Caleb Williams and the Bears flipped an 18-point halftime nightmare into a 25-point fourth-quarter masterpiece, burying the Packers 31-27 and authoring the greatest playoff comeback in Chicago history.
Soldier Field shook like it hasn’t in decades. With 1:43 left on the clock, Caleb Williams dropped, scanned, and ripped a 25-yard laser to a streaking DJ Moore—the dagger that completed a breathtaking 25-point fourth-quarter avalanche and lifted the Chicago Bears over the Green Bay Packers 31-27 in Saturday’s wild-card barn-burner.
The comeback is the largest in Bears playoff history and instantly etches Williams’ second-year campaign into franchise lore. Chicago trailed 21-3 at the break and still stared at an 11-point deficit inside the final five minutes before a pair of flawless touchdown drives flipped the script on their fiercest rival.
How Chicago Dug the Hole—Then Climbed Out
Green Bay’s opening script was surgical. Jordan Love, back from the concussion that sidelined him since Week 17, fired three first-half touchdown passes—two to Romeo Doubs and a highlight one-hander to Christian Watson—while the Bears’ offense sputtered on three failed fourth-down gambles.
But the second half flipped with ruthless efficiency:
- Third quarter: Cairo Santos banged a 51-yard field goal to trim the gap to 21-6.
- 12:00 mark, fourth: Williams dropped a 5-yard touchdown to D’Andre Swift, 21-13.
- 4:18 left: A 27-yard scramble-drill dime to Rome Odunze set up an 8-yard touchdown to Olamide Zaccheaus plus the two-pointer, 27-24.
- 1:43 left: The coup de grâce—25 yards to Moore down the left sideline for the 31-27 lead.
Green Bay’s final march reached the Bears’ 33, but Love’s Hail Mary fell incomplete, igniting midnight pandemonium on Chicago’s lakefront.
Missed Kicks, Costly Decisions Haunt Packers
Special-teams gaffes and conservative second-half play-calling doomed Matt LaFleur’s crew. Brandon McManus yanked a 44-yard field goal wide right with 2:56 remaining and had already clanged an extra point after rookie Matthew Golden’s 23-yard catch-and-run score.
McManus’ pair of misses totaled seven lost points—an unacceptable margin in a four-point defeat. LaFleur also chose to sit on the ball late rather than chase additional scores, decisions that will fuel an off-season of what-ifs in Titletown.
What It Means for Both Franchises
Bears: The Resurrection Is Real
Ben Johnson’s first-year rebuild already has a signature moment. Chicago is 6-1 in games decided by one score this season, and Williams now owns two last-minute, game-winning drives against the Packers in a month. With Moore, Odunze, and Swift all under 26, the Bears enter the divisional round as the NFC’s most dangerous young core.
Packers: A Collapse That Could Reshape the North
Green Bay blew double-digit leads in all three meetings with Chicago this year, losing two. The special-teams meltdown and Love’s stalled second-half rhythm (just 10 points after halftime) will amplify calls for roster surgery on both sides of the ball. LaFleur’s reported extension talks could now face scrutiny after a historic collapse against his team’s bitterest rival.
Next Up
Chicago hosts the winner of Sunday’s Rams–Eagles clash next weekend, riding a wave of momentum no analytics model can quantify. For the Packers, the longest off-season in years begins immediately—haunted by 60 minutes they had in the palm of their hand and let slip into Lake Michigan folklore.
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