Monday, September 16, 2024

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Final Chicago Bears 53-Man Roster Projection For 2023 Season

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With two preseason games in the books, it feels like the Chicago Bears likely have an idea of how their 53-man roster will look once cuts begin. There are still some roster battles that could encounter some unexpected swings, but in truth, the second preseason game resolved most of them. The only thing that can create a decisive shift would be an injury.

Hopefully, it doesn’t come to that. The Bears have managed to avoid any significant health setbacks this month. Given the information available, here is a full breakdown of how I expect the final roster to take shape. Be warned it doesn’t account for any potential waiver wire pickups, which feels like a strong possibility.

The Chicago Bears’ final 53-man roster appears set.

QB:

*Subject of 3rd quarterback rule

Practice squad option: Nathan Peterman

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By far, the biggest upset of any roster battle takes place at the position nobody expected. Bagent, an undrafted rookie out of Division II Shepherd, has looked terrific through two preseason games. He’s had a strong train camp as well. By comparison, Walker has struggled. While the Bears did invest a healthy contract into the former XFL and Carolina standout, the fact is the rookie has outshined him. Thanks to the new third QB rule, the Bears can carry three QBs on the roster, with one not counting against the final 53.

RB:

  • Khalil Herbert
  • D’Onta Foreman
  • Roschon Johnson
  • Travis Homer
  • Khari Blasingame

Practice squad option: Trestan Ebner

Going heavy at running back feels ill-advised these days, but it’s necessary with the type of offense the Bears run. A wide-zone scheme demands a steady rushing attack. In the absence of a true star, it’s always best to have a good stock of bodies. Herbert, Foreman, and Johnson is the trio Chicago will run with. Homer is versatile depth and, more importantly, an immediate presence on special teams. Blasingame will fill the fullback role. Ebner’s draft status can’t protect him anymore. He didn’t do enough to stand out.

WR:

  • D.J. Moore
  • Darnell Mooney
  • Chase Claypool
  • Tyler Scott
  • Velus Jones
  • Equanimeous St. Brown

Practice squad option: Daurice Fountain

The competition at wide receiver never materialized. Moore, Mooney, and Claypool are the unquestioned top three options, and it was obvious from the second camp began. Scott and Jones have been up and down. They’ve had some really good moments, but both suffered mental mistakes in their first preseason outing. Scott is a 4th round pick. Jones is their best kick returner. So they’re safe. St. Brown isn’t a receiving threat, but their system highly values his run-blocking. Fountain showed enough against the Colts to suggest he has emergency backup capability.

TE:

  • Cole Kmet
  • Robert Tonyan
  • Marcedes Lewis

Practice squad option: Stephen Carlson

Going with three tight ends is a little light, but the Chicago Bears can feel more than comfortable with this trio. Lewis is still a fantastic blocker. Tonyan can be a big threat in the passing game. Kmet is a combination of both. Health will be the biggest key with this group. If they can avoid injuries, the Bears may get more contributions from their tight ends than almost any other position on the roster. It’s that deep. Carlson had some nice moments in the preseason. He can be a serviceable stash on the practice squad.

OL:

  • Braxton Jones
  • Teven Jenkins
  • Cody Whitehair
  • Nate Davis
  • Darnell Wright
  • Larry Borom
  • Ja’Tyre Carter
  • Lucas Patrick

Practice squad options: Alex Leatherwood and Doug Kramer

The great thing about the new practice squad rules is it allows you stash players far more easily. That is why the Bears feel comfortable rolling with only eight linemen on the main roster. You have the five obvious starters locked in. Borom has consistently proven to be their best option as the swing tackle, so he stays. Patrick has the versatility to play both center and guard. His leadership is also valuable. As for Carter, he has improved more than anybody else since last season. His play in the preseason proves that. Having him behind the notoriously injury-prone Jenkins and Davis will be important.

DL:

  • Yannick Ngakoue
  • Andrew Billings
  • Justin Jones
  • DeMarcus Walker
  • Gervon Dexter
  • Zacch Pickens
  • Terrell Lewis
  • Trevis Gipson
  • Dominique Robinson

Practice squad options: Travis Bell, Rasheem Green, Jalen Harris, and D’Anthony Jones

One thing that’s clear about this position group? Eberflus and his staff will have some tough decisions to make. The top six names listed above are obvious locks, with the first four being the starters. Pickens and Dexter have both looked good as high draft choices. Lewis and Gipson have been the two most consistently productive pass rushers this preseason. They’ve earned their way onto the roster. The hardest choice is that last spot. Green, Harris, and Jones all have cases. Robinson gets it for his still considerable upside.

