Ben Johnson puts it on Bears players to clean up the sloppy play.
In the aftermath of yet another uneven performance by the Chicago Bears, head coach Ben Johnson delivered a clearβand bluntβmessage: the mistakes stop with the players.
Chicagoβs 30-16 loss to the Baltimore Ravens in Week 8 served as a tipping point. Johnson didnβt mince words: βItβs our first game in a while β¦ when we donβt have some takeaways β¦ when that happens you really gotta play a clean game and we didnβt.β
The problem: sloppy execution
Whatβs standing in the Bearsβ way isnβt a lack of talentβitβs care-less execution. The penalties keep piling up: 11 flags for 79 yards in that Ravens loss alone. The team has recorded more penalties and more penalty yards than their opponents in every game so far.
Johnson called out issues that go beyond the headline stats: false starts, mis-aligned formations, sloppy tempo and motion, and βnot getting lined up quite right.β
And the result? A team that looked like it could be ascending β flashes of explosive plays, a rising young quarterback in Caleb Williams, some bright moments on offenseβbut then self-inflicted wounds kept the Bears from finishing games or sustaining drives.
Accountability in the locker room
Johnson placed responsibility squarely with the teamβs leaders. βI really put it on the leaders there in that locker room to get this ship going in the right direction β¦ coaches have been pounding that drumβ¦ So itβs on the leaders here.β
That shift is telling: the coach is acknowledging that at a certain point, detail work, drill execution and habit-fixing canβt just be coach drivenβthey must be player-owned.
So what happens next?
For the Bears, the coming weeks will test whether the foundation Johnson is building can absorb and remove the sloppiness thatβs been a recurring theme. Some key questions:
* Can the Bears reduce the number of penalties and poor pre-snap errors? The numbers suggest this is non-negotiable.
* Will the offense finish drives in the red zone instead of stalling? Williams himself noted the need to βfind a way to get in the end zone.β
* Will the leaders step up and enforce the habits Johnson is demanding? Because his message is loud: coaches canβt keep making this adjustment for you.
The bigger picture
Johnson came to Chicago with a reputation as an offensive innovator, someone who could revitalize a stagnant unit. But talent alone wonβt mask self-inflicted errors in this league. As one analyst noted, the Bearsβ βquality control problemsβ are hampering what could otherwise be a more promising season.
If the Bears get a handle on their execution, the upside is real. But if not, the sloppy habits will continue to define their resultsβregardless of scheme or player talent. Johnsonβs message is clear: the time for excuses is over. The players must commit to cleaner football, or the penalty yards will keep swallowing their progress.
For now, all eyes are on Chicagoβs next gameβhow they respond will say much about Johnsonβs vision becoming reality.