SAN FRANCISCO — 14.5 sacks. Fourth in the NFL. A Pro Bowl nod. By almost any metric, Aidan Hutchinson just tore through the 2025 season like a wrecking ball. But elite pass rushers don’t count the hits they land; they obsess over the ones they miss.
And for Detroit’s defensive anchor, one specific miss is living rent-free in his head this week.
Hutchinson finished just a half-sack shy of tying—and one sack shy of breaking—Robert Porcher’s longstanding franchise record of 15.0 sacks, set back in 1999. Speaking from Pro Bowl practice in the Bay Area, Hutchinson didn’t blame coverage or officiating. He pointed the finger squarely at a ghost in the machine: Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams.
The Record-Breaker That Wasn’t
The math is brutal. Hutchinson ended the year with 14.5 sacks. A single takedown of Williams in their Week 16 clash would have pushed him to 15.5, crowning him the new sack king of Detroit. He had the rookie-sensation-turned-sophomore dead to rights. Then, physics took a day off.
“I missed one in the Chicago game where Caleb [Williams] hit me with [a juke], and I knew the record was right there as he left me,” Hutchinson admitted, the frustration still audible in his voice. “Yeah, so it sucked, but I’m not worried. I think I’ll have many more years to beat that record.”
It’s a candid confession from a player who has otherwise been a nightmare for NFC North backfields. The play in question highlights the dangerous evolution of Williams in his second year—slippery, elusive, and increasingly aware of where No. 97 is lining up.
“He’s got that greased-lightning quality. You think you’ve boxed him in, you commit your hips, and he’s gone. Hutch eats quarterbacks for breakfast, but Caleb? He’s a different kind of meal ticket.” — Alim McNeill, Lions Defensive Tackle
NFC North: The New Trenches
This missed record isn’t just a stat sheet anomaly; it signals the heating up of a rivalry that will define the division for the next five years. The Lions owned the trenches in 2023 and 2024, but the Bears’ resurgence in 2025—led by Williams’ escapability—has leveled the playing field.
Hutchinson’s pursuit of Porcher’s record (and the elusive 20-sack club) will resume next September. But make no mistake: when Detroit sees Chicago on the 2026 schedule, Hutchinson won’t just be looking for a win. He’ll be looking to settle a personal score with the quarterback who juked him out of the history books.

