Chicago Bears Post Draft Safety Review

CHICAGO, IL - OCTOBER 22: Eddie Jackson #39 of the Chicago Bears smiles after returning an interception for a touchdown early against the Carolina Panthers at Soldier Field on October 22, 2017 in Chicago, Illinois. The Bears defeated the Panthers 17-3. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)
CHICAGO, IL - OCTOBER 22: Eddie Jackson #39 of the Chicago Bears smiles after returning an interception for a touchdown early against the Carolina Panthers at Soldier Field on October 22, 2017 in Chicago, Illinois. The Bears defeated the Panthers 17-3. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

Now that the 2018 NFL Draft has come and passed, what does the Chicago Bears safety room look like?

The Chicago Bears found something in their safety duo last season. Therefore they did not feed the position much this offseason. How do they look in 2018?

Adrian Amos

It felt as though Amos finally was in a role that was right for him and his fit beside Eddie Jackson was like a glove. The two formed well together, and it was easily the best season of the career of Amos. Now the team is hoping that they can only grow on that connection.

Eddie Jackson

Eddie Jackson came out as an older prospect with an injury but he is turning into a solid value at his draft slot. He is going to enter his second year as the starter. He is not the strongest tackler but has good range, ball skills an understanding to stay in position.

Deiondre Hall

The depth behind this duo is young but questionable. Hall missed most of 2017 due to an injury, and when he was cleared, John Fox started Chris Prosinski over giving the young up and comer meaningful snaps. It will be interesting to see what they have in Hall.

More from Bear Goggles On

Deon Bush

Bush has been decent on special teams and below average on defense in his limited experience over the past two seasons. Bush has good size but has not shown enough yet. Year three will be a big one.

DeAndre Houston-Carson

Houston-Carson has seen the field even less than Bush. He has more special teams upside in his profile, but between the three, they will be looking for improvement anywhere. It is an open competition for a direct backup to Jackson and Amos.

Nick Orr

Nick Orr is an Undrafted Free Agent from TCU. Football runs deep in his family and he is a smart player in the back end. However, he lacks speed and athleticism and will have to live in the box in the NFL. Still, he can make noise against the three above due to his special team’s value.

Schedule