Chicago Bears gain in latest power rankings just not against NFC

In this story:
The Bears have made their offseason moves and situated themselves for the draft.
The end result is they still have not cracked the barrier to be considered a playoff team, according to the rankings of the website Pro Football Focus.
It's a sign of how tough the NFC North is and also how the NFC has more good teams than the AFC, but the Bears are in the top 14 and 14 teams make the playoffs—they're just not in the top seven for their conference and the top seven NFC teams are playoff teams.
PFF ranks the Bears 13th in NFL power rankings going into the draft. However, there are seven teams from the NFC ahead of them, the last one being the Green Bay Packers at No. 12.
The last time the Bears made the playoffs was 2020.
— Chicago Bears Network (@bearsnetwork_) April 16, 2025
Is this the year they return? 👀 pic.twitter.com/UBoC9y5Ckc
The Vikings are also in the top 13, ranking eighth even without a starting QB who has taken an NFL regular-season snap.
The Eagles are No. 1 and Detroit, even without Ben Johnson and Aaron Glenn as coordinators, is ranked second.
Ben Johnson called a very multiple run game with the Lions, but Outside Zone was a core concept.
— Bobby Peters (@b_peters12) April 18, 2025
The Lions had a DOWNHILL feel to their Outside Zone calls. Offensive line constantly working on the other side of the line of scrimmage. pic.twitter.com/pnyTJSRVq7
Somehow, the Bears moved up two spots since their last PFF power rankings at the end of the first week of free agency. Maybe it was the later free agency signings like Devin Duvernay and Olamide Zaccheaus that put them over the top in the eyes of the bean counters at this analytics site.
In his summary, PFF's Bradley Locker doesn't discount the notion the Bears could actually become a playoff team.
No Chicago team has made the playoffs since the Bulls in 2022. This city is hungry for a winner, but its teams just have not been providing one. The Cubs might break that drought this fall. Hopefully, the Bears are right behind them.
— Geoffrey Clark (@gfclark89) April 17, 2025
"The talent is there for Chicago to reach its first postseason since 2020, but Caleb Williams (63.5 PFF passing grade) and Rome Odunze (65.3 PFF receiving grade) will need to play like top-10 picks to make that happen," Locker wrote. "Overall, it’s easy to be bullish on a new-look Bears team with Ben Johnson calling the shots, especially with what’s expected to be a new, high-profile running back—but there could be growing pains for a first-time head coach on a big stage."
Maybe the most interesting part of PFF's ranking is the team needs listed for this draft. They say the needs are edge rusher, defensive line and safety.
I’m sorry but at this point if you think the Bears biggest need is OLine and we aren’t in a position draft elite prospects at other positions. You’re incredibly stupid.
— pöp? (@n0t_pop) April 21, 2025
Theres no other way to put it. Teams become great by drafting elite prospects early. Not just “trenches”.
All are definite needs, but they kind of forgot two massive needs like offensive line depth and, oh by the way, maybe a running back.
After all, it was Pro Football Focus that graded Bears starting running back D'Andre Swift 43rd out of the 47 backs league-wide last season. That was one season after he was 45th out of 58 backs while playing with the Eagles.
If that doesn't say PFF should think they need a running back in the draft, what does?
I want Ashton Jeanty but not at the cost it would take to get to No. 5. #Bears https://t.co/VnCDvJkYSd
— Aaron Leming (@AaronLemingNFL) April 21, 2025
More Chicago Bears News
X: BearsOnSI

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.