Let’s be honest. At 7:30 PM last night, we were all writing the same tweet.
You know the one. It starts with “Same Old Bears,” cycles through three or four unprintable expletives, and ends with a solemn vow to burn your jersey and move to a monastery where they’ve never heard of the forward pass.
We were down 21-3 at halftime. Jordan Love was carving us up like a Thanksgiving turkey. Caleb Williams looked like he was seeing ghosts. And Soldier Field started sounded less like a playoff atmosphere and more like a funeral for a relative nobody really liked. It was happening again. The script was written. The Packers were going to come into our house, smack us around, and remind us that they own the lease, the deed, and our dignity.
But then, something happened that defied fifteen years of trauma, logic, and physics.
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The Chicago Bears didn’t just wake up; they rose from the grave, grabbed a shovel, and buried the Green Bay Packers in the most improbable, heart-stopping, alcohol-poisoning-inducing 30 minutes of football I have ever witnessed. They erased an 18-point deficit, scored 25 points in the fourth quarter, and walked away with a 31-27 victory that didn’t just win a playoff game — it exorcised a generation of demons.
This wasn’t luck. This wasn’t a fluke. This was a seismic shift. So pour yourself a drink (or another one), sit down, and let’s break down exactly how the hell this happened.
The First Half: A Masterclass in Pain
If you want to understand the joy of the second half, you have to respect the absolute misery of the first.
The Packers came out looking like the ’85 Bears, and we looked like the ’08 Lions. Jordan Love, fresh off that helmet hit in Week 16, didn’t show a speck of rust. He looked surgical. He threw for 139 yards in the first half. He was finding Romeo Doubs and Christian Watson so wide open they could’ve stopped to check their fantasy scores before catching the ball.
Dennis Allen’s defense looked completely lost. We were getting out-schemed, out-flanked, and out-muscled. The pass rush was nonexistent, pressuring Love on a pathetic 18% of dropbacks. It felt like watching a car crash in slow motion where the driver is wearing a Cheesehead.
And the offense? Gross.
Caleb Williams, our savior, our “Generation Talent,” looked like a young qb who had swallowed a bug. He was completing 47% of his passes. He threw a pick that set up a Packers touchdown. He was hesitant, skittish, and holding onto the ball like it was a grenade with the pin pulled.
First Half Disasters:
- Offense: 3 measly points.
- Turnovers: 2.
- Yards Per Play: A staggering 5.3 (sarcasm font needed).
- Vibe: Apocalyptic.
When Williams threw that interception deep in our own territory to set up another Green Bay score, I was ready to turn off the TV. It wasn’t just that we were losing; it was how we were losing. We looked scared. We looked inferior. We looked like the Bears of the last decade.
The Halftime Shift: Belief Over Bullsh*t
What happened in that locker room at halftime needs to be studied by historians, psychologists, and maybe priests.
Head Coach Ben Johnson didn’t come in throwing chairs. He didn’t pull a Mike Ditka and scream until his mustache fell off. He went cerebral. He reminded the team of the Patriots’ 28-3 comeback against the Falcons — a game they had dissected in training camp.
“Rather than saying, ‘Oh, woe is me,’ or ‘Oh crap, we’re in a hole,’ it’s more, ‘This is a great opportunity to turn this around into a game we’ll never forget,'” Johnson told them.
Now, usually, I’d call that motivational poster garbage. But here’s the thing: They believed him.
This team has been the “Cardiac Kids” all year. They led the league with six fourth-quarter comebacks. They thrive in the chaos. Johnson didn’t just give a speech; he made tactical adjustments that flipped the game on its head.
The Tactical Pivot
Dennis Allen finally woke up and chose violence. He stopped playing passive zone and unleashed the hounds.
- The Blitz: We started sending Jaquan Brisker on designed pressures. We sent corners. We sent the house.
- The Slot: Kyler Gordon, finally back from that injury since Week 13, replaced Nick McCloud in the slot and brought a physical edge that had been missing.
- The Result: The pass rush pressure rate skyrocketed from 18% to 32%. Love went from surgical to panicked.
Here is the data visualization of the “Tale of Two Halves,” per the box score:
Pressure Rate vs. Jordan Love
First Half : ████░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ 18% (Pathetic)
Second Half: ████████░░░░░░░░░░░░ 32% (ELITE)
Bears Points Per Drive
First Half : █████░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ 2.05
Second Half: ████████░░░░░░░░░░░░ 2.88 (+40% Efficiency)
The Third Quarter: Planting the Seeds
The comeback didn’t happen all at once. It was a slow burn.
