The 1964 Chicago Bears season was their 45th regular season completed in the National Football League. The team finished with a 5–9 record, earning them a sixth-place finish in the NFL Western Conference. It was a downfall from winning their eighth league title the previous December.
Running back Willie Galimore and wide receiver John Farrington were killed in an automobile accident on July 27; Galimore's Volkswagen left the road on a curve and rolled, a few miles from the team's training camp at St. Joseph's College in Rensselaer, Indiana.[1][2][3]
Roster
Schedule
| Week
|
Date
|
Opponent
|
Result
|
Record
|
Venue
|
Attendance
|
| 1
|
September 13
|
at Green Bay Packers
|
L 12–23
|
0–1
|
City Stadium
|
42,327
|
| 2
|
September 20
|
at Minnesota Vikings
|
W 34–28
|
1–1
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
41,387
|
| 3
|
September 27
|
at Baltimore Colts
|
L 0–52
|
1–2
|
Memorial Stadium
|
56,537
|
| 4
|
October 4
|
at San Francisco 49ers
|
L 21–31
|
1–3
|
Kezar Stadium
|
33,132
|
| 5
|
October 11
|
Los Angeles Rams
|
W 38–17
|
2–3
|
Wrigley Field
|
47,358
|
| 6
|
October 18
|
Detroit Lions
|
L 0–10
|
2–4
|
Wrigley Field
|
47,567
|
| 7
|
October 25
|
at Washington Redskins
|
L 20–27
|
2–5
|
D.C. Stadium
|
49,219
|
| 8
|
November 1
|
Dallas Cowboys
|
L 10–24
|
2–6
|
Wrigley Field
|
47,527
|
| 9
|
November 8
|
Baltimore Colts
|
L 24–40
|
2–7
|
Wrigley Field
|
47,891
|
| 10
|
November 15
|
at Los Angeles Rams
|
W 34–24
|
3–7
|
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
|
61,115
|
| 11
|
November 22
|
San Francisco 49ers
|
W 23–21
|
4–7
|
Wrigley Field
|
46,772
|
| 12
|
November 26
|
at Detroit Lions
|
W 27–24
|
5–7
|
Tiger Stadium
|
52,231
|
| 13
|
December 5
|
Green Bay Packers
|
L 3–17
|
5–8
|
Wrigley Field
|
43,636
|
| 14
|
December 13
|
Minnesota Vikings
|
L 14–41
|
5–9
|
Wrigley Field
|
46,486
|
- Source[4]
Game summaries
Week 1 at Packers
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- CHI – Bob Jencks 8-yard field goal. Packers 7–3. Drive:
- GB – Tom Moore 33-yard pass from Bart Starr (Paul Hornung kick). Packers 14–3. Drive:
- GB – Paul Hornung 52-yard field goal. Packers 17–3. Drive:
Third quarter
- CHI – Bob Jencks 36-yard field goal. Packers 17–6. Drive:
- CHI – Mike Ditka 13-yard pass from Rudy Bukich (kick failed). Packers 17–12. Drive:
- GB – Paul Hornung 29-yard field goal. Packers 20–12. Drive:
Fourth quarter
- GB – Paul Hornung 20-yard field goal. Packers 23–12. Drive:
|
- Top passers
- Top rushers
- Top receivers
|
|
Week 12
| Team |
1 |
2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
| • Bears |
0 |
21 | 3 | 3 |
27 |
| Lions |
3 |
14 | 7 | 0 |
24 |
- Date: November 26
- Location: Tiger Stadium
- Game attendance: 52,231
- Game weather: 41 °F (5 °C); wind 13 mph
Scoring summary |
| Q1 | | DET | Walker 25 yard field goal | DET 3–0 |
|
| Q2 | | CHI | Arnett 1 yard pass from Bukich (Jencks kick) | CHI 7–3 |
|
| Q2 | | DET | Barr 13 yard pass from Plum (Walker kick) | DET 10–7 |
|
| Q2 | | CHI | Marconi 5 yard pass from Bukich (Jencks kick) | CHI 14–10 |
|
| Q2 | | CHI | Morris 16 yard pass from Bukich (Jencks kick) | CHI 21–10 |
|
| Q2 | | DET | Gibbons 5 yard pass from Plum (Walker kick) | CHI 21–17 |
|
| Q3 | | CHI | LeClerc 27 yard field goal | CHI 24–17 |
|
| Q3 | | DET | Watkins 1 yard run (Walker kick) | Tie 24–24 |
|
| Q4 | | CHI | LeClerc 17 yard field goal | CHI 27–24 |
[5]
Standings
- Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.
- ^ Green Bay was awarded the Playoff Bowl berth from the Western Conference
by outscoring Minnesota 65–37 in their two meetings.
References
|
|---|
|
| Franchise | |
|---|
| Records | |
|---|
| Stadiums | |
|---|
| Culture | |
|---|
| Lore | |
|---|
| Rivalries | |
|---|
| Retired numbers | |
|---|
| Key personnel | |
|---|
| Division championships (22) | |
|---|
| Conference championships (4) | |
|---|
| League championships (9) | |
|---|
| Media |
- Broadcasters
- Radio:
- Personnel:
- Television:
- WFLD (pre-season and most regular season games through Fox, official pre-game and post-game alternate)
- Marquee Sports Network (official post-game and in-season programming)
- Personnel:
- Lou Canellis (gameday television host, pre-season sideline reporter)
- Adam Amin (pre-season play-by-play)
- Jim Miller (pre-season analyst)
|
|---|
| Current league affiliations | |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Formerly the Decatur Staleys (1920) and the Chicago Staleys (1921) |
|
|