The 2025 season was the Chicago Bears' 106th in the National Football League (NFL), their fourth under the leadership of general manager Ryan Poles and their first under head coach Ben Johnson. This was their first season since 1982 without Virginia Halas McCaskey since she took over as team owner, as she died on February 6, 2025 at the age of 102.[1]
The Bears improved on their 5–12 record[2] from 2024 following a week 10 win against the New York Giants.[3] With a week 13 road win over the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles,[4][5] the Bears clinched their first winning season since 2018.[6] Their 11-4 start was also their best since doing the same in that season. After a Week 16 overtime win against their longtime rival, the Green Bay Packers, coupled with the Detroit Lions losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers[7] the following day, the Bears secured their first playoff berth since 2020[8] as well as ending their seven-year NFC North title drought[9] following the Packers' loss to the Baltimore Ravens in Week 17.[10]
The Bears began their playoff run with a comeback victory over the Packers in the Wild Card round, marking their first playoff win since the 2010 season. They would later lose to the Los Angeles Rams in the divisional round in overtime. During the season, Caleb Williams broke Erik Kramer's record for the most single-season passing yards as a Bear with 3,942; the previous record was 3,838, making him the first Bear to have a 3,900-passing yard season.
Offseason
Ownership changes
Virginia Halas McCaskey, who was the oldest of George Halas' children and the principal owner of the franchise since 1983, died on February 6, 2025 at the age of 102.[11][12]
Staff changes
On November 29, 2024, the Bears fired head coach Matt Eberflus after the team was 4–8 and in the midst of a six-game losing streak. It was the first time in franchise history the Bears fired their head coach in the middle of the season.[13] The Bears promoted offensive coordinator Thomas Brown[14][15] as interim head coach, and under Brown the team went 1–4 in their last five games to finish the year at 5–12. On January 21, 2025, the Bears hired Ben Johnson as their 18th head coach.[16] Johnson had previously been with the Miami Dolphins from 2012 to 2018, working up the ranks as offensive assistant, assistant quarterbacks coach, tight ends coach, assistant wide receivers coach and wide receivers coach.[17][18] He was then hired by the Detroit Lions in 2019 as an offensive quality control coach before moving up to tight ends coach and passing game coordinator in 2020 and 2021. He took over as offensive coordinator in 2022 under head coach Dan Campbell, and over the next three seasons, he helped make the Lions one of the best offenses in the league – they ranked in the top five in scoring in each of Johnson's three seasons, leading the league in 2024 with 564 points (fourth-most in NFL history and a franchise record).
On February 20, 2025, the Bears announced the full 2025 coaching staff.[19]
Roster changes
Free agents
| Position
|
Player
|
|
2025 team
|
Date signed
|
Contract
|
Source
|
| WR
|
Keenan Allen
|
UFA
|
Los Angeles Chargers
|
August 5
|
1 year, $8.5 million
|
[20]
|
| CB
|
Josh Blackwell
|
RFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
March 6
|
2 years, $5 million
|
[21]
|
| T
|
Larry Borom
|
UFA
|
Miami Dolphins
|
March 13
|
1 year, $2.5 million
|
[22]
|
| TE
|
Stephen Carlson
|
UFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
March 13
|
1 year, minimum
|
|
| WR
|
DeAndre Carter
|
UFA
|
Cleveland Browns
|
March 19
|
1 year, minimum
|
[23]
|
| S
|
Adrian Colbert
|
UFA
|
|
|
|
|
| S
|
Douglas Coleman III
|
ERFA
|
|
|
|
|
| DT
|
Byron Cowart
|
UFA
|
New York Jets
|
March 13
|
1 year, $1.36 million
|
[24]
|
| T
|
Jake Curhan
|
UFA
|
Arizona Cardinals
|
March 14
|
1 year, $1.17 million
|
[25]
|
| LS
|
Scott Daly
|
UFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
March 17
|
1 year, minimum
|
|
| RB
|
Darrynton Evans
|
UFA
|
Buffalo Bills
|
March 13
|
1 year, $1.21 million
|
[26]
|
| DL
|
Jonathan Ford
|
ERFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
April 8
|
1 year, minimum
|
[27]
|
| DE
|
Daniel Hardy
|
ERFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
April 8
|
1 year, minimum
|
[28]
|
| RB
|
Travis Homer
|
UFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
March 17
|
1 year, $2 million
|
[29]
|
| G
|
Teven Jenkins
|
UFA
|
Cleveland Browns
|
March 20
|
1 year, $3.05 million
|
[30]
|
| WR
|
Collin Johnson
|
UFA
|
Las Vegas Raiders
|
May 1
|
|
[31]
|
| CB
|
Jaylon Jones
|
RFA
|
Arizona Cardinals
|
March 21
|
1 year, $1.2 million
|
[32]
|
| C
|
Doug Kramer Jr.
|
RFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
March 18
|
1 year, minimum
|
[33]
|
| TE
|
Marcedes Lewis
|
UFA
|
Denver Broncos
|
October 29
|
Practice squad
|
|
| DE
|
Jacob Martin
|
UFA
|
Washington Commanders
|
March 13
|
1 year, $3 million
|
[34][35]
|
| S
|
Tarvarius Moore
|
UFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
March 10
|
1 year, $1.17 million
|
[36]
|
| G
|
Bill Murray
|
ERFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
April 8
|
1 year, minimum
|
[37]
|
| LB
|
Amen Ogbongbemiga
|
UFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
March 6
|
2 years, $5.25 million
|
[38]
|
| G
|
Matt Pryor
|
UFA
|
Philadelphia Eagles
|
March 27
|
$1.355 million
|
[39]
|
| LB
|
Jack Sanborn
|
RFA
|
Dallas Cowboys
|
March 12
|
1 year, $1.5 million
|
[40]
|
| LS
|
Patrick Scales
|
UFA
|
|
|
|
|
| C
|
Coleman Shelton
|
UFA
|
Los Angeles Rams
|
March 13
|
2 years, $12 million
|
[41]
|
| CB
|
Ameer Speed
|
ERFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
April 8
|
1 year, minimum
|
[42]
|
| DE
|
Darrell Taylor
|
UFA
|
Houston Texans
|
March 10
|
1 year, $5.25 million
|
[43]
|
| WR
|
Nsimba Webster
|
UFA
|
|
|
|
|
| DT
|
Chris Williams
|
RFA
|
Chicago Bears
|
April 8
|
1 year,$3.26 million
|
[44]
|
| RFA: Restricted free agent, UFA: Unrestricted free agent, ERFA: Exclusive rights free agent
Legend
- – Light green background indicates a player has been re-signed by the Bears.
- – Light red background indicates a player has departed the Bears.
