Okay, let’s rip the Band-Aid off. This Bears team got its brakes beaten off by the Lions. No sugarcoating it — that was a straight-up bully session from Detroit. Ben Johnson’s so-called revenge game? It looked more like a public shaming. The defense got shredded, the offense got embarrassed, and it was no bueno.
But — and this is a big BUT — that game doesn’t define the season. Bears fans deserve more than doom-scrolling after 0-2. There are real reasons to believe this season is far from lost. Here’s why hope is alive, even if things aren’t rock solid yet.
The Loss Was Brutal, But Context Matters
Week 2’s 52‑21 beatdown by Detroit hurt — it exposed holes, showed breakdowns in discipline, deficiencies in depth, and got Chicago’s defense looking shaky.
But let’s not pretend Detroit is an average opponent. The Lions were among the league’s most explosive units last year under the offense Ben Johnson helped build. Facing them early, having to defend every trick they know by heart … that’s a hard test for a team in transition.
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Even in the loss there were glimmers: Rome Odunze hauled in two touchdowns and 128 yards. Caleb Williams showed flashes — and honestly, he looked significantly better than he did in Week 1. The game may have spiraled, but his pocket presence, decision-making, and timing all looked sharper. He’s still raw, but the step forward was real in my eyes. Those don’t erase the problems, but they are real signs of upside.
The Odds: Steep, But Not Fatal
Let’s talk playoff odds. Since 1970, teams that start 0-2 make the playoffs just 10-12% of the time. That’s the raw data. But it doesn’t tell the whole story.
In the expanded 14-team playoff era? Three teams made the postseason after 0-2 starts just last year alone: the Ravens, Rams, and Broncos. And those weren’t fluky back-door clinches either — they found rhythm, rode talent, and fought through adversity. It can be done. It has been done.
Even more encouraging? Three teams have gone from 0-2 to Super Bowl champions — the ’93 Cowboys, ’01 Patriots, and ’07 Giants. All legendary teams. No one’s saying the Bears are about to turn into Brady’s Patriots, but let’s not act like they’re dead after two games.
Vegas hasn’t completely given up either. As of now, most sportsbooks still give the Bears roughly +500 to +600 odds to make the playoffs — not great, but not zero. In betting language, that’s a live underdog, not a lost cause.


What Supports Optimism
These are the things that suggest the Bears have a legitimate path forward — not baseless hope.
1. New Coaching Direction & Offensive System
Ben Johnson is more than just a new face. He comes with a track record — as Lions OC he helped build a top‐offense. But let’s zoom in on that.
People forget what Johnson inherited in Detroit. In 2022, the Lions started 1-6. That’s right. The same team that now looks like a well-oiled machine started the season in total disarray. But what did they do? They finished 8-2 down the stretch. Then in 2023, they looked like a legitimate Super Bowl contender.
That turnaround didn’t happen because they got lucky. It happened because Johnson implemented a system that works — one rooted in rhythm, play-action, motion, and spacing. It took time to click. But when it did? It exploded. That exact same framework is now being installed in Chicago.
His system is demanding, detailed, and likely to take time for everything to gel. Mistakes early don’t shock when you’re breaking in a young QB into this kind of offense. Fans often expect instant results; the more realistic expectation is incremental growth.
2. Roster Has Talent — It’s Just Not Clicking Yet
The Bears didn’t sit idle this offseason. They made additions, especially up front and in support of the offense. Better protection should mean fewer sacks, more clean pockets for Williams, more time for routes to develop.
And look — this roster is still good. It’s deep, it’s talented, and it’s built for modern football. Of course, in only-the-Bears fashion, these guys are underperforming out of the gate. But it’s still so, so early. We’re talking about two games of data. A 0-2 hole feels awful, but there are fifteen games left on the schedule. Like Caleb himself said postgame: “We still have 15 games to play.”
There are weapons: Rome Odunze shows big play ability. DJ Moore is still there. Tight ends, other pass catchers — the potential for variety in the offense exists. And unlike last season, the play-calling will actually scheme guys open.
3. Expectations Were Reasonable — And Still Reachable
Vegas and most analysts expected the Bears to be somewhere in that 8-9 win range heading into the season. Not 12 wins. Not a Super Bowl run. But right there in the middle of the pack with upside. That’s a real, tangible step forward from the disaster years. And here’s the kicker — that win total is still very attainable.
Plenty of teams have started 0-2 and clawed their way to 9 wins. It’s been done repeatedly in NFL history, especially in a league where half the teams look mediocre every year. This team wins nine games? That’s a damn solid season in my book for a first-year head coach, a sophomore quarterback, and a locker room still learning how to win together. Context matters. And this context says don’t hit the panic button yet.


What Needs Fixing — Why It Ain’t Over, But It’s Not Easy
Hope isn’t blind. There are clear areas that must improve for the turnaround to be real.
- Defense Depth & Discipline: The Lions exposed the secondary, penalties killed momentum, and the pass rush lacked consistency. If those things don’t get better, the Bears will lose shootouts.
- Self Inflected Plays: The Bears’ offense has been plagued by drive-killing penalties in the first two weeks: holding calls, false starts, you name it. These mistakes don’t just stall drives — they destroy momentum and set the offense back behind the sticks. That’s coaching, focus, and execution. Cleaning that up is non-negotiable moving forward.
- Mentality & Situational Execution: Third downs, red zone offense/defense, turnovers — tight moments. These make or break seasons. Johnson’s type of coaching tends to emphasize these, but habits take time to build.
The team has to stop beating itself before it can start beating others. That’s the real first step.
Pathways to a “Good Enough” Season
Here’s what a realistic, but meaningful, season could look like if things go right:
- Win a few toss‑ups early: Take advantage of some winnable games like Dallas or Las Vegas to build confidence. Because once belief kicks in, momentum matters.
- Show steady progress in offensive metrics: more yards per game, fewer sacks allowed, better third‑down conversion. Not perfect, but trends pointing upward.
- Let Williams grow: Not as a finished product, but someone visibly more comfortable and making fewer mistakes. Big throws aren’t enough; consistency is.
- Defense holds: Serve enough in non‑blowouts, keeps games within reach. Even if not elite, being “not get blown out every time” is progress.
- Finish around .500: 8‑9 or 9‑8 could put them in the playoff conversation — especially with NFC North being chaotic.
And let’s not forget: in-division chaos can benefit Chicago. If the Lions, Vikings, and Packers beat each other up, a 9-8 Bears team could sneak into a wild card without needing miracles.
Final Verdict
Look, I’m not going to tell you how to fan. I’ve been a die-hard for this team for 30+ years, so I’ve seen enough shitty football to piss me off. But there’s always a lot of context in the details — and it’s telling me that this season isn’t over yet.
Because this is different. New coach. Offensive system built for playmakers. A young star QB whose floor is low but whose ceiling is high. Roster upgrades that seem thoughtful. And perhaps most critically — the fanbase and media see this as a reset, not just another lost year.
Yes, the odds of starting 0‑2 and making the playoffs are historically grim. But lately, we’ve seen more teams pull it off than you’d expect. Hope isn’t just blind optimism — it’s reasoned.
So, will Chicago make playoffs? Maybe. It’s not likely yet. But will they be better, more competitive, less embarrassing, more enjoyable to watch? That’s very doable. And sometimes, that kind of year is what you need before you win.
And when that win finally comes? You’ll know you stuck through the ugly part to see it.












