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2017 Chicago Bears season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
98th season in franchise history

2017 Chicago Bears season
OwnerThe McCaskey Family
General managerRyan Pace
Head coachJohn Fox
Home stadiumSoldier Field
Results
Record5–11
Division place4thNFC North
PlayoffsDid not qualify
Pro BowlersNone
Uniform

The2017 season was theChicago Bears' 98th in theNational Football League (NFL), as well as their third and final season underhead coachJohn Fox. The Bears improved upon the previous year's 3–13 record, finishing 5–11, but failed to make the playoffs for the seventh consecutive season and suffered their fourth consecutive losing season.

This was their first season since2008 withoutJay Cutler as their startingquarterback, ending an eight-year era. Instead, the Bears picked up formerTampa Bay Buccaneers' quarterbackMike Glennon in free agency and traded up to the number two overall pick in the draft forMitchell Trubisky. Glennon started the first four games of the season, but was benched for Trubisky after a 1–3 start. Despite entering the bye week with a 3–5 record, the Bears were eliminated from playoff contention following a week thirteen loss against theSan Francisco 49ers, and finished the season 5–11. In addition, no Bears players were selected to thePro Bowl. To add to these failures, it was the first season since1969 that the Bears failed to win a game against a divisional opponent.

On January 1, 2018, after failing to produce a winning season for a third consecutive season, Fox was fired following the Bears' 23–10 loss to theMinnesota Vikings the day prior.

Offseason

[edit]

Organizational changes

[edit]

On January 3, running backs coachStan Drayton departed the team to become the running backs coach for theTexas Longhorns.[1] The following day, the Bears fired offensive line coachDave Magazu and assistant defensive backs coachSam Garnes.[2] The Bears lost a fourth assistant coach on January 7, when outside linebackers coachClint Hurtt joined theNew York Jets.[3] To take their places, the Bears hiredSan Francisco 49ers offensive coordinatorCurtis Modkins,Miami Dolphins assistant offensive line coachJeremiah Washburn and 49ers safeties coachRoy Anderson, respectively.[4] In addition to his role as Bears defensive coordinator,Vic Fangio assumed Hurtt's role as outside linebackers coach[5] untilChattanooga Mocs defensive coordinatorBrandon Staley was hired on February 22.[6] Assistant offensive line coachKevin Mawae was not retained by the Bears.[7] On January 30, wide receivers coachCurtis Johnson announced he would be leaving the team.[8]Tennessee Volunteers receivers coach / passing game coordinatorZach Azzanni was hired to replace Johnson on February 22.[9] The Bears and 49ers also swapped special teams coaches when the latter's ST coordinatorDerius Swinton II, who served as an assistant for the Bears in 2015, returned to Chicago as the assistant ST coach;[10] meanwhile, Bears assistant ST coachRichard Hightower joined the 49ers as their new ST coordinator.[11]

Roster changes

[edit]
PositionPlayerFree agency
Tag
Date signed2017 team
OLBSam AchoUFAApril 15[12]Chicago Bears
LTMike AdamsUFA
CBJohnthan BanksUFAMarch 11[13]Chicago Bears
QBMatt BarkleyUFAMarch 10[14]San Francisco 49ers
KConnor BarthUFAMarch 10Chicago Bears[15]
LTNick BectonUFAJuly 31Detroit Lions[16]
QBBrian HoyerUFAMarch 9[17]San Francisco 49ers
WRAlshon JefferyUFAMarch 9[18]Philadelphia Eagles
GEric KushUFAFebruary 15[19]Chicago Bears
GTed LarsenUFAMarch 9[20]Miami Dolphins
RTMatt McCantsUFAMarch 27[21]Cleveland Browns
TELogan PaulsenUFAMarch 9[17]San Francisco 49ers
SSChris ProsinskiUFAMarch 20[22]Chicago Bears
WRDeonte ThompsonUFAMarch 23[23]Chicago Bears
DECornelius WashingtonUFAMarch 9[24]Detroit Lions
DEC. J. WilsonUFAMarch 20[22]Chicago Bears
WRMarquess WilsonUFAJune 20New York Jets
WRJosh BellamyRFAMarch 6[25]Chicago Bears
QBDavid FalesRFAApril 5[26]Miami Dolphins
SSDemontre HurstRFAApril 3[27]Tennessee Titans
OLBChristian JonesRFAMarch 11[28]Chicago Bears
QBConnor ShawRFAMarch 4[29]Chicago Bears
RBBralon AddisonERFA
TEDaniel BrownERFAMarch 6[25]Chicago Bears
CBBryce CallahanERFAMarch 6[25]Chicago Bears
ILBDanny MasonERFAJuly 29Denver Broncos[30]
LSPatrick ScalesERFAMarch 4[29]Chicago Bears
RFA:Restricted free agent,UFA:Unrestricted free agent,ERFA: Exclusive rights free agent

Acquisitions

[edit]

The first transactions of the year occurred shortly after the conclusion of the2016 regular season, on January 3, 2017, when the Bears signed to futures contracts cornerbacksDe'Vante Bausby,Jacoby Glenn andRashaad Reynolds, wide receiverDres Anderson, running backDavid Cobb, tackleWilliam Poehls, guardCyril Richardson and centerCornelius Edison. Bausby, Glenn and Edison all saw regular season action for the Bears in 2016, with Glenn also earning three starts throughout the season, while Anderson, Cobb, Poehls, Reynolds and Richardson spent the 2016 season on the team's practice squad.[31]

On January 6, the team signed to a futures contract defensive endKapron Lewis-Moore.[32] Lewis-Moore, a 2013 sixth-round pick by theBaltimore Ravens, was a practice squad player in Baltimore during the 2016 season after playing in five games (three tackles) in 2015.[33] Four days later, the Bears signed to a futures contract with wide receiverRueben Randle.[34] Randle, a former second-round pick by theNew York Giants in 2012, spent the 2016 season out of football after being released by thePhiladelphia Eagles at the end of the preseason.[35]

On March 10, the Bears signed quarterbackMike Glennon, wide receiverMarkus Wheaton, tight endDion Sims and safetyQuintin Demps. Glennon, who started 18 games for theTampa Bay Buccaneers between 2013 and 2014, signed a three-year, $43.5 million deal with the Bears and started the first four games of the season.[36] Wheaton, a former third-round pick by thePittsburgh Steelers in 2013, missed most of the 2016 season with a shoulder injury, after recording 44 receptions for 749 yards and five touchdowns in 2015.[37] Sims, an excellent blocker who started 11 games for theMiami Dolphins in 2016, signed a three-year, $18 million contract with the team.[38] Demps, a nine-year veteran who led theHouston Texans in interceptions in 2016, signed a three-year, $13.5 million contract with the Bears.[39]

On March 11, the team added cornerbacksPrince Amukamara andMarcus Cooper, offensive linemanTom Compton and wide receiverKendall Wright. Amukamara, a former first-round draft pick of the2011 Giants, who started twelve games for theJacksonville Jaguars in 2016, agreed to a one-year, $7 million contract, while Cooper, a 7th round pick by theSan Francisco 49ers in 2013 who led theArizona Cardinals in interceptions during the 2016 season, signed a three-year, $16 million contract with the team. Cooper played wide receiver at Rutgers.[40][41] Compton, a five-year veteran who played in all 16 regular season games for the 2016 NFC championAtlanta Falcons, was a 6th round pick by the Redskins in 2012. Wright, a former first-round pick by theTennessee Titans who played under Bears offensive coordinatorDowell Loggains and caught 280 passes for 2,244 yards and 18 touchdowns through his five seasons with the team, both agreed to one-year deals with the Bears.[42]

On March 17, the Bears signed defensive tackleJohn Jenkins, a 359-pound nose tackle who was a third-round pick by theNew Orleans Saints in 2013, when Bears general manager Ryan Pace was the Saints' Director of player personnel. Jenkins agreed to a one-year, $900.000 contract with the team.[43]Los Angeles Rams running backBenny Cunningham signed with the team on March 21; also a kick returner, he returned 22 kicks for an average of 27.2 yards, fourth-best in the NFL.[44] Three days later, the Bears signed veteran quarterbackMark Sanchez to a one-year contract.[45] On April 5, cornerbackB. W. Webb was signed on a one-year deal; Webb started eight games for theSaints in 2016 and recorded an interception.[46]

The first signing of May took place on May 1, signing interior offensive lineman and former BearTaylor Boggs; after spending 2013 and 2014 with the Bears, Boggs played for the Cardinals in 2016.[47] The next day, the Bears signed another offensive lineman inBradley Sowell, who played left and right tackle for theSeattle Seahawks in 2016.[48] On May 4,Kansas City Chiefs defensive endJaye Howard signed with the Bears on a one-year contract; starting four games in 2016 with the Chiefs, Howard had 122 tackles and 7.5 sacks over his five-year career.[49] Four days later, linebackerDan Skuta, a former player of Vic Fangio during their time with the 49ers, joined the Bears on a one-year deal.[50] On May 25, the Bears signed Giants'Victor Cruz to a one-year contract; Cruz caught 39 passes for 586 yards and a touchdown in 2016 after two seasons plagued with injuries.[51] On the final day of the month,Detroit Lions fullbackMichael Burton was claimed off waivers by the Bears; in 2015, Burton caught six passes for 39 yards and a touchdown, along with four rushing attempts for two yards, while he did not record a rush or a reception in 2016.[52]

Departures

[edit]

On January 9, linebackerJosh Shirley was waived.[53] Shirley, who was signed to the Bears' practice squad on December 14 and promoted to the active roster for the season finale, played only one defensive snap for the team in 2016.[53] On March 9, the team released longtime quarterbackJay Cutler; the 33-year-old quarterback held multiple franchise passing records, but played just five games in 2016 due to injury.[54] Later in the month, on March 31, the Bears waived defensive endEgo Ferguson, who last played during the2015 season and was since on injured reserve twice.[55] CornerbackTracy Porter was released on April 10; despite starting all sixteen games in 2016, he struggled with knee injuries throughout the year.[56] In early May, the Bears released six players: running backs David Cobb andBralon Addison, defensive backs De'Vante Bausby and Jacoby Glenn; wide receiver Dres Anderson and tight endJustin Perillo.[47] On May 11, receiverEddie Royal, defensive linemanWill Sutton, fullbackPaul Lasike and centerCornelius Edison were waived; Royal struggled with injuries during his tenure with the Bears; Sutton, a4–3 defensive tackle, did not fit Fangio's3–4 defense and was unable to record a sack as a Bear.[57]

On March 9, free agency began with the departure of receiverAlshon Jeffery for theEagles to end a five-year tenure in Chicago.[18] QuarterbacksBrian Hoyer andMatt Barkley, along with tight endLogan Paulsen, signed with theSan Francisco 49ers.[14][17] Three other linemen who left the Bears included defensive endCornelius Washington, who joined theLions,[24] guardTed Larsen, who signed with theMiami Dolphins,[20] and offensive tackleMatt McCants, who was signed by theCleveland Browns.[21] On April 3, cornerbackDemontre Hurst became aTitan.[27] Two days later, quarterbackDavid Fales also signed with the Dolphins.[26] On July 29 and 31, linebackerDanny Mason and offensive linemanNick Becton signed with theBroncos and Lions, respectively.[16][30]

2017 NFL draft

[edit]
Main article:2017 NFL draft

Pre-draft

[edit]

Entering the draft, the Bears saw needs at various positions, including quarterback, offensive tackle, wide receiver, and safety.[58][59][60] In the months leading up to April's draft, the team interacted with 84 players; 21 had private visits, 7 players visited during theNFL Scouting Combine, 55 met during theSenior Bowl and 2 during theEast–West Shrine Game, 4 had private workouts, while 2 had local visits. Of the 84, 6 had met with the team on multiple occasions.[61]

With the third-overall pick leading up to the draft, it was the highest selection by the Bears since the2005 NFL draft, in which the team draftedTexas Longhorns running backCedric Benson;[62] it was also the first No. 3 pick since1972, which was used onSouthern Illinois Salukis offensive tackleLionel Antoine.[63]

Draft

[edit]

