The Chicago Bears are on the verge of a seismic shift that could redefine their defense for years, as reports out of New York confirm that All-Pro defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence has completely severed ties with the Giants, with trade talks already underway and the Bears positioned as a prime suitor. Pat Leonard of the New York Daily News, a beat reporter with deep connections to the Giants organization, has escalated the language surrounding Lawrence’s situation from a simple stalemate to what he calls a dire and real possibility of a trade. Leonard reports that contract negotiations have broken off entirely, with no phone calls, no meetings, and no contact between Lawrence and the team. This is not the typical posturing of a player seeking leverage. This is a full-blown fracture, and the Giants are now actively speaking with other teams about moving the 27-year-old defensive monster. Ian Rapoport of NFL Network had previously used the word impasse, but Leonard goes further, confirming that the relationship is beyond repair. For a franchise like the Bears, which has been starving for interior disruption since the days of Tommie Harris, this is the kind of opportunity that does not come around often.
Lawrence is not just a good player. He is a generational force on the interior defensive line. Over the three seasons prior to 2025, Lawrence accumulated 21 sacks, a staggering number for a nose tackle who commands double teams on nearly every snap. His Pro Football Focus grades as a pass rusher never dipped below ninth in the entire league, and as a run defender, he never ranked below third. That level of dominance is almost impossible to find in the modern NFL, where interior linemen who can both collapse the pocket and stuff the run are treated like gold. The reason for his statistical dip in 2025 is critical to understand. Lawrence played through a dislocated elbow, an injury that directly impacts a defensive tackle’s ability to generate leverage at the point of attack. He played hurt on a team that won almost nothing, and scouts around the league are still telling reporters that he is one of the most disruptive defensive players alive when healthy. That context is everything for a Bears front office that is building for a championship window right now.
Picture this defensive line in navy and orange. Montez Sweat on the edge, already a proven sack artist who commands attention. Gervon Dexter developing on the interior, showing flashes of the power that made him a second-round pick. Grady Jarrett as the veteran anchor, a steady hand who knows how to win in the trenches. Now slide Dexter Lawrence in next to them, under the coordination of Dennis Allen, a defensive mastermind who knows exactly how to deploy a dominant interior presence. That is not a defensive line. That is a death sentence for every offense in the NFC North. Aaron Jones will not find a crease. Jared Goff will not have time to set his feet. Jordan Love will be running for his life. The space that front creates for Caleb Williams is exactly what Ryan Poles is chasing right now. When your quarterback is on a rookie deal, you do not have the luxury of waiting three years to build a defense. You strike while the window is open, and Lawrence is the kind of player who slams that window open for the next half-decade.

The cost, of course, is the central question. The Giants are likely asking for a first-round pick plus more, perhaps a second or a third-round selection. For a team sitting on pick 25 and two second-round picks, that is a significant price. But consider the alternative. Caleb Williams is entering year two of his rookie contract. The Bears have already invested heavily in the offense, adding weapons and a new offensive coordinator. The defense, however, still has a glaring hole in the middle. If Chicago passes on Dexter Lawrence and he ends up in Detroit or Green Bay, that decision will haunt the franchise for a long, long time. The NFC North is becoming a gauntlet of elite quarterbacks and creative offensive minds. The Bears cannot afford to be the team that hesitates while their rivals get stronger. The question for fans is simple. Do you trade the 25th pick plus a second-rounder for a 27-year-old defensive tackle who has proven he can dominate when healthy? The answer, for a team that believes it is one piece away from a Super Bowl run, should be an emphatic yes.
But while Chicago is staring at New York, another ghost from the trade wire refuses to disappear. Max Crosby, the Las Vegas Raiders edge rusher who nearly became a Bear back in March, is still lurking as a potential backup plan. Crosby was shipped to Baltimore in a deal that reportedly cost two first-round picks, but the Ravens sent him back due to health concerns. Now Crosby is sitting in Las Vegas, telling everyone he wants to stay a Raider. But the reality of the NFL business is that value is fluid, and Crosby’s stock has hit rock bottom. Jake Beckman of FanSided recently named Crosby as one of seven players who make the most sense to trade during the draft, and he identified the Chicago Bears as the ideal landing spot. Beckman argues that Crosby’s trade value hit the floor the moment Baltimore reversed course, and the only direction his value moves from that point is up. If a team grabs him now, they do it at a discount. Beckman projects the current price at one first-round pick plus a second or third, a very different conversation from the two-first-round price tag that was floated earlier.
