logo
Chicago Bears rookie outlook: CB Zah Frazier faces uphill battle for playing time — but it's not the 1st time

Chicago Bears rookie outlook: CB Zah Frazier faces uphill battle for playing time — but it's not the 1st time

Chicago Tribune12-07-2025
Length comes up a lot when talking about offensive and defensive linemen. NFL teams want tackles with long arms. The same is true for edge rushers, who have to battle with those long-armed offensive tackles.
Bears general manager Ryan Poles has shown an affinity for drafting long-armed players at another position group: defensive back. He found another one when he selected Zah Frazier out of Texas-San Antonio in April in the fifth round (No. 169). Frazier's 32⅞-inch arms were the second-longest of any cornerback measured at the NFL scouting combine in February.
Length alone won't land Frazier a spot on the team, but the Bears are optimistic he has the physical tools to develop into a quality NFL cornerback.
Here's what Bears fans need to know about Frazier before rookies report for training camp July 19.
Al Harris kept an eye on Frazier. The first-year Bears defensive backs coach joined Ben Johnson's staff after five years with the Dallas Cowboys. While Harris was in Dallas, a cornerback from UTSA caught his eye. When he took the job in Chicago, Harris wasted no time letting Poles know about the rangy Roadrunners corner.
'I actually got a text in February from Al Harris saying: 'Hey, there's this guy Zah Frazier. He's long. I think we can develop him as a press corner. I think we can get him in the fourth or fifth round,'' Poles said after drafting Frazier.
That's exactly how it played out.
Frazier brings his 6-foot-3 frame to a crowded cornerback room. But the Bears believe he has the tools to compete, even with Jaylon Johnson, Kyler Gordon, Tyrique Stevenson, Terell Smith and Josh Blackwell already pretty well-established on the roster. Like Frazier, Smith and Stevenson have arms longer than 32 inches.
Frazier grew up in Cedartown, Ga., near the Alabama border. He wasn't rated by online recruiting services coming out of high school and initially went to Southern Illinois, playing in four games for the Salukis in 2019.
He then transferred to Coffeyville Community College in Kansas and emerged as one of the top juco recruits in 2022. He initially committed to Kentucky before flipping to UTSA.
With the Roadrunners, it was a long path to significant playing time. He played in 12 games in 2022 but wasn't a starter. UTSA cornerbacks coach Nick Graham had high expectations for Frazier's future, but he still had to prove himself.
'He just plain wasn't ready,' Graham said, 'and I don't like to put kids out there before they're ready, especially a kid who's out of juco.'
The next season, an academic eligibility issue kept Frazier out until November. When he finally cracked the starting lineup in 2024, he had a breakout season, grabbing six interceptions and defending 15 passes in 12 games.
Frazier already possessed an NFL-size frame, but adding that type of ball production probably cemented him as a potential draft pick.
Cornerback wasn't a huge area of need, but NFL teams always need depth in the defensive backfield. The Bears return their entire starting secondary, so it will be an uphill battle for Frazier to find playing time as a rookie.
But the Bears drafted him because they see a developmental corner whom they can work with. Frazier's 6-3 frame and 80-inch wingspan are huge pluses. If he can learn the playbook and understand NFL concepts, he could be the type of cornerback who excels two or three years down the road.
Harris was a similar player coming out of Texas A&M-Kingsville in 1997. A sixth-round draft pick, Harris eventually developed into a two-time Pro Bowl cornerback and second-team All-Pro with the Green Bay Packers.
'It definitely boosts my confidence because I have a coach that has done it,' Frazier said. 'He is going to give me the game. I've just got to add it to my toolbox and just be ready to work every day.'
Graham said scouts were telling him Frazier would have a shot in the NFL based solely off his measurables — like those long arms. But what NFL teams really wanted to see in his final year of college was an ability to create turnovers.
'So I had a conversation with him about it,' Graham said. 'We talked about it: You've got to start attacking the ball. That's the only way you're going to get drafted. Otherwise you're going to have to fight it the hard way. He took that to heart.'
The six interceptions in 2024 easily could've been seven, eight or nine, Graham said. Graham had confidence that Frazier could've done it the hard way, fighting his way up as an undrafted rookie, but all those interceptions led to increased interest from NFL teams.
Graham believes Harris might be the perfect position coach for Frazier.
'They're kind of similar,' he said. 'Big, strong guys that can run and don't mind getting physical. There's nobody better that he can learn from.'
Frazier visited with the Bears at Halas Hall during the predraft process. That's where he began to build his relationship with Harris.
From that day forward, the Bears were at the top of Frazier's wish list.
'Ever since I took my first top-30 visit here, it has been great,' he said. 'I told (Harris) when I was here, it felt like home here. It's great to be drafted by the team I wanted to be drafted by, so it's a blessing for me for sure.'
The biggest adjustment for Frazier as a rookie will be learning NFL concepts and grasping the playbook.
Graham believes Frazier won't be afraid to compete. That's what he had to do in order to see the field at UTSA. He worked his way up over the course of his time there. In a crowded Bears secondary, he'll have to do the same.
'He understands there are guys on that (Bears) roster like — they're playing,' Graham said. 'But the ones where it's a question, you've got to go. You've got to look better every day. You know what that takes: studying, taking care of your body, sleeping. He understands that stuff.'
If Frazier is going to earn playing time as a rookie, he'll have to beat out a more experienced cornerback ahead of him on the depth chart.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A year after camp knee injury, former starter Derion Kendrick fights for a role with the Rams
A year after camp knee injury, former starter Derion Kendrick fights for a role with the Rams

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A year after camp knee injury, former starter Derion Kendrick fights for a role with the Rams