The Bears traded the third-overall pick, a 2017 third-round pick (No. 67) overall, a 2017 fourth-round pick (No. 111) and a 2018 third-round pick to the 49ers in exchange for their second-overall pick. Moving up a spot in the draft order, the Bears used it onNorth Carolina quarterbackMitchell Trubisky;[64] although he only started for one full season, Trubisky threw for 30 touchdowns and just six interceptions in 2016, including completing 68 percent of his passes and an average of 8.4 yards per pass.[65] In the second round, the Bears traded the 36th-overall pick and a seventh-round selection (No. 211) to theCardinals in exchange for their 45th-overall pick, a fourth- (No. 119) and sixth-rounder (No. 197), and a fourth-rounder in 2018. With the new second-round pick, tight endAdam Shaheen of theAshland Eagles was selected; in 2016, Shaheen recorded 16 touchdown receptions, the most in a season by a tight end inNCAA Division II history.[66] After trading their third-rounder to the 49ers, the Bears did not have a pick in that round, instead waiting until the next round to use the 112th-overall pick onAlabama safetyEddie Jackson; over the course of his college career, Jackson had nine interceptions, 12 pass breakups and five touchdowns (three on interception returns), including restricting opposing quarterbacks to a combined 38.3 passer rating when throwing his way in 2016. Also a punt returner, he averaged 23 yards on punt returns, but broke his leg on a return during a game last October.[67] The second fourth-round pick, the 119th-overall from Arizona, was used to selectNorth Carolina A&T running backTarik Cohen. The 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m), 160 lb (73 kg) running back attracted Internet attention in 2015 when a video surfaced of him performing a backflip and catching two footballs at the same time.[68] With the Aggies, Cohen was namedMid-Eastern Athletic Conference Rookie of the Year during his freshman year and was the MEAC Offensive Player of the Year three times as he recorded 5,619 rushing yards during his tenure.[69] A second Division II player,Kutztown Golden Bears offensive linemanJordan Morgan, was drafted with Chicago's final pick (a fifth-rounder and the 147th-overall selection); the first Kutztown player to be drafted sinceAndre Reed in1985, Morgan started 43 of 44 games with the Golden Bears, winning the 2016Gene Upshaw Award and being named thePennsylvania State Athletic Conference Eastern Division Offensive Athlete of the Year, the first lineman to receive the honor.[70]

Reception to the Bears' draft varied. The decision to trade up for the second-overall pick was criticized by various analysts:CBSSports.com writer Pete Prisco called it a "strange move to give up so much to move up a spot",[71] whileFox Sports 1 punditsSkip Bayless andShannon Sharpe as "indefensibly idiotic" and as making "no sense", the latter also questioning the necessity of drafting a quarterback so early after signing Mike Glennon in free agency.[72] The Bears drafted three players from colleges not within theDivision I Football Bowl Subdivision, the first time the team's draft class featured three non-FBS players since2002, when the Bears draftedDelaware receiverJamin Elliott (FCS),Georgia Southern running backAdrian Peterson (FCS) andTuskegee cornerbackRoosevelt Williams (Division II).[73]

2017 Chicago Bears draft
RoundPickPlayerPositionCollegeNotes
12Mitchell Trubisky * QBNorth CarolinaFrom San Francisco
245Adam Shaheen TEAshlandFrom Arizona
4112Eddie Jackson * SAlabama
4119Tarik Cohen * RBNorth Carolina A&TFrom Arizona
5147Jordan Morgan GKutztown
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least onePro Bowl during career

Notes

  • The Bears acquired an additional fourth-round selection (No. 117 overall) as part of a trade that sent the team's2016 second-round selection to theBuffalo Bills.[74]
  • The Bears traded their sixth-round selection (No. 188 overall) to theHouston Texans in exchange fortight endKhari Lee.[75]
  • The Bears traded their third-overall pick, third-round pick, a fourth-round pick and a 2018 third-round pick to the 49ers for the second-overall pick.
  • The Bears traded their second- and seventh-round selections (36th and 221st) toArizona in exchange for Arizona's second-, fourth-, and sixth-round selections (45th, 119th, and 197th) as well as a fourth-round selection in2018.

Undrafted free agents

[edit]

After the draft, the Bears signed the followingundrafted free agents:

PositionPlayerCollege
RBJoel BouagnonNorthern Illinois
DLRashaad CowardOld Dominion
LBHendrick EkpeMinnesota
WRTanner GentryWyoming
TEFranko HouseBall State
LBIsaiah IrvingSan Jose State
OTDieugot JosephFlorida International
OLMitchell KirschJames Madison
KAndy PhillipsUtah
LBAlex ScearceCoastal Carolina
WRJhajuan SealesOklahoma State
FBFreddie StevensonFlorida State
WRKermit WhitfieldFlorida State
Source:[76]

Offseason activities

[edit]

The first day of offseason workouts was on April 18. Other events included offseason team activities (OTAs) on May 23–25 and 30–31, and June 1 and 5–8. A mandatory minicamp took place from June 13–15.[77] Two weeks after the draft, the Bears hosted their Rookie Minicamp from May 12–14.[78] In addition to the draft picks and 13 undrafted free agents signed prior, the Minicamp featured 38 rookies and nine veteran players trying out.[79] At the end of the camp, the Bears signed veteran tryout and formerNew York Jets receiverTitus Davis, who retired after the 2016 season before participating at the camp.[80] In conjunction with the signing, Kermit Whitfield was waived.[81] On May 30, the Bears waived quarterbackConnor Shaw, but following an injury to Mark Sanchez, rescinded the waiver and instead released Jhujuan Seales.[82] When Michael Burton was signed a day later, Franko House was released.[83]

Bears Training Camp was held atOlivet Nazarene University inBourbonnais from July 26 to August 14.[84] The team's annual Family Fest was held atSoldier Field on August 5,[85] while a practice was conducted atProspect High School on August 17.[86] On August 3, Joel Bouagnon was waived with an injury designation, withTulane Green Wave running backJoshua Rounds being signed in his place.[87] A day later, during a practice, guardEric Kush tore a hamstring from its bone, forcing the Bears to place him on the injured reserve list and rendering him out for the 2017 season.[88] To replace Kush, Chicago signed Alabama tight endBrandon Greene, who also played offensive lineman and was a run blocker for the Crimson Tide.[89] At Family Fest, Andy Phillips struggled and was released two days later, with his roster slot being filled by Tennessee Volunteers receiverAlton Howard.[90]

Preseason

[edit]

Transactions

[edit]
Preseason roster changes[91]
Additions
Departures
Reserve lists
  • On August 13, the Bears placed Rueben Randle on the injured reserve list.
  • On August 28, the Bears placed Patrick Scales on the injured reserve list.
  • On September 2, the Bears placed Connor Shaw,Ka'Deem Carey,Lamarr Houston,Cameron Meredith, Jordan Morgan, andChris Prosinski on the injured reserve list.
  • On September 4, the Bears placedDeiondre' Hall on the injured reserve list.
Practice squad additions
  • On September 4, the Bears added Jonathan Anderson, Rashaad Coward, Tanner Gentry, Brandon Greene, DeAndre Houston-Carson, Isaiah Irving, Dieugot Joseph,Cameron Lee, and John Timu to the practice squad.

Schedule

[edit]

The Bears' preseason schedule was announced on April 10. Like in 2016, the first game of the preseason was at home against the Broncos, who defeated the Bears 22–0 in last year's meeting. For the next two games, the Bears traveled to Arizona and Tennessee to take on the Cardinals and Titans before ending August in Soldier Field against a traditional preseason opponent in the Cleveland Browns; playing each other to close the preseason since2004, the Bears held a 7–6 lead in the series.[92]

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteNFL.com
GameBook
NFL.com
recap
1August 10Denver BroncosL 17–240–1Soldier FieldGameBookRecap
2August 19atArizona CardinalsW 24–231–1University of Phoenix StadiumGameBookRecap
3August 27atTennessee TitansW 19–72–1Nissan StadiumGameBookRecap
4August 31Cleveland BrownsL 0–252–2Soldier FieldGameBookRecap

Game summaries

[edit]

Against the Broncos, the Bears' preseason started on a rough note; on the third play of the game, Mike Glennon's pass forZach Miller was intercepted byChris Harris Jr. and returned 50 yards for a touchdown. On the resulting kickoff,Deonte Thompson muffed the return, but managed to recover and return it to the Bears' 28-yard line, thoughKa'Deem Carey was injured on the play. The Bears were later forced to punt on the drive.[93] Now on defense, Chicago started strong whenLeonard Floyd sackedTrevor Siemian on the first play of the series, but the defense committed four consecutive penalties and Denver was able to add three points to the score withBrandon McManus' 38-yard field goal. Another turnover for the Bears offense occurred whenCody Whitehair's snap missed Glennon and was recovered byJamal Carter of the Broncos. Both teams traded punts and Mark Sanchez eventually replaced Glennon at quarterback; Glennon struggled greatly, completing just two of eight passes for 20 yards with an interception and a 0.0 passer rating. Sanchez would play one series, completing a pass for four yards.[94] With 1:55 remaining in the first half, Mitchell Trubisky became the Bears' quarterback, where he led the offense by completing all four of his passes for 24 yards on a six-play, 50-yard drive, culminating in a two-yard touchdown pass to Victor Cruz. After the Broncos punted to start the second half, Trubisky guided the Bears on a 75-yard series, which ended with Benny Cunningham's one-yard touchdown run to take the 14–10 lead.[94] On Chicago's next possession, the offense traveled 45 yards before Connor Barth kicked a 25-yard field goal.[93] Despite the seven-point advantage, the Broncos scored 14 unanswered points onKyle Sloter's 47-yard touchdown pass toIsaiah McKenzie andDeAngelo Henderson's 41-yard run on third down-and-22 with less than two minutes in the game.[94] Down 24–17, Trubisky attempted to rally a late drive and reached the Broncos' 22-yard line, but his final pass to Thompson fell incomplete as time expired.[93] In total, Trubisky completed his first ten passes and ended the day with 18/25 passes completed for 166 yards with a touchdown and a 103.1 rating.[94]

AtUniversity of Phoenix Stadium, Chicago scored first on Barth's 42-yard field goal in the opening quarter.[95] A quarter later, the Bears had another opportunity to score again, but Glennon's pass for Kendall Wright was intercepted byTyrann Mathieu at the Cardinals' 11-yard line and was taken 52 yards to the Bears' 43.[96] During the resulting drive,J. J. Nelson was stripped by Quintin Demps and recovered by the Bears'Cre'Von LeBlanc, who returned the fumble 77 yards for the score, though it was overturned upon official review and Arizona retained possession of the ball. The Cardinals reached the Bears' one-yard line, but failed to score on first, second and third down beforeCarson Palmer threw a touchdown pass toJermaine Gresham on fourth down.[95] Glennon rebounded by throwing a seven-yard touchdown pass to Wright despite facing a heavy blitz. On the final play of the first half, Cardinals kickerPhil Dawson attempted a 63-yard field goal, which fell short and was caught by Deonte Thompson, who returned it 109 yards for the touchdown.[96] During Arizona's first drive of the second half,Blaine Gabbert scored on a four-yard touchdown run. Sanchez entered the game for the Bears on the next series, though he fumbled on a snap and the Bears eventually punted. Trubisky took over a drive later, where he led the Bears offense into field goal range, though Roberto Aguayo missed a 49-yard field goal.[95] In the fourth quarter, Chicago'sRoy Robertson-Harris recorded two consecutive sacks, while B. W. Webb intercepted a Gabbert pass by pulling the ball fromChris Hubert;[96] though the play initially resulted in a touchdown, it was overturned, though the Bears kept the ball. Trubisky eventually threw a six-yard touchdown pas to Cunningham to make the score 24–14, but the Cardinals scored on Dawson's 52-yard field goal and Gabbert's three-yard pass toJeremy Ross to draw them within one point. Arizona attempted a two-point conversion, but Gabbert's pass for Ross fell incomplete to seal the win.[95]

In Nashville, the Titans punted on the opening drive, withBrett Kern's punt landing at the Bears' four-yard line.[97] Glennon successfully engineered a 15-play, 96-yard drive as he completed seven of nine passes for 89 yards and culminating with a one-yard touchdown pass to Dion Sims.[98] On their next drive, the Titans were forced to punt again, with Kern once again forcing the Bears to start deep within their own territory with a 61-yard punt landing at the six. Unlike the first drive, Chicago was unable to score on the second and was forced to punt, though the offense entered Tennessee's side of the field. During Kern's third punt,[97] Robertson-Harris blocked it in the end zone and Adam Shaheen attempted to recover, but was ruled out of bounds, giving the Bears two points via safety. The Titans'Ryan Succop later tried a 40-yard field goal, but missed it to the right; the Bears' Barth responded by converting his 41-yard field goal to give his team a 12–0 lead at halftime.[98] Trubisky entered the game in the third quarter, though neither team scored during the quarter.[97] On the first play of the fourth quarter, Tennessee'sMarcus Mariota threw a three-yard touchdown pass toDerrick Henry to decrease the margin to five points, though the Bears retaliated as Trubisky launched a 45-yard pass to Tanner Gentry for the score.[98] Two series later, Titans quarterbackMatt Cassel was strip-sacked byLamarr Houston, with Chicago's John Jenkins recovering; Connor Shaw eventually took over the Bears' quarterback role, though his drive also ended with a fumble when Freddie Stevenson lost the ball after being tackles byJustin Staples, withDaren Bates recovering. With 1:46Alex Tanney guided the Titans offense into Chicago territory before failing to convert on fourth down. Shawkneeled once to end the game with a 19–7 win.[97] Despite the win, the Bears roster suffered a variety of injuries: Prince Amukamura had an ankle injury early in the game,[99] receiverCameron Meredith suffered a leftanterior cruciate ligament injury that required replacement and ruled him out until 2018,[100] long snapperPatrick Scales injured his right knee and was placed on the waived/injured list,[101] and linebackers Floyd and Dan Skuta had a foot injury and underwent concussion protocol, respectively.[99]