|
Signings
| Position
|
Player
|
Previous team
|
Date signed
|
Contract
|
Source
|
| TE
|
Durham Smythe
|
Miami Dolphins
|
March 12
|
1 year, minimum
|
[45]
|
| DT
|
Grady Jarrett
|
Atlanta Falcons
|
March 12
|
3 years, $42.75 million
|
[45]
|
| C
|
Drew Dalman
|
Atlanta Falcons
|
March 13
|
3 years, $42 million
|
[46]
|
| DE
|
Dayo Odeyingbo
|
Indianapolis Colts
|
March 13
|
3 years, $48 million
|
[46]
|
| WR
|
Olamide Zaccheaus
|
Washington Commanders
|
March 17
|
1 year, minimum
|
[47]
|
| WR
|
Devin Duvernay
|
Jacksonville Jaguars
|
March 19
|
1 year, minimum
|
[29]
|
| CB
|
Nick McCloud
|
San Francisco 49ers
|
March 24
|
1 year, minimum
|
[48]
|
| CB
|
Shaun Wade
|
Los Angeles Chargers
|
April 3
|
1 year, minimum
|
[49]
|
| WR
|
Miles Boykin
|
Seattle Seahawks
|
April 3
|
1 year, minimum
|
[49]
|
| QB
|
Case Keenum
|
Houston Texans
|
April 4
|
1 year, $3 million
|
[50]
|
Trades
Reserve/future contracts
The Bears signed the following players to reserve/future contracts: Maurice Alexander (WR), Theo Benedet (OT), Alex Cook (FS), Chris Glaser (OG), John Jackson (WR), Carl Jones Jr. (LB), Jamree Kromah (DE), Joshua Miles (OT), Jordan Murray (TE), Austin Reed (QB), Ricky Stromberg (C), Samori Toure (WR) and Joel Wilson (TE).[52]
Releases
Draft
Draft trades
- ^ The Bears traded a 2023 first-round selection (1st overall) to the Carolina Panthers in exchange for a second-round selection (39th overall), 2023 first- and second-round selections (9th and 61st overall), a 2024 first-round selection (1st overall) and WR D. J. Moore.[54]
- ^ a b c d e f The Bears traded second- (41st overall), third- (72nd overall) and seventh- (240th overall) round selections in exchange for second- (56th and 62nd overall) and fourth- (109th overall) round selections.[55]
- ^ The Bears traded a sixth-round selection (185th overall) to the Seattle Seahawks in exchange for LB Darrell Taylor.[56]
- ^ a b The Bears traded a sixth-round selection (192nd overall) to the Cleveland Browns in exchange for a seventh-round selection (240th overall) and DT Chris Williams.[57]
- ^ The Bears traded a seventh-round selection (224th overall) and WR Chase Claypool to the Miami Dolphins in exchange for a sixth-round selection (192nd overall).[58]
- ^ The Bears traded a sixth-round selection (202nd overall) to the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for G Jonah Jackson.[59]
- ^ The Bears traded QB Justin Fields to the Pittsburgh Steelers in exchange for a conditional sixth-round selection (202nd overall). The condition – which would have given Chicago a fourth-round selection if Fields played in 51% of the Steelers' snaps in 2024 – was not met.[60]
- ^ The Bears traded RB Khalil Herbert to the Cincinnati Bengals in exchange for a seventh-round selection (233rd overall).[61]
Staff
2025 Chicago Bears staff
|
|
Front office
- Chairman – George McCaskey
- President/CEO – Kevin Warren
- General manager – Ryan Poles
- Assistant general manager – Ian Cunningham
- Vice president of football administration – Matt Feinstein
- Senior director of player personnel – Jeff King
- Director of player personnel – Trey Koziol
- Director of college scouting – Breck Ackley
- Assistant director of college scouting - Francis St. Paul
- Director of pro scouting – DJ Hord
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
|
|
|
Defensive coaches
- Defensive coordinator – Dennis Allen
- Defensive line – Jeremy Garrett
- Linebackers – Richard Smith
- Assistant linebackers – Kevin Koch
- Defensive backs/passing game coordinator – Al Harris
- Assistant defensive backs/safeties – Matt Giordano
- Senior defensive assistant – Bill Johnson
- Defensive assistant (nickels) – Cannon Matthews
- Defensive quality control – Kenny Norton III
Special teams coaches
|
Final roster
Preseason
Schedule
Game summaries
Week 1: vs Miami Dolphins
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- MIA – Alexander Mattison 1-yard run (Jason Sanders kick), 14:14. Dolphins 7-0. Drive: 9 plays, 45 yards, 2:48.
- CHI — Maurice Alexander 4-yard pass from Tyson Bagent (Cairo Santos kick), 4:43. Tied. 7-7. Drive: 20 plays, 94 yards, 9:33
- MIA — Jaylen Wright 7-yard run (Jason Sanders kick), 1:49 Dolphins 14-7. Drive: 9 plays, 58 yards, 2:53
- CHI — Cairo Santos 57-yard field goal, 0:01. Dolphins 14-10. Drive: 2 plays, 13 yards, 0:06
Third quarter
- CHI – Deion Hankins 4-yard pass from Case Keenum (Cairo Santos kick), 0:25. Bears 17-14. Drive: 6 plays, 3 yards, 2:27.
Fourth quarter
- MIA — Ollie Gordon II 1-yard run (Jason Sanders kick), 11:51. Dolphins 21-17 Drive: 10 plays, 49 yards, 3:31
- CHI — Jahdae Walker 14-yard pass from Case Keenum (Cairo Santos kick), 8:43. Bears 24-21 Drive: 11 plays, 40 yards, 3:10
- MIA — Jason Sanders 56-yard field goal, 6:27. Tied 24-24 Drive: 7 plays, 23 yards, 2:16
|
Top passers
- CHI – Tyson Bagent – 13/19, 103 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT
- MIA – Zach Wilson – 5/9, 96 yards
Top rushers
- MIA – Ollie Gordon II – 8 rushes, 33 yards, 1 TD
- CHI – Kyle Monangai – 6 rushes, 30 yards
Top receivers
- MIA – Tahj Washington – 3 receptions, 53 yards
- CHI – Jahdae Walker – 3 receptions, 41 yards, 1 TD
|
|
Week 2: vs Buffalo Bills
Preseason Week 2: Chicago Bears vs Buffalo Bills – Game summary
at Soldier Field
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- CHI – Brittain Brown 1-yard rush (Cairo Santos kick), 13:45. Bears 14–0. Drive: 12 plays, 86 yards, 5:50.
- CHI – Tyler Scott 11-yard pass from Tyson Bagent (Cairo Santos kick), 9:42. Bears 21–0. Drive: 5 plays, 61 yards, 2:24.
- CHI – Ian Wheeler 1-yard rush (Cairo Santos kick), 1:50. Bears 28–0. Drive: 12 plays, 84 yards, 5:37.
Third quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 40-yard field goal, 8:33. Bears 31–0. Drive: 6 plays, 25 yards, 2:01.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Ian Wheeler 10-yard rush (Cairo Santos kick), 9:35. Bears 38–0. Drive: 14 plays, 86 yards, 7:36.
|
Top passers
Top rushers
- CHI – Ian Wheeler – 19 rushes, 80 yards, 2 TD
- BUF – Frank Gore Jr. – 8 rushes, 51 yards
Top receivers
- CHI – Tyler Scott – 3 receptions, 54 yards, 1 TD
- BUF – Frank Gore Jr. – 4 receptions, 30 yards
|
|
Week 3: at Kansas City Chiefs
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- KC – Isiah Pacheco 2-yard run (Harrison Butker kick), 12:08. Chiefs 7–0. Drive: 8 plays, 69 yards, 2:52.
- KC — Harrison Butker 31-yard field goal, 7:03. Chiefs 10–0. 7 plays, 81 yards, 3:02.
Second quarter
- KC – Rashee Rice 4-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes, (Harrison Butker kick), 14:57. Chiefs 17–0. Drive: 6 plays, 81 yards, 2:29.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 28-yard field goal, 8:46. Chiefs 17–3. Drive: 12 plays, 61 yards, 6:11.
- KC – Harrison Butker 23-yard field goal, 2:45. Chiefs 20–3. Drive: 13 plays, 59 yards, 6:01.
- CHI – Rome Odunze 3-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 0:28. Chiefs 20–10. Drive: 7 plays, 78 yards, 2:17
Third quarter
- KC — Elijah Mitchell 2-yard run (Harrison Butker kick), 7:59. Chiefs 27–10. Drive: 4 plays, 63 yards, 1:23
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Royce Freeman 2-yard pass from Tyson Bagent (kick blocked), 12:59. Chiefs 27–16. Drive: 11 plays, 59 yards, 6:04.
- CHI – Joel Wilson (American football) 3-yard pass from Tyson Bagent, (pass failed), 4:58. Chiefs 27–22. Drive: 12 plays, 68 yards, 5:59.
- CHI — Jahdae Walker 7-yard pass from Tyson Bagent, (Cairo Santos kick), 0:00. Bears 29–27. Drive: 10 plays, 87 yards, 1:26.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Tyson Bagent – 20/28, 212 yards, 3 TD
- KC – Patrick Mahomes – 8/13, 143 yards, TD
Top rushers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 7 rushes, 28 yards
- KC – Isaiah Pacheco – 3 rushes, 21 yards, TD
Top receivers
- KC – Tyquan Thornton – 1 reception, 58 yards
- CHI – Rome Odunze – 3 receptions, 45 yards, TD
|
|
Regular season
Schedule
On May 12, the NFL announced that the Bears will host their longtime rival Green Bay Packers on Saturday, December 20 as part of a Week 16 double header that will air exclusively on Fox.[63] Later that day, the NFL announced that the Bears will travel to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Black Friday to face the Eagles in their Week 13 matchup.[64]
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Game summaries
Week 1: vs. Minnesota Vikings
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- MIN – Will Reichard 31-yard field goal, 12:48. Bears 7–3. Drive: 7 plays, 67 yards, 3:10.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 42-yard field goal, 0:24. 'Bears 10–3. Drive: 9 plays, 35 yards, 4:05.
