By Eric Goska
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| Mooove over Bears, the Packers are in first place! (photos by Eric Goska) |
Packers fans, you can exhale now.
But don’t get complacent. That rampaging Bear your team just
encountered isn’t going into hibernation anytime soon.
Pushed to the limit by its longtime rival, Green Bay withstood
every blow to register a 28-21 win over Chicago Sunday at Lambeau Field. The
victory moved the Packers (9-3-1) into first place in the NFC North Division ahead
of the Bears (9-4).
For you doubters out there, know this: the Monsters of the
Midway are for real. Only an interception in the red zone with 22 seconds left ended
the threat they presented, a looming menace that seemed to gain strength with
every offensive snap.
Restricted to 19 plays in the first half, Chicago launched
40 after the break. Held to 71 yards in the opening two quarters, the Bears amassed
244 in the final 30 minutes.
Having punted four times in the first half, Chicago had no
need for Tory Taylor down the stretch except when he held for field goal and
extra point attempts. Limited to 13 minutes, 16 seconds of possession before
the break, the Bears took control for 20:13 in the second half.
Such an onslaught would test any defense.
“What a second half,” gushed play-by-play announcer Kevin Burkhardt after the Bears tied the score at 21. “It’s – I think this is the first time I can remember all year seeing the Packers’ D just gassed.”
Color analyst Tom Brady echoed that sentiment after Bears
running back Kyle Monangai picked up six to reach the Green Bay 17-yard line with
less than two minutes remaining.
“They’ve (the Bears) have really worn this team (the
Packers) down,” Brady asserted.
Monangai carried twice more for three yards to set up
fourth-and-one from the Green Bay 14. From there, Bears quarterback Caleb Williams
rolled to his left but underthrew an open Cole Kmet in the end zone.
Keisean Nixon intercepted to end the threat and salt away
the game.
If Green Bay’s defense was gassed in the second half, credit and/or blame the Bears. The visitors converted seven of nine third downs. Their four longest gains – passes of 27 (to Luther Burden), 26 (Kmet), 24 (Devin Duvernay) and 18 (Burden) – came after intermission.
The Bears took 5:36 off the clock in foraging for their
first touchdown, a 10-play, 64-yard advance capped by Williams’ 1-yard pass to Olamide
Zaccheaus. They used up 8:32 on a 17-play, 83-yard excursion that culminated in
a 1-yard TD toss to Colston Loveland.
Chicago spent more time on Green Bay’s side of the field in
the second half than it did its own. Twenty-eight of its 40 plays (70 percent) originated
beyond the 50, good for 150 yards, 10 first downs, two touchdowns and a field
goal.
Historically, the Bears rarely stake out such a wide-sweeping
territorial claim. Only three times before in the last 75 years of the rivalry have
they run 28 or more second-half plays beyond the 50, having last done so in
1983.
Those 28 plays represent a season high for Green Bay’s
defense. The Bengals (26 plays), Giants (25) and Commanders (23) also nicked
them for more than 20 in the second half.
Fortunately, the Green and Gold does not have to face
Cincinnati, New York or Washington again this season. They will, of course, tangle
with the Bears again, an animal intent on maximizing its playoff position while
exacting revenge.
Since 1950, the six regular-season games in which Chicago ran 25 or more second-half plays in Packers territory.
Plays Date Yards FDs TDs Result
29 Sept. 6, 1981 137 8 1 GB won, 16-9
29 Oct. 3, 1965 123 9 1 GB won, 23-14
28 Dec. 7, 2025 150 10 2 GB won, 28-21
28 Dec. 18, 1983 136 10 2 GB lost, 21-23
25 Nov. 18, 1951 117 8 2 GB lost, 13-24
25 Nov. 8, 1987 86 7 1 GB lost, 24-26



BW ...
ReplyDeleteWhat impressed me the most was the Bears neutralizing Parsons and Gary. This offensive line will only get better. Too bad Williams ended it with a bad throw. He will learn from this. For GB, Watson has returned but can he and Reed continue to stay healthy?