Trubisky was named the starter for the final preseason game against the Browns, the Bears hoping doing so would give the rookie game experience. He started the game by handing off on nine consecutive plays, with three straight drives ending with punts. By the end of the game, he attempted only four passes, completing two for ten yards. The game was scoreless until late in the first half, when Cleveland'sCody Kessler threw a 27-yard touchdown pass toRannell Hall. In the second half, the Browns scored 18 unanswered points:Zane Gonzalez kicked a 53-yard field goal,Calvin Pryor andKarter Schult sacked Shaw in the end zone for a safety, andKevin Hogan threw 51- and 21-yard touchdown passes toRandall Telfer andJordan Leslie, respectively.[102] Trubisky returned to the game in the fourth quarter on two occasions when Shaw was hurt, though he could not lead the Bears on a scoring drive and was sacked at the Browns' nine-yard line on the final play of the game.[103]

Regular season

[edit]

Transactions

[edit]
Regular season roster changes[91]
Additions
  • On September 12, the Bears promoted Jonathan Anderson and Tanner Gentry to the active roster.
  • On September 19, the Bears promoted DeAndre Houston-Carson to the active roster.
  • On September 23, the Bears promoted John Timu to the active roster.
  • On October 2, the Bears promoted Tre McBride to the active roster.
  • On October 9, the Bears promoted Isaiah Irving to the active roster.
  • On October 11, the Bears promoted Tanner Gentry to the active roster.
  • On October 26, the Bears acquiredDontrelle Inman in a trade with theLos Angeles Chargers.
  • On November 9, the Bears promoted Ben Braunecker to the active roster.
  • On November 11, the Bears promoted Jonathan Anderson to the active roster.
  • On November 20, the Bears signedCairo Santos.
  • On November 23, the Bears promotedHoward Jones to the active roster.
  • On November 29, the Bears signed Lamarr Houston.
  • On December 2, the Bears promoted Deiondre' Hall to the active roster.
  • On December 4, the Bears signedMike Nugent.
  • On December 5, the Bears promoted Howard Jones and Cameron Lee to the active roster.
  • On December 9, the Bears promoted Rashaad Coward to the active roster.
Departures
  • On September 19, the Bears released Tanner Gentry.
  • On September 23, the Bears released Tre McBride.
  • On October 11, the Bears released Deonte Thompson.
  • On October 26, the Bears released Jonathan Anderson.
  • On November 11, the Bears released Tanner Gentry.
  • On November 20, the Bears releasedConnor Barth.
  • On November 27, the Bears releasedMario Alford.
  • On November 28, the Bears released Tre McBride.
  • On November 30, the Bears released Howard Jones.
  • On December 9, the Bears released Jonathan Anderson.
Reserve lists
  • On September 12, the Bears placedKevin White andJerrell Freeman on the injured reserve list.
  • On September 29, the Bears placed Quintin Demps on the injured reserve list.
  • On October 10, the Bears placedWillie Young on the injured reserve list.
  • On November 9, the Bears placed Zach Miller on the injured reserve list.
  • On November 23, the Bears placed Leonard Floyd on the injured reserve list.
  • On December 2, the Bears placed Isaiah Irving on the injured reserve list.
  • On December 4, the Bears placed Cairo Santos on the injured reserve list.
  • On December 5, the Bears placedKyle Long andMitch Unrein on the injured reserve list.
Practice squad additions
  • On September 12, the Bears added Joshua Rounds and Mario Alford to the practice squad.
  • On September 19, the Bears addedMike Purcell to the practice squad.
  • On September 21, the Bears added Tanner Gentry to the practice squad.
  • On September 26, the Bears added Tre McBride andDoran Grant to the practice squad.
  • On October 2, the Bears addedJason Thompson to the practice squad.
  • On October 6, the Bears added Howard Jones to the practice squad.
  • On October 11, the Bears addedCarl Bradford andDarreus Rogers to the practice squad.
  • On October 16, the Bears addedNelson Spruce to the practice squad.
  • On November 7, the Bears addedColin Thompson to the practice squad.
  • On November 14, the Bears added Tanner Gentry andTravis Averill to the practice squad.
  • On December 2, the Bears added Howard Jones to the practice squad.
  • On December 5, the Bears added Colin Thompson andWill Pericak to the practice squad.
Practice squad departures
  • On September 19, the Bears removed Joshua Rounds from the practice squad.
  • On October 6, the Bears removed Mike Purcell from the practice squad.
  • On October 16, the Bears removed Jason Thompson from the practice squad.
  • On November 14, the Bears removed Darreus Rogers from the practice squad.
  • On December 2, the Bears removed Colin Thompson from the practice squad.

Schedule

[edit]
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteNFL.com
GameBook
NFL.com
recap
1September 10Atlanta FalconsL 17–230–1Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-09-16 at theWayback MachineRecap
2September 17atTampa Bay BuccaneersL 7–290–2Raymond James StadiumGameBookArchived 2017-10-04 at theWayback MachineRecap
3September 24Pittsburgh SteelersW 23–17(OT)1–2Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-10-04 at theWayback MachineRecap
4September 28atGreen Bay PackersL 14–351–3Lambeau FieldGameBookArchived 2017-10-03 at theWayback MachineRecap
5October 9Minnesota VikingsL 17–201–4Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-10-11 at theWayback MachineRecap
6October 15atBaltimore RavensW 27–24(OT)2–4M&T Bank StadiumGameBookArchived 2017-10-18 at theWayback MachineRecap
7October 22Carolina PanthersW 17–33–4Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-10-25 at theWayback MachineRecap
8October 29atNew Orleans SaintsL 12–203–5Mercedes-Benz SuperdomeGameBookArchived 2017-11-02 at theWayback MachineRecap
9Bye
10November 12Green Bay PackersL 16–233–6Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-11-16 at theWayback MachineRecap
11November 19Detroit LionsL 24–273–7Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-11-23 at theWayback MachineRecap
12November 26atPhiladelphia EaglesL 3–313–8Lincoln Financial FieldGameBookArchived 2017-11-30 at theWayback MachineRecap
13December 3San Francisco 49ersL 14–153–9Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-12-07 at theWayback MachineRecap
14December 10atCincinnati BengalsW 33–74–9Paul Brown StadiumGameBookArchived 2017-12-14 at theWayback MachineRecap
15December 16atDetroit LionsL 10–204–10Ford FieldGameBookArchived 2017-12-21 at theWayback MachineRecap
16December 24Cleveland BrownsW 20–35–10Soldier FieldGameBookArchived 2017-12-28 at theWayback MachineRecap
17December 31atMinnesota VikingsL 10–235–11U.S. Bank StadiumGameBookArchived 2018-01-04 at theWayback MachineRecap
Note: Intra-division opponents are inbold text.
Legend
 #  Games played with color uniforms.
 #  Games played with white uniforms.
 #  Games played with 1940s throwback uniforms.
 –  Light green background indicates a victory.
 –  Light red background indicates a loss.
Note: The Bears'Color Rush uniforms for the Week 4Thursday Night game at the Green Bay Packers consisted of navy blue pants with their standard navy jerseys.[104]

Game summaries

[edit]

Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons

[edit]
Week One: Atlanta Falcons at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Falcons3731023
Bears0100717

atSoldier Field,Chicago, Illinois

Game information

First quarter

  • ATL –Matt Bryant 48-yard field goal, 8:01.Falcons 3–0.Drive: 11 plays, 62 yards, 7:04.

Second quarter

  • CHI –Connor Barth 54-yard field goal, 15:00.Tied 3–3.Drive: 10 plays, 41 yards, 4:24.
  • ATL –Devonta Freeman 5-yard run (Matt Bryant kick), 4:34.Falcons 10–3.Drive: 11 plays, 83 yards, 6:59.
  • CHI –Jordan Howard 4-yard run (Connor Barth kick), 0:20.Tied 10–10.Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 4:15.

Third quarter

  • ATL – Matt Bryant 28-yard field goal, 2:15.Falcons 13–10.Drive: 13 plays, 76 yards, 6:29.

Fourth quarter

  • ATL –Austin Hooper 88-yard pass fromMatt Ryan (Matt Bryant kick), 12:10.Falcons 20–10.Drive: 3 plays, 95 yards, 0:59.
  • CHI –Tarik Cohen 19-yard pass fromMike Glennon (Connor Barth kick), 7:33.Falcons 20–17.Drive: 9 plays, 75 yards, 4:29.
  • ATL – Matt Bryant 37-yard field goal, 3:29.Falcons 23–17.Drive: 9 plays, 56 yards, 4:02.

Top passers

  • ATL – Matt Ryan – 21/30, 321 yards, TD
  • CHI – Mike Glennon – 26/40, 213 yards, TD

Top rushers

  • ATL – Devonta Freeman – 12 rushes, 37 yards, TD
  • CHI – Tarik Cohen – 5 rushes, 66 yards

Top receivers

  • ATL – Austin Hooper – 2 receptions, 128 yards, TD
  • CHI – Tarik Cohen – 8 receptions, 47 yards, TD

Top tacklers

The Bears played all of their home games atSoldier Field.

For the season opener, the Bears were considered an obvious underdog as they faced theAtlanta Falcons, who appeared inSuper Bowl LI a year earlier.[105] After 26 total meetings, the Bears led the series 14–12; entering the 2017 game, the Bears had a two-game winning streak against the Falcons, with the most recent game in2014 being a 27–13 victory.[106] The offense, which ranked 15th in 2016 (17th in rushing and 14th passing), took on a Falcons defense that was ranked 25th (17th in run and 28th in pass). During his tenure with the Buccaneers, Mike Glennon completed 71.6 percent of his passes for 683 yards with six touchdowns, no interceptions, and a 109.2 passer rating against the Falcons.[107] Although Glennon had strong stats against Atlanta,CBS Chicago writer and former Bears director of college scouting Greg Gabriel suggested the Bears should utilize its rushing attack due to a lack of options at receiver. Rookie running backs Tarik Cohen andTaquan Mizzell, both players with high agility, were recommended by Gabriel for use, as "gimmicks" are more effective at the start of the season due to a lack of preparation for them.[105] The Bears' 15th-ranked defense (27th in run and seventh in pass) faced a Falcons offense led by 2016 MVP quarterbackMatt Ryan and ranked second in offense (fifth in rushing and third in passing).[107] Gabriel wrote the Bears defensive line and linebackers were among the best in the league, and played against a Falcons offensive line that was considered one of the weakest parts of the team. On the other hand, Gabriel added the Bears secondary was an area of concern, meaning the DL and LB corps were to be relied on to apply pressure to Ryan.[105]

The Falcons'Matt Bryant kicked a 48-yard field goal on the opening drive. After the two teams exchanged punts, Connor Barth converted a 54-yard field goal at the start of the second quarter to tie the game.[108] AlthoughDevonta Freeman scored on a five-yard touchdown run, the Bears responded with a 75-yard drive featuring exclusively run plays. On the series, Cohen escaped two Falcons and shifted from the left side of the field to the right to record a 46-yard run. Cohen later took a direct snap from the center in theWildcat formation and handed the ball toJordan Howard, who received assistance on a block by Glennon to score a five-yard touchdown.[109] The first three drives of the second half ended with a punt before Bryant kicked a 28-yard field goal.[108] After another Chicago punt, the defense appeared to have forced a fourth down situation on Atlanta untilAkiem Hicks was penalized for roughing the passer. Ryan capitalized by throwing to an openAustin Hooper, whostiff-arm fended Quintin Demps to score an 88-yard touchdown.[109] Glennon threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to Cohen to decrease the gap to three points until Bryant kicked a 37-yard field goal. Down by six with 3:21 remaining in the game, Glennon drove the Bears downfield and reached the Falcons' five-yard line, but his first three passes toJosh Bellamy, Howard, and Miller fell incomplete. On fourth-and-five, Glennon was sacked byBrooks Reed for a turnover on downs. Ryan kneeled to seal the Bears' 23–17 defeat.[108]

The loss marked the fourth straight opening week loss for the Bears.

