CHICAGO — Silence. Total, suffocating silence.
That’s what 60,000 people at Soldier Field sound like when a season of destiny dissolves into thin air.
Eight hours ago, the Chicago Bears were driving in overtime, marching toward their first NFC Championship appearance since 2010. They had momentum. They had the ball at the Rams’ 48-yard line. Then, in a split second, the air left the building.
Caleb Williams, fresh off a Houdini-act touchdown to Cole Kmet that forced the extra period, fired a dart to the right hash. No one was there but Los Angeles Rams safety Kam Curl.
Ball game. Season over.
But in the postgame presser, while the internet was busy meme-ing the turnover, Williams offered a three-second clip that tells the real story of the play. It wasn’t just a bad throw. It was a schematic breakdown of the highest order.
“Safety down front side, a concept.”
That’s what Williams said, staring deadpan at the cameras, wearing a patterned sweater that clashed violently with the somber mood.
The Anatomy of the Error
Let’s break down what Williams actually saw.
When a quarterback identifies “safety down front side,” he’s reading the rotation of the defense. In Ben Johnson’s offense, this trigger is supposed to change the receiver’s route. If the safety crashes down—usually indicating a blitz or a Cover 1 robber look—the receiver (in this case, DJ Moore) is often coached to break the route off. A “sight adjust.”
He stops. He slants. He finds the void.
Williams saw the safety rotation. He trusted the concept. He threw the ball to a spot where the schematic rulebook says DJ Moore should be.
The problem? Moore ran vertical.
“Miscommunication between him and I,” Williams admitted later, his voice barely rising above a whisper.
Kam Curl didn’t care about the miscommunication. The Rams safety, who has been a menace in the intermediate zones all season, read Williams’ eyes the entire way. He didn’t bite on the vertical stem. He undercut the “concept” route.
A Brutal End to a Magic Run
It’s a cruel finish for a quarterback who had played hero ball for four quarters.
Remember, this game shouldn’t have even reached overtime. Williams’ 4th-and-4 heave to Kmet with 18 seconds left in regulation was the kind of throw that gets statues built. Next Gen Stats had it traveling over 50 yards in the air while Williams was falling away from pressure. It was pure improvisation.
But the NFL playoffs punish improvisation when structure is required.
In overtime, against a disciplined Sean McVay-led team, you can’t rely on magic. You rely on precision. The Rams stayed disciplined. They forced the rookie-year mistakes to resurface in Year 2.
What This Means for 2026
The Bears finished 12-7. They won the NFC North. They have their franchise quarterback. But this loss will sting differently because it wasn’t physical domination—it was a mental error.
Williams expects the “safety down” read to be automatic. Moore expects the ball to be thrown to the open grass. That disconnect is the difference between booking a flight to Seattle for the NFC Championship and cleaning out your locker on a Monday morning.
For the Rams, they head to the Pacific Northwest to face the Seahawks, riding the leg of Harrison Mevis and a defense that capitalized on the one mistake that mattered.
For Chicago? They’re left with a concept. And a long offseason to think about it.

