Day 47 of the Chicago Bears offseason. I made pigs in a blanket with chocolate chip pancakes for breakfast, which put me in a good mood to start my Saturday.
The final Friday of the 2025 NFL league year served up a reminder that there is no such thing as a slow news day when you write about the NFL for a living. Friday night was a banger for news coverage, headlined locally by the Bears trading for New England Patriots center Garrett Bradbury and Maxx Crosby (a player whose availability we were monitoring with great interest) being sent from the Las Vegas Raiders to the Baltimore Ravens. Those deals won’t be officially official until 3 p.m. CT on Wednesday, but that won’t stop us from discussing them now. When it comes to the Garrett Bradbury trade, I’m reminded that every deal has its pros and cons. Even though I didn’t love the deal initially, I can understand why Chicago made the move. Bradbury has ample starting experience and has traits Bears Head Coach Ben Johnson seems to value (as discussed here) in a center. However, I have some concerns regarding the Bradbury trade. For instance, I don’t love the PFF grades attached to his performance. Don’t get me wrong. I know Pro Football Focus evaluations aren’t the be-all, end-all. But a steady stream of below-average grades is troubling. It is encouraging that Bradbury allowed no sacks during the regular season, but he did allow sacks in the AFC Championship Game and the Super Bowl. Not quite how you want to end your season. Super Bowl LX was rough for Bradbury, who posted a 44.4 overall grade from PFF after allowing a sack, five hurries, and six quarterback pressures against a Seattle Seahawks defense that Chicago’s football team will see at some point during the 2026 regular season. Perhaps Bradbury can straighten up and fly right under the direction of Bears Offensive Line Coach Dan Roushar. After watching right tackle Darnell Wright play his way into receiving second-team All-Pro honors, Jonah Jackson play at a Pro Bowl level for the first time since leaving the Lions, and Theo Benedet hold it down admirably at left tackle as a second-year undrafted player, I’m willing to give Roushar some runway to work with Bradbury. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images In the end, I was correct to think Johnson would lean toward bringing in a veteran center to replace Dalman in the middle of the line. However, I just bet on the wrong horse. And while I suppose the Bears could still land Tyler Linderbaum in free agency and use Bradbury as a valuable depth piece, but I’d put those odds at 1 percent.NEW BN BEARS PODCAST EPISODE: Apple | Spotify | YouTube
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Weird, but interesting: The Bears, Packers, Vikings, and Lions all needed to find a starting center at some point this offseason. In theory, Chicago (Bradbury) and Detroit (Juice Scruggs) traded for starters. Green Bay and Minnesota could find options via free agency. The Vikings are the newest team that needs a center after Ryan Kelly announced his retirement just one year after signing a multi-year deal in free agency with Minnesota:10 seasons. What an incredible ride it was. I was blessed to be around some of the greatest people this sport has to offer. I always wanted to leave each place better than how I found it and with that I can hang my hat. Forever grateful for my family and brothers! Cheers pic.twitter.com/LzliGJ2wOK
— Ryan Kelly (@ryan_kelly70) March 6, 2026 You might recall that Kelly was one of Chicago’s rumored free agency targets last offseason. But unlike Drew Dalman, Kelly had a lengthy injury history before leaving the Indianapolis Colts to join Minnesota last offseason. So, in a way, I’m not surprised by the retirement news on that front. Nevertheless, a need is still a need for the Vikings. One year after trading a third-round pick to the Seahawks to acquire Geno Smith, the Raiders are set to dump the quarterback. I will always remember the interceptions Geno threw directly to Bears safety Kevin Byard III — who still doesn’t have a new deal from Chicago’s football team at this point of the offseason. If Byard hits free agency, I hope he gives the Bears an opportunity to match whatever contract offer comes his way.MORE BEARS FROM BLEACHER NATION: Go Ad-Free | Subscribe to the BN Newsletter
BN Bears Podcast Ep. 22: Bears Trade D.J. Moore to Buffalo, Dalman Retires & Maxx Crosby Rumors www.bleachernation.com/bears/2026/0…[image or embed]
— Bleacher Nation Bears (@bn-bears.bsky.social) March 6, 2026 at 2:59 PMReading the Room: Are These 4 2026 NBA Mock Draft Picks Right for the Chicago Bulls? t.co/Vr52Uyrlts
— Bleacher Nation Bulls (@BN_Bulls) March 6, 2026Javier Assad Balled Out Today For Team Mexico www.bleachernation.com/cubs/2026/03…[image or embed]
— Bleacher Nation (@bleachernation.bsky.social) March 6, 2026 at 2:23 PMOn Friday, #Blachawks GM Kyle Davidson reiterated his confidence and faith in the pipeline he's built thus far. But he also said the Hawks were open to using their assets to do something bigger – if the right player/opportunity presents itself. More: t.co/sLgJqJqA9t
— Bleacher Nation Blackhawks (@BN_Blackhawks) March 7, 2026Hence then, the article about more bradbury thoughts crosby trade reaction cap space update and other bears bullets was published today ( ) and is available on Bleacher Nation ( Middle East ) The editorial team at PressBee has edited and verified it, and it may have been modified, fully republished, or quoted. You can read and follow the updates of this news or article from its original source.
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