Chicago Sports

Bears podcast: Packers win — again

Patrick Finley and Jason Lieser break down Justin Fields’ return, Aaron Rodgers’ fourth-quarter rally and more from the latest installment of the Bears’ rivalry game.

New episodes of “Halas Intrigue” will be published regularly with accompanying stories collected on the podcast’s hub page. You can also listen to “Halas Intrigue” wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Luminary, Spotify and Stitcher.

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Bears DL provided Aaron Rodgers with a ‘dream game’

The Packers left Soldier Field victorious and Aaron Rodgers had some comments about the Bears defense in postgame presser.

While the Chicago Bears seemed to be in control or at least in the lead for a large part of the game with plenty of momentum they could never put away the Green Bay Packers.

If there is one thing Rodgers likes to do is beat the Bears in Soldier Field. After the game he admitted it was like a dream game for him as Chicago couldn’t generate much from a pass rush:

The #Bears had no sacks and zero hits on Aaron Rodgers. “The line played really good today. I moved around a decent amount, held on to the ball at times, and went to the ground one time. So that’s like a dream game for somebody in my position with a pretty sore rib cage.”

Tough to win a game when a successful QB has all the time to let receivers get open and make clean throws. Not saying Chicago’s defense should have gone full Gregg Williams with “bountygate” but Rodgers has been pretty banged up recently. Simply getting pressures and hits could have swung the game entirely.

Rodgers on the Bears’ short-handed secondary: “Jaylon is a premier player, but the other young guys played pretty well. There were times I felt like, ‘Get out of the pocket, somebody’s going to come open,’ and they locked down our guys. They definitely deserve credit for that.”

It is fair to say the secondary gave it their best and they were obviously going to struggle when Aaron Rodgers had all day. The effort was there and they wanted this win bad clearly but the lack of experience and injuries played it’s part.

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3 takeaways from Bears’ 28-19 loss to Packers

The Bears have now lost eight consecutive games to the Packers by a total of 101 points. Even in a season when everything seems to be crumbling in Green Bay, this is still far from a legitimate rivalry.

Here are three takeaways from the latest defeat:

Fields’ long runs

Justin Fields has three of the top four runs by a quarterback this season, trailing only Lamar Jackson’s 79-yard touchdown. Fields had a 67-yard touchdown against the Lions, a 61-yarder against the Dolphins and added a 56-yarder against the Packers on Sunday.

Kmet’s uptick

With Darnell Mooney out, tight end Cole Kmet was the Bears’ leading receiver with six catches for 72 yards on seven targets. After just 14 catches through eight games, Kmet has 21 for 249 and four touchdowns over the last five.

Scary schedule

The harsh reality is that this was one of the most winnable games left on the Bears’ schedule. Their next two opponents, the Eagles and Bills, are a combined 20-4. Both are in the top three in scoring and top eight in defense. Both have MVP-candidates at quarterback.

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Bears, QB Justin Fields lose another one to Packers in ‘sickening’ style

There should be no mischaracterizing this as a good day for Justin Fields and the Bears.

So before he and they try to spin their 28-19 loss to the Packers as progress, here’s someone who won’t sugarcoat it: Veteran safety DeAndre Houston-Carson.

“It’s really sickening,” he said of the loss, which was the Bears’ eighth in a row to their supposed rival. “That’s probably the best word, especially just the way that these games go: It’s tight, it’s tight, it’s tight, and then at some point there’s one drive where they get it.

“To lose in that manner over and over again is the most disappointing thing… And it’s really sickening to lose to Green Bay.”

That’s the unfiltered truth.

Fields threw two interceptions in the final three minutes. The Bears didn’t score a touchdown after the 6:09 mark in the second quarter. The defense broke on Christian Watson’s 46-yard touchdown run with the game on the line and allowed the Packers to roll 18-0 in the fourth quarter.

There’s no polishing that.

The Bears have seen this opponent at its peak, and this wasn’t it. This was a depleted version of the Packers and a diminished version of Aaron Rodgers, who was already talking about shutting it down for the season once they’re eliminated from the playoffs.

This was their chance.

It also was Fields’ chance to deliver the signature victory that has eluded him his first two seasons. The stage was set beautifully for him to do something memorable as he gutted out pain — he played through it straight-up, no pre-game injection — in his return from a separated non-throwing shoulder.

Fields was headed toward heroics until everything crumbled at the end. It was the same story in Atlanta two weeks earlier and in the losses to the Lions and Dolphins before that.

After a missed field goal by Cairo Santos and various other snafus allowed the Packers to take a 20-19 lead with 4:49 left, Fields was in that familiar position. He pushed the Bears to the Packers’ 43-yard line with three minutes left, and that was when the good vibes fizzled.

Fields threw downfield for Equanimeous St. Brown on a route designed for him to break sharply back toward the line of scrimmage. But Packers cornerback Jaire Alexander broke faster and beat him to the ball for the interception.

