BREAKING NEWS: Bears Urged to Re-Sign Keenan Allen—Caleb’s Favorite Target Still Waiting for a Deal

   
  • D.J. Moore: Good at catching footballs.
  • Rome Odunze: Will be good at catching footballs.
  • Olamide Zaccheaus: Can be good at catching footballs.
  • The rest of the Chicago Bears wide receivers room: Meh at catching footballs.

But you know who’s really good at catching footballs?

Future Hall of Famer and (hopefully) future Chicago Bear, Keenan Allen.

Keenan Allen’s 2024 Was Better Than You Thought

Last season—despite dealing with a rookie quarterback, a wishy-washy head coach, and a pair of garbage offensive coordinators—Keenan Allen was sneaky-good, hauling in seven touchdowns (tied for the second-most in his career) and racking up five-plus catches in seven of his 15 games.

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In a Week 15 rumble with the Detroit Lions, he put together one of the finest games of his career, a nine-catch, 141-yard, one-touchdown gem that simultaneously turned back the clock and gave Bears Nation hope for the future.

So he’s still got it. But the Chicago Bears brass apparently isn’t convinced.

Allen Needs a Home

Allen—who inked a one-year deal with Chicago last spring—is still on the street…and that’s odd, because, well, future Hall of Famer.

  • Maybe his financial expectations are too high, with Spotrac pegging his current market value at $11.1 million.
  • Maybe there aren’t any NFL GMs who want to offer a long-ish-term deal to a soon-to-be-33-year-old who hasn't played a full season since 2021.
  • Or maybe the league thinks he’s lost his mojo, as between 2023 and 2024, his yardage total dropped from 1,243 to 744.

Whatever the reason, he’s still looking for a gig. And Chicago’s wide receiver room has holes.

So the Bears need to get The Bearded One back into Halas Hall.

3 Reasons Why Allen Should Be In a Bears Uniform In 2025

1) He’s One Of the Nastiest Route Runners In NFL History

Bears head coach Ben Johnson seems to be a stickler for exactitude, and when watching Allen go through his route trees, you can tell the ex-Charger offers just that.

2) He’s a Needed Veteran Presence.

The Bears' three starting wide receivers have an average age of 25.3, while the Super Bowl-winning Philadelphia Eagles’ top-three WRs average out to 26.0...and that 2/3rds of a year makes a difference.

So let’s get some experience in the locker room, shall we?

3) Caleb Williams Digs Him

Last season, Allen was Williams’ security blanket, arguably more so than ostensible WR1, D.J. Moore.

And then there’s the fact that despite their near-decade difference in age, the two of them just like one another.

A Tweet is worth 1,000 words—and hopefully Bears GM Ryan Poles will take those 1,000 words to heart and get Keenan Allen back in the building.