Just 1 Hour After Being Cut by Seahawks, the “Cornerstone” Who Led Rams to a Super Bowl Title Expresses Desire to Join Bears– Ready to Turn Down 9 NFL Teams for Championship Dream with Chicago
Chicago, Illinois – December 20, 2025
The NFL’s late-season free-agent market shifted abruptly Friday night when, just one hour after being released by the Seattle Seahawks, former Super Bowl champion Tyler Hall made his intentions unmistakably clear. Despite interest from nine teams across the league, Hall has set his sights on one destination: the Chicago Bears.
League sources say Hall’s phone lit up almost immediately after he hit free agency, with multiple clubs seeking experienced secondary depth for the playoff push. But within an hour, those conversations were paused — not because of leverage, but because of conviction. For Hall, this moment isn’t about chasing snaps or short-term guarantees. It’s about aligning with a team he believes can win when the margins shrink.

Hall, 27, was part of the Los Angeles Rams squad that captured Super Bowl LVI, contributing throughout the championship run as a reliable nickel corner and core special-teams presence. His résumé may not be filled with gaudy numbers, but coaches around the league value what he brings when games tighten: discipline, versatility, and calm under pressure.
His NFL journey has been anything but linear. Hall has worn multiple uniforms — Falcons, Raiders, Eagles, Rams, and most recently the Seahawks — and that path, those close to him say, shaped his understanding of what sustainable winning truly looks like. It’s also why his decision came together so quickly.
Hall views Chicago as a franchise on the rise, built on defensive accountability and a locker-room culture that demands toughness. With the Bears managing injuries in the secondary while pushing to solidify their postseason position, Hall believes his experience — particularly from a Super Bowl environment — can translate immediately.
One league insider put it simply: “This is a player choosing fit over options.”
Hall echoed that mindset in a brief statement shared with team contacts:
“I’ve been through enough locker rooms and enough adversity to know what winning at this level actually requires. Championships aren’t built on hype — they’re built on belief, accountability, and the right culture. When I look at Chicago, I see a team moving in that direction, and if I’m chasing another Lombardi, that’s where I’m willing to put everything on the line.”
From the Bears’ perspective, the potential addition is about more than depth. A proven Super Bowl contributor choosing Chicago over nine other suitors sends a quiet but meaningful signal about where the franchise stands — and where it believes it’s headed.
As the playoff race tightens, decisions like Hall’s often define seasons more than splashy signings. If finalized, this move could become one of the most telling late-season stories of 2025: a veteran champion choosing belief over convenience, and Chicago emerging as the place where that belief feels justified.
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