Bears DE Montez Sweat’s moment has arrived as he aims for All-Pro prestige

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Defensive end Montez Sweat is the Bears’ most important player after rookie quarterback Caleb Williams, and they’re asking a lot out of him.

Their pass rush remains one of the biggest questions and potential pitfalls for the upcoming season, and they badly need Sweat to be a star. They’re counting on him to be an overwhelming force and spearhead their defense no matter how many double teams and chip blocks he faces.

It’s likely the most a team has asked of Sweat in his six-year career, but it’s a reasonable request given that he’s the highest-paid player on the roster. He’s been good — no question. Now he needs to be great.

He pushed back on the premise that the pressure is on to produce, but said he fully intends to deliver. He made his first Pro Bowl last season with a career-high 12½ sacks and wants to take the next step by claiming an All-Pro spot this season.

“I’m definitely not already there, but I definitely feel like I can get there,” Sweat told the Sun-Times on Tuesday. “Anybody who comes into this league should have aspiration to be All-Pro, Pro Bowl, a gold-jacket guy. What’s the point of doing it if you’re not gonna do it for real?”

Every player probably does enter the NFL with those ideals, though few actually have that elite ability. And even then, it takes time.

Sweat’s moment might be arriving.

He averaged seven sacks for the Commanders over his first four seasons before breaking through with 6½ in eight games for them and another six in nine games with the Bears after they traded a second-round pick to get him and sign him to a four-year, $98 million contract extension.

His sack total was 10th in the NFL, making him one of eight defensive ends chosen for the Pro Bowl and earned him the No. 82 ranking in the NFL’s Top 100, as voted by players. All-Pro is far more exclusive, however. The Associated Press All-Pro first team has just two openings for edge rushers, and last season they went to two players on course for the Hall of Fame in the Browns’ Myles Garrett and the Steelers’ T.J. Watt.

Just like with Khalil Mack, the Bears’ last star pass rusher, opposing offensive coordinators will prioritize taking Sweat out of the equation. He’ll have to rise above it.

“That’s just a part of the league and being a good pass rusher,” Sweat said. “I’ve been getting chipped, double-teamed and slides even since I was in Washington. You just have a pass-rush plan and move forward.”

If his teammates are able to divert some of that attention from him, all the better, but that didn’t happen much last season. As of now, the Bears are headed into the season with DeMarcus Walker (23 career sacks in seven seasons) as their other starter and hoping to solidify some depth from a group of Jacob Martin (18 career sacks), Dominique Robinson (two), Khalid Kareem (one) and fifth-round pick Austin Booker.

The Bears brought in veteran Yannick Ngakoue last season, and he had four sacks in 13 games before breaking his ankle. Ngakoue, 29, worked out for the Panthers and Dolphins recently, but remains a free agent.

“I’m not going to get into hypotheticals,” coach Matt Eberflus said Tuesday when asked if he would be an asset. “I do like him. I like him as a man. I like him as a worker. He certainly has done good things for us in the past, but again, that’s speculation.”

That leaves them all-in on Sweat, which isn’t necessarily a problem. If he elevates his play this season, it should create a ripple effect of opportunities for other pass rushers to emerge. Teams turn to their stars for major production and to make everyone around them better, and Sweat seems ready for it.

The Bears’ starters are done for training camp.

There’s little dispute that even at this early stage, as a rookie quarterback who still has more than two weeks until his NFL debut, he’s a more gifted and sophisticated passer than Justin Fields and Mitch Trubisky were.

The third-year cornerback had a sack and two tackles for loss against the Bengals after missing three weeks with “tightness.” He added two interceptions of Caleb Williams in practice Monday and declared himself ready for Week 1 after only 21 snaps in the preseason.

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