Cairo Santos nailed a 51-yarder to make it 21-6. Fine. Whatever. We’re still down two scores. But then the defense forced three straight three-and-outs. Suddenly, the Packers weren’t moving the ball at will. The crowd started to buzz.
Then came the moment that almost killed us again. Ty’Ron Hopper intercepted Caleb near the goal line. It felt like the dagger. But weirdly, it wasn’t. It was a wake-up call. Caleb didn’t sulk. He didn’t crumble. He locked in. He wouldn’t throw another pick for the rest of the night.
The Fourth Quarter: An Avalanche of Awesome
The final 15 minutes of this game were pure, uncut cocaine for Bears fans. We scored 25 points. Twenty-five. In one quarter. Against the Packers.
1. The Swift Strike
D’Andre Swift punched in a 5-yard run to cut it to 21-16. We had a pulse.
2. The Gut Punch
Of course, Green Bay answered immediately. Rookie Matthew Golden broke three tackles and leapfrogged a guy to score a 23-yard TD. 27-16.
But wait. Brandon McManus missed the extra point. Wide left. That missed point loomed over the stadium like a bad omen. It kept it an 11-point game — a two-score game, but a weird one.
3. The Catalyst: 4th-and-8
This is the play we’ll be talking about for 20 years.
Own 43-yard line. Season on the line. 4th-and-8. Ben Johnson leaves the offense on the field.
Caleb drops back. The pocket collapses. He rolls left — his “hero ball” side. He launches a prayer downfield to Rome Odunze.
And Odunze, the young WR who has been a revelation all year (when not injured), comes down with it. A 27-yard gain. The stadium exploded. It was the moment the “Same Old Bears” narrative died. Two plays later, Caleb hits Olamide Zaccheaus for a TD, then finds Colston Loveland (more on him later) for the two-point conversion.
27-24.
4. The Miss
The Packers drove down. They were going to ice it. McManus lines up for a 44-yard field goal.
Wide right.
Ball don’t lie.
5. The Dagger: The “Lake Shore Drive” Route
1:43 left. We’re trailing. We have the ball.
Caleb pump-fakes a screen to Luther Burden III. The entire Packers defense bites. They bit so hard they’re probably still chewing on the turf.
DJ Moore takes off down the left sideline. To quote the broadcast, he looked “like a lone runner on Lake Shore Drive during a marathon.” There wasn’t a Packer within ten yards of him. Caleb delivers a strike. Moore walks into the end zone.
31-27 Bears.
The Aftermath: Love Crumbles
We still had to stop them. Jordan Love had one last chance to be the hero. He drove them into Bears territory.
But on 3rd down, with no timeouts, the pressure got to him. He dropped the snap. He scrambled. He panicked. He heaved a desperation duck into the end zone.
Montez Sweat Kyler Gordon says NO.
Ball deflected. Game over. Bears win.
Why This Matters (Beyond Just Beating Green Bay)
This wasn’t just a win; it was a statement.
Caleb Arrived
Caleb Williams’ stat line in the second half is silly. Passer rating over 90. 361 total yards. He engineered his seventh game-winning drive of the season. He didn’t just play quarterback; he played winning football.
Colston Loveland is a Cheat Code
Can we talk about the rookie tight end? Eight catches, 137 yards. He is the first rookie TE in NFL history to drop a 100-yard game with 8+ catches in the playoffs. He was Caleb’s security blanket, his binky, and his best friend.
Coaching Mismatch
Matt LaFleur got out-coached. Period. His team dominated for 30 minutes and then fell apart when the pressure hit. Ben Johnson, meanwhile, looked like a grandmaster. He used the “Bulletin Board Material” from the Packers all week to fuel the team. He made the adjustments. He trusted his rookie QB on 4th down.
Final Verdict
The Bears are moving on to the Divisional Round. We’re hosting the Rams on Sunday. But honestly? I don’t care who we play right now.
We beat the Packers. We came back from 18 down. We ended a 15-year drought.
The rivalry has shifted. The power is in Chicago. And for the first time in a long, long time, the monsters of the midway aren’t just a history lesson — they’re real, they’re resilient, and they’re dangerous as hell.
Bear Down.