams. Neither communicated well publicly or in the locker room. A big part of Johnson’s task is “to reset the culture,” as safety Kevin Byard put it.
Byard began his career with the middling Titans under Mike Mularkey, then saw the whole vibe shift when Mike Vrabel walked in the door and turned them into a smashmouth team on both sides of the ball.
“I just really enjoy the energy that he sets every single day,” Byard said of Johnson. “It feels very similar... to what it was when I was with Vrabel.”
McCaskey added, “He’s an agent of change, that’s for sure.”
That was most evident Tuesday, when Johnson challenged players to bring fury to practice. Allen taunted the defense by mentioning he was disappointed he hadn’t seen “a tussle” yet. Then, when it inevitably bubbled up into several scuffles, the coaches didn’t intervene much.
That mentality continued Friday, when the Dolphins — especially on offense — appeared caught off guard by the Bears’ physicality.
“I haven’t been a part of a training camp like this before in my career, honestly,” said Byard, who is going into his 10th season.
Johnson’s approach is landing for a team that was too often sloppy and boring before he got here. His tone is playing well, for now.
“We’re in the honeymoon period — we’re undefeated,” McCaskey said, snapping everyone out of their imaginations. “People are very excited that we got the guy they wanted us to get, but now we need to take care of business.”
That’s usually where the fun ends for the Bears as hype implodes into a heap. But there’s no denying how different it feels this time, and if Johnson gets the Bears to play the way they’ve been practicing, the change might be real.