CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears are on the verge of a defensive transformation that could send shockwaves through the NFC North, and the name on everyone’s lips is Gabe Jacquizz. Multiple sources, including ESPN, CBS Sports, and every serious beat reporter covering this draft, have the Illinois edge rusher locked in as the Bears’ target at pick 57 tonight. This is not a rumor. This is real smoke converging on one single name, and if general manager Ryan Poles has Jacquizz on the board when Chicago steps to the podium, the Monsters of the Midway defense just found the weapon it was missing next to Montez Sweat.
The urgency of this move cannot be overstated. Last season, the Bears defense finished 22nd in pressure rate at a dismal 21.1 percent. That number is almost criminal for a team with playoff aspirations. Montez Sweat delivered 10 sacks, but the production gap behind him was a canyon. Austin Booker managed four and a half sacks, and Dominique Robinson added just one and a half. The Bears tried to patch the hole at the trade deadline by burning assets to bring in Joe Tryon Shoyinka, who is now in Philadelphia, leaving no mark on the roster. That failure cannot repeat itself.
Jacquizz, standing 6-foot-4 and weighing 261 pounds, brings a stat line that demands attention. Over his last two college seasons, he recorded 26 and a half tackles for loss, including 11 sacks in his final year with the Fighting Illini. He generated 44 pressures and eight sacks in 2024, followed by 41 pressures and 11 sacks in 2025. That man knows how to find the quarterback. He played in a 3-4 scheme at Illinois, but the projection is seamless for Dennis Allen’s 4-3 defense in Chicago, where he can line up with his hand in the dirt opposite Sweat.
Yes, Jacquizz has weaknesses. His coverage grades from Pro Football Focus over the last two seasons were 47.8 and 58.4, meaning he is not a hybrid linebacker dropping into space. But in a scheme where Sweat already commands double teams, and where Allen can unleash Jacquizz as a pure pass rusher, the tandem could terrorize opposing quarterbacks in 2026. The thought of that duo keeping offensive coordinators up at night is real, and it is the kind of luxury the Bears have not had since the days of Khalil Mack and Akiem Hicks.

Other names are circulating in mock drafts. The Athletic points to Keiran Crawford from Auburn. Sports Illustrated likes Danny Dennis Sutton from Penn State. Athlon favors Jaishawn Barham from Michigan. But the consistency with which Jacquizz appears in the most serious projections, combined with the fact that he played 30 minutes from Halas Hall and already understands Midwest football culture, creates a signal that cannot be ignored. Ryan Poles has three picks on Friday night, and pick 57 is where this story gets written or erased.
But 57 is not the only pick that matters tonight. Pick 60 and pick 89 carry their own stories, and one of them involves a position that may not have been a priority until the numbers reveal a crisis. The left tackle spot in Chicago is a war zone. Avi Trapilo, last year’s second-round gem, won the starting job and fought through the season, only to tear a patellar tendon in the wildcard game against the Packers. That injury is devastating for the player, and now the Bears must be brutally pragmatic about the future.
Braxton Jones, who started three straight seasons, posted a 55.5 grade on Pro Football Focus last year. Theo Benedet filled in admirably for Jones before Trapilo took over, but his grade was 55.8, with 26 pressures allowed and two sacks on 334 pass blocking snaps. Jedrick Wills, the new signing and former top-10 pick out of Cleveland, missed all of last season recovering from injuries. The last time he played, he posted a 52.9 grade with 11 pressures and three sacks on just 156 snaps. None of those three is a reliable answer.
The Athletic’s Dan Wiederer laid it out directly. If a high-value tackle prospect fell to pick 25 in the first round, the Bears should not hesitate. That did not happen because they took safety Dylan Theineman, but the storyline does not end there. On day two, names like Getting’s Dunker out of Iowa and Caleb Lomu out of Utah appear as real candidates to add depth and competition. Dunker, projected by USA Today to pick 60, is described as a lineman with NFL-level power and a run-game mentality that offensive line coaches love.
The projection does not see Dunker surviving on the edge in the pros, but as a mauling guard in Ben Johnson’s system, that makes real sense. And here is the cold reality for Trapilo. If the Bears draft a tackle or versatile lineman this weekend, and that player performs well during the 2026 season, the pressure on Trapilo to reclaim his spot in 2027 goes way up. In the NFL, the phrase “I deserve the job because I was hurt” does not exist. You earn it back, and Poles knows that, which is why pick 60 could easily go to a lineman with real upside.
Now, there is a third story today that is making the least noise but could be the one Ben Johnson needs most for the 2026 attack. The Bears lost DJ Moore and Equanimeous St. Brown, and the only real move to replace that production was signing Kalif Raymond as a free agent. Many fans were nervous, thinking the Bears would take a receiver in the first round who would push Raymond to the bench before the season started. That did not happen. Poles took Theineman, a safety, and that decision is a direct blessing for Raymond.
Right now, the projected starting receiver lineup is Rome Odunze, DJ Moore, and Kalif Raymond. That is real. That is the starting lineup as long as the rest of the draft does not change it. And Raymond can actually work in that role because he has been there before. In Detroit in 2022, he put up 616 yards as a secondary option. In 2023, he had 489 yards. He is not a number one receiver, but as the third option in a system where the tight end and running back also demand defensive attention, Raymond can be exactly what Ben Johnson needs.

There is something else nobody is talking about enough. Raymond worked directly with Johnson in Detroit. That relationship is not trivial. When a head coach already knows your tendencies, your routes, and your timing off the line, the learning curve practically disappears. Raymond now knows he will not be displaced by a first-round pick, and that is a motivated player. He will show up to training camp with something to prove, and the confidence that the boss already believes in him.
The Bears still have day two picks that could bring competition to the receiver room. The Athletic projects Antonio Williams from Clemson to pick 60. PFF likes Chris Bell from Louisville. But none of those are number one receivers coming in to take anyone’s starting job. Raymond’s starting spot is more secure today than it was 48 hours ago, and in the NFL, that means a lot. The Bears step to the podium tonight with picks 57, 60, and 89, and day two could define as much or more than the first round did.
If Gabe Jacquizz falls to 57, Poles must press that button without blinking. If pick 60 brings the right piece for the offensive line future, he takes it. And if 89 adds another pass rusher or a versatile lineman, this roster suddenly looks very different from where it stood Thursday night. This is the part of the draft where championship rosters get built in silence. The Bears are right in the middle of that process right now, and the decisions made in the next few hours will echo through the 2026 season and beyond.