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A year after Derion Kendrick tore his knee ligament in the first practice of training camp, the Los Angeles Rams' former starting cornerback is fighting to reclaim a prominent role on a defense that was forced to move on without him. Kendrick didn't grind through a year of rehab to give up now — not even after the Rams waived him last month and brought him back at a lower salary. He could have gone elsewhere, but Kendrick says he was determined to continue what he started in Los Angeles. 'I love the people here," Kendrick said Wednesday. "I've built so many relationships in this organization, and I've got so much love for it. And I know the playbook like the back of my hand, so I wouldn't want to be nowhere else, for real.' Although the former sixth-round pick started 18 games over his first two seasons, Kendrick knows he has to compete for a roster spot this summer, let alone his former job. Kendrick has been working mostly with the Rams' second-team defense in camp. Starters Darious Williams and Cobie Durant are back for LA, and veteran Ahkello Witherspoon still occupies the role he seized last season after Kendrick's injury. The Rams also have praised Emmanuel Forbes, the former Commanders first-round selection picked up on waivers late last season. 'Just being a competitor, I always want to be the first one going out there,' he said. 'But right now, I'm just stacking my days, getting better each day.' Kendrick has still made enough plays to earn praise from coach Sean McVay and his staff. 'He's handled himself really well,' McVay said. 'He's got great instincts and a great concept trigger. He's worked really hard. You see the amount of time and effort that goes into getting yourself back, and he's even stronger than before. He's really smart and understands what's going on big-picture. His teammates love him. He just loves the game, and I've been really pleased with the steps that he's taken.' Winning at every level Kendrick has been a prolific winner throughout an impressive football career slowed only by off-field setbacks. He won two state titles as a high school quarterback in South Carolina, and he famously won College Football Playoff championships at both Clemson and Georgia. In between, he was dismissed by the Tigers for disciplinary issues shortly before he was arrested in 2021 when police found him asleep in his car with a gun. Kendrick started six games as a Rams rookie, and he had an even larger role in 2023 before he was arrested in an early-morning traffic stop hours after a game. He spent nearly three days in custody and faced two misdemeanor gun charges. Kendrick's role and playing time shrank on a playoff-bound team. He returned to training camp eager for a fresh start, only to injure his knee immediately and miss out on the Rams' unlikely NFC West title and playoff run. 'I've never had an injury like this in my career, so having people around me that have been through it and let me know how I need to go about it, they helped me through this past year to keep my head down and keep working,' he said. Seizing the controller Mindful of his own past, Kendrick also changed his life off the field. 'I'm trying not to be outside as much,' he said with a grin. 'I game a lot now. (NBA) 2K, Call of Duty. So I try to stay in the house with gaming, and then if I'm not on the game with my kids, then I'm with my other immediate family. Pretty chill.' The Rams waived Kendrick before minicamp, only to re-sign him four days later at a lower salary than he would have made under the performance escalators in his original deal. Kendrick said the coaches already told him they wanted him back before the move, and he readily agreed. Kendrick said he finally felt 100% confident in his injury recovery a few weeks before training camp. Heading into a vital month of preseason play for his career, he still knows exactly where he wants to go. 'One of my goals is All-Pro, Pro Bowl, all those type of things, and then my goal other than the personal accolades is just to win the Super Bowl,' Kendrick said. 'Finish out my wins throughout my career. I won at the high school level. I won at the college level. Now it's time to finish it out at the professional level, win that Super Bowl — and then for myself, just going to get that gold jacket.' ___ AP NFL:

NFL vows resilience following shooting at the league office building that killed 4 people
NFL vows resilience following shooting at the league office building that killed 4 people

San Francisco Chronicle​

time26 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

NFL vows resilience following shooting at the league office building that killed 4 people

The NFL vowed to be resilient, two days after league headquarters was targeted by a gunman who killed four people on Monday. 'The NFL is deeply grateful for the global outpouring of support following the tragic act of violence at the New York city building that houses our league office among other organizations,' the league said in a statement Wednesday. 'We honor the four innocent lives lost, including NYPD Officer Didarul Islam, whose heroism will never be forgotten. Our thoughts are with the survivors as they begin the difficult journey of physical and emotional recovery. The NFL family is resilient and united, and together, we will find strength in one another as we heal.' The league held a virtual town hall Wednesday, giving employees an opportunity to connect and share resources. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell told employees on Tuesday they could work remotely at least through the end of next week because league offices would be closed. Investigators believe Shane Tamura, 27, of Las Vegas, was trying to get to the NFL offices after shooting several people in the building's lobby, then another in a 33rd-floor office on Monday, before he killed himself, authorities said. Police said Tamura had a history of mental illness, and a rambling note found on his body suggested that he had a grievance against the NFL over a claim that he suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a degenerative brain disease that can be diagnosed only by examining the brain after a person dies. Tamura played high school football in California a decade ago but never in the NFL. This is a big week for the NFL as the preseason schedule kicks off Thursday night with the annual Hall of Fame game. The Detroit Lions and Los Angeles Chargers face off in the exhibition opener. On Saturday, Eric Allen, Jared Allen, Antonio Gates and Sterling Sharpe will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. ___ ___

A year after camp knee injury, former starter Derion Kendrick fights for a role with the Rams
A year after camp knee injury, former starter Derion Kendrick fights for a role with the Rams

Washington Post

time27 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

A year after camp knee injury, former starter Derion Kendrick fights for a role with the Rams

LOS ANGELES — A year after Derion Kendrick tore his knee ligament in the first practice of training camp, the Los Angeles Rams' former starting cornerback is fighting to reclaim a prominent role on a defense that was forced to move on without him. Kendrick didn't grind through a year of rehab to give up now — not even after the Rams waived him last month and brought him back at a lower salary. He could have gone elsewhere, but Kendrick says he was determined to continue what he started in Los Angeles.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store