The Chicago Bears released second year cornerback Zah Frazier on Thursday, and while the move removes one name from the CB competition, it doesn’t make Tyrique Stevenson‘s life any easier.
If anything, it just makes 2026 the most important year of his career…
Frazier was a 5th round pick out of Texas-San Antonio in 2025 who never got off the ground. He participated in one OTA practice before stepping away entirely, landing on the Non-Football Injury/Issue list and missing his whole rookie season.
Ryan Poles said in January that Frazier had “a mountain to climb” just from missing so much time. Whatever happened between then and now made that mountain unclimbable, and the Bears moved on.
The mystery surrounding Zah Frazier’s situation may never be fully resolved. But the impact on the CB room is crystal clear.
The numbers don’t lie
GettyBears DBs Tyrique Stevenson and Jaquan Brisker
Tyrique Stevenson has spent three years with the Chicago Bears as the kind of player everyone agrees needs replacing and keeps surviving anyway. He outlasted Nahshon Wright. He survived the fallout from the 2024 Hail Mary disaster. He’s even outlasted Frazier, who never played a single snap.
However, last season was Stevenson’s worst as a Bear. He allowed a career high 15.4 yards per reception across 13 starts, ranking third worst among all cornerbacks in yards allowed per target at 9.8, per Pro Football Focus.
He missed 10.9% of his attempted tackles and eventually lost his starting spot to Wright down the stretch. ESPN’s Ben Solak put him on a list of 14 veterans most likely to lose their jobs because of the 2026 draft, and it’s hard to argue with the reasoning.
Then the Bears selected CB Malik Muhammad out of Texas in the fourth round, and the profile is hard to ignore. He’s 6 feet tall with a 4.42 40, a 39 inch vertical, a 10 foot 11 broad jump, and 32 inch arms. All-SEC in 2025 with 29 career starts.
The athleticism is there but the resume makes things interesting. Muhammad’s PFF grade actually declined each season at Texas, and he ranked 432nd out of 896 college cornerbacks in receptions allowed last year.
The Bears’ calculated gamble
GettyBears CB Tyrique Stevenson
Here’s where it gets complicated. The Chicago Bears actually want Tyrique Stevenson to start and play well. In fact, if Stevenson performs at a high level and walks in free agency next spring, Chicago collects a compensatory pick, potentially in Round 3.
But that preference evaporates the moment Muhammad outperforms him in camp. The Bears won’t bench a better player to protect a draft pick strategy, and Stevenson knows it.
He’s in the final year of his $6.4 million rookie deal with everything on the line… His starting spot, his next contract, and his reputation in Chicago.
Free agent L’Jarius Sneed remains available after having his charges dropped this week, meaning an outside addition isn’t off the table either.
Zah Frazier being gone does clean up the room a little. But with Muhammad waiting, Stevenson’s path to locking down CB2 is anything but simple.
The spotlight is on Tyrique Stevenson. Whether he’s ready for it is the only question that matters.
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