Week 2: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers

[edit]
Week Two: Chicago Bears at Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bears00077
Buccaneers10160329

atRaymond James Stadium,Tampa, Florida

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

  • No Scoring Plays

Fourth quarter

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

For the second week of the season, Mike Glennon returned toRaymond James Stadium to take on his former team, theTampa Bay Buccaneers. Although the Bears led the all-time series 38–19 and had won three of the last four games, the Buccaneers routed the Bears 36–10 in their latest meeting in 2016.[110] Chicago's 25th-ranked defense (tenth against the run and 27th against the pass) faced a Tampa offense spearheaded by quarterbackJameis Winston, who threw for 28 touchdowns and 18 interceptions for a passer rating of 86.1 passer rating in 2016.[111] Winston's catchers included receiversMike Evans andDeSean Jackson, along with tight endsCameron Brate andO. J. Howard; Brate, an Illinois native and Bears fan, had excelled against his favorite team, recording a 46-yard catch in 2015 and a career-high seven receptions for 84 yards and a touchdown in 2016.[112] Bears defensive coordinator Vic Fangio described the Bucs' tight ends as "good players. [Brate] has been a really good red-zone player for them. The quarterback is very comfortable throwing to him. He's got great route instincts and route-running ability and he's a very good catcher of the ball. Howard is a very good athlete with good size, a good blocker that can get down the field. They've got two really good weapons at tight end."[113]

The Buccaneers opened the game withNick Folk's 42-yard field goal.[114] On Chicago's first drive, Glennon completed his first six passes before his pass for Dion Sims was intercepted byKwon Alexander, and while the Bucs were forced to punt on the resulting series, Tarik Cohen attempted to field a bouncing punt as he was covered by two players, causing him to fumble. Tampa'sCameron Lynch recovered the loose ball, with Winston throwing a 13-yard touchdown pass to Evans on the next play.[115] During the Bears' next series, Glennon was sacked byNoah Spence and fumbled, with the Bucs'Lavonte David recovering.Jacquizz Rodgers eventually scored on a one-yard touchdown run. Glennon's woes continued when he was intercepted byRobert McClain, who returned the 47 yards for a touchdown. Although Folk missed the extra point, he kicked a 50-yard field goal to give the Buccaneers a 26–0 lead by halftime. The Bears punted on the first drive of the second half, but reclaimed the ball whenCharles Sims was stripped byPernell McPhee and Leonard Floyd recovered, though the Bears failed to capitalize on the takeaway as they were forced to punt. Folk kicked a 23-yard field goal in the fourth quarter to increase the lead by 29 points. Chicago's next two drives reached Tampa's red zone, but both ended with turnovers on downs.[114] With 1:43 left in the game, Glennon threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Deonte Thompson, though it was too late to make a comeback.[115]

Week 3: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

[edit]
Week Three: Pittsburgh Steelers at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234OTTotal
Steelers0773017
Bears71000623

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Overtime

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

In week three, Chicago hosted the 2–0Pittsburgh Steelers, who trailed the all-time series 18–7–1 and had not defeated the Bears since2005.[116]WBBM-TV writer Jeff Joniak described the Bears as in "clean-up mode" after a poor performance in Tampa. The battle between the Bears' rushing attack and the Steelers' run defense featured the former averaging just 2.9 yards per carry (27th in the league) taking on a defense that allowed just 74 yards per game and 3.3 yards per carry. Joniak added Chicago's running game should try to make progress on early downs to allow Mike Glennon to succeed against Pittsburgh. Defensively, Joniak wrote the Bears had "their hands full" as Steelers quarterbackBen Roethlisberger was aided by receiversAntonio Brown andMartavis Bryant, running backLe'Veon Bell, and tight endJesse James. In spite of Pittsburgh's success in contrast with Chicago's struggles, a common belief was that the Steelers would often "play down to their competition," one that was spurned in the wake of Glennon's 2014 Buccaneers upsetting the Steelers 27–24.[117]

The first two drives of the game ended with punts, but on the Bears' first punt of the game, Steelers returnerEli Rogers muffed the ball andSherrick McManis recovered. Jordan Howard would score a three-yard touchdown run on the drive. On the Steelers' next drive, Roethlisberger was sacked byBryce Callahan and fumbled, with Akiem Hicks recovering. The takeaway failed to result in points, however, as Connor Barth missed a 47-yard field goal. In the second quarter, Roethlisberger threw a seven-yard touchdown pass to Brown, which the Bears responded via Glennon's two-yard touchdown pass to Adam Shaheen.[118] On the final play of the first half,Chris Boswell's 35-yard field goal was blocked by McManis into Marcus Cooper's hands. Cooper raced down the field before suddenly slowing down before he reached the end zone, which allowed Pittsburgh'sVance McDonald to knock the ball away at the one-yard line. The ball was then batted out of the end zone, which led to a penalty against the Steelers and anuntimed play for the Bears. A false start penalty onCharles Leno prompted the Bears to instead kick a 24-yard field goal.[119] In the second half, the Bears suffered their first turnover of the game when Howard was stripped byRyan Shazier; the Steelers took advantage to score on Bell's one-yard touchdown run. A second giveaway occurred when Glennon's pass for Zach Miller was intercepted byJ. J. Wilcox, which enabled the Steelers to tie the game on Boswell's 32-yard field goal. The game remained scoreless through the rest of the half, resulting in overtime. After winning the coin toss to start overtime with the ball, the Bears quickly scored on the second play of the series;[118] Tarik Cohen broke through for a 73-yard touchdown run, but was ruled to have stepped out of bounds at the Steelers' 37-yard line.[119] Two plays later, Howard scored the game-winning touchdown on a 19-yard run.[118]

In claiming their first victory of the season, the Bears' running backs provided a solid performance, recording a combined 220 yards on the ground – 200 yards more than in week two. The defense also shone, forcing two turnovers after having just one in the first two games.[119]

Week 4: at Green Bay Packers

[edit]
Week Four: Chicago Bears at Green Bay Packers – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bears070714
Packers1477735

atLambeau Field,Green Bay, Wisconsin

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

Coming off their victory against Pittsburgh, the Bears traveled to Green Bay to take on therivalPackers. In 194 total games, the all-time series was tied 94–94–6, with the Packers having won all but three games since2010.[120] To challenge the Packers defense, Jeff Joniak wrote the Bears should utilize their running game; after the first three games of 2017, the Packers had allowed eight runs of at least ten yards, along with 5.7 rushing yards on first down. Jordan Howard and Tarik Cohen had eight and four runs of 10+ yards, respectively, with the former being the second-most in the NFL. A product of running the ball would be keeping Packers quarterbackAaron Rodgers off the field; Rodgers, who was 15–4 against the Bears, led the league in completions and passing first downs (49), along with second in passing yards. The Packers offense was ranked third in third down conversion percentage (48.8) and time of possession. However, the Packers offensive line was struggling with injuries, especially with five tackles hurt and three on injured reserve, which Joniak expected the Bears to capitalize on.[121]

Rodgers opened the scoring on the first drive of the game, throwing a five-yard touchdown pass toDavante Adams. On the Bears' first offensive play, Glennon was sacked byClay Matthews III and fumbled, with Green Bay'sJake Ryan recovering the ball. Another Packers score took place three plays later on Rodgers' two-yard throw toRandall Cobb. Chicago's woes continued whenCody Whitehair's snap bounced off Glennon and was recovered byBlake Martinez.[122] Unlike the previous drive, the Packers were unable to score off the takeaway and were forced to punt. The next four series of the game also ended with punts. On Chicago's next possession, Glennon's pass for Markus Wheaton was intercepted byHa Ha Clinton-Dix, which set up Rodgers' 58-yard pass toJordy Nelson andAaron Jones' two-yard touchdown run. With eight seconds left in the second quarter, Glennon threw a five-yard touchdown pass to Kendall Wright, completing a 72-yard drive that began with less than two minutes to go. On the Bears' first drive of the second half, Connor Barth missed a 47-yard field goal wide right, which led to Rodgers' four-yard touchdown pass to Nelson.[123] On the drive, Danny Trevathan tackled Adams, but collided with his head in a helmet-to-helmet hit, causing the receiver to be sent off the field in a stretcher. A series later, Glennon had his fourth turnover of the game when his pass was intercepted byKentrell Brice, which led to an eight-yard touchdown pass to Nelson. With 6:01 left in the game, Howard scored on a three-yard run to make the final score 35–14.[122]

With the loss, the Bears trailed the all-time series for the first time since1933. Although the Bears had built a strong lead for much of the rivalry, Packers quarterbacksBrett Favre and Rodgers had beaten the Bears 35 of 45 times; Rodgers had won 16 of 20 meetings.[124] Trevathan apologized for the hit on Adams, explaining he was attempting to make a play. He was later suspended two games,[125] though it was reduced to one game following an appeal.[126] Trevathan's suspension resulted in glaringly worse depth for the linebackers, which had already lostNick Kwiatkoski to a pectoral injury.John Timu, who had been on the practice squad at the start of the season, became the new leading inside linebacker in place Trevathan.[127] The Monday after the game, Glennon was benched in favor of Mitchell Trubisky; Glennon's eight turnovers across the first four games of the season led the league.[128]

Week 5: vs. Minnesota Vikings

[edit]
Week Five: Minnesota Vikings at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Vikings0314320
Bears207817

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
  • MIN –Kai Forbath 26-yard field goal, 1:02.Vikings 3–2.Drive: 4 plays, 5 yards, 1:26.
Third quarter
Fourth quarter
  • CHI –Zach Miller 20-yard pass fromMitchell Trubisky (Mitchell Trubisky run), 12:24.Tied 17–17.Drive: 11 plays, 79 yards, 6:07.
  • MIN – Kai Forbath 26-yard field goal, 0:12.Vikings 20–17.Drive: 6 plays, 20 yards, 2:08.
Top passers
Top rushers
Top receivers

OnMonday Night Football, Mitchell Trubisky made his NFL debut against theMinnesota Vikings, who led theall-time series 58–52–2, though the Bears had won all but two games at Soldier Field since2007.[129] Trubisky is the eleventh rookie quarterback in team history to start a game and the first sinceKyle Orton in2005, though only three won their first games (Jim McMahon,Rex Grossman,Craig Krenzel); furthermore, since2009, only one of nine Bears quarterbacks won in their debuts with the team (Todd Collins).[130] Jeff Joniak emphasized a focus on first down success; the Bears' rushing game, which averaged 5.3 yards per carry on first down in 2016, had just 3.7 yards in 2017, including 17 plays in which Jordan Howard and Tarik Cohen were tackled behind the line of scrimmage. Chicago took on a Minnesota defense that allowed just 71.2 yards per game, the third-least in the league. Instead, Joniak suggested relying on the passing attack; on first down, the Vikings allowed opposing quarterbacks to complete 80 percent of their passes for a 121.1 passer rating. The Bears also had to focus on improving their league-worst –7 turnover ratio; over the past three seasons, the team had a combined ratio of –31. For the Bears defense, Joniak wrote the unit had to prevent the Vikings from making big plays courtesy ofStefon Diggs andAdam Thielen, who had a combined 15 catches for at least 20 yards, while a combined 30 receptions resulted in first downs. Joniak further added the "excitement Trubisky brings into this game at Soldier Field" should be used by the "Bears to their advantage to keep the crowd engaged and loud."[131]