- MIN – Will Reichard 59-yard field goal, 0:06. Bears 10–6. Drive: 2 plays, 28 yards, 0:18.
Third quarter
- CHI – Nahshon Wright 74-yard interception return (Cairo Santos kick), 12:51. Bears 17–6.
Fourth quarter
- MIN – Justin Jefferson 13-yard pass from J. J. McCarthy (pass failed), 12:13. Bears 17–12. Drive: 6 plays, 60 yards, 2:42.
- MIN – Aaron Jones Sr. 27-yard pass from J. J. McCarthy (J. J. McCarthy-Adam Thielen pass), 9:46. Vikings 20–17. Drive: 3 plays, 50 yards, 0:51.
- MIN – J. J. McCarthy 14-yard rush (Will Reichard kick), 2:53. Vikings 27–17. Drive: 9 plays, 68 yards, 4:31.
- CHI – Rome Odunze 1-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 2:02. Vikings 27–24. Drive: 5 plays, 65 yards, 0:51.
|
Top passers
- MIN – J. J. McCarthy – 13/20, 143 yards, 2 TD, INT
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 21/35, 211 yards, TD
Top rushers
- MIN – Jordan Mason – 15 rushes, 68 yards
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 6 rushes, 58 yards, TD
Top receivers
- MIN – Aaron Jones Sr. – 3 receptions, 44 yards, TD
- CHI – D. J. Moore – 3 receptions, 70 yards
|
|
In their season opener against the Vikings, the Bears led 17–6 through the first three quarters thanks to a Caleb Williams rushing touchdown and a pick-six by Nahshon Wright. However, they allowed 21 unanswered points in the 4th quarter, including touchdown passes to Justin Jefferson and Aaron Jones Sr., resulting in a 24–27 defeat. With the loss, the Bears started their season 0–1 and lost their sixth straight home game against the Vikings.
Week 2: at Detroit Lions
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- DET – Brock Wright 8-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 4:48. Lions 21–7. Drive: 8 plays, 67 yards, 4:57.
- CHI – Rome Odunze 6-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 1:55. Lions 21–14. Drive: 7 plays, 57 yards, 2:53.
- DET – Amon-Ra St. Brown 4-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 0:02. Lions 28–14. Drive: 8 plays, 76 yards, 1:53.
Third quarter
- DET – Jake Bates 34-yard field goal, 10:39. Lions 31–14. Drive: 5 plays, 60 yards, 3:03.
- DET – Jameson Williams 44-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 6:22. Lions 38–14. Drive: 3 plays, 46 yards, 1:19.
Fourth quarter
- DET – Amon-Ra St. Brown 8-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 14:56. Lions 45–14. Drive: 7 plays, 84 yards, 4:23.
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 3-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 11:45. Lions 45–21. Drive: 8 plays, 60 yards, 3:11.
- DET – Amon-Ra St. Brown 4-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 7:58. Lions 52–21. Drive: 6 plays, 43 yards, 3:47.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 19/30, 207 yards, 2 TD, INT
- DET – Jared Goff – 23/28, 334 yards, 5 TD
Top rushers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 12 rushes, 63 yards, TD
- DET – Jahmyr Gibbs – 12 rushes, 94 yards, TD
Top receivers
- CHI – Rome Odunze – 7 receptions, 128 yards, 2 TD
- DET – Amon-Ra St. Brown – 9 receptions, 115 yards, 3 TD
|
|
This was Ben Johnson's first visit to Detroit since he left the Lions. With the blowout loss, the Bears fell to 0–2 overall and against the NFC North.
Week 3: vs. Dallas Cowboys
Week 3: Dallas Cowboys at Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- DAL – Brandon Aubrey 33-yard field goal, 13:49. Bears 14–6. Drive: 10 plays, 50 yards, 5:21.
- DAL – George Pickens 2-yard pass from Dak Prescott (Dak Prescott–Jalen Tolbert pass), 7:57. Tied 14–14. Drive: 7 plays, 57 yards, 4:12.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 30-yard field goal, 4:15. Bears 17–14. Drive: 8 plays, 54 yards, 3:42.
- CHI – Cole Kmet 10-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 0:25. Bears 24–14. Drive: 7 plays, 71 yards, 2:00.
Third quarter
- CHI – D. J. Moore 4-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 0:09. Bears 31–14. Drive: 19 plays, 76 yards, 9:54.
Fourth quarter
|
Top passers
- DAL – Dak Prescott – 31/40, 251 yards, TD, 2 INT
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 19/28, 298 yards, 4 TD
Top rushers
Top receivers
- DAL – Jake Ferguson – 13 receptions, 82 yards
- CHI – Luther Burden III – 3 receptions, 101 yards, TD
|
|
This was their first win under head coach Ben Johnson. With the win, the Bears improved to 1–2 and 1–0 against the NFC East.
Week 4: at Las Vegas Raiders
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 43-yard field goal, 4:22. Raiders 7–6. Drive: 8 plays, -1 yard, 4:26.
- LV – Ashton Jeanty 64-yard run (Daniel Carlson kick), 4:03. Raiders 14–6. Drive: 1 play, 64 yards, 0:19.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 52-yard field goal, 0:53. Raiders 14–9. Drive: 9 plays, 37 yards, 3:10.
Third quarter
- CHI – Rome Odunze 27-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 11:38. Bears 16–14. Drive: 7 plays, 40 yards, 3:04.
- LV – Ashton Jeanty 9-yard pass from Geno Smith (Daniel Carlson kick), 5:23. Raiders 21–16. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 6:15.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 51-yard field goal, 11:38. Raiders 21–19. Drive: 8 plays, 16 yards, 4:29.
- LV – Daniel Carlson 29-yard field goal, 6:45. Raiders 24–19. Drive: 9 plays, 63 yards, 4:53.
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 2-yard run (pass failed), 1:34. Bears 25–24. Drive: 11 plays, 69 yards, 5:11.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 22/37, 212 yards, TD, INT
- LV – Geno Smith – 14/21, 117 yards, 2 TD, 3 INT
Top rushers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 14 rushes, 38 yards, TD
- LV – Ashton Jeanty – 21 rushes, 138 yards, TD
Top receivers
- CHI – Rome Odunze – 4 receptions, 69 yards, TD
- LV – Brock Bowers – 5 receptions, 46 yards
|
|
The Bears blocked an attempted game-winning field goal by the Raiders to secure their 800th win in franchise history.[65]
Week 6: at Washington Commanders
Week 6: Chicago Bears at Washington Commanders – Game summary
at Northwest Stadium, Landover, Maryland
- Date:
- Game time: 8:15 p.m. EDT/7:15 p.m. CDT
- Game weather: Cloudy, 59 °F (15 °C)
- Game attendance: 64,457
- Referee: Alex Moore
- TV announcers (ABC): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Lisa Salters and Laura Rutledge
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- CHI – Jake Moody 47-yard field goal, 10:41. Bears 3–0. Drive: 9 plays, 41 yards, 4:19.
- CHI – Jake Moody 48-yard field goal, 2:27. Bears 6–0. Drive: 8 plays, 36 yards, 3:39.
Second quarter
Third quarter
- WAS – Matt Gay 53-yard field goal, 11:59. Bears 13–10. Drive: 8 plays, 25 yards, 3:01.
- CHI – Jake Moody 41-yard field goal, 8:05. Bears 16–10. Drive: 8 plays, 62 yards, 3:54.
- WAS – Luke McCaffrey 33-yard pass from Jayden Daniels (Matt Gay kick), 2:56. Commanders 17–16. Drive: 9 plays, 84 yards, 5:09.
Fourth quarter
- WAS – Zach Ertz 6-yard pass from Jayden Daniels (Matt Gay kick), 11:27. Commanders 24–16. Drive: 6 plays, 63 yards, 3:28.