LB:

  • Tremaine Edmunds
  • T.J. Edwards
  • Jack Sanborn
  • Noah Sewell
  • Mykal Walker
  • Dylan Cole

Practice squad option: Micah Baskerville

Another position that is suddenly competitive. Edmunds and Edwards are starters. Sanborn and Sewell are competing for that last spot. Both will make the roster regardless. Walker is a late addition to the roster but carries significant value as a backup, thanks to his starting experience in Atlanta. As for Cole, he survives thanks to his proven track record on special teams. While unfortunate for Baskerville, he did more than enough to stay on the practice squad. He may crack the roster down the line.

CB:

  • Jaylon Johnson
  • Kyler Gordon
  • Tyrique Stevenson
  • Terell Smith
  • Jaylon Jones
  • Josh Blackwell

Practice squad option: Michael Ojemudia

It appears Stevenson has cemented himself as the #3 cornerback alongside Johnson and Gordon. Smith has also had a great training camp. The last two spots go to Jones and Blackwell, thanks to their quality play last year as rookies and their undeniable value as special teams players. Ojemudia has always had talent. He never quite unlocked it during his time in Denver. However, he’s shown promising signs this preseason. Continuing to work with him on the practice squad is a logical step.

SAF:

  • Eddie Jackson
  • Jaquan Brisker
  • Elijah Hicks
  • A.J. Thomas
  • Bralen Trahan

Practice squad option: Kendall Williamson

Jackson and Brisker are cemented as starters. Hicks played quite well in the safety role this preseason and, apparently joint practices too. He’s also becoming a core special teams ace. The biggest surprises are Thomas and Trahan. Both had interceptions in the first preseason game against Tennessee. Thomas almost had another against the Colts. They’ve also stood out in training camp. They display the competitive tendencies the Bears look for. Each earned his way onto the roster.

ST:

  • Cairo Santos
  • Patrick Scales
  • Trenton Gill

Fittingly, the projection rounds out with minimal drama. Santos Rookie Andre Szmyt briefly tested Santosly camp. That didn’t last long. The veteran kicker was sharp every day, and that carried over into the preseason, where he hasn’t missed a single kick. Scales remains as reliable as ever. Gill also did solid work punting.

5 COMMENTS

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Dr. Melhus
Aug 21, 2023 12:47 am

GrinBearIt: As far as I remember, it works like this: every player that you want on the practice squad is cut, and then resigned to the practice squad. Other teams can claim your cuts for their roster, if no one claims a player, then the player can take offers to be on a practice squad, either with the team he did training camp with, or another team. So if Green is on the practice squad, he’s getting cut, and may end up elsewhere.

Modair
Modair
Aug 20, 2023 11:31 pm

Gipson will not make the team. They’ve already signaled they want to move on. Velus Jones will make it, but shouldn’t. I’d keep Baskerville over Walker or Cole because neither impresses me as an option if we have injuries.

I still expect Poles to churn this roster some more by sifting through guys who are cut elsewhere while we’re first on the waiver wire. I expect him to find us at least 1 or 2 more gems. I think that’s we’re we’ll find our final pieces. I’m thinking he looks hard at DE, S, LB, and hopefully G.

Slip Knotz
Slip Knotz
Aug 20, 2023 7:15 pm

Currently, I’m still feeling a little bit of anxiety about 2 positions Safety and OT. We have had some nice developments at OG and Center, in addition to the other positions that got all the attention. I think we’re going to be a 9-8 team, starting rough and finishing rough. I think we’ll find out who is the core of this team by Thanksgiving. But I worry about a December with Larry Borom, Jatyre Carter, Kramer, and a backup QB out there. I think the Defense will become great but I worry about injuries at Safety by December. I think… Read more »

IADaveMark
Aug 20, 2023 5:45 pm

So no Pettis. Interesting.

GrinBearIt
GrinBearIt
Aug 20, 2023 4:02 pm

Agree about *Green, but disagree about Baskerville. He should be in and Cole should be out.
*Green should be cut, though. He wouldn’t agree to being sent to the practice squad.

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