Trubisky led the Bears into Vikings territory on the opening drive, but a holding penalty on Cody Whitehair pushed the offense back before the Bears punted. The Vikings were unable to exit their side of the field on their first two drives and were forced to punt; likewise, the Bears reached Minnesota's side before punting on their drives.[132] Late in the first quarter,Sam Bradford was sacked by Leonard Floyd in the end zone for a safety.[133] In the second quarter, Trubisky was strip-sacked byEverson Griffen, which resulted in the Vikings'Linval Joseph recovering.Kai Forbath kicked a 26-yard field goal to give the Vikings a 3–2 lead. Bradford, who was sacked three times in the first half, was replaced byCase Keenum for the remainder of the game.[132] On the Vikings' first drive of the second half, Keenum threw a 13-yard touchdown pass toKyle Rudolph, to which the Bears responded with a trick play: on fourth down, punterPat O'Donnell instead threw a pass to Benny Cunningham, who escaped two Vikings to score on the 38-yard play.[133] The Bears defense suffered another loss when reserve linebacker John Timu suffered a knee injury. A play later, Minnesota'sJerick McKinnon ran 58 yards for the touchdown. Down 17–9, Trubisky answered with a 79-yard drive that ended with a 20-yard touchdown pass to Zach Miller, who caught a pass that had been tipped byAndrew Sendejo.[133] Now trailing by just two points, the Bears elected to go for a two-point conversion, on which they attempted another trick play: Trubisky handed the ball to Howard on what appeared to be adraw play until Howard gave it to Miller, who was running in the opposite direction. Trubisky ran alongside Miller on areverseoption play, catching a lateral from the tight end when Miller was stopped byAnthony Barr, allowing the quarterback to run into the end zone unscathed.[134] The next three series ended with punts. With 2:32 remaining in the game and pinned at his team's ten-yard line, Trubisky's pass for Miller was intercepted byHarrison Smith, which set up Forbath's game-winning 26-yard field goal with 12 seconds to go. On the final play of the game, Trubisky passed to Markus Wheaton, who lateraled to Cohen before he was tackled to end the game.[132]

In his debut, Trubisky completed 12 of 25 passes for 128 yards, one touchdown, one interception, and a 60.1 passer rating. He also had three rushing attempts for 22 yards. John Fox reflected on Trubisky's first game by connecting it toJoe Montana's before adding he was "not making comparisons at this point. But [Trubisky] will do nothing but get better."[133]

Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens

[edit]
Week Six: Chicago Bears at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter1234OTTotal
Bears01077327
Ravens03714024

atM&T Bank Stadium,Baltimore, Maryland

Game information

First quarter

  • no scoring plays

Second quarter

  • CHI –Connor Barth 24 yard field goal, 10:54.Bears 3–0.Drive: 10 plays, 60 yards, 4:19.
  • CHI –Zach Miller 21 yard pass fromTarik Cohen (Connor Barth kick good), 2:53.Bears 10–0.Drive: 2 plays, 20 yards, 0:43.
  • BAL –Justin Tucker 27 yard field goal, 0:03.Bears 10–3.Drive: 12 plays, 55 yards, 1:37.

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Overtime

  • CHI –Connor Barth 40 yard field goal, 2:06.Bears 27–24.Drive: 8 plays, 71 yards, 5:40.

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

In week six, the Bears traveled toM&T Bank Stadium to play the 3–2Baltimore Ravens, whom the Bears led 3–2 in five all-time meetings. The series had been a see-saw in victors, with the winning team alternating each time; the Bears won the most recent game in2013 23–20, but the Ravens won the latest game in Baltimore (a 31–7 rout in 2009).[135] For the Bears offense, the unit hoped to provide more support for Mitchell Trubisky in his first NFL away game. "The kid's going to be special and we've got to do our jobs around him; keep getting in the right spot, make plays and catch the football, and making sure we're keeping him out of first-and-17s," offensive coordinatorDowell Loggains stated. "We have a lot of faith and confidence in Mitchell."[136] To do this,USA Today's Lorin Cox wrote the offensive line needed to stop Ravens nose tackleMichael Pierce, whose 13 stops in 2017 tied for fifth among defensive linemen.[137] On defense, the Bears entered the game with the sixth-ranked defense (allowing 305 yards per game) that also ranked ninth in average yards allowed per play (5.07).[138] With Danny Trevathan returning from suspension, the defense faced a Ravens offense that ranked sixth in rushing with 130.4 yards per game.[136] On the other hand, Baltimore's offensive line – particularly the guards – had been struggling due to injuries, and Cox wrote the defense should take advantage of the openings. While the Bears had yet to record an interception in 2017, Ravens quarterbackJoe Flacco had thrown 33 in his last 31 games, including one in ten consecutive games; Cox added, "It's up to this defense to actually finish the turnover."[137]

The first five drives of the game ended with punts. The Bears opted for a run-based attack for much of the game; on their first scoring drive in the second quarter, all but one play was a run, with the series ending on Connor Barth's 24-yard field goal. On the Ravens' next drive,Maxx Williams was stripped byChristian Jones and Trevathan recovered the loose ball. Although the Bears were unable to capitalize on the takeaway, the defense recorded another turnover on the next drive when Bryce Callahan intercepted Flacco's pass intended forBreshad Perriman.[139] On a halfback option, Tarik Cohen eventually threw a 21-yard touchdown pass to Zach Miller to put the Bears up 10–0.[140]Justin Tucker kicked a 27-yard field goal to put the Ravens on the scoreboard with three seconds remaining in the first half. During the third quarter, Trubisky led a 66-yard drive that ended with a 27-yard touchdown pass to Dion Sims.[139] During the ensuing kickoff, Joshua Bellamy appeared to trip Ravens kick returnerBobby Rainey, but Rainey instead got back up and ran 96 yards for a touchdown. Upon review, the referees determined Bellamy's hand did not touch Rainey.[140] Subsequently, the Bears committed two turnovers: Cohen fumbled at the Bears' 39-yard line – which set up Tucker's 31-yard field goal to narrow the gap to four points – and Trubisky was strip-sacked byLardarius Webb withC. J. Mosley recovering. The Ravens reached the Bears' 30-yard line,[139] where Flacco was intercepted byAdrian Amos, who returned his first career interception 90 yards for the touchdown to put the Bears up by 11 points with 5:08 left in the game. However, Tucker kicked a 50-yard field goal with 2:53 remaining, whileMichael Campanaro scored on a 77-yard punt return touchdown and Flacco completed the two-point conversion toNick Boyle to tie the game at 24 apiece and enter overtime.[140] Neither team was able to score on their first drive;[139] on Chicago's second series, the offense was pinned at its own seven-yard line. Jordan Howard recorded a 53-yard run on the first play of the possession, which was later followed by Trubisky's 18-yard pass to Kendall Wright on third down to draw the Bears closer. Barth kicked a 40-yard field goal to win the game.[140]

It was the Bears' first road victory since 2015 against theBuccaneers, breaking a ten-game losing streak. The Bears' rushing attack resulted in a career high 167 rushing yards on 36 carries for Howard, while Cohen had 14 carries for 32 yards. Trubisky threw just 16 passes, completing eight for 113 yards and a touchdown. John Fox explained the Ravens were the reason for the run-based strategy, having used the same philosophy with the2012 Denver Broncos; in that team's game against Baltimore, the Broncos ran 44 times against just 21 passing plays despite the presence ofPeyton Manning.[140]

Week 7: vs. Carolina Panthers

[edit]
Week Seven: Carolina Panthers at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Panthers03003
Bears7100017

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • CHI – Eddie Jackson 76-yard interception return (Connor Barth kick), 12:28.Bears 14–0.
  • CAR –Graham Gano 36-yard field goal, 3:18.Bears 14–3.Drive: 16 plays, 56 yards, 9:10.
  • CHI – Connor Barth 19-yard field goal, 1:10.Bears 17–3.Drive: 5 plays, 74 yards, 2:08.

Third quarter

  • No scoring plays

Fourth quarter

  • No scoring plays

Top passers

Top rushers

  • CAR – Cam Newton – 9 rushes, 50 yards
  • CHI –Jordan Howard – 21 rushes, 65 yards

Top receivers

Top tacklers

Chicago hosted theCarolina Panthers, who trailed the all-time series 5–4, in week seven. With the exception of a playoff loss in 2005, the Bears had won every meeting at Soldier Field.[141] Jeff Joniak stressed a run-heavy offense; although the Panthers had not allowed a 100-yard rusher nor 100-yard receiver in 2017, the lack of linebackerLuke Kuechly weakened the Panthers defense. Furthermore, Jordan Howard was averaging 2.1 yards per carry, while his 245 rushing yards after contact was the second-highest in the league behind theKansas City Chiefs'Kareem Hunt. For the defense, the unit needed to containCam Newton by preventing the scramble-skilled quarterback from running, while also dealing withKelvin Benjamin,Christian McCaffrey, andEd Dickson.[142]

The Bears started the game on a strong note when Newton's pitch toCurtis Samuel was dropped and recovered by Eddie Jackson, who returned the fumble for a 75-yard touchdown.[143] The next three drives ended with punts,[144] with Chicago's next series stalling after Mitchell Trubisky was sacked for a nine-yard loss on Carolina's 25-yard line. Connor Barth's 52-yard field goal attempt was partially blocked byKawann Short and hit the crossbar.[143] On the Panthers' following possession, Newton's pass for Benjamin was broken up by Prince Amukamara and intercepted by Jackson, resulting in a 76-yard pick six.Graham Gano kicked a 36-yard field goal, which the Bears responded with Trubisky's 70-yard pass to Tarik Cohen to set the offense up at the five-yard line. Howard's two carries were stopped, while Trubisky's touchdown run on third down was overturned as he was down before crossing the goal line. This resulted in 19-yarder by Barth to make the score 17–3 at halftime.[144] In the second half, neither team was able to score as all but two drives concluded with a punt: on the Panthers' first series of the second half, Newton's attempt to run on fourth down and two was stopped by Eddie Goldman, while in the fourth quarter, Danny Trevathan intercepted a pass by Newton.[143]

The victory marked Chicago's second consecutive win, the first time the Bears had done so since November 2015. Jackson's two scores made him the first player in NFL history to record two defensive touchdowns of at least 75 yards in a game; as a whole, the defense excelled as it sacked Newton a season-high five times and forced three turnovers. In contrast to the defensive success, the offense was restricted to just five first downs and 153 total yards, while converting just two of eleven third down situations. In the second half, the offense was forced to punt on four straight drives and ended the day having allowed four total sacks.[143] Trubisky completed just four of seven passes, making him the first quarterback since the2011 Denver Broncos'Tim Tebow to win a game while completing less than five passes; coincidentally, Tebow's head coach was also John Fox. While coaching the Panthers in2006, Fox's team defeated theFalcons as quarterbackChris Weinke also completed four of seven passes.[145]

Week 8: at New Orleans Saints

[edit]
Week Eight: Chicago Bears at New Orleans Saints – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bears033612
Saints770620

atMercedes-Benz Superdome,New Orleans, Louisiana

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • CHI –Connor Barth 27-yard field goal, 14:52.Saints 7–3.Drive: 10 plays, 67 yards, 5:25.
  • NO –Mark Ingram II 1-yard run (Wil Lutz kick), 3:41.Saints 14–3.Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards, 4:30.

Third quarter

  • CHI – Connor Barth 44-yard field goal, 5:42.Saints 14–6.Drive: 8 plays, 72 yards, 3:31.

Fourth quarter-

  • NO – Wil Lutz 45-yard field goal, 12:54.Saints 17–6.Drive: 7 plays, 26 yards, 2:26.
  • CHI –Tarik Cohen 1-yard run (pass failed), 3:58.Saints 17–12.Drive: 10 plays, 72 yards, 3:34.
  • NO – Wil Lutz 49-yard field goal, 1:35.Saints 20–12.Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 0:16.

