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The Chicago Bears are 9-3 and riding the most explosive offense the franchise has seen in years. Caleb Williams is inconsistent but rising, and Ben Johnson’s scheme is firing on all cylinders.
But inside all that success sits a glaring flaw, one tied directly to tight end Cole Kmet. It shows up in the numbers, it shows up on tape, and nothing illustrates it better than this:
On the season, Kmet is averaging just 3.7 yards after the catch and it’s become impossible to ignore.
Cuz not long ago, Cole Kmet was one of the Bears most trusted players. In 2023, he put up 73 catches for 719 yards and six touchdowns.
But the fade started last year. And the Bears’ decision to spend the No. 10 overall pick on Colston Loveland signaled where things were headed.
Now in 2025, Kmet has only 22 catches for 273 yards and two touchdowns, numbers that barely resemble a complementary starter, let alone a featured piece in a modern offense.
And the thing is… He’s not a preferred target for Caleb Williams. Despite still playing plenty in 12 personnel, he’s become more of an accessory to the offense than a threat within it.
Is His Time in Chicago Coming to an End?
GettyBears TE Cole Kmet
ESPN’s Dan Graziano summed up the financial reality bluntly: “Kmet is signed for two more years at $10 million per year, but none of that money is guaranteed… The dead money hit if Chicago cut him would be just $3.2 million.”
Now that Colston Loveland has taken over as TE1 and is trending toward a breakout, the pressure on Kmet’s future has only intensified. If Chicago wants cap flexibility heading into an offseason where they’ll need to pay stars, restructure veterans, and build around a young QB, Cole Kmet’s contract becomes one of the easiest levers to pull.
Cuz after an early injury, Loveland has played at least 58 percent of the snaps in eight straight games. His receiving grade (76.3), depth of target (9.4 yards), and versatility all point to a tight end ready to break out.
Pro Football Focus even floated him as a wild card candidate to be the TE1 in fantasy in 2026. Not coincidentally, Loveland’s leap has coincided with Kmet’s shrinking footprint.
A Tape Issue as Much as a Numbers Issue
GettyBears TE Cole Kmet
Cole Kmet’s yards after catch ability has evaporated. He goes down on first contact, and often even without contact. He struggles to separate against man. It’s why every reception feels the same: Catch. Collapse. Reset the chains and move on.
That’s not what Ben Johnson’s offense is built on. That’s not what Caleb Williams thrives with. And that’s not what Colston Loveland brings to the table.
Cole Kmet is still useful. He’s still a strong blocker who helps Chicago operate the heavy personnel packages Ben Johnson leans on. But when your TE2 is making $10 million, providing limited juice after the catch, and getting overshadowed by a rookie who fits the future of your passing game, something has to give.
Whatever the outcome, the Bears can’t pretend the gap between Kmet and Colston Loveland isn’t widening.
The Chicago Bears have a Cole Kmet problem. And unless something changes down the stretch, they’ll have no choice but to address it head on this offseason.
Garrett Klaus Garrett Klaus is a NFL contributor at Heavy.com, where he covers the Chicago Bears, Indianapolis Colts, Atlanta Falcons, Jacksonville Jaguars, and the Carolina Panthers. More about Garrett Klaus
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