Ben Johnson's impact in Chicago greater for some than for others

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Ben Johnson's move to the Bears has been widely hailed as possibly the biggest made in this NFL offseason.
The impact is twofold, because it removes a major factor for success from Detroit while bringing it to a team with an offense starved for success.
At least this was apparent to most, with the exception of CBS Sports' Tyler Sullivan. He not only missed the mark at the biggest offseason move made by naming a different one, but also halved his chance at a bit of redemption by weakly putting Johnson in the second position.
In his eyes, the biggest move of this offseason was a non-move. It was the Rams giving a contract extension to Matthew Stafford. Stafford was obviously using his situation as a contract ploy to get desired money while extending his career.
Rome Odunze on Ben Johnson:
— Ficky (@itsfickybaby) July 10, 2025
“𝘏𝘦’𝘴 𝘣𝘦𝘦𝘯 𝘩𝘢𝘳𝘥 𝘰𝘯 𝘶𝘴, 𝘮𝘢𝘯.”
That’s music to my ears. Culture shift in full effect. pic.twitter.com/fkNt2ipFWr
This can't even rank. The Rams never were seriously letting him leave.
It was a non-move.
The problem with putting Johnson second on this top-10 list is Sullivan didn't even give the Bears coach his full just due. He called it a double move with No. 2 being Johnson and Aaron Glenn both leaving the Lions.
I’m so confused.
— EJ 🇺🇸 (@itsmine49) July 19, 2025
For the last 5 months Lion fans have been telling me that Ben Johnson wasnt the reason for the Lions success on offense.
Somebody is lying. pic.twitter.com/aLARXM7BXS
This is soft on a few levels.
Johnson brought dramatic change in results to the Detroit offense and improved them every year as coordinator.
With a current ADP of 152.1 overall (13th), snagging WR Luther Burden III at 18.05 felt like a steal. The rookie out of Missouri electrified the Combine with a 4.4 40 & zero drops in the gauntlet. He was hand-picked by offensive guru Ben Johnson to bring explosiveness to #DaBears pic.twitter.com/dGo42kx7pz
— Jayson Snyder (@Spydes78) July 18, 2025
The Detroit defense, however, never attained the league-wide position under Glenn that the offense did under Johnson. They were holding back the Lions offense in 2022 when the defense was last.
They never ranked better than 19th in the league under Glenn, who admittedly was phenomenal when he had to glue them together with everyone injured in 2024.
- Vikings got a rookie qb
— Joey (@CalebGoatQB1) April 28, 2025
- Lions lost Ben and Aaron Glenn
- Jordan Love
We are unfazed pic.twitter.com/eVbrYdTYsj
Still, the numbers don't say the Lions ever had the highest quality defense and replacing Glenn with Kelvin Sheppard isn't a huge step back in Detroit because this was a former assistant of Glenn's who can simply carry on what he did except with a full cast.
On the other hand, the Lions have replaced Johnson with John Morton, a one-time Lions assistant but one who has experience as a coordinator. His 2017 Jets offense was last in the NFL. He's also taking over an offense without its greatest weapon. It's a new offensive line with three positions changed.
Jahmyr Gibbs is expecting to be involved in the Lions passing attack even more under new offensive coordinator John Morton.
— Brad Galli (@BradGalli) July 11, 2025
"I'm being split out, I guess, way more than I was the last two years. That's good, that's going to be fun," he said Thursday at a youth camp. pic.twitter.com/OBrIC59e8u
Separating the two moves makes more sense because Johnson's departure impacts the offense of Detroit on a higher level, and has the chance to immediately impact the Bear' offense on a huge level due to the explosive players they've already put in place and the presence of an offensive line potentially one of the best in the NFL. Pro Football Focus graded them fourth best.
This list is weak in another sense.
Of all the off-season trades I think Joe Thuney was the best.
— Clay Harbor (@clayharbs82) July 3, 2025
Joe Thuney hasn't allowed a sack in his last 25 regular season games played and has started 146 games over 9 NFL seasons missing only two starts.
Built different. #DaBears #Bears #ChicagoBears pic.twitter.com/ydNGNwMqJ6
The Joe Thuney trade wasn't even listed top 10. Thuney coming to the Bears in a trade for a fourth-round pick greatly diminishes Kansas City's offensive line while providing Williams with one of the league's strongest pass blockrs at the position. He's been the best pass blocker in the NFL at this at his position for four straight years if not more.
Washington acquiring tackle Laremy Tunsil in a trade with Houston was given fourth-biggest move, but Thuney to Chicago doesn't rate top 10?
Felix Anudike-Uzomah only played 6 defensive snaps against the Texans but he made them count
— Price Carter (@priceacarter) January 20, 2025
-Nice TFL by shedding the left guard to bring down Dameon Pierce for -4
-Hustle sack in the red zone against veteran Laremy Tunsil #ChiefsKingdom pic.twitter.com/G1ewSswqmP
Tunsil has missed 23 games in nine seasons. Tunsil has never been an All-Pro. Thuney has missed two games and was All-Pro twice. Thuney helped his team win six conference championship games and four Lombardi trophies.
Tunsil has been in seven postseason games with three wins, no conference championship game appearances and wasn't among the top five AP vote getters for best NFL tackle heading into this season.
Just a reminder:
— Daily Chiefs (@Daily_Chiefs_) July 15, 2025
Trey Smith was an absolute fortress last season! 🧱🔥
▪️ 708 pass-blocking snaps — 5th most among all guards
▪️ 0 sacks given up all year 😤
Only one other guard did that: Joe Thuney. pic.twitter.com/RL9Kx3FyGi
The AFC champions losing Thuney's presence is huge. To top it off, Washington did quite well without Tunsil last year. How much better would he make them?
Lists of these types often are made with too much overthinking. This one sure was.
Both Bears moves should rate top 10 with Johnson No. 1 by himself.
Ben Johnson checks every box for Coach of the Year—and the odds agree (+650).
— Up & Adams (@UpAndAdamsShow) June 4, 2025
Who’s your pick this season? 👀@heykayadams | @FDSportsbook pic.twitter.com/8bgNOguyHS
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Gene Chamberlain has covered the Chicago Bears full time as a beat writer since 1994 and prior to this on a part-time basis for 10 years. He covered the Bears as a beat writer for Suburban Chicago Newspapers, the Daily Southtown, Copley News Service and has been a contributor for the Daily Herald, the Associated Press, Bear Report, CBS Sports.com and The Sporting News. He also has worked a prep sports writer for Tribune Newspapers and Sun-Times newspapers.