The Chicago Bears are considering selecting a safety with their 25th pick in the 2026 NFL Draft due to a significant lack of depth at the position. Three first-round caliber safeties are available, making it a critical need for the team.
Key points
Bears have only one starting-caliber safety on the roster
Three first-round caliber safeties available in the draft
Coby Bryant is the team's S1, but no reliable S2
Waiting until the second round for a safety is risky
Dillon Thieneman is a top prospect that fits the team's needs
IOWA CITY, IA - NOVEMBER 08: Dillon Thieneman #31 of the Oregon Ducks pursues a play on defense during a college football game against the Iowa Hawkeyes on November 08, 2025 at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City, Iowa. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
IOWA CITY, IA - NOVEMBER 08: Dillon Thieneman #31 of the Oregon Ducks pursues a play on defense during a college football game against the Iowa Hawkeyes on November 08, 2025 at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City, Iowa. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
As we do every year, we take a look at the Bearsâ first-round pick and the different positions the team needs, and what would make sense for the team to do. As a reminder, I will go through multiple positional cases for the 25th pick, making the case does not necessarily mean I believe this is what the Bears should do, simply laying out the reasons as to why this pick makes sense.
Itâs time to make the case for safety.
The case is obvious: you start two safeties, and the Bears only have one starting-caliber safety on the roster.
There are other position holes on the team, but none as glaring as safety. At every other position, you at least have an NFL-caliber player ready to start, even if he may not be the strongest player, but you can at least make the argument.
Elijah Hicks has returned to play the S4 role, which is largely a special teams role on this team. Jonathan Owens is no longer here, and heâs been replaced by Cam Lewis, the former Buffalo Bill. Now I havenât seen a case made, but if someone is out there actually making the case that Lewis is the teamâs S2 and not the teamâs S3, you can simply skip that personâs opinion as someone who âdoesnât know ball.â
Lewis is the new Jonathan Owens as the teamâs S3. I special teams player that can start if needed (Lewis has 14 career starts over 6 years), but not a starting caliber player.
has been signed as the teamâs S1, but they simply donât have an S2 on the roster. When a hole is that glaring, you simply donât wait until round 2 or round 3 to fill that hole; you fill it immediately.
You donât know how the draft is going to break, if you decide to go another direction at 25 and decide to wait until 57 to grab your safety, you may be in a position where there is a run on safeties and you canât grab the one you were hoping for, and, unfortunately for the Bears, when you have a glaring need, you just canât let the draft come to you, you need to be pro-active.
Luckily for the Bears, three safeties in this draft are considered first-round caliber safeties, which is higher than most drafts. Ohio Stateâs , Oregonâs Dillon Thieneman, and Toledoâs .
I donât see any world where Caleb Downs is still available when the Bears are at 25. If Thieneman is there, I think thatâs the type of pick that Dennis Allen would slap , knock over Ryan Poles, and call the pick in himself from the War Room before anyone had a chance to consider anyone else. Thieneman is a great prospect and fits what DA likes to do with his safeties very well. McNeil-Warren may not fit Dennis Allenâs defense as well as Thieneman and doesnât have the skills that Downs has, but he has the talent to be a very successful player at the NFL level, and the Bears need difference makers on a defense that is sorely missing them right now.
If all three of them are off the board, perhaps the Bears should consider a trade down into the early part of the second round and take a safety there because waiting until 57 with the Bears roster construction is certainly a very risky proposition.
Q&A
Why do the Chicago Bears need to draft a safety in the 2026 NFL Draft?
The Bears currently have only one starting-caliber safety on their roster, creating a glaring need at the position.
Who are the top safety prospects for the Bears in the 2026 NFL Draft?
The top safety prospects include Caleb Downs from Ohio State, Dillon Thieneman from Oregon, and Emmanuel McNeil-Warren from Toledo.
What happens if the Bears wait until the second round to draft a safety?
Waiting until the second round could result in missing out on top safety prospects due to a potential run on safeties.
What is the current safety situation on the Bears' roster?
The Bears have Coby Bryant as their S1, but lack a reliable S2, with Cam Lewis and Elijah Hicks filling lesser roles.
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