https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/04/30/2015-draft-reaction-blog-day-1/ 7: Chicago Bears Kevin White, WR, West Virginia Brandon Marshall is gone but fear not Bears fans because Kevin White is in town. A beast of a receiver, his physicality and ability to win downfield scared many a college defensive back and promise to do the same in the NFL. Only Amari Cooper forced more missed tackles, and only Devin Smith had more deep touchdowns (7) than the talented wideout. A truly explosive player, the tandem of him and Alshon Jeffery is one that rightly has the Bears fans in attendance sitting very pretty. This fit makes all kinds of sense. https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/05/01/2015-draft-reaction-blog-round-2/ 39. Chicago Bears Eddie Goldman, ID, Florida State What He Brings: An ability to stand up and be counted at the line of scrimmage. Won’t let double teams hurt him like a Carl Davis would and is a guy who can truly eat up blocks. Still could do more in that regard with a rather paltry 16 defensive stops in the run game really unimpressive. Don’t expect much out of him as pass rusher, isn’t his game where 43 interior defenders had higher pass rusher games against the Power-5. Where He Fits: Right on the nose. Its possible the team might use Jay Ratliff there but Goldman is your prototypical space eater who should make life easier for those behind him. He’s no Jordan Phillips mind. https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/05/01/2015-draft-reaction-blog-round-3/ 71. Chicago Bears Hroniss Grasu, C, Oregon The Bears aren’t exactly stacked at center with Will Montgomery currently pencilled in to start so Grasu has a real chance to start. Referred to by some as a poor man’s Jason Kelce, Grasu is an extremely fluid athlete but is a little undersized and it shows with how much help he got at Oregon. Real zone blocking center who had the highest run blocking grade of Power-5 centers in a scheme that was a little friendly in this regard. https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/05/02/2015-draft-reaction-blog-day-3/ 106. Chicago Bears Jeremy Langford, RB, Michigan State Langford forced at least three missed tackles in six games while gaining an average of 3.1 yards after contact against Power 5 teams, ninth-most in this class. He graded negatively as a blocker and receiver. 142. Chicago Bears Adrian Amos, S, Penn State Amos held Power 5 QBs to a 19.2 passer rating on throws into his coverage (3.3 QB rating when covering the slot), the best mark in the class. 183. Chicago Bears Tayo Fabuluje, OT, TCU Fabuluje had the best Pass Blocking Efficiency (97.2) for eligible LTs from the Big-12.