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 55-yard pass from Caleb Williams (pass failed), 10:26. Commanders 24–22. Drive: 3 plays, 61 yards, 1:01.
- CHI – Jake Moody 38-yard field goal, 0:00. Bears 25–24. Drive: 9 plays, 36 yards, 3:07.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 17/29, 252 yards, TD
- WAS – Jayden Daniels – 19/26, 211 yards, 3 TD, INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 2 receptions, 67 yards, TD
- WAS – Chris Moore – 3 receptions, 46 yards, TD
|
|
Running back D'Andre Swift rushed for 108 yards on 14 carries and added two receptions for 67 yards, including a 55-yard catch-and-run touchdown. Kicker Jake Moody, who was activated from the Bears' practice squad, converted four of five field goal attempts, including the game-winner, as the Bears avenged their last-second loss to the Commanders from the previous season.[66]
Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints
Week 7: New Orleans Saints at Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- CHI – Jake Moody 27-yard field goal, 9:34. Bears 3–0. Drive: 6 plays, 15 yards, 3:21.
Second quarter
- CHI – Jake Moody 39-yard field goal, 14:06. Bears 6–0. Drive: 9 plays, 35 yards, 3:49.
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 11-yard run (Jake Moody kick), 9:05. Bears 13–0. Drive: 4 plays, 30 yards, 2:01.
- CHI – Kyle Monangai 1-yard run (Jake Moody kick), 2:51. Bears 20–0. Drive: 8 plays, 55 yards, 4:35.
- NO – Chris Olave 21-yard pass from Spencer Rattler (Blake Grupe kick), 0:22. Bears 20–7. Drive: 5 plays, 91 yards, 0:46.
Third quarter
- NO – Chris Olave 14-yard pass from Spencer Rattler (Blake Grupe kick), 9:40. Bears 20–14. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 5:20.
- CHI – Jake Moody 24-yard field goal, 4:07. Bears 23–14. Drive: 8 plays, 66 yards, 5:33.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Jake Moody 33-yard field goal, 6:22. Bears 26–14. Drive: 8 plays, 51 yards, 4:18.
|
Top passers
- NO – Spencer Rattler – 20/32, 233 yards, 2 TD, 3 INT
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 15/26, 172 yards, INT
Top rushers
- NO – Alvin Kamara – 11 rushes, 28 yards
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 19 rushes, 124 yards, TD
Top receivers
- NO – Chris Olave – 5 receptions, 98 yards, 2 TD
- CHI – D. J. Moore – 3 receptions, 43 yards
|
|
The Bears snapped their eight-game losing streak against the Saints, beating them for the first time since the 2008 season. This also marked the Bears first four-game win streak since 2018.[67]
Week 8: at Baltimore Ravens
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 32-yard field goal, 6:50. Bears 6–0. Drive: 13 plays, 64 yards, 8:10.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 39-yard field goal, 0:03. Bearss 6–0. Drive: 11 plays, 61 yards, 4:31.
Second quarter
- BAL – Derrick Henry 2-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 8:15. Ravens 7–6. Drive: 12 plays, 62 yards, 6:48.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 42-yard field goal, 1:06. Ravens 10–6. Drive: 12 plays, 54 yards, 5:27.
Third quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 28-yard field goal, 10:05. Ravens 13–6. Drive: 8 plays, 56 yards, 4:55.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 32-yard field goal, 3:35. Ravens 16–6. Drive: 10 plays, 76 yards, 4:22.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 2-yard rush (Cairo Santos kick), 12:22. Ravens 16–13. Drive: 11 plays, 83 yards, 6:13.
- BAL – Charlie Kolar 10-yard pass from Tyler Huntley (Tyler Loop kick), 8:13. Ravens 23–13. Drive: 2 plays, 9 yards, 0:47.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 47-yard field goal, 5:06. Ravens 23–16. Drive: 10 plays, 48 yards, 3:07.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 2-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 2:09. Ravens 30–16. Drive: 9 plays, 66 yards, 2:57.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 25/38, 285 yards, INT
- BAL – Tyler Huntley – 17/22, 186 yards, TD
Top rushers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 11 rushes, 45 yards, TD
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 21 rushes, 71 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
|
|
With the loss, the Bears fell to 4–3 for the second year in a row.
Week 9: at Cincinnati Bengals
Week 9: Chicago Bears at Cincinnati Bengals – Game summary
at Paycor Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio
- Date: November 2
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
- Game weather: Cloudy, 50 °F (10 °C)
- Game attendance: 66,264
- Referee: Clete Blakeman
- TV announcers (CBS): Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta and Aditi Kinkhabwala
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- CHI – Olamide Zaccheaus 15-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 14:54. Bears 14–10. Drive: 11 plays, 74 yards, 5:47.
- CIN – Evan McPherson 33-yard field goal, 5:47. Bears 14–13. Drive: 11 plays, 70 yards, 4:20.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 24-yard field goal, 1:29. Bears 17–13. Drive: 11 plays, 59 yards, 4:18.
- CIN – Tee Higgins 44-yard pass from Joe Flacco (Evan McPherson kick), 1:12. Bengals 20–17. Drive: 2 plays, 63 yards, 0:17.
Third quarter
- CHI – Colston Loveland 5-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 8:11. Bears 24–20. Drive: 12 plays, 77 yards, 6:49.
- CIN – Tee Higgins 2-yard pass from Joe Flacco (Evan McPherson kick), 5:19. Bengals 27–24. Drive: 6 plays, 69 yards, 2:52.
- CHI – Brittain Brown 22-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 1:57. Bears 31–27. Drive: 6 plays, 74 yards, 3:22.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 36-yard field goal, 12:03. Bears 34–27. Drive: 5 plays, 20 yards, 2:51.
- CHI – D. J. Moore 17-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 4:53. Bears 41–27. Drive: 2 plays, 56 yards, 1:00.
- CIN – Noah Fant 23-yard pass from Joe Flacco (Joe Flacco–Tee Higgins pass), 1:43. Bears 41–35. Drive: 4 plays, 55 yards, 0:32.
- CIN – Andrei Iosivas 9-yard pass from Joe Flacco (Evan McPherson kick), 0:54. Bengals 42–41. Drive: 6 plays, 57 yards, 0:49.
- CHI – Colston Loveland 58-yard pass from Caleb Williams (pass failed), 0:17. Bears 47–42. Drive: 4 plays, 72 yards, 0:37.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 20/34, 280 yards, 3 TD
- CIN – Joe Flacco – 31/47, 470 yards, 4 TD, 2 INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
- CHI – Colston Loveland – 6 receptions, 118 yards, 2 TD
- CIN – Tee Higgins – 7 receptions, 121 yards, 2 TD
|
|
The Bears appeared to seal the game when D. J. Moore scored a 16-yard touchdown to make it 41–27 with 4:53 remaining. However, Bengals' quarterback Joe Flacco led the Bengals on a four-play touchdown drive that concluded with a 23-yard touchdown pass to tight ends Noah Fant with 1:43 left. Bengals' wide receiver Tee Higgins then caught a two-point conversion to trim the Bears' lead to 41–35. The Bengals successfully executed an onside kick that deflected off the leg of Daniel Hardy and was recovered by defensive end Joseph Ossai. With 49 seconds remaining, the Bengals took a one-point lead after Flacco threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Andrei Iosivas. On the ensuing drive, Caleb Williams connected with Colston Loveland for a 58-yard touchdown with 17 seconds left, giving Chicago a 47–42 victory and thwarting the Bengals’ comeback attempt. Williams and the Bears offense had one of their better offensive performances, accumulating 576 total yards of offense. With a comeback win, the Bears secure their fourth win over Cincinnati since 2013 and improve to their first 5–3 start since 2020.[68]
Williams became the first starting quarterback with more than one reception in a game since George Taliaferro of the 1953 Baltimore Colts.[69]
Week 10: vs. New York Giants
Week 10: New York Giants at Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- NYG – Jaxson Dart 3-yard run (Younghoe Koo kick), 13:06. Tied 7–7. Drive: 6 plays, 80 yards, 2:34.
