CHICAGO — If you thought the broadcast angle was wild, wait until you see this. Sunday night at Soldier Field wasn’t just a playoff game; it was a geometry lesson led by Caleb Williams, and one fan sitting in the North End Zone just captured the syllabus. The Bears may have eventually fallen 20-17 to the Rams in an overtime heartbreaker, but the clip circulating this morning isn’t about the loss—it’s about the single most impossible throw of the 2025-26 postseason.
The viral video, courtesy of fan account @malikbadran226, captures the sheer chaos of the fourth quarter’s dying moments. With 27 seconds left and the Bears trailing 17-10, Soldier Field was a cauldron of nerves. The camera angle is perfect—straight down the pipe from behind the goalposts giving us a terrifyingly clear view of what Williams saw: nothing but trouble.
Facing a 4th-and-4 from the Rams’ 14-yard line, the pocket didn’t just collapse; it evaporated. The video shows Williams backpedaling. And backpedaling. And backpedaling. He retreated nearly 26 yards behind the line of scrimmage, hauling his team’s season all the way back to the 40-yard line while three Rams defenders closed in for the kill.
Then came the heave.
From the stands, the ball looks like it hangs in the snowy Chicago air for an eternity. Next Gen Stats confirms why it felt that way. The pass traveled a staggering 51.2 air yards to travel a literal distance of 14 yards on the stat sheet. It is officially the longest completion by air distance in the red zone since tracking began in 2016.
The fan video captures the exact millisecond the crowd realizes Cole Kmet is open in the back corner. The roar isn’t gradual; it’s an explosion. Kmet, fighting off Rams cornerback Cobie Turner, hauled in the “prayer” to tie the game at 17-17, sending the game to overtime and the internet into a meltdown.
“I ended up getting a little bit of pressure… just tried to break contain. I saw Kmet and just gave him a chance. It felt like it was in slow motion.” — Caleb Williams, Bears Quarterback
“There are some things you just can’t coach. That was ridiculous.” — Ben Johnson, Bears Head Coach
While the throw will live on in highlight reels forever, the result ends Chicago’s surprising 12-win season. The Rams survived the overtime scare after a Williams interception set up the winning field goal, booking their ticket to Seattle for the NFC Championship Game. For the Bears, the offseason begins with a bitter taste but undeniable optimism. They have their franchise quarterback, a coach in Ben Johnson who maximized the roster, and now, arguably the greatest “fan cam” highlight in team history.

