Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Ryan Poles’ Showed Something At Trade Deadline He Never Has Before

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The Chicago Bears are 5-3. Their roster is decimated by injuries, though. Anybody with an understanding of football knows those circumstances are a perfect breeding ground for aggressive trades. GM Ryan Poles has shown in the past that he doesn’t fear taking shots. He gave up 2nd round picks for Chase Claypool and Montez Sweat during a time when the Bears were rebuilding. It went against typical logic for team construction. Poles felt it was worth the risk. No doubt he’d be more aggressive than ever now that his team finally has a chance to make a playoff run.

At 3:00 p.m. CST, the deadline passed. Chicago’s only move of the day was swapping picks with the Cleveland Browns for veteran edge rusher Joe Tryon-Shoyinka. It was a minor deal for a player who is not a difference-maker. He is depth. Good depth, but still depth. Fans were upset. Why didn’t Poles take a bigger swing? That is because the GM finally demonstrated something he hasn’t in years past.

Self-awareness.

Ryan Poles knew he wasn’t well-equipped to be aggressive.

Usually, when you’re a buyer at the deadline, you have some extra draft picks to throw around. That is what happened with Philadelphia and Jacksonville this week. Chicago only has seven picks next year, which is the standard amount for each year. Going below that number is not advisable for teams that want to maintain their roster with young talent. Then there’s the salary cap. The Bears have the 10th-lowest cap this year at $7.49 million. Next year, it actually drops to $2.86 million. That severely limits the types of players they could pursue. Veterans with large contracts were off the table.

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Lastly, Ryan Poles has shown that he understands the current state of the Bears as a football team. Are they one or two players away from a Super Bowl? No. They still have several areas of the roster to sort out, and one mid-tier veteran addition at the deadline wasn’t going to change that. The smart thing to do was to keep the draft picks and continue stockpiling young bodies under Ben Johnson and his coaching staff. Forcing the issue rarely works.

Poles’ predecessor learned that lesson the hard way.

11 COMMENTS

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Dr. Steven Sallie
Dr. Steven Sallie
Nov 5, 2025 12:22 pm

Poles had to learn, know, or be reminded of his considerable limitations.

katherinne
katherinne
Nov 5, 2025 10:37 am

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dabear01
dabear01
Nov 4, 2025 8:57 pm

So did you hear about the latest

Krisanthony
Krisanthony
Nov 4, 2025 7:00 pm

Hmmm, allegedly making out with 40% profit on home purchased two years ago is inept? Makes a lot of sense. I also heard that he’s leasing a car and it doesn’t have the option to buy it. He shops at Whole Foods and not at Aldis . He pays top dollar for gas instead of driving out 10 min further to save 19 cents per gallon. . He doesn’t return clothes that don’t fit to Amazon. Just keeps them in a storage container. There’s so much more.

Last edited 17 hours ago by Krisanthony
Krisanthony
Krisanthony
Nov 4, 2025 6:52 pm

I’d also remind that they have next to nothing in dead cap space in 2026 so it’s fair to expect a June 1st casualty to add cap space. One or two from Johnson, Moore, Sweat, Gordon and Kmet could be those casualties.

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