The Chicago Bears moved to 8-3 with a gutsy win over the Steelers, but with a harsh stretch looming—including showdowns against elite NFC contenders—the team’s legitimacy as a playoff force will finally face the ultimate test.
The Chicago Bears, under first-year head coach Ben Johnson, have rocketed to an impressive 8-3 record. Their latest victory—a tense 31-28 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers—proves this team is no longer an NFC North afterthought. Yet as Chicago basks in top-billing over the 7-3-1 Packers and 7-4 Lions, fans and analysts are left with the same burning question: can this team keep delivering as the pressure intensifies?
Key context: the Steelers were forced to start Mason Rudolph in place of the injured Aaron Rodgers, who was sidelined by a recent wrist fracture [Yahoo Sports]. Even against a depleted opponent, Chicago’s path to victory included withstanding yet another injury crisis—this time, their entire starting linebacker corps was absent—while relying on the resilience of Caleb Williams and a defense that has delivered in clutch moments throughout 2025.
The Anatomy of the Bears’ Turnaround
Last season’s Bears routinely struggled to keep pace, but under Johnson’s direction, Williams has made one of the most dramatic year-two improvements among NFL quarterbacks:
- 239 yards passing on 19-35 attempts against Pittsburgh
- Three touchdowns, zero interceptions, and only one sack taken
- Just 17 sacks in 11 games this year, a far cry from last season’s league-leading 68
Williams’ poise was evident after a costly first-quarter sack-fumble that Pittsburgh returned for a touchdown [Yahoo Sports]. Instead of unraveling, he engineered three passing scores and consistently found ways to escape pressure, a testament to both his development and Johnson’s QB-friendly system.
This ability to quickly move past mistakes—and make defenses pay—has been the spark that keeps Chicago’s offense inside the league’s top five. Yet, lurking behind those numbers is an important caveat: so far, the Bears’ wins have mostly come against struggling teams.
Strength of Record: The Caveat for Chicago’s Rise
All eight Bears victories have come either against teams with question marks at quarterback or franchises outside the playoff picture. The laundry list of recent Chicago wins includes the Cowboys, Raiders, Commanders, Saints, Bengals, Giants, and Vikings—none of whom are currently considered NFC powerhouses.
Pittsburgh, meanwhile, entered this week outside most playoff projections, and the absence of Rodgers further diminished the challenge for Chicago. For the Bears to shake the “pretender” label, they must prove their mettle against playoff-caliber competition.
The Looming Gauntlet: Eagles, Packers, 49ers, Lions
The defining stretch of the Bears’ season is here. The next five games will reveal if Chicago is a gritty upstart or a true NFC threat:
- Week 13 at Eagles: Facing the reigning Super Bowl champs on Black Friday in a hostile environment
- Two matchups with the rival Packers, who trail only slightly in the division race
- Showdown vs. the 49ers, a team built for late-season football
- Season finale vs. the Lions, last year’s NFC North champions, and the current division rival hot on their heels
Only one remaining contest—against the Cleveland Browns—features a team outside the postseason hunt. The time for Chicago to prove itself is now.
Defense Under the Microscope: Can They Withstand Elite Offenses?
For all the talk of Williams and the offense, defense may be the biggest concern. The Bears rank 27th in total defense (364.4 yards allowed per game), and injuries have tested their depth at linebacker and in the secondary. Against an underpowered Steelers attack, Chicago allowed 186 yards rushing and 5.2 yards per carry, while surrendering a narrow edge in first downs and time of possession.
Upcoming opponents like the Eagles and 49ers provide a far sterner test. Even with improved health, Chicago must find ways to stiffen against playoff-caliber running games and elite passers down the stretch.
Fan Pulse & The Road Ahead: Can Bears Nation Dare to Dream?
For the first time since 2020, hope is tangible in Chicago. The swagger is deserved: an 8-3 record, a resurgent young quarterback, and a coach who has rejuvenated the city’s most beloved franchise. But Bears fans, seasoned by decades of heartbreak, have their eyes wide open: the journey ahead could define a new era—or reinforce old doubts.
- Can Williams stay mistake-free when the margin is razor thin?
- Will the defense find its footing in time to withstand the league’s elite?
- Is this the start of a perennial contender, or merely a feel-good flash?
The answers are coming soon. As Chicago braces for its toughest battles yet, the entire NFL will be watching—because this season, the Bears have gone from spoilers to one of the league’s defining stories.
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