- NYG – Younghoe Koo 32-yard field goal, 0:03. Giants 10–7. Drive: 8 plays, 53 yards, 1:05.
Third quarter
- NYG – Jaxson Dart 24-yard run (Younghoe Koo kick), 12:17. Giants 17–7. Drive: 6 plays, 56 yards, 2:43.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 22-yard field goal, 0:34. Giants 17–10. Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards, 4:31.
Fourth quarter
- NYG – Younghoe Koo 19-yard field goal, 10:19. Giants 20–10. Drive: 10 plays, 79 yards, 5:15.
- CHI – Rome Odunze 2-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 3:56. Giants 20–17. Drive: 9 plays, 91 yards, 2:17.
- CHI – Caleb Williams 17-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 1:47. Bears 24–20. Drive: 4 plays, 53 yards, 1:06.
|
Top passers
- NYG – Jaxson Dart – 19/29, 242 yards
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 20/36, 220 yards, TD
Top rushers
Top receivers
- NYG – Darius Slayton – 4 receptions, 89 yards
- CHI – Rome Odunze – 6 receptions, 86 yards, TD
|
|
Although the Giants held a 20–10 lead with 10:19 remaining, the Bears staged yet another comeback as Caleb Williams scored two touchdowns to secure the victory. With the win, the Bears improved to 6–3 for the first time since the 2018 season.[70]
Week 11: at Minnesota Vikings
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- MIN – Will Reichard 31-yard field goal, 2:10. Vikings 3–0. Drive: 8 plays, 47 yards, 4:13.
Second quarter
- CHI – Kyle Monangai 1-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 4:55. Bears 7–3. Drive: 15 plays, 74 yards, 8:25.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 38-yard field goal, 2:00. Bears 10–3. Drive: 4 plays, 5 yards, 1:34.
Third quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 54-yard field goal, 10:31. Bears 13–3. Drive: 9 plays, 33 yards, 4:29.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 33-yard field goal, 2:11. Bears 16–3. Drive: 10 plays, 65 yards, 5:07.
Fourth quarter
- MIN – Jordan Mason 16-yard run (Will Reichard kick), 12:33. Bears 16–10. Drive: 2 plays, 24 yards, 0:41.
- MIN – Jordan Addison 15-yard pass from J. J. McCarthy (Will Reichard kick), 0:50. Vikings 17–16. Drive: 10 plays, 85 yards, 2:24.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 48-yard field goal, 0:00. Bears 19–17. Drive: 4 plays, 9 yards, 0:50.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 16/32, 193 yards
- MIN – J. J. McCarthy – 16/32, 150 yards, TD, 2 INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
|
|
Although the Vikings overcame a 16–3 fourth-quarter deficit and took a one-point lead with 50 seconds remaining, a 56-yard kickoff return by Devin Duvernay set up Cairo Santos to convert a 48-yard game-winning field goal as time expired, completing another comeback victory for Chicago.
Week 12: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers
Week 12: Pittsburgh Steelers at Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
- Date: November 23
- Game time: 12:00 p.m. CST
- Game weather: Sunny, 51 °F (11 °C)
- Game attendance: 59,658
- Referee: John Hussey
- TV announcers (CBS): Ian Eagle, J. J. Watt and Evan Washburn
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- PIT – Nick Herbig 0-yard fumble recovery (Chris Boswell kick), 14:44. Steelers 14–7.
- CHI – Colston Loveland 12-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 3:56. Tied 14–14. Drive: 11 plays, 70 yards, 4:50.
- PIT – Jaylen Warren 1-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 1:19. Steelers 21–14. Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards, 2:37.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 47-yard field goal, 0:00. Steelers 21–17. Drive: 9 plays, 35 yards, 1:19.
Third quarter
- CHI – D. J. Moore 25-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 8:29. Bears 24–21. Drive: 5 plays, 60 yards, 2:47.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Kyle Monangai 2-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 14:14. Bears 31–21. Drive: 9 plays, 54 yards, 4:38.
- PIT – Pat Freiermuth 3-yard pass from Mason Rudolph (Chris Boswell kick), 6:27. Bears 31–28. Drive: 17 plays, 73 yards, 7:47.
|
Top passers
- PIT – Mason Rudolph – 24/31, 171 yards, TD, INT
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 19/35, 239 yards, 3 TD
Top rushers
- PIT – Kenneth Gainwell – 10 rushes, 92 yards
- CHI – Kyle Monangai – 12 rushes, 48 yards, TD
Top receivers
- PIT – Calvin Austin III – 4 receptions, 36 yards
- CHI – D. J. Moore – 5 receptions, 64 yards, 2 TD
|
|
Although the Bears’ former rival quarterback from the Packers, Aaron Rodgers, now plays for the Steelers, the Bears didn’t face him because he was sidelined with a broken left wrist.[71]
With their 4th home win against Pittsburgh since 2001, the Bears improved to 8–3 and 2–1 against the AFC North.
Week 13: at Philadelphia Eagles
Black Friday games
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- PHI – Jake Elliott 44-yard field goal, 13:04. Bears 7–3. Drive: 7 plays, 39 yards, 3:27.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 30-yard field goal, 6:44. Bears 10–3. Drive: 15 plays, 68 yards, 6:20.
Third quarter
- PHI – A. J. Brown 33-yard pass from Jalen Hurts (kick blocked), 8:05. Bears 10–9. Drive: 5 plays, 92 yards, 1:54.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Kyle Monangai 4-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 12:49. Bears 17–9. Drive: 12 plays, 87 yards, 6:44.
- CHI – Cole Kmet 28-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 6:19. Bears 24–9. Drive: 8 plays, 63 yards, 4:56.
- PHI – A. J. Brown 4-yard pass from Jalen Hurts (pass failed), 3:10. Bears 24–15. Drive: 12 plays, 80 yards, 3:09.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 17/36, 154 yards, TD, INT
- PHI – Jalen Hurts – 19/34, 230 yards, 2 TD, INT
Top rushers
- CHI – Kyle Monangai – 22 rushes, 130 yards, TD
- PHI – Saquon Barkley – 13 rushes, 56 yards
Top receivers
- CHI – Cole Kmet – 3 receptions, 36 yards, TD
- PHI – A. J. Brown – 10 receptions, 132 yards, 2 TD
|
|
Running backs D'Andre Swift and rookie Kyle Monangai rushed for a combined 255 yards and 2 touchdowns with Swift rushing for 125 and Monangai rushing for 130. It was the first time the Bears had two 100-yard rushers since Walter Payton and Matt Suhey in 1985. With their first win over Philadelphia since 2011, the Bears snapped a six-game losing streak against the Eagles and swept the NFC East. This also marked their first winning season since 2018.[72][73]
Week 14: at Green Bay Packers
Week 14: Chicago Bears at Green Bay Packers – Game summary
at Lambeau Field, Green Bay, Wisconsin
- Date: December 7
- Game time: 3:25 p.m. CST
- Game weather: Sunny, 16 °F (−9 °C)
- Game attendance: 78,214
- Referee: Craig Wrolstad
- TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Burkhardt, Tom Brady, Erin Andrews and Tom Rinaldi
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- GB – Christian Watson 23-yard pass from Jordan Love (Brandon McManus kick), 9:19. Packers 7–0. Drive: 11 plays, 80 yards, 5:50.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 33-yard field goal, 1:14. Packers 7–3. Drive: 14 plays, 59 yards, 8:05.
- GB – Bo Melton 45-yard pass from Jordan Love (Brandon McManus kick), 0:38. Packers 14–3. Drive: 4 plays, 60 yards, 0:36.
Third quarter
- CHI – Olamide Zaccheaus 1-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Kyle Monangai run), 8:20. Packers 14–11. Drive: 10 plays, 64 yards, 5:36.
- GB – Christian Watson 41-yard pass from Jordan Love (Brandon McManus kick), 6:10. Packers 21–11. Drive: 4 plays, 63 yards, 2:10.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 41-yard field goal, 3:15. Packers 21–14. Drive: 7 plays, 37 yards, 2:55.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Colston Loveland 1-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 8:00. Tied 21–21. Drive: 17 plays, 83 yards, 8:32.
