The Chicago Bears have thrown the NFL draft into chaos just hours before the first round, with multiple blockbuster moves reshaping the franchise’s future in ways no analyst predicted. The most shocking development centers on quarterback Tyson Bagent, who is now the target of a desperate Pittsburgh Steelers team that has been left at the altar by Aaron Rodgers. Sources confirm that Halas Hall has received serious trade inquiries, and the price being discussed could fundamentally alter the Bears’ draft strategy at pick number 25. This is not speculation. This is happening right now, and the clock is ticking toward the opening of the 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh.
The Steelers have emerged as the most aggressive suitor for Bagent, a move that would have seemed unthinkable just weeks ago. Pittsburgh enters tonight’s first round without a clear starting quarterback after Aaron Rodgers refused to commit to a 43rd season. Art Rooney II publicly stated he wanted an answer before the draft, but that answer never came. The Steelers are now sitting on a roster with Mason Rudolph, who holds a 9-9 record as a starter, and Will Howard, a sixth-round pick from 2025, as their only options under center. That is not a plan. That is a prayer, and the front office knows it.
Brad Berumen from FanSided laid out the logic on April 22nd with surgical precision. If Rodgers does not return and the draft does not hand Pittsburgh a solution, the Steelers must make a move on a veteran quarterback before the weekend ends. The name that fits that market right now is Tyson Bagent. The fit is undeniable. Bagent is locked in for two more seasons at $10 million total, which is a high salary for a backup but a bargain for a starter. The Bears have to ask themselves whether they can afford to keep that insurance policy when a second-round pick is on the table.

The price being discussed is staggering. Beat reporters are putting Bagent’s trade value in the second to third-round range. Pittsburgh holds picks 53, 76, 85, and 99 on day two. If the Steelers offer pick 53, the Bears cannot say no. If they offer pick 99, Chicago hangs up the phone. The sweet spot is pick 76 or 85, where both sides might actually find a deal. Keep it a buck. If Pittsburgh comes with pick 76 or better, Ryan Poles has to listen. Bagent does not lose value over a year if he barely plays. That means Chicago could wait this out or cash in right now with a real draft asset.
The timing is everything. If Rodgers eventually makes up his mind and returns to Pittsburgh, or if the Steelers find their answer in tonight’s draft, the whole conversation dies. The clock is ticking as round one approaches, and every minute that passes without a Rodgers decision pushes the Steelers closer to a trade. The Bears are in the driver’s seat, but they cannot afford to wait too long. The value of Bagent is peaking right now, and Poles has to decide whether to cash in or hold onto a backup who may never see the field behind Caleb Williams.
This Bagent situation connects directly to what happens tonight at pick 25. If Bagent walks out the door before the weekend is over, the Bears need the first round to be perfect. And right now, hours before Chicago is on the clock, three real names keep coming up in every conversation. The first is T.J. Parker from Clemson. Albert Breer from Sports Illustrated specifically mentioned Parker as someone that keeps coming up in talks about Dennis Allen’s defensive system. Parker brings raw power. He is an edge rusher who physically overwhelms blockers at the point of attack, sets hard edges, and has the hand technique to be a legit complement to Montez Sweat.
Parker only had five sacks in his final Clemson season, which scares some evaluators, but his pre-draft process was strong. That above-average hand work is exactly the kind of technical foundation Ben Johnson’s staff develops. This is a calculated risk with real upside. The Bears need pass rush help, and Parker could be the answer if they are willing to bet on his potential over his production. The second name is Kedrick Fox from Auburn. Ten sacks in three college years does not blow the roof off, but seven of those came in 2024 alone. What Fox does schematically is what actually matters here.

Fox can rush the passer from the inside or the outside, which in a Dennis Allen 4-3 defense gives you alignment versatility that is worth its weight in gold. On top of that, his run defense grade was 85.5 among edge defenders last year. He is not just a one-trick pass rush paper tiger. He can set the edge and stop the run, which makes him a three-down player in the NFL. The third name is Caleb Lomu, offensive tackle out of Utah. Dan Graziano from ESPN reported that the Bears are one of multiple teams dead set on coming away from Thursday night with a new offensive lineman.
The reason is clear. Aviante Collins is dealing with a patellar tendon injury, which leaves Braxton Jones as the default starter at left tackle. Braxton Jones got benched in 2025 for poor play. That is not a franchise left tackle situation going into a season where you are trying to protect Caleb Williams. Lomu started the last two years at left tackle, has an elite athletic profile for the position, and posted an 82.1 pass protection grade. His run blocking at 62.0 needs work, but in Ben Johnson’s offense where the quarterback is the engine of the whole system, pass pro takes priority.
There is also a wild detail that came out today courtesy of beat reporter Tony Pauline. The Bears actually wanted in on the Dexter Lawrence trade before the Bengals swooped in with the number 10 pick and closed it. Let that sink in for a second. That tells you exactly what Ryan Poles is thinking about on defense. He wants interior dominance. If Dexter was off the market, then T’Vondre Sweat from Ohio State becomes the logical fallback at number 25. Sweat posted the top PFF run defense grade among all interior linemen last year. He is a force in the middle who can collapse pockets and free up edge rushers.

Tonight defines a huge piece of this defense’s future. Ben Johnson has the offensive side of the ball locked in. Now the draft has to build the wall in front of him. Navy and orange, baby. Let’s get it done. But before we close, there is legislative news that matters for the long-term future of the Bears. The Illinois House of Representatives passed updated stadium legislation in a 78 to 32 vote on Wednesday night. That is not a squeaker. That is momentum. The amended version of the bill adds property tax protections that had been blocking skeptical lawmakers and residents.
Fifty percent of payments in lieu of taxes will now go toward property tax relief. Of that 50%, 60% goes directly to homeowner rebates in mega project districts, and 40% drops into the state’s existing property tax relief fund. The whole incentive plan sunsets in five years, at which point lawmakers revisit its effectiveness. That is a real framework with real accountability built in. Team spokesperson Scott Hagel was diplomatic but clear. The Bears welcomed the progress on the House version of the mega project bill but said additional amendments are still necessary to make the Arlington Heights site feasible.
Indiana has already passed its own stadium bill that would fund a new venue in Hammond with new local taxes. That competition for the franchise is still very much alive, but Wednesday night’s House vote shifts the energy. Illinois is fighting for this team, and if they land on the right infrastructure funding formula, the Bears stay home right here where they belong. The draft starts tonight. The Steelers may be calling about Bagent. Pick 25 might be the most interesting selection in the first round. Tonight, Poles and Johnson have to prove last year was not luck. The entire league is watching.