KEY TAKEAWAYS
- The Element: Forecasts for Sunday night at Soldier Field predict single-digit temperatures. The Rams (13-5) are leaving sunny Los Angeles for the “Bear Weather” of Chicago.
- The Quarterbacks: Veteran grit meets young phenom. Matthew Stafford returns to the NFC North to face Caleb Williams, who has led the Bears (12-6) to their best season in years.
- The Trenches: Chicago’s defense has allowed fewer than 100 rushing yards per game at home. If the Rams can’t run, they can’t win.
CHICAGO — The forecast calls for pain. When the Los Angeles Rams trot onto the frozen turf of Soldier Field this Sunday, they won’t just be battling the Chicago Bears; they’ll be fighting the wind coming off Lake Michigan. This is old-school, bruised-knuckle football. The Bears have turned their home stadium into a fortress this season, and they are welcoming the Rams with open, freezing arms.
For Sean McVay’s squad, this is the ultimate test of adaptability. The Rams built a 13-5 record on speed, precision, and high-flying offense. But speed slows down when the thermometer drops. Chicago (12-6) knows this. They built a team designed to drag opponents into the mud and beat them with physicality.
The Narrative: California Cool vs. Chicago Cold
The storyline writes itself, but the game will be decided by who ignores it. The Rams have historically struggled in cold-weather games, but Matthew Stafford is no stranger to NFC North winters from his Detroit days. He knows how the ball hardens in the cold and how hits feel twice as hard.
On the other sideline, Caleb Williams makes his Divisional Round debut. The Bears’ young signal-caller has electrified the city, playing with a loose, improvisational style that drives defensive coordinators crazy. But playoff football is about protecting the football. If Williams tries to do too much against a disciplined Rams secondary, disaster awaits.
Key Matchups: Where the War is Won
- Kyren Williams vs. The Wall: The Rams need to establish the run to keep the pass rush off Stafford. Chicago’s linebackers, led by T.J. Edwards, have been stuffing run gaps all season.
- Puka Nacua vs. Jaylon Johnson: This is the heavyweight bout on the outside. Nacua relies on physical route running; Johnson is one of the few corners strong enough to match him jam for jam.
- The Turnover Battle: The Bears are 9-0 this season when winning the turnover margin. The Rams must play clean.
“We don’t care about the weather. We care about execution. If you’re focused on the cold, you’re already losing. We are going there to play our game, not theirs.” — Sean McVay, Rams Head Coach
The X-Factor: Special Teams
In games where scoring is low and field position is king, special teams often decide the outcome. Chicago’s return game has been explosive lately, flipping field position and giving Williams short fields to work with. The Rams’ coverage units have been suspect. One missed tackle on a punt return could be the difference between a trip to the NFC Championship and a flight home.
Playoff Implications
The winner advances to the NFC Championship Game. For the Bears, a win would send the city into a frenzy not seen since 1985. For the Rams, it would prove they can win anywhere, in any conditions. Expect a low-scoring, physical brawl that comes down to a fourth-quarter drive.