- GB – Josh Jacobs 2-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 3:32. Packers 28–21. Drive: 8 plays, 65 yards, 4:28.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 19/35, 186 yards, 2 TD, INT
- GB – Jordan Love – 17/25, 234 yards, 3 TD, INT
Top rushers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 13 rushes, 63 yards
- GB – Josh Jacobs – 20 rushes, 86 yards, TD
Top receivers
- CHI – Luther Burden III – 4 receptions, 67 yards
- GB – Christian Watson – 4 receptions, 89 yards, 2 TD
|
|
In a game-deciding play, Packers cornerback Keisean Nixon intercepted Caleb Williams’ pass in the end zone with 22 seconds remaining, leading to a Packers victory.
Week 15: vs. Cleveland Browns
Week 15: Cleveland Browns at Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
- Date: December 14
- Game time: 12:00 p.m. CST
- Game weather: Sunny, 8 °F (−13 °C)
- Game attendance: 54,051
- Referee: Ron Torbert
- TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Kugler, Daryl Johnston and Allison Williams
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
Third quarter
- CLE – Andre Szmyt 50-yard field goal, 10:03. Bears 14–3. Drive: 6 plays, 16 yards, 2:10.
- CHI – D. J. Moore 22-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 8:39. Bears 21–3. Drive: 1 play, 22 yards, 0:07.
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 17-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 0:46. Bears 28–3. Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards, 5:01.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 41-yard field goal, 7:30. Bears 31–3. Drive: 4 plays, -1 yard, 1:25.
|
Top passers
- CLE – Shedeur Sanders – 18/35, 177 yards, 3 INT
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 17/28, 242 yards, 2 TD
Top rushers
- CLE – Shedeur Sanders – 2 rushes, 24 yards
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 18 rushes, 98 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
|
|
With the win, the Bears clinched their first double-digit win season since 2018.[74]
Week 16: vs. Green Bay Packers
Week 16: Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
- Date:
- Game time: 7:20 p.m. CST
- Game weather: Clear, 37 °F (3 °C)
- Game attendance: 60,152
- Referee: Alex Kemp
- TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Burkhardt, Tom Brady, Erin Andrews and Tom Rinaldi
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- GB – Brandon McManus 26-yard field goal, 12:45. Packers 3–0. Drive: 14 plays, 70 yards, 6:06.
- GB – Brandon McManus 22-yard field goal, 1:41. Packers 6–0. Drive: 16 plays, 91 yards, 7:53.
Third quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 46-yard field goal, 12:12. Packers 6–3. Drive: 6 plays, 38 yards, 2:48.
- GB – Romeo Doubs 33-yard pass from Malik Willis (Brandon McManus kick), 0:33. Packers 13–3. Drive: 6 plays, 64 yards, 3:42.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 51-yard field goal, 10:52. Packers 13–6. Drive: 10 plays, 47 yards, 4:41.
- GB – Brandon McManus 28-yard field goal, 5:03. Packers 16–6. Drive: 10 plays, 53 yards, 5:49.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 43-yard field goal, 1:59. Packers 16–9. Drive: 11 plays, 43 yards, 3:04.
- CHI – Jahdae Walker 6-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 0:24. Tied 16–16. Drive: 8 plays, 53 yards, 1:35.
Overtime
- CHI – D. J. Moore 46-yard pass from Caleb Williams, 4:50. Bears 22–16. Drive: 4 plays, 64 yards, 1:20.
|
Top passers
- GB – Malik Willis – 9/11, 121 yards, TD
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 19/34, 250 yards, 2 TD
Top rushers
Top receivers
- GB – Romeo Doubs – 5 receptions, 84 yards, TD
- CHI – D. J. Moore – 5 receptions, 97 yards, TD
|
|
The Packers lost quarterback Jordan Love to a concussion after he took a helmet-to-helmet hit from Chicago’s Austin Booker in the second quarter. In a defensive battle, Green Bay built a 16–6 lead when kicker Brandon McManus kicked a 28-yard field goal with about five minutes remaining. The Bears responded by marching down the field and kicking a field goal just as the two-minute warning arrived. Chicago then recovered an onside kick, setting up a dramatic finish. Facing 4th-and-4 at the Packers' 6-yard line, Caleb Williams beat an all-out blitz and lofted a pass to a wide-open Jahdae Walker in the right corner of the end zone to force overtime. In overtime, the Packers had 4th-and-1 at the Chicago 36, but backup quarterback Malik Willis fumbled the snap. On the ensuing Bears drive, Williams connected with D. J. Moore for a 46-yard touchdown, completing a comeback victory.
The Bears defeated the Packers at home for the first time since 2018.[75] With the Steelers defeating the Lions the following day, the Bears clinched their first playoff berth since the 2020 season.[76] Next Gen Stats reported the Bears' rally against the Packers was the fifth-most improbable comeback since 2016,[77] while Pro Football Focus graded Williams' game-winning touchdown throw as the highest-rated passing play of the season.[78]
Week 17: at San Francisco 49ers
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- CHI – T. J. Edwards 34-yard interception return (Cairo Santos kick), 14:45. Bears 7–0.
- SF – Jake Tonges 1-yard pass from Brock Purdy (Eddy Pineiro kick), 10:57. Tied 7–7. Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 3:48.
- SF – Brock Purdy 10-yard run (Eddy Pineiro kick), 4:52. 49ers 14–7. Drive: 3 plays, 66 yards, 1:21.
- CHI – Luther Burden III 35-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 2:58. Tied 14–14. Drive: 5 plays, 77 yards, 1:54.
Second quarter
- SF – Christian McCaffrey 5-yard run (Eddy Pineiro kick), 13:44. 49ers 21–14. Drive: 9 plays, 75 yards, 4:14.
- CHI – Colston Loveland 36-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 12:20. Tied 21–21. Drive: 3 plays, 65 yards, 1:24.
- SF – Brock Purdy 3-yard run (Eddy Pineiro kick), 3:23. 49ers 28–21. Drive: 15 plays, 72 yards, 8:57.
Third quarter
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 2-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 9:51. Tied 28–28. Drive: 10 plays, 65 yards, 5:09.
- SF – Kyle Juszczyk 6-yard pass from Brock Purdy (Eddy Pineiro kick), 4:52. 49ers 35–28. Drive: 8 plays, 65 yards, 4:59.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 22-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 14:54. Tied 35–35. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 4:58.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 29-yard field goal, 5:22. Bears 38–35. Drive: 11 plays, 78 yards, 6:01.
- SF – Jauan Jennings 38-yard pass from Brock Purdy (Eddy Pineiro kick), 2:15. 49ers 42–38. Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 3:07.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 25/42, 330 yards, 2 TD
- SF – Brock Purdy – 24/33, 303 yards, 3 TD, INT
Top rushers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 9 rushes, 54 yards, 2 TD
- SF – Christian McCaffrey – 23 rushes, 140 yards, TD
Top receivers
- CHI – Luther Burden III – 8 receptions, 138 yards, TD
- SF – Ricky Pearsall – 5 receptions, 85 yards
|
|
Following the Packers' loss to the Ravens from yesterday, the Bears clinched their first NFC North title since 2018.[79]
The Bears and 49ers engaged in a shootout, with the game decided on the final play when Caleb Williams’ last-ditch pass to Jahdae Walker fell incomplete in the end zone from San Francisco’s 2-yard line, sealing the 49ers’ victory. With the loss, the Bears dropped to 11–5 finished 5–4 on the road.
Week 18: vs. Detroit Lions
Week 18: Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
- Date: January 4
- Game time: 3:25 p.m. CST
- Game weather: Mostly cloudy, 33 °F (1 °C)
- Game attendance: 57,036
- Referee: Brad Rogers
- TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Burkhardt, Tom Brady, Erin Andrews and Tom Rinaldi
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- DET – Jake Bates 34-yard field goal, 8:35. Lions 3–0. Drive: 11 plays, 55 yards, 6:25.
Second quarter
- DET – Jake Bates 30-yard field goal, 11:28. Lions 6–0. Drive: 16 plays, 66 yards, 7:11.
- DET – Jahmyr Gibbs 15-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 4:40. Lions 13–0. Drive: 9 plays, 76 yards, 5:06.