Top passers

Top rushers

  • CHI –Jordan Howard – 23 rushes, 102 yards
  • NO – Mark Ingram II – 18 rushes, 75 yards, TD

Top receivers

Top tacklers

During the eighth week of the season, the Bears went to theMercedes-Benz Superdome to play theNew Orleans Saints, who trailed the series 15–14 but had won every meeting since 2011.[146] Jeff Joniak wrote a goal of the Bears offense would be to get into scoring position; since Mitchell Trubisky became the starter, the offense had entered the red zone only twice in three games, with both trips ending in field goals. Upon reaching the 20-yard line, using the running game would be ideal; Jordan Howard ranked fifth in the league in rushing, second in yards after contact, and led the offense rushing first downs with 32. In contrast, the Saints defense ranked 30th in rushing yards allowed per carry. Joniak also emphasized the need for Trubisky to tune out the loud Superdome crowd and lead the offense without making errors. For the defense, it facedDrew Brees, who, according to Joniak, was to be pressured quickly if the Bears were to succeed – while being blitzed, Brees was intercepted three times and sacked twice. Otherwise, Brees was successful in quickly passing the ball for gains of six yards in a fast-paced offense. Turnovers were also priority; in the last two games, the Bears had forced six and scored on three, and while Brees had recorded turnovers in his last two games, the Saints still had the fifth-best turnover difference.[147]

On the Saints' opening possession,Wil Lutz was lining up for a 32-yard field goal attempt when Kyle Fuller was penalized for jumping offsides.[148] This set upAlvin Kamara's eight-yard touchdown run to put New Orleans up by seven points. After the next two drives resulted in punts, Connor Barth made a 27-yard field goal in the second quarter, thoughMark Ingram II scored on a one-yard touchdown run. Barth missed a 48-yard field goal wide left late in the first half as the Bears entered halftime with an 11-point deficit.[149] In the third quarter, Trubisky threw a 25-yard touchdown pass to Zach Miller, who landed on his knee and dislocated it in the process. The touchdown was eventually nullified when refereeCarl Cheffers determined Miller had let go of the ball in pain while on the ground. The Bears were forced to settle for Barth's 44-yard field goal.[148] In the fourth quarter, Lutz kicked a 45-yard field goal to increase the lead to 17–6.[149] With 7:32 remaining in the game,Jonathan Bullard stripped Ingram and Christian Jones recovered the fumble. Aided by Trubisky's 46-yard run, Tarik Cohen dove into the end zone from the Saints' one-yard line to score the offense's first touchdown in 25 series (dating back to the Baltimore game).[148] The Bears failed to score on the two-point conversion but were just five points down.[149] Chicago forced another takeaway when Adrian Amos stripped and recovered the ball from Ingram with 2:12 left.[148] Although the Bears turned the ball over on downs, they had another chance after Lutz's 49-yard field goal put them behind by eight points. However, Trubisky's pass for Tre McBride was intercepted byMarshon Lattimore to seal the loss.[149]

Miller was taken to theUniversity Medical Center New Orleans for treatment. In addition to a dislocated knee, Miller was revealed to have torn thepopliteal artery in his region, an injury that is common in car accidents and raised the possibility of amputation. Vascular surgery was successfully completed the day after the game.[150] The overturning of Miller's catch was controversial. Cheffers defended the call, stating when Miller was falling to the turf, he "has to survive the ground. He went to the ground, he temporarily lost control of the ball. The ball hit the ground; therefore it's incomplete."[148] The NFL's Vice President of OfficiatingAlberto Riveron also maintained Miller had not completed the catch, but predecessorsMike Pereira andDean Blandino argued otherwise. "At some point the process of the catch ends, and it ends when he rolls over on the ground with control. It was ruled a catch on the field. I didn't see anything definitive to overturn it and quite frankly, if it had been ruled incomplete on the field, if it had been me in the command center, I would have reversed it to a catch," Blandino said.[151] On Monday, John Fox announced he would send video of the play to the NFL.[152]

Week 10: vs. Green Bay Packers

[edit]
Week Ten: Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Packers3731023
Bears3301016

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information
First quarter
  • GB –Mason Crosby 40-yard field goal, 7:25.Packers 3–0.Drive: 11 plays, 70 yards, 4:37.
  • CHI –Connor Barth 45-yard field goal, 2:21.Tied 3–3.Drive: 8 plays, 53 yards, 5:05.
Second quarter
  • GB –Ty Montgomery 37-yard run (Mason Crosby kick), 11:49.Packers 10–3.Drive: 3 plays, 79 yards, 1:43.
  • CHI – Connor Barth 44-yard field goal, 0:01.Packers 10–6.Drive: 10 plays, 39 yards, 1:37.
Third quarter
  • GB – Mason Crosby 24-yard field goal, 10:20.Packers 13–6.Drive: 10 plays, 40 yards, 4:44.
Fourth quarter
  • GB – Mason Crosby 50-yard field goal, 13:14.Packers 16–6.Drive: 10 plays, 26 yards, 4:20.
  • CHI –Josh Bellamy 46-yard pass fromMitchell Trubisky (Connor Barth kick), 10:48.Packers 16–13.Drive: 4 plays, 70 yards, 2:30.
  • GB –Davante Adams 19-yard pass fromBrett Hundley (Mason Crosby kick), 5:37.Packers 23–13.Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 5:10.
  • CHI – Connor Barth 49-yard field goal, 3:23.Packers 23–16.Drive: 8 plays, 49 yards, 2:10.
Top rushers
Top receivers

Although the Bears now trailed the Packers in the all-time series, they were the five-point favorite against Green Bay among bookkeepers for the first time since week sixteen of2008. The odds had been influenced by Aaron Rodgers' season-ending collarbone injury in October along with backup quarterbackBrett Hundley's struggles in the previous week's 30–17 loss to the Lions.[153] Although the Bears had not defeated the Packers at home since 2010, the Packers were 2–3 since the two teams' last meeting in week four, while Green Bay head coachMike McCarthy was 1–3 against the Bears without Rodgers. Jeff Joniak described his ideal Bears offensive gameplan as "[p]laying a clean game" to avoid swinging the "tempo or momentum in favor of a team that's on a three-game losing streak." To do this, Mitchell Trubisky would have to avoid getting sacked, while the running game would have to reduce its runs resulting in negative yardage. Through the air, the Bears remained an unknown entity due to a lack of available film on Trubisky and receivers Markus Wheaton andDontrelle Inman,[154] the latter making his Bears debut in week ten after being traded to the team in late October.[155] On defense, Joniak wrote the unit needed to prevent Hundley from developing his accuracy, especially as the Chicago defense was excelling in preventing touchdowns, along with containing running backTy Montgomery, who recorded 162 rushing yards on 16 carries against the Bears in week sixteen last year.[154]

In a game that ChicagoBears.com writer Larry Mayer described as having "[reverted] to an early-season trend, the Bears shot themselves in the foot repeatedly," Chicago struggled with penalties during the game as the team committed seven in the first half.[156] The Bears punted on the first drive, which led to an exchanging of field goals onMason Crosby's 40- and Connor Barth's 45-yard kicks. Three drives later, in the second quarter, Montgomery scored on a 37-yard touchdown run to give the Packers the lead. On the next drive,[157] Trubisky threw a screen pass to Benny Cunningham, who ran to the Packers' goal line and dived for the pylon. His knee landed out of bounds and the play was ruled as such at the two-yard line, which the Bears challenged with the belief that the ball had reached the pylon before he went out; instead, the challenge went against the Bears when it was determined he had lost the ball before it had touched the pylon, resulting in a touchback and possession being granted to the Packers.[156] Chicago eventually added three more points on Barth's 44-yard field goal as time expired in the first half. Crosby kicked a 24-yard field goal on the first drive of the second half, which was followed by one from 50 yards in the fourth quarter.[157] The Bears ended their touchdown-scoring troubles (scoring just one touchdown in 35 drives across the previous four games) when Trubisky threw a 46-yard touchdown pass to Josh Bellamy, who escapedDavon House for the score. However, the Packers responded with a 75-yard drive that ended with Hundley's 19-yard touchdown pass to Davante Adams.[156] Barth added a 49-yard field goal to draw the Bears within a touchdown, and remained in contention when Crosby missed a 35-yarder wide right with 1:02 left in the game. After completing an 11-yard pass to Kendall Wright, Trubisky's next three passes were incomplete. On fourth-and-ten, Trubisky passed to Cunningham for five yards, who lateraled toHroniss Grasu and ran two yards before he was tackled for a turnover on downs.[157]

Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions

[edit]
Week Eleven: Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Lions0210627
Bears1070724

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

  • Matt Prater 27 yard field goal, 10:04.Lions 24-17.Drive: 12 plays, 63 yards, 7:05
  • Tarik Cohen 15 yard run. (Connor Barth kick), 5:09.Tied 24-24.Drive: 8 plays, 78 yards, 4:59
  • Matt Prater 52 yard field goal, 1:40.Lions 27-24.Drive: 9 plays, 76 yards, 3:27

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

In week eleven, the Bears hosted theDetroit Lions, whom the Bears led 97–72–5 in theall-time series but had defeated only once since 2013.[158] Entering the game, Mitchell Trubisky hoped to improve on his productive game against the Packers in addition to reducing sacks; in five starts, he had been sacked 16 times, including five times last week. Larry Mayer also raised the possibility of using Tarik Cohen more frequently; after catching a combined 24 passes in the first four games, he had just one in the last five, a trend that Dowell Loggains explained was a result of Cohen's inexperience. Questions surrounded the defense, which went from forcing eight turnovers across three straight games to allowing a season-high 160 yards and no takeaways against the Packers. "You've got to have a short memory in this league," Akiem Hicks stated. "You've got to take it game-by-game. [...] But at the end of the day, you've got to lock into your next opponent because they don't care what happened last week. They want to beat you. So you have to have that mindset where, 'OK, you didn't get the results you want last week, but you're coming in fighting this week.'"[159]

The Bears offense made early progress on the opening drive as it reached the Lions' five-yard line before stalling and settling for Connor Barth's 23-yard field goal. On Detroit's first series,Matthew Stafford was sacked by Nick Kwiatkoski and fumbled, with Hicks recovering the ball; the Bears capitalized on the takeaway via Jordan Howard's 50-yard run and Trubisky's one-yard touchdown pass to Adam Shaheen.[160] The Lions scored on a turnover of their own when Trubisky fumbled Cody Whitehair's snap, which Detroit'sD. J. Hayden picked up and returned 27 yards for the touchdown. Chicago answered with a 78-yard drive that ended with Howard's 12-yard touchdown run to make the score 17–7 midway through the second quarter. However, Stafford threw two touchdown passes toMarvin Jones andAmeer Abdullah to put the Lions up 21–17 by halftime.[161] The third quarter went scoreless beforeMatt Prater kicked a 27-yard field goal in the fourth quarter to increase the margin by seven points.[160] With 5:02 left in the game, the Bears drove 78 yards and tied the game on Cohen's 15-yard touchdown run, in which he dove over safetyGlover Quin into the end zone. Prater converted a 52-yard field goal to give the Lions the lead once again with 1:52 remaining. Trubisky led the offense down the field, including one play on fourth-and-13 in which he kept the drive alive via a 19-yard scramble, but Barth missed the game-tying 46-yard field goal wide right.[161] Stafford kneeled once to seal the Bears loss.[160]

A day after the loss, Barth was released and replaced byCairo Santos. In two seasons with the Bears, Barth converted 29 of 39 field goals, including 11 of 16 in 2017; all five of his misses were of at least 40 yards. Santos had been with the Chiefs since 2014, made 31 of 35 in 2016 (the fifth-highest conversion percentage in the league), and recorded a career-high 55.8 touchback percentage on kickoffs. In three games with Kansas City in 2017, Santos made all three of his field goals and all six of his extra points, but re-aggravated a groin injury from Training Camp in week three and was released.[162]

Week 12: at Philadelphia Eagles

[edit]
Week Twelve: Chicago Bears at Philadelphia Eagles – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bears00303
Eagles7170731

atLincoln Financial Field,Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

  • Date: November 26
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: 49 °F (9 °C), sunny
  • Game attendance: 69,596
  • Referee:Walt Coleman
  • TV announcers (Fox): Kevin Burkhardt, Charles Davis and Pam Oliver
  • Recap,Gamebook
Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • PHI –Nelson Agholor 15-yard pass from Carson Wentz (Jake Elliott kick), 10:52.Eagles 14–0.Drive: 9 plays, 56 yards, 5:27.
  • PHI – Jake Elliott 45-yard field goal, 6:52.Eagles 17–0.Drive: 5 plays, 18 yards, 2:29.
  • PHI –Alshon Jeffery 8-yard pass from Carson Wentz (Jake Elliott kick), 0:05.Eagles 24–0.Drive: 13 plays, 69 yards, 4:33.

Third quarter

  • CHI –Cairo Santos 38-yard field goal, 8:40.Eagles 24–3.Drive: 10 plays, 36 yards, 6:20.

Fourth quarter

  • PHI – Nelson Agholor 0-yard fumble return (Jake Elliott kick), 13:37.Eagles 31–3.Drive: 6 plays, 73 yards, 2:25.

