Even offensive players admit the energy shift.
Quarterback Justin Fields (or replacement Jordan Love if 2025 timeline) joked during camp:
“It’s annoying how loud Baker is. You can’t audible without him yelling something back.”
That intensity pushes everyone.
Wideout DJ Moore said it best: “He talks trash the way Chicago likes — with results.”
XIV. What It Means for the Franchise
For Poles and Eberflus, Baker’s immediate success validates a broader vision — build the Bears through culture and competition, not free-agent fireworks.
Each offseason signing is a piece of that mosaic.
The right player in the right moment changes trajectory more than the biggest name does.
“He reminds me of what the 2005 Bears got when they added Ruben Brown,” said one longtime staffer. “A grown man in the room. Those are priceless.”
XV. How Younger Players Benefit
Rookies now orbit Baker like apprentices.
During stretching, he rotates lines, ensuring he connects with each position group.
During film, he asks young defenders to present scouting breakdowns so they practice communicating like veterans.
“You can’t teach that kind of mentorship,” said rookie safety Elijah Hicks. “He gives away everything he knows.”
That transfer of knowledge is accelerating Chicago’s rebuild in real time.
XVI. The City Responds
In a football town that worships toughness, Baker’s style feels like nostalgia reborn.
He plays the way fans remember the Monsters of the Midway — downhill, decisive, physical.
Local radio callers mention him daily. Jerseys are selling.
At Soldier Field, chants of “BAY-KER!” echoed after his first sack.
It’s rare for a newcomer to earn that kind of affection so quickly, but Chicago fans recognize authenticity when they see it.
XVII. The Chemistry With Coaches
Between Baker and Eberflus, there’s mutual respect bordering on mentorship reversed.
After one practice, the coach approached Baker and said, “You remind me why I still love teaching this game.”
Baker laughed. “You remind me why I still love playing it.”
That bond has translated into trust — Baker now has freedom to make live checks pre-snap without sideline confirmation.
It’s the kind of autonomy that defines veteran core players.
XVIII. The National Spotlight
When NBC’s Sunday Night Football broadcast crew prepped for Chicago’s Week 5 matchup, they built an entire segment titled “The Baker Effect.”
Analyst Cris Collinsworth noted:
“Watch how 55 moves people before the play even starts. That’s leadership you can’t fake.”
By halftime, the Bears’ defense had held their opponent to 93 total yards.
The league noticed.
XIX. The Broader Message to the League
Poles’ signing of Baker sends a subtle but powerful message: the Bears are done with patience without payoff.
They’re moving from “promising” to “proven.”
This roster now mixes youthful stars — DJ Moore, Darnell Wright, Kyler Gordon — with grown-man anchors like Baker who’ve survived the league’s grind.
It’s balance.
It’s maturity.
It’s what sustainable contenders look like.
XX. The Human Element
Football glory fades fast, but impact lasts longer.
After each home game, Baker walks to the stands, finds the section where his mother sits, and hands her his gloves.
“She’s my first coach,” he says. “If I play lazy, she’ll tell me before my position coach does.”
Those little stories remind teammates that football is still human — still rooted in love, not just contracts.
XXI. What Comes Next
Baker’s short-term deal includes incentives that could extend him through 2026.
If his production continues at this pace, the Bears would be foolish not to keep him.
But Baker doesn’t talk about extensions.
He talks about February.
“This team has something,” he said after a recent win. “We’re learning how to finish. And finishing changes everything.”
XXII. The Larger Arc of a Rebuild
Every franchise in transition needs one signing that proves momentum is real.
For the 2025 Bears, Baker is that signing.
He’s turned the defense’s noise into harmony.
He’s turned culture talk into visible results.
And maybe most importantly, he’s made belief tangible again.
When the season began, Chicago wanted progress.
Now, they want playoffs.
XXIII. Epilogue: The Measure of Value
In the NFL, success is usually measured in dollars, snaps, and wins.
But sometimes, value shows up in quieter ways — in the tone of meetings, the pace of practice, the conviction of huddles.
Baker’s presence touches all of it.
He’s not just producing numbers; he’s producing trust.
And in a city built on hard work and heart, that might be the most valuable stat of all.