CHICAGO — The silence in Soldier Field wasn’t the sound of defeat. It was the sound of a city realizing it finally has a quarterback.
Sure, the scoreboard read Rams 20, Bears 17 in overtime. Watching the Rams celebrate a Divisional Round victory on our turf stung like the January wind coming off the lake. But let’s cut the pity party. If you told any fan in 2024 that the 2025 Bears would sweep the Packers, host a playoff game, and shatter the franchise passing record, they’d have asked what you were drinking.
The magic ran out on Monday night, but the window just flew wide open. Here is the autopsy of a season we’ll never forget.
The 3,942-Yard Exorcism
We need to talk about the number. For 30 years, Erik Kramer’s 3,838 yards haunted this franchise like a ghost in the hallway. Quarterbacks came, threw interceptions, and left.
Caleb Williams didn’t just break the record; he evicted the ghost. 3,942 yards. 27 Touchdowns. And perhaps the most absurd stat of all: he was only sacked 24 times (down from 68 last year). That is what happens when you bring in an offensive architect like Ben Johnson to steer the ship. The “Ben Johnson Effect” turned a chaotic offense into a precision machine.
The Play That Almost Saved Us
We will see the replay for decades. 4th and 4. Game on the line. The Rams’ pass rush collapsed the pocket instantly. Williams spun out, ran backward 26 yards—scaring the life out of every person in the 312 area code—and heaved a prayer to the back corner.
Cole Kmet coming down with that ball to force overtime wasn’t just a highlight; it was defiance. It was the moment the “Same Old Bears” narrative officially died. Next Gen Stats clocked the air distance at 51.2 yards. I just clocked it as a heart attack.
“I don’t care about the record. I care that we’re cleaning out lockers today. But I’ll tell you this—Chicago hasn’t seen our best yet. We’ll be back, and we won’t be the ones walking off sad next time.” — Caleb Williams, Bears QB
The Rookie Who Stepped Up
While the headlines belong to Williams, we can’t ignore Colston Loveland. The rookie tight end became the safety valve this offense desperately needed. Six touchdowns and 713 yards for a first-year TE is absurd production. He and Kmet formed the best 12-personnel duo in the NFC North.
What Comes Next?
The pain of the OT loss will fade, but the reality of the roster remains. The Bears have a franchise QB on a rookie deal, a coach who knows how to use him, and a defense that kept the Rams in check for 60+ minutes.
The “Rebuild” is dead. The “Window” is open. The 2025 season was magical, yes. But 2026 needs to be legendary.