The health question around Crosby is real, and it is the reason Baltimore sent him back. But for a Bears team that needs edge depth and interior pressure, Crosby represents a high-risk, high-reward option. Do I actually see Ben Johnson pulling the trigger on something this flashy on draft night? Honestly, not really. Johnson is calculated and composed. He is not the type to make an emotional blockbuster call on impulse. But if the Bears land Dexter Lawrence, the Crosby conversation is closed. If they do not get Lawrence, Crosby becomes the urgent backup plan because this defense needs interior pressure. Montez Sweat cannot do everything from the edge alone. Dennis Allen’s system needs disruption from the inside, and it needs it now. The Cowboys and the Bills are also circling Crosby, so the window is not open forever. The Bears must decide quickly whether to pursue the sure thing in Lawrence or gamble on the discount in Crosby.
Meanwhile, a different kind of battle is unfolding in Springfield, and it has nothing to do with players or picks. Bears leadership is in meetings right now with Governor J.B. Pritzker’s staff, pushing what is being called the mega projects bill. This piece of legislation would freeze property tax assessments for any project costing at least $500 million in Illinois. In plain English, that means financial certainty to build the new stadium in Arlington Heights. The problem is that the bill cleared a House committee back in February but still has not received a full floor vote. While Illinois is stuck in Springfield bureaucracy, Indiana has already passed its own legislation to create a stadium authority in Hammond using taxpayer money. Translation, Indiana is moving fast and playing offense. Illinois is moving slow. For Bears fans in the Windy City, this matters more than most people realize. If this team crosses that border into Indiana, Chicago does not just lose a football team. It loses a piece of its identity. The Halas family, George Halas, Soldier Field, the lakefront. Bear Down. That is not just history. That is culture. The clock is running, and the question nobody wants to say out loud is whether Illinois is taking this seriously enough before it is too late.

On a calmer note, Dane Brugler of The Athletic dropped his seven-round mock this week for Chicago, and the message is clear. If there is no blockbuster trade, Ryan Poles uses those four picks in the top 89 to build through the trenches. Pick 25 goes to T.J. Parker, an edge rusher out of Clemson with an elite motor and power fundamentals. He is still developing his counter moves, but Brugler projects him as a solid NFL starter. With Montez Sweat already anchoring the room, Parker does not have to be the guy on day one. He has time to grow. Pick 57 goes to Domonique Orange, a defensive tackle out of Iowa State. He is not a pass rusher, but as a nose tackle, he can be immovable against the run. That is exactly what this defense needs on early downs. Pick 60 goes to Jaylon Jones, a safety out of South Carolina. With Byard and Brisker gone, this position is urgent, high risk, high reward. If Brugler’s evaluation holds up, this is the kind of bet you take in round two. Pick 89 goes to Jake Slaughter, a center out of Florida. Drew Dalman’s retirement still stings. Garrett Bradbury is the bridge. Slaughter could be the long-term answer at the position. It is a solid draft if the board falls that way. But if there is a real chance to bring in Dexter Lawrence before any of this, everything changes. And I will take that scenario 10 times out of 10.
This is the state of Bear Country heading into draft week. A defensive tackle in New York who wants out and could be the missing piece on this defense. A pass rusher in Las Vegas still haunting the trade wire. A political fight in Springfield deciding whether this team stays in Illinois or becomes something else entirely. And a draft getting closer by the hour. The Bears are at a crossroads, and the decisions made in the coming days will shape the franchise for a generation. The Monsters of the Midway are being built, but the blueprint is not yet complete. Ryan Poles has the resources, the cap space, and the draft capital to make a move. The question is whether he has the nerve to pull the trigger on a player like Dexter Lawrence, a player who could transform this defense from a question mark into a nightmare for the entire NFC North. The answer will come soon enough. Bear Down, Chicago.