Third quarter
- DET – Jake Bates 25-yard field goal, 2:11. Lions 16–0. Drive: 11 plays, 74 yards, 5:34.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Jahdae Walker 25-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Kyle Monangai run), 14:16. Lions 16–8. Drive: 7 plays, 65 yards, 2:55.
- CHI – Colston Loveland 1-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Caleb Williams–Cole Kmet pass), 5:25. Tied 16–16. Drive: 12 plays, 88 yards, 5:56.
- DET – Jake Bates 42-yard field goal, 0:00. Lions 19–16. Drive: 6 plays, 39 yards, 1:41.
|
Top passers
- DET – Jared Goff – 27/42, 331 yards, TD, INT
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 20/33, 212 yards, 2 TD, INT
Top rushers
- DET – Jahmyr Gibbs – 19 rushes, 80 yards
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 10 rushes, 40 yards
Top receivers
- DET – Amon-Ra St. Brown – 11 receptions, 139 yards
- CHI – Colston Loveland – 10 receptions, 91 yards, TD
|
|
Caleb Williams threw for 212 yards, giving him 3,942 on the season and surpassing Erik Kramer’s franchise record of 3,838 set in 1995. Chicago remains the only NFL team without a 4,000-yard passer. Kevin Byard recorded his league-leading seventh interception.[80]
Despite the loss, the Eagles loss to the Commanders allowed the Bears to remain the NFC’s second seed, setting up a Wild Card Round matchup against their division rival Green Bay Packers.[81]
Standings
Division
Conference
Postseason
Schedule
Game summaries
NFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (7) Green Bay Packers
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- GB – Jayden Reed 18-yard pass from Jordan Love (Brandon McManus kick), 6:46. Packers 14–3. Drive: 10 plays, 87 yards, 5:37.
- GB – Romeo Doubs 1-yard pass from Jordan Love (Brandon McManus kick), 1:56. Packers 21–3. Drive: 8 plays, 32 yards, 3:19.
Third quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 34-yard field goal, 10:07. Packers 21–6. Drive: 8 plays, 48 yards, 3:46.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 51-yard field goal, 13:29. Packers 21–9. Drive: 7 plays, 2 yards, 2:06.
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 5-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 10:08. Packers 21–16. Drive: 7 plays, 66 yards, 2:30.
- GB – Matthew Golden 23-yard pass from Jordan Love (kick failed), 6:36. Packers 27–16. Drive: 7 plays, 46 yards, 1:34.
- CHI – Olamide Zaccheaus 8-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Caleb Williams–Colston Loveland), 4:18. Packers 27–24. Drive: 10 plays, 76 yards, 2:18.
- CHI – D. J. Moore 25-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 1:43. Bears 31–27. Drive: 6 plays, 66 yards, 1:08.
|
Top passers
- GB – Jordan Love – 24/46, 323 yards, 4 TD
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 24/48, 361 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT
Top rushers
- GB – Josh Jacobs – 19 rushes, 55 yards
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 13 rushes, 54 yards, TD
Top receivers
- GB – Romeo Doubs – 8 receptions, 124 yards, TD
- CHI – Colston Loveland – 8 receptions, 137 yards
|
|
The Bears were down 21–3 coming out of halftime but produced another seemingly insurmountable comeback by scoring 25 points in the 4th quarter, coupled with several missed kicks from the Packers, to win 31–27.[82] This was their first playoff win since 2010 (first over Green Bay since 1941) and the Bears advanced to the Divisional Round via a wild card victory for the first time since 1994.
NFC Divisional Playoffs: vs. (5) Los Angeles Rams
NFC Divisional Playoffs: (5) Los Angeles Rams at (2) Chicago Bears – Game summary
at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- CHI – D. J. Moore 3-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 14:55. Tied 7–7. Drive: 12 plays, 80 yards, 6:25.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 48-yard field goal, 1:10. Bears 10–7. Drive: 5 plays, 33 yards, 1:44.
- LAR – Harrison Mevis 32-yard field goal, 0:00. Tied 10–10. Drive: 8 plays, 66 yards, 1:10.
Third quarter
Fourth quarter
- LAR – Kyren Williams 5-yard run (Harrison Mevis kick), 8:50. Rams 17–10. Drive: 14 plays, 91 yards, 6:02.
- CHI – Cole Kmet 14-yard pass from Caleb Williams (Cairo Santos kick), 0:18. Tied 17–17. Drive: 7 plays, 50 yards, 1:32.
Overtime
- LAR – Harrison Mevis 42-yard field goal, 3:19. Rams 20–17. Drive: 10 plays, 54 yards, 3:20.
|
Top passers
- LAR – Matthew Stafford – 20/42, 258 yards
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 23/42, 257 yards, 2 TD, 3 INT
Top rushers
- LAR – Kyren Williams – 21 rushes, 87 yards, 2 TD
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 19 rushes, 76 yards
Top receivers
|
|
With their playoff loss to the Rams, the Bears season ended with their first Divisional Round loss since 2001. It was also their first home loss to the Rams since 2003.
Notes
- ^ a b Chicago finished ahead of Philadelphia based on head-to-head victory.
- ^ a b c Carolina finished ahead of Tampa Bay and Atlanta based on head-to-head record (Carolina 3–1 to Tampa Bay 2–2 and Atlanta 1–3).
- ^ a b LA Rams finished ahead of San Francisco based on common games (LA Rams 9–3 to San Francisco 8–4 against: Arizona, Atlanta, Carolina, Houston, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, New Orleans, Seattle, Tampa Bay and Tennessee).
- ^ a b Minnesota finished ahead of Detroit based on head-to-head sweep.
- ^ a b Tampa Bay finished ahead of Atlanta based on common games (Tampa Bay 6–6 to Atlanta 5–7 against: Arizona, Buffalo, Carolina, LA Rams, Miami, New England, New Orleans, NY Jets, San Francisco and Seattle).
References
- ^ "Bears mourn passing of owner Virginia Halas McCaskey". www.chicagobears.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Chicago Bears 2024 Games and Schedule". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Bears 24-20 Giants (Nov 9, 2025) Final Score". ESPN. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Eagles 40-22 Chiefs (Feb 9, 2025) Final Score". ESPN. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Bears 24-15 Eagles (Nov 28, 2025) Final Score". ESPN. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "2018 Chicago Bears Rosters, Stats, Schedule, Team Draftees, Injury Reports". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Steelers 29-24 Lions (Dec 21, 2025) Final Score". ESPN. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Chicago Bears Playoff History". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Bears clinch first NFC North title since 2018 thanks to Packers' loss". NFL.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Ravens 41-24 Packers (Dec 27, 2025) Final Score". ESPN. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ Mayer, Larry (February 8, 2025). "Bears mourn passing of owner Virginia Halas McCaskey". ChicagoBears.com. Retrieved August 14, 2025.
- ^ Pierson, Don (February 6, 2025). "Virginia McCaskey, the principal owner of the Chicago Bears and George Halas' daughter, dies at 102". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on February 7, 2025. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- ^ "Bears relieve Eberflus of duties, elevate Brown". chicagobears.com. November 29, 2024. Retrieved November 29, 2024.
- ^ "Bears relieve Eberflus of duties, elevate Brown". www.chicagobears.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Brown excited to lead Bears over final five regular-season games". www.chicagobears.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Bears hire Ben Johnson as head coach". Chicago Bears. January 21, 2025. Retrieved January 21, 2025.
- ^ "Ben Johnson". www.chicagobears.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Ben Johnson | Pro Football History.com". pro-football-history.com. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ^ "Bears add to coaching staff". ChicagoBears.com.
- ^ "WR Keenan Allen returning to Chargers on one-year, $8.5 million contract". nfl.com. August 5, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears extend DB Josh Blackwell". chicagobears.com. Chicago Bears. March 6, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ "Dolphins Sign Borom". miamidolphins.com. Miami Dolphins. March 13, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ Russo, Kelsey. "Browns sign WR DeAndre Carter". clevelandbrowns.com. Retrieved April 1, 2025.
- ^ Greenberg, Ethan (March 13, 2025). "Jets Sign DT Byron Cowart". newyorkjets.com. New York Jets. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ Urban, Darren. "Cardinals Get More Guard Depth With Jake Curhan Signing". azcardinals.com. Retrieved April 4, 2025.
