Chicago Sun-Times

Cohen’s timetable still unknown

- BY JASON LIESER, STAFF REPORTER jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r

Tarik Cohen is drifting from being a focal point of the offense to an ancillary piece as the Bears wait on his recovery from a torn ACL. With less than three weeks until the first game and coach Matt Nagy sketching out his plans for the offense, Nagy doesn’t know whether his versatile running back will be ready by the start of the season.

“He is just going through all of his rehab,” Nagy said Monday. “He’s out there trying to stay as flexible as he can and running around. I’m not out there when he’s doing his stuff, so I don’t know the exact details of what he’s doing. He’s definitely progressin­g.

“I don’t have a timeline for him, but he’s in a good place. It’s been frustratin­g for him, but he’s working hard.”

Nagy has no choice but to prepare to go without Cohen, who has been on the physically unable-toperform list since training camp opened nearly a month ago.

None of this is much of a surprise as Cohen nears the 11-month mark since his injury, but it’s a hard truth to accept nonetheles­s.

Before a down season in 2019 and the early injury last season, Cohen was a game-changer for Nagy as a runner, receiver and punt returner. He led the Bears in 2018 with 1,169 yards of total offense (about two-thirds of that coming as a receiver), averaged 6.9 yards per touch, had 16 plays of 20-plus yards and scored eight touchdowns.

That’s absolutely something the Bears could use after averaging the second-fewest yards per play and scoring the sixth-fewest touchdowns in the NFL over the last two seasons.

Mack trade talks

Nearly three years after trading Khalil Mack to the Bears, the Raiders apparently wanted him back.

Amid the Bears’ salary-cap nightmare in the offseason, Mack’s old team inquired about the possibilit­y of reacquirin­g him, but the Bears quickly snuffed out any thought of a deal, The Athletic reported.

After trading two first-round picks for Mack, the Bears signed him to a six-year, $141 million contract extension. They restructur­ed that deal this offseason rather than unload him. The reworked contract lowered his cap hit to $14.6 million this season. It spikes to $30.2 million next season if they don’t restructur­e.

More injury updates

Nagy allayed two significan­t concerns coming out of the preseason game against the Bills: Wide receiver Javon Wims was diagnosed with an oblique muscle injury after the initial fear that he was suffering from appendicit­is, and starting defensive tackle Bilal Nichols’ toe injury shouldn’t keep him out long.

“He’ll be OK for [the opener],” Nagy said of Nichols. “We just want to be smart with him so he is ready for Week 1.”

No. 1 cornerback Jaylon Johnson was a surprise absence from practice Monday. The team said he was out for personal reasons. Linebacker Joel Iyiegbuni we was out because of an illness, and cornerback Teez Tabor exited with a thigh injury.

On the plus side, defensive standouts Eddie Goldman, Roquan Smith and Danny Trevathan all returned after missing time last week.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Coach Matt Nagy doesn’t know when running back Tarik Cohen, who continues to recover from a torn ACL he suffered nearly 11 months ago, will be ready to play.
GETTY IMAGES Coach Matt Nagy doesn’t know when running back Tarik Cohen, who continues to recover from a torn ACL he suffered nearly 11 months ago, will be ready to play.

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