The Bears beat the Packers with a massive fourth-quarter comeback driven by Caleb Williams’ late-game heroics, clutch defense, and key Packers mistakes in the kicking game and ball security.

Game context

  • This was an NFC wild-card playoff game at Soldier Field, where the Bears rallied from an 18-point deficit to win 31–27.
  • Green Bay led 21–3 at halftime and 21–6 after three quarters before Chicago exploded for 25 fourth-quarter points.

How the comeback started

  • Early in the fourth quarter, D’Andre Swift’s 5-yard touchdown run pulled the Bears within 21–16 and shifted momentum to Chicago.
  • Caleb Williams kept drives alive with aggressive downfield throws, including a pivotal fourth-down completion that energized the Bears’ sideline and crowd.

Caleb Williams and the passing attack

  • Williams threw for 361 yards and two late touchdowns, including an 8-yard TD to Olamide Zaccheaus plus a two-point conversion to Colston Loveland to cut the deficit to 27–24.
  • With 1:43 left, he hit DJ Moore wide open down the sideline for a 25-yard go-ahead touchdown that gave Chicago its first lead since 3–0 in the first quarter.

Packers’ mistakes that opened the door

  • Packers kicker Brandon McManus missed a key extra point (wide left) after a Matthew Golden touchdown, keeping the score at 27–16 instead of 28–16.
  • Later, with a chance to extend the lead, McManus missed a 44-yard field goal wide right, giving the Bears the ball back for the eventual winning drive.

Defensive stand to seal it

  • On the final play, Jordan Love dropped the snap, scrambled, and heaved a desperation pass into the end zone, where Jaquan Brisker deflected it to end the game.
  • That breakup capped a fourth quarter where Chicago’s defense tightened up, pressuring Love and preventing Green Bay from answering Chicago’s late scoring surge.

TL;DR: The Bears beat the Packers by storming back from 18 points down behind Caleb Williams’ explosive fourth quarter, big plays to Moore and Loveland, a revived run game, and costly Packers kicking and execution errors in crunch time.

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