Ryan Poles prefers not to spend big in free agency but knew he had to this year. The Chicago Bears had too many holes on the roster to avoid it. Perhaps his most surprising addition was Nate Davis. Paying $10 million per year for a guard is a lot of money. Poles is a former offensive lineman himself. He must’ve seen something he really wanted to have in Chicago. At first glance, Davis is a great run blocker. His mixture of quickness, size, and nastiness consistently generates movement on the ground.
Yet what makes the signing better for the Bears is the timing. Poles might be getting some heat if this had occurred a year earlier. The biggest problem facing the line wasn’t its run blocking last year. It was the pass protection. Keeping Justin Fields upright is the top priority. Davis spent the first three seasons in Tennessee as an unremarkable pass protector. That changed in 2022. Something finally seemed to click for him, and it showed in the numbers.
Snaps per pressure allowed:
- 2019 – Every 17.85 snaps
- 2020 – Every 19.03 snaps
- 2021 – Every 15.25 snaps
- 2022 – Every 27.50 snaps*
Nate Davis should fix one of their biggest issues.
The Bears’ offensive line could not handle stunts and blitzes last year. More creative defensive coordinators routinely outfoxed them with well-disguised pressure packages. There were too many instances of guys failing to pick up a looping defensive end or a late blitzer. Davis demonstrated last season that he has become quite adept at solving this problem. He was rarely caught off guard by anything defenses tried to throw at him. His awareness and patience will be more welcome than any of his physical attributes.
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Part of “winning” free agency isn’t about spending the most money. It’s about spending money in the right places without going over budget. That is what the Bears did with Nate Davis. They got a capable starter going into the best years of his career at a highly affordable price. Poles deserves credit for that. Davis doesn’t have to be a superstar. He only has to be what he was in 2022. Anything beyond that is gravy for this team. It will be even better if he can help Darnell Wright get settled at right tackle as well.
Cool
A guy having his best season in a contract year isn’t really breaking news. I hope he continues to improve.
Look at Mpbeezy91 gets triggered by stats. Seems you were projecting in your reply. Need a tissue?
Hey Thomas, your head is so far UP YOUR ASS, you can’t even see the mf light at the end, so do us all a favor an take your dumbass back to your worthless lil cave an stfu like the good lil bitch you are.
So Erik, Ryan Poles let James Daniels join Omar Khan’s Steelers; tried Lucas Patrick (while disrespecting Teven Jenkins)– and then finally, signed Nate Davis. But, check their 2022 stats: Nate Davis (26) Bears: $30MM — 3 yrs. 682 snaps; 385 pass; 4 penalties; 3 sacks; PFF grades (Ovrall/Pblk/Rblk): 70.6; 69.8; 66.8 — 14 pressures — 3.64% James Daniels (25) Steelers $26.5MM –3 yrs. 1,160 snaps; 686 pass; 5 penalties; 0 sacks; PFF grades (Ovrall/Pblk/Rblk): 66.9; 73.2; 60.0 — 20 pressures — 2.91% . . . and tell me again, why you think Ryan Poles is so brilliant. It seems that… Read more »