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

For week twelve's game, the Bears visitedLincoln Financial Field to play the 9–1 and league-leadingEagles.[163] Although the Bears led the all-time series 30–14–1, they had not defeated the Eagles since 2011, while also losing their most recent game in Philadelphia in 2013 54–11.[164] To take on the Eagles defense, Jeff Joniak elaborated on using a rushing attack that ranked fifth in the league, along with keeping Mitchell Trubisky protected and scoring points; entering the game, the Eagles were allowing less than 19 points per game. Defensively, the Bears faced quarterbackCarson Wentz, who led the league in touchdown passes with three, and an offense that ranked first in scoring; eleven different players on the Eagles had scored a touchdown in 2017. With Danny Trevathan and Leonard Floyd out due to injuries, the backups were also challenged by a rushing unit featuringLeGarrette Blount andJay Ajayi, which ranked second in the NFL. Philadelphia also succeeded in developing high margins of victory, winning by more than 15 points per game, and scoring at least 26 points in every game but their only loss in week two. Despite the stacked odds, as the Bears were able to defeat three perennial playoff teams in Pittsburgh, Baltimore, and Carolina, Joniak wrote the team had to "believe [victory over the Eagles] can happen, and the longer they hang around, the more they will believe."[163]

The two teams traded punts to start the game, though the Eagles struck first on Wentz's 17-yard touchdown pass toZach Ertz. On the first play of the Bears' next drive,[165] Trubisky's pass to Tre McBride was batted and intercepted byMalcolm Jenkins, but Dion Sims stripped the ball away and McBride recovered to continue the series.[166] Four plays later, the Bears punted, but got the ball back after the Eagles' first play of their drive;[165] Blount broke free for a 35-yard run, but Adrian Amos forced a fumble andSam Acho recovered. Chicago attempted to take advantage of the takeaway, but Cairo Santos' 54-yard field goal went wide right. A drive later, the Bears forced a three-and-out until a holding penalty on Prince Amukamara gave the Eagles a first down. Wentz later escaped a blitz from Cre'Von LeBlanc on third-and-nine to record a 16-yard run, followed by throwing a 15-yard touchdown pass toNelson Agholor, who escaped Eddie Jackson and Kyle Fuller for the touchdown. Later in the first half,Jake Elliott made a 45-yard field goal to increase the gap, and Wentz threw an eight-yard touchdown pass to Alshon Jeffery with five seconds remaining to make the halftime score 24–0.[166] During Chicago's first drive of the second half, Santos successfully kicked a 38-yard field goal to give the Bears three points, which followed with the defense stopping the Eagles on fourth down,[165] but Philadelphia scored once again in the fourth quarter when Ajayi fumbled in the end zone and Agholor recovered the loose ball.[166]Nick Foles relieved Wentz late in the game and lost a fumble to Isaiah Irving, butCorey Graham intercepted Trubisky's pass for McBride.[165]

Week 13: vs. San Francisco 49ers

[edit]
Week Thirteen: San Francisco 49ers at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
49ers363315
Bears770014

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

  • Robbie Gould 34-yard field goal, 2:00.Bears 14-12.Drive: 16 plays, 70 yards, 8:19.

Fourth quarter

  • Robbie Gould 24-yard field goal, 0:08.49ers 15-14.Drive: 14 plays, 86 yards, 5:23.

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

Chicago hosted the 1–10 San Francisco 49ers in week thirteen, the fourth straight year in which the two teams met and the third at Soldier Field and in December, with the Bears winning 2016's game 26–6.[167] Offensively, the Bears rushing game had an opportune chance to succeed against a 49ers defense that was ranked 30th against the run (28th overall with 374.2 total yards allowed per game), allowing 129.5 rushing yards per game,[168] 42 runs of at least ten yards in 2017 and three running backs to record 100-yard games. For the 49ers offense, it was led byJimmy Garoppolo in his first start for the team, and Garoppolo was supported by aWest Coast offense that ranked 12th in yards after the catch. Although the 49ers were ranked last in the league in time of possession, they were tied for the most drives of ten plays or more with 22, with 19 resulting in scores (including eight ending in touchdowns). In contrast, the Bears offense's 140 points were the fewest in the NFL, while also having a league-high 40 drives end with punts. As such, Jeff Joniak stressed the importance of playing "loose" by letting "it rip in every phase." With San Francisco's optimism in Garoppolo, the Bears had "to ruin that excitement and create some of its own."[169]

Former Bears kickerRobbie Gould opened the game by converting a 33-yard field goal. While the Bears punted on their first drive,[170] Kyle Fuller recorded his first interception since 2015 when he yanked the ball fromLouis Murphy's hands, which set up Mitchell Trubisky's eight-yard touchdown pass to Dontrelle Inman. Gould added a 28-yard field goal in the second quarter to narrow the gap to one point, but Tarik Cohen responded with a 61-yard punt return touchdown; after catching the punt at his 39-yard line, Cohen ran back to his 24, moved to his right, then ran forward for the touchdown.[168] With 24 seconds left in the first half, Gould kicked his third field goal (35 yards), followed by one from 34 yards in the third quarter to put the 49ers behind by two.[170] Early in the fourth quarter, Cohen returned a punt for 67 yards to the 49ers' 16-yard line, butBen Braunecker was penalized for an illegal block in the back to negate the play and force the Bears to start at their own 14.[168] Although the offense was able to reach 49ers territory, it could not progress further and the Bears eventually punted. Pinned at his eight with 5:27 remaining in the game, Garoppolo led the 49ers downfield to set up Gould's game-winning 24-yard field goal with four seconds left. On the final kickoff, Josh Bellamy handed the ball to Cohen, who threw to Eddie Jackson before the play was stopped as Cohen's lateral was a forward pass.[170]

The loss dropped the Bears to 3–9, their fourth straight losing season and worst stretch since they had five consecutive from1996 to2000. It was also the Bears' fifth straight loss, the first such losing streak sinceMarc Trestman's final season as the Bears head coach in 2014.[168]

Week 14: at Cincinnati Bengals

[edit]
Week Fourteen: Chicago Bears at Cincinnati Bengals – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bears6671433
Bengals70007

atPaul Brown Stadium,Cincinnati, Ohio

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • CHI –Mike Nugent 34-yard field goal, 12:38.Bears 9–7.Drive: 10 plays, 73 yards, 4:37.
  • CHI – Mike Nugent 27-yard field goal, 1:46.Bears 12–7.Drive: 15 plays, 86 yards, 8:11.

Third quarter

  • CHI –Mitchell Trubisky 4-yard run (Mike Nugent kick), 4:54.Bears 19–7.Drive: 9 plays, 76 yards, 5:15.

Fourth quarter

  • CHI –Adam Shaheen 1-yard pass from Mitchell Trubisky (Mike Nugent kick), 14:52.Bears 26–7.Drive: 7 plays, 43 yards, 3:23.
  • CHI – Jordan Howard 8-yard run (Mike Nugent kick), 9:18.Bears 33–7.Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards, 4:13.

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

TheCincinnati Bengals hosted the Bears in week fourteen, holding a 6–4 lead in the series against Chicago. While the Bears won the most recent meeting in 2013 21–13, the Bengals dominated the last game in Cincinnati, a 45–10 victory in 2009.[171] As the Bengals defense was struggling to contain opposing running attacks, allowing 170 carries of at least four yards, the most in the NFL, while the Bears had 141 of such attempts (15th in the league), Jeff Joniak wrote the Bears should effectively utilize Jordan Howard and Tarik Cohen, while also reducing the number of negative runs (with 50 entering week fourteen).[172] On defense, the Bears had to play without players like Pernell McPhee, Leonard Floyd, Eddie Goldman, Willie Young, Mitch Unrein, Jerrell Freeman, Adrian Amos, and Quintin Demps, all of whom were sidelined due to injuries.[173] Joniak took note of Bengals quarterbackAndy Dalton's struggles under pressure, being sacked 19 times on third down in 2017, while the Bears led the league in third-down sacks with 17 sacks, including at least one sack in every game in 2017. As a result, Joniak stressed the importance of providing a heavy blitz. Joniak also added taking advantage of a Bengals special teams unit that was ranked 27th in average return yards allowed with 10.7, including four 20+-yard returns and a return touchdown. After a physical game against the Steelers in week thirteen, Joniak expressed the possibility of the Bengals being "flat", and "[i]f so, the Bears should pounce on the opportunity and prove they are still playing for pride and the future."[172]

After the Bengals punted on their first drive,[174] the Bears scored on their opening series for the first time in 2017, doing so on Howard's 21-yard touchdown run. However,Mike Nugent, who was signed earlier in the week to replace an injured Cairo Santos, missed the extra point as the kick hit the right upright. The Bengals responded late in the first quarter when Dalton threw a 14-yard touchdown pass toBrandon LaFell, who evaded Deon Bush for the score.[173] Early in the second quarter, Mitchell Trubisky threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Cohen, but it was nullified by Tom Compton's holding penalty; the Bears were eventually forced to settle for Nugent's 34-yard field goal to retake the lead. Nugent added a 27-yard field goal with 2:15 remaining in the half to give the Bears the 12–7 lead at halftime. Following punts on the first two drives of the second half,[174] Trubisky scored on a four-yard touchdown run. On the ensuing drive, Dalton's pass toA. J. Green was deflected and intercepted by Eddie Jackson, which resulted in Trubisky's one-yard touchdown pass to Adam Shaheen. Jackson forced another takeaway when he pulled the ball away from Green's hands and recovered; Chicago once again capitalized via Howard's eight-yard touchdown run to put the Bears up 33–7.[173] Neither team was able to score for the rest of the game.[174]

The 26-point victory marked the largest blowout for the Bears since a 51–20 win over theTennessee Titans in2012.[173] It was also Chicago's highest-scoring game since the team scored 37 against theSt. Louis Rams in 2015. The Bears offense ended the game with a season-high 482 total yards, nearly 200 more than in the Bears' last two games, along with 232 rushing yards and three touchdowns on the ground. Howard recorded 167 rushing yards, resulting in a season total of 1,032, and he became the first running back in Bears history to have 1,000-yard rushing seasons in his first two years in the NFL.[175]

Week 15: at Detroit Lions

[edit]
Week Fifteen: Chicago Bears at Detroit Lions – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bears030710
Lions3107020

atFord Field,Detroit, Michigan

Game information

First quarter

  • DET –Matt Prater 48-yard field goal.Lions 3–0.Drive: 8 plays, 47 yards, 3:02.

Second quarter

  • DET – Matt Prater 31-yard field goal.Lions 6–0.Drive: 11 plays, 49 yards, 5:27.
  • DET –T. J. Jones 3-yard pass fromMatthew Stafford (Matt Prater kick).Lions 13–0.Drive: 10 plays, 92 yards, 5:44.
  • CHI –Mike Nugent 41-yard field goal.Lions 13–3.Drive: 2 plays, 4 yards, 0:10.

Third quarter

  • DET –Eric Ebron 8-yard pass from Matthew Stafford (Matt Prater kick).Lions 20–3.Drive: 9 plays, 41 yards, 4:22.

Fourth quarter

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

The Bears visitedFord Field to play the 7–6 Lions for the second time in 2017 in week fifteen. Jeff Joniak emphasized a consistent offensive production against Detroit, one that would be similar to the success in Cincinnati but would be difficult to maintain if the offense was to lose awareness; the Lions defense forced 12 fumbles and 26 sacks, while seven players had intercepted a pass and the unit had seven return touchdowns.[176] In spite of the Lions' success at forcing turnovers, the defense ranked 27th in total yards allowed, 20th against the run, and 27th in pass defense.[177] For the Bears defense, it saw the return of linebacker and leader Danny Trevathan; Joniak described his presence as a "Trevathan effect", with the defense allowing 81 points in three losses and failing to win a game when he was absent, while allowing 17.6 points per game and going 4–5 when he was playing. The defense entered the game with a fifth-ranked red zone touchdown efficiency, while also excelling in providing pressure, ranking second in sacks on third down, ninth in opposing quarterback rating when blitzed, and leading the league in fumble recoveries with 12. The unit took on a Lions offense that ranked sixth in the NFL in yards after catch with 1,759 (47.5 of the team's total yards), but was one of three teams in the league with less than 300 total rushing attempts and averaging fewer than 77 rushing yards per game.[176] Detroit's passing attack continued to be led by Matthew Stafford, who recorded a career-best 120.2 passer rating against the Bears earlier in the season.[177]

Matt Prater made a 48-yard field goal on the Lions' opening drive, followed by a 31-yard kick in the second quarter to put Detroit up by six. After being pinned on his team's eight-yard line, Stafford led a 92-yard drive that ended with a three-yard touchdown pass toT. J. Jones.[178] On the ensuing kickoff, Tarik Cohen recorded a 90-yard return to the Lions' 14-yard line, but a holding penalty onDeAndre Houston-Carson nullified the play and forced the Bears to start at their own 14. Later in the quarter, Sam Acho strippedTheo Riddick and Eddie Jackson recovered. Mike Nugent made a 41-yard field goal with two seconds remaining in the half to grant the Bears' first points of the game. However, the Bears' first drive of the second half ended when Mitchell Trubisky's pass for Kendall Wright was overthrown and intercepted byDarius Slay, which set up Stafford's eight-yard touchdown pass toEric Ebron.[179] After a trading of punts,[178] Trubisky guided the Bears to the Lions' five-yard line, but he was once again intercepted when his pass for Dontrelle Inman was picked off byQuandre Diggs.[179] Unlike the previous takeaway, the Lions could not capitalize and were forced to punt.[178] The Bears went 92 yards and eventually scored on Trubisky's nine-yard touchdown pass to Benny Cunningham to create a ten-point game, but he was intercepted for the third time on the next drive.[179]

After recording 222 rushing yards on 30 carries in the first game against Detroit, the Bears had just 43 yards on 15 attempts in week fifteen. Chicago also committed a season-high 15 penalties for 97 yards.[179]

Week 16: vs. Cleveland Browns

[edit]
Week Sixteen: Cleveland Browns at Chicago Bears – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Browns03003
Bears6014020

at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

Game information

First quarter

  • CHI –Jordan Howard 2-yard run (kick failed), 1:23.Bears 6–0.Drive: 9 plays, 57 yards, 5:11.