- ^ White, Alec (March 14, 2025). "Buffalo Bills Free Agency Tracker 2025". buffalobills.com. Buffalo Bills. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ "Bears announce roster moves". chicagobears.com. April 7, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ "Bears announce roster moves". chicagobears.com. April 7, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ a b "Bears sign former Ravens All-Pro return specialist Devin Duvernay, re-sign RB Travis Homer". sports.yahoo.com. Retrieved March 19, 2025.
- ^ "Browns sign G Teven Jenkins". ClevelandBrowns.com. March 20, 2025. Retrieved March 20, 2025.
- ^ "Raiders sign WR Collin Johnson". Raiders.com. May 1, 2025.
- ^ Gershman, Zach. "Cardinals Add Depth With Royce Newman, Jaylon Jones". AZCardinals.com. Retrieved March 22, 2025.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears re-sign OL Doug Kramer Jr". chicagobears.com. Retrieved March 19, 2025.
- ^ "Former Chicago Bears edge rusher signs $3 million deal with Commanders". Washington Commanders On SI. March 14, 2025. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ^ "Commanders sign DE Jacob Martin, T Foster Sarell, DE Deatrich Wise Jr". Commanders.com. March 18, 2025. Retrieved March 19, 2025.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears extend DB Tarvarius Moore". chicagobears.com. Chicago Bears. March 10, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ "Bears announce roster moves". chicagobears.com. April 7, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears extend LB Amen Ogbongbemiga". chicagobears.com. Chicago Bears. March 6, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ "Eagles, OL Matt Pryor agree to terms on one-year deal". www.philadelphiaeagles.com. Retrieved March 28, 2025.
- ^ Yarrish, Tommy (March 12, 2025). "Cowboys agree to terms with former Bears LB Jack Sanborn". DallasCowboys.com. Dallas Cowboys. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ Miller, Wyatt (March 13, 2025). "Rams sign OL Coleman Shelton to 2-year deal". therams.com. Los Angeles Rams. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ "Bears announce roster moves". chicagobears.com. April 7, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ "Houston Texans Transactions (3-14-2025)". HoustonTexans.com. March 14, 2025.
- ^ "Bears re-sign DL Chris Williams, four others". nbcsports.com. April 7, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ a b "Roster Moves: Bears sign DL Grady Jarrett, TE Durham Smythe". chicagobears.com. Chicago Bears. March 12, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ a b "Roster Moves: Bears sign OL Drew Dalman, DL Dayo Odeyingbo". chicagobears.com. Chicago Bears. March 13, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears sign WR Olamide Zaccheaus". chicagobears.com. Chicago Bears. March 17, 2025. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ^ Ong, Eli (March 24, 2025). "Bears sign DB Nick McCloud to 1-year contract". WGN-TV.
- ^ a b "Roster Moves: Bears add to roster". chicagobears.com. Retrieved April 4, 2025.
- ^ Barbieri, Alyssa. "Bears sign Case Keenum: NFL world reacts". Bears Wire. Retrieved April 4, 2025.
- ^ a b "Roster Moves: Bears acquire Joe Thuney, Jonah Jackson via trade". chicagobears.com. Chicago Bears. March 12, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears sign nine players to reserve/future contracts". ChicagoBears.com.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears release Gerald Everett, DeMarcus Walker". ChicagoBears.com.
- ^ McDaniel, Mike (March 10, 2023). "Bears Trade No. 1 Pick in 2023 NFL Draft to Panthers, per Reports". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
- ^ White, Alec (April 25, 2025). "2025 Bills NFL Draft Tracker". BuffaloBills.com.
- ^ Boyle, John (August 23, 2024). "Seahawks Trade Outside Linebacker Darrell Taylor To Bears". Seahawks.com. Retrieved August 23, 2024.
- ^ Mayer, Larry (August 24, 2024). "Roster Move: Bears acquire DT Chris Williams in trade with Browns". ChicagoBears.com.
- ^ Hajduk, Gabby (March 13, 2024). "Roster Move: Bears trade Chase Claypool to Dolphins". chicagobears.com. Retrieved October 6, 2023.
- ^ "Roster Moves: Bears acquire Joe Thuney, Jonah Jackson via trade". NFL.com. March 12, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ Mayer, Larry (March 16, 2024). "Roster Move: Bears agree to trade Justin Fields to Steelers". Chicago Bears. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
- ^ Hajduk, Gabby (November 5, 2024). "Roster Move: Bears trade Khalil Herbert to Bengals". ChicagoBears.com. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
- ^ Mayer, Larry (May 8, 2025). "Bears sign 10 undrafted free agents". ChicagoBears.com.
- ^ "2025 NFL schedule release: Eagles-Commanders, Packers-Bears headline Week 16 Saturday doubleheader on FOX". May 12, 2024.
- ^ "2025 NFL schedule release: Bears to face Eagles in Black Friday game on Prime Video". May 12, 2024.
- ^ Anderson, Mark (September 29, 2025). "Bears block last-minute field-goal attempt, score narrow 25-24 victory over Raiders". ABC7Chicago. Archived from the original on September 28, 2025. Retrieved October 14, 2025.
- ^ Fendrich, Howard (October 14, 2025). "No Hail Mary magic this time and Moody's last-play kick lifts the Bears past the Commanders 25-24". Associated Press. Archived from the original on October 14, 2025. Retrieved October 14, 2025.
- ^ Lieser, Jason (October 19, 2025). "Bears avoid embarrassment, get past lowly Saints 26-14, but there's plenty to fix". Chicago Sun Times. Archived from the original on October 21, 2025. Retrieved October 21, 2025.
- ^ "Bears outlast Bengals for wild 47-42 win on Williams' TD pass to Loveland in final minute". ESPN. Associated Press. November 2, 2025. Archived from the original on November 4, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
- ^ Reedy, Joe (November 2, 2025). "Caleb Williams has milestone game for a QB with 2 catches in Bears' thrilling win over Bengals". Associated Press. Archived from the original on November 4, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
- ^ "Caleb Williams stars as the Bears rally past the Giants for a 24-20 win". ESPN. Associated Press. November 9, 2025. Archived from the original on November 11, 2025. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
- ^ Finley, Patrick (November 23, 2025). "Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers won't face Bears". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved November 25, 2025.
- ^ "Chicago Bears vs. Philadelphia Eagles". The Football Database.
- ^ Hammond, Sean (November 28, 2025). "Week 13 recap: Chicago Bears get a Tush Push takeaway in 24-15 win in Philadelphia — their 9th in 10 games". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved December 14, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Lieser, Jason (December 14, 2025). "Bears blast Browns 31-3 to keep pace in playoff race as QB Caleb Williams throws for 242 yards, 2 touchdowns". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Seligman, Andrew (December 21, 2025). "Bears show again they're not the same old team with wild overtime win over Packers". The News-Gazette. Retrieved December 25, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Hammond, Sean (December 21, 2025). "Chicago Bears clinch their 1st playoff spot since 2020". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved December 25, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Shook, Nick (December 21, 2025). "Packers-Bears on Saturday of Week 16: What We Learned from Chicago's 22-16 OT win". NFL.com. Retrieved January 20, 2026.
- ^ McGuinness, Gordon (January 5, 2026). "The highest graded plays of the 2025 NFL regular season". Pro Football Focus. Retrieved January 20, 2026.
- ^ Biggs, Brad (December 27, 2025). "Column: Chicago Bears are closing in on a worst-to-first turnaround — and they want to capitalize on it". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 14, 2026.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ "Caleb sets Bears' passing record but falls short of 4K yards in loss to Lions". The Score. Associated Press. January 4, 2026. Retrieved January 24, 2026.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Spofford, Mike (January 4, 2026). "Rubber match: Packers to play at Chicago in NFC Wild Card playoff". Green Bay Packers. Retrieved January 24, 2026.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ writer, Frank SchwabSenior (January 11, 2026). "Packers vs. Bears: Caleb Williams leads another incredible comeback over rivals with 25-point fourth quarter in Chicago's 31–27 victory". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved January 19, 2026.
External links
|
|---|
|
| 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) |
|
|