Snow flurries, single-digit wind chills and two of the NFL’s most creative play-callers set the stage for a Divisional classic: Stafford’s cold-weather résumé vs. Williams’ 361-yard comeback DNA.
Chicago’s first home playoff game since 2011 doubles as a polar laboratory for two contrasting quarterback prototypes. Matthew Stafford arrives with a toque, a healed index finger and the league’s most prolific arm—4,707 yards and 46 touchdowns in 2025. Across the line, Caleb “Iceman” Williams carries the hottest fourth-quarter résumé in football: seven game-winning drives, including last week’s 21-point resurrection against Green Bay.
Forecast: Arctic edge or frozen flinch?
Kickoff temperature is projected in the teens with swirling snow. Stafford’s career log at Soldier Field in sub-40° weather: 4-1 with a 102.8 passer rating. The lone loss came in 2013—before Sean McVay was legally allowed to call plays. Los Angeles’ roster is loaded with Midwesterners who relish the freeze: Kyren Williams (St. Louis native, Notre Dame alum) and Davante Adams (eight winters in Green Bay) treat the lake-effect wind like a familiar relative.
Chess match in the booth
Sean McVay faces his 15th different playoff opponent, but the sideline subplot is pure coaching incest. Bears play-caller Ben Johnson once helped mold Jared Goff in Detroit; McVay then shipped Goff to Johnson’s Lions to acquire Stafford. Now Johnson must counter the very quarterback he once schemed for. Johnson’s 2025 offense finished third in explosive-play rate; McVay’s unit ranked first in play-action yards per attempt (9.8). Expect pre-snap motion chess and late-shift stacks designed to stress Chicago’s man-heavy secondary.
Chicago’s patchwork wall
The Bears will trot out a re-shuffled left side: Theo Benedet and Braxton Jones were activated off IR after rookie Ozzy Trapilo tore his ACL versus Green Bay. Benedet’s first snap of the postseason was the game-winning drive—now he must block Kobie Turner and Byron Young, who combined for 19.5 sacks. Los Angeles’ front four generated pressure on 39 percent of opponent drop-backs when rushing four, the highest rate in the NFC.
Hidden target: Colston Loveland
With Rome Odunze nursing a foot injury, Williams turned to rookie tight end Colston Loveland (8-137-1 vs. Packers). The 10th overall pick runs a 4.52 forty at 245 pounds and aligns everywhere from H-back to split-wide. McVay’s answer is likely man-under quarters—safety John Johnson III bracketing Loveland inside the red zone, where 60 percent of Williams’ touchdown passes have come on extended plays.
Special-teams dagger
Weather tilts the field-position war. Bears returner Velus Jones Jr. averaged 29.1 yards per kickoff after Week 12 alignment tweak; Rams punter Ethan Evans dropped 38 punts inside the 20, tied for the league lead. One muffed punt in 12-degree air can flip momentum faster than any blitz.
Prediction machine
- Turnover margin is +13 for Chicago, +8 for L.A.—both top-three.
- Stafford is 11-2 when posting a 110-plus rating outdoors.
- Williams is 6-0 when his scrambling yards exceed 35.
- Snow games under McVay: 3-0, average margin 12.3 points.
Bottom line: Chicago’s fairy-tale run lives or dies on Williams’ ability to create outside structure; the Rams’ path is simpler—protect Stafford’s finger, let Adams and Puka Nacua win on double-moves before the ball turns to ice.
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