Second quarter

  • CLE –Zane Gonzalez 48-yard field goal, 0:06.Bears 6–3.Drive: 4 plays, 48 yards, 0:30.

Third quarter

  • CHI – Jordan Howard 16-yard run (Mike Nugent kick), 12:30.Bears 13–3.Drive: 4 plays, 60 yards, 2:37.
  • CHI –Mitchell Trubisky 4-yard run (Mike Nugent kick), 3:33.Bears 20–3.Drive: 12 plays, 66 yards, 7:30.

Fourth quarter

  • No scoring plays.

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

Top tacklers

For the final home game of the 2017 season, the Bears hosted the winless Browns onChristmas Eve. In 15 regular season meetings, the Browns led the series 9–6, though the Bears had won the last two games.[180] While the Browns were 0–14, head coachHue Jackson was 2–0 in Christmas games, including recording the Browns' lone win of 2016 on the day. On offense, protecting Mitchell Trubisky fromGregg Williams' blitz-heavy defense; despite its frequency of utilizing the pass rush, the Browns ranked 29th in quarterback knockdowns with 62, while also allowing ten touchdowns on blitzes. Furthermore, the Browns defense led the league in fewest rushing yards allowed per carry on first down. For the Bears defense, it faced a Browns offense that turned the ball over 36 times, including 19 interceptions from quarterbackDeShone Kizer. Entering the game, Chicago had just six interceptions in 2017, meaning Cleveland marked a prime opportunity to increase the stat.[181] The Bears were 6.5-point favorites for the game; in three seasons under John Fox, the Bears had lost all seven games in which they were favored, including defeats to the Packers and 49ers in 2017. In spite of this, considering the Bears' opposition in week sixteen,247Sports.com's Matt Eurich wrote it would be "satisfying for many to at least see the Bears earn a victory for the first time in three years in which it has been favored."[182]

After the first three series ended with punts,[183] Jordan Howard scored on a two-yard run, but Mike Nugent's extra point was blocked.[184] Following five drives that featured three-and-outs, Kizer's pass forJosh Gordon was intercepted by Kyle Fuller, but the Bears were forced to punt. Zane Gonzalez kicked a 48-yard field goal with one second remaining in the first half to make the score 6–3 at halftime. On the first offensive play of the second half,[183] Trubisky was intercepted byMyles Garrett, who returned the pick to the Bears' five-yard line, but the play was called back because of an offsides penalty onCarl Nassib.[184] With the drive saved, Trubisky completed a 40-yard pass to Benny Cunningham to set the offense up in the Browns' red zone, which led to Howard's 16-yard touchdown run. Upon getting the ball back, Trubisky guided the offense downfield on a 66-yard drive that culminated in his four-yard touchdown run. A series later,[183]Rashard Higgins caught Kizer's pass and reached the Bears' three-yard line, where he was stripped by Danny Trevathan and the ball went into the end zone, where Prince Amukamara recovered. Another takeaway for the Bears occurred with 4:11 left in the game, when Kizer's pass was intercepted by Bryce Callahan. However, neither team scored for the rest of the game as the Bears triumphed 20–3.[184]

With the win, the Bears defeated all four AFC North teams in 2017, a similar feat accomplished in 2013.[185] Trubisky ran for 246 yards, the most by a Bears quarterback sinceKordell Stewart in2003, along with throwing for 193 yards; the latter increased his season passing yard total to 2,015, the most by a rookie in Bears history.[186]

Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings

[edit]
Week Seventeen: Chicago Bears at Minnesota Vikings – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Bears070310
Vikings797023

atU.S. Bank Stadium,Minneapolis, Minnesota

Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
  • MIN – Latavius Murray 1-yard run (Kai Forbath kick), 9:30.Vikings 14–0.Drive: 11 plays, 71 yards, 6:08.
  • CHI –Bryce Callahan 59-yard punt return (Mike Nugent kick), 5:50.Vikings 14–7.
  • MIN – Penalty onMitchell Trubisky enforced in the end zone for a safety, 2:25.Vikings 16–7.
Third quarter
  • MIN –Stefon Diggs 15-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Kai Forbath kick), 0:14.Vikings 23–7.Drive: 7 plays, 63 yards, 3:36.
Fourth quarter
  • CHI – Mike Nugent 55-yard field goal, 8:22.Vikings 23–10.Drive: 5 plays, 11 yards, 1:31.
Top passers
Top rushers
Top receivers

On New Year's Eve, Chicago played 12–3 Minnesota, who led the NFC North and would clinch the second seed in the playoffs with a win, atU.S. Bank Stadium. The Bears' 30th-ranked offense (11th in rushing and 31st in passing) faced a Vikings defense that led the league, including second-place rankings in rush and pass defense.[187] To survive, Jeff Joniak emphasized protecting Mitchell Trubisky and utilizing the rushing attack, especially as the Vikings pass defense allowed less than 200 net passing yards in just nine games in 2017.[188] Defensively, the Bears' eighth-ranked defense (ninth in run, eighth in pass) took on the Case Keenum-led tenth-ranked offense (eighth in rushing, 13th in passing);[187] Joniak described Chicago's defense as having "survived an array of injuries and some powerful offenses for the most part," ranking in the top half in points allowed (fourth), sacks (sixth), first downs allowed (11th), and third downs allowed (tenth). Although the Vikings ranked third in converting third downs, Joniak wrote there was "some momentum with this defense."[188]

The Bears punted on the opening drive, which led toLatavius Murray scoring on a one-yard touchdown run. Murray added another one-yard score in the second quarter to put the Vikings up by 14.[189] During the early stages of the game, Bryce Callahan was penalized for pass interference, resulting in the Vikings gaining 24 and 27 yards, though he redeemed himself during the second quarter on a punt return;[190] Tarik Cohen prepared to field a punt on one side of the field, while Callahan kneeled on the other side. Cohen acted as if he was going to field the punt, prompting the Vikings to chase him, though the punt was actually being returned by Callahan, who ran 59 yards unopposed for the touchdown.[191] However, the Vikings added two more points when Trubisky, facing a blitz fromLinval Joseph, was penalized for intentional grounding, resulting in a safety.[190] Minnesota attempted to score again on the last play of the first half, but Kai Forbath's 55-yard field goal was wide right. The first four drives of the second half resulted in punts, which ended when Keenum threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to Stefon Diggs.[189] Trubisky attempted to guide the offense downfield, reaching as far as the Vikings' six-yard line, but he threw four consecutive incomplete passes to turn the ball over on downs. With 8:22 left in the game, Mike Nugent converted a 55-yard field goal to make the score 23–10, and the offense once again entered the Vikings' red zone on their next series. However, despite reaching the two-yard line, the Bears suffered another turnover on downs.[190] The Bears dropped to 5-11 and were swept by all of their divisional rivals for the first time since 1969.

Postseason

[edit]

One day after the loss to the Vikings, John Fox was fired. Rumors of his release were reported earlier in the 2017 season, though no official announcement was made until January 1, 2018. Fox ended his tenure in Chicago with a 14–34 record, never recording a winning streak longer than two games and finishing last in the NFC North in all three seasons. "Thank you to all the players, coaches, the city of Chicago and Bears fans everywhere, your passion for the game and this team is unmatched in the NFL," Fox stated in a team release. "Today is the tough part of our results-oriented business but I wish the Bears organization the best for years to come."[192] One week later, Chiefs offensive coordinatorMatt Nagy was hired as the 16th head coach in Bears history.[193]

For January 28's2018 Pro Bowl, no Bears were voted in for the third consecutive year, though Jordan Howard, Kyle Long, Tarik Cohen, and Akiem Hicks were named first, second, second, and fourth alternates for the game, respectively.[194][195]Josh Sitton (two), Kyle Fuller (two), and Cohen (one) received votes for theAssociated Press'All-Pro Team.[196]

Standings

[edit]

Division

[edit]
NFC North
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
(2)Minnesota Vikings1330.8135–110–2382252W3
Detroit Lions970.5635–18–4410376W1
Green Bay Packers790.4382–45–7320384L3
Chicago Bears5110.3130–61–11264320L1

Conference

[edit]
#TeamDivisionWLTPCTDIVCONFSOSSOVSTK
Division leaders
1[a]Philadelphia EaglesEast1330.8135–110–2.461.433L1
2[a]Minnesota VikingsNorth1330.8135–110–2.492.447W3
3[b]Los Angeles RamsWest1150.6884–27–5.504.460L1
4[b][c]New Orleans SaintsSouth1150.6884–28–4.535.483L1
Wild Cards
5[c]Carolina PanthersSouth1150.6883–37–5.539.500L1
6Atlanta FalconsSouth1060.6254–29–3.543.475W1
Did not qualify for the postseason
7[d]Detroit LionsNorth970.5635–18–4.496.368W1
8[d]Seattle SeahawksWest970.5634–27–5.492.444L1
9[d]Dallas CowboysEast970.5635–17–5.496.438W1
10Arizona CardinalsWest880.5003–35–7.488.406W2
11[e]Green Bay PackersNorth790.4382–45–7.539.357L3
12[e]Washington RedskinsEast790.4381–55–7.539.429L1
13San Francisco 49ersWest6100.3751–53–9.512.438W5
14[f]Tampa Bay BuccaneersSouth5110.3131–53–9.555.375W1
15[f]Chicago BearsNorth5110.3130–61–11.559.500L1
16New York GiantsEast3130.1881–51–11.531.458W1
Tiebreakers[g]
  1. ^abPhiladelphia claimed the No. 1 seed over Minnesota based on winning percentage vs. common opponents. Philadelphia's cumulative record against Carolina, Chicago, the Los Angeles Rams and Washington was 5–0, compared to Minnesota's 4–1 cumulative record against the same four teams.
  2. ^abLA Rams claimed the No. 3 seed over New Orleans based on head-to-head victory.
  3. ^abNew Orleans clinched the NFC South division over Carolina based on head-to-head sweep.
  4. ^abcDetroit finished ahead of Dallas and Seattle based on conference record, while Seattle finished ahead of Dallas based on head-to-head victory.
  5. ^abGreen Bay finished ahead of Washington based on record vs. common opponents. Green Bay's cumulative record against Dallas, Minnesota, New Orleans and Seattle was 2–3, compared to Washington's 1–4 cumulative record against the same four teams.
  6. ^abTampa Bay finished ahead of Chicago based on head-to-head victory.
  7. ^When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest-ranked remaining team from each division.

Staff

[edit]
2017 Chicago Bears staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

Final roster

[edit]
2017 Chicago Bears final roster
Quarterbacks(QB)

Running backs(RB)

Wide receivers(WR)

Tight ends(TE)

Offensive linemen(OL)

Defensive linemen(DL)

Linebackers(LB)

Defensive backs(DB)

Special teams(ST)

Reserve lists


Practice squad


Rookies in italics
53 active, 15 inactive, 10 practice squad

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[edit]
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  125. ^"Danny Trevathan suspended two games for Adams hit".National Football League. September 30, 2017. RetrievedOctober 1, 2017.
  126. ^Rapaport, Daniel (October 3, 2017)."Bears' Danny Trevathan Has Suspension Reduced to One Game".Sports Illustrated. RetrievedOctober 9, 2017.
  127. ^Jahns, Adam (October 7, 2017)."Bears confidently turn to John Timu at inside linebacker".Chicago Tribune. RetrievedOctober 11, 2017.
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  150. ^Kane, Colleen (October 30, 2017)."Zach Miller in good spirits after serious knee injury, says coach John Fox".Chicago Tribune. RetrievedOctober 31, 2017.
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Division championships (21)
Conference championships (4)
League championships (9)
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Formerly theDecatur Staleys (1920) and theChicago Staleys (1921)
Bold indicatesNFL Championship (1920–69) orSuper Bowl (1966–present) victory
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