St. Brown left the locker room before the media entered, forfeiting the chance to tell his side of it, but he’ll hear the echoes of Fields and coach Matt Eberflus pinning that pick on him throughout the bye week.

“That’s a trust throw,” Eberflus said. “That he’s reading it and, man, he’s going to let it rip and [St. Brown has] got to do a great job of stepping up and making those plays. [Alexander] made a nice play. He jumped it. But hopefully our receiver can jump out and knock that down, if possible.”

Fields added, “You just like to see the receiver come back to the ball. We always just try to tell the receivers that those DBs want that pick each and every time, so they’re going to attack that ball.”

Before that throw, Fields completed 16 of 19 passes for 224 yards. With that pick and another one fired out of desperation with 51 seconds left and the game already lost, he finished 20 of 25 for 254 yards and a 75.7 passer rating.

He also ran six times for 71 yards, including a 56-yard scramble for a touchdown late in the first quarter.

Fields was upbeat afterward, saying the 20.15 miles per hour he was clocked at on the touchdown was below his usual 21 or 21.5, asserting that it’s inevitable the Bears will start stacking wins and calling it a step forward for him.

“This was one of my best games, passing-wise,” Fields said. “Of course, the stats won’t show that. I felt really comfortable out there in the passing game.”

If the stats don’t illustrate it, perhaps he can. What felt so right?

“I don’t know,” he said. “I just felt comfortable.”

Until the end.

His performance shows potential, certainly, but not necessarily progress. The eagerness to proclaim Fields a finished product is understandable given how starved the Bears have been for a franchise quarterback, but Fields still has steps to take. He’s on track, but he’s not there yet.

Fields gets some margin as he tries to grow into this job, but it’s concerning that he has thrown interceptions on an NFL-high 4% of his passes this season. He has thrown 10 fourth-quarter interceptions in 20 games.

The losses don’t matter as much in a rebuilding season, but eventually they will. And if these issues persist into a season in which the Bears actually have some aspirations, that’s going to be very uncomfortable.

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The Packers had ‘winning time,’ the Bears a losing streak

Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers sounded an awful lot like Michael Jordan after outscoring the Bears 18-0 in the final frame of a 28-19 win Sunday at Soldier Field.

“The fourth quarter,” Rodgers said, “is winning time.”

The Bears had again proven the inverse, losing their sixth-straight game and ninth in 10 tries. Six of those have come by one score or less. Sunday might as well have been — until the Packers followed Christian Watson’s fly sweep with Rodgers’ two-point conversion pass to take a nine -point lead with 1:51 to play.

“I can’t even count on my fingers anymore how many close games in the end we’ve lost,” rookie tackle Braxton Jones said.

The Bears have been saying for two months how crucial it would be for the development of their young players to win a close game. That they haven’t is cause for concern, even as one acknowledges the team is rebuilding.

The Bears’ offensive improvement ends at the start of the fourth quarter. Entering Sunday’s game, the Bears were last in the league in fourth-quarter passer rating and fourth-quarter yards per pass. Sunday’s fourth-quarter drives ended in a missed field goal and two interceptions.

“The wins are going to start coming …” quarterback Justin Fields said. “I just can’t wait until they start coming. They’re going to start rolling in here soon, so [we] just gotta keep working and keep getting better.”

A defensive backfield missing four of its five starting defensive backs allowed the Packers to average 10.3 yards per play in the fourth quarter, not counting two Rodgers kneeldowns at the end.

“This is the NFL,” safety DeAndre Houston-Carson said. “That’s what it’s always gonna come down to — you gotta find a way to do it.”

The Bears have 14 rookies and four second-year players on their active roster. There’s no evidence they know how to win in the NFL. They’re also on perhaps the league’s worst roster — one constructed with little regard for the final score in 2022.

After trading Roquan Smith and Robert Quinn in October, the Bears are paying 43.7 percent of their salary cap to players no longer on their team, per Spotrac. Safety Eddie Jackson and receiver Darnell Mooney going to injured reserve last week meant the Bears are paying another 11.7 percent of their salary cap to injured players.

They took the field Sunday with 40.5 percent of their salary cap in uniform. The Packers had 77 percent. They’re not supposed to win regularly that way — but shouldn’t they win more than one out of 10 games?

“We have big plays, we’re driving, we’re doing good things,” Jones said. “I’m pretty sure all day we looked fairly unstoppable until we make a mistake.

“Good championship teams don’t say they shot themselves in the foot.”

No one will mistake this team for one. The 3-9 Bears became the second team to be eliminated from playoff contention Sunday, joining the Texans — one of three teams they’ve beaten this season.

With the league’s most salary cap space available in 2023 and a high draft pick — they’d draft second if the season ended today — the Bears will spend the offseason hoping to add winning pieces.

Until then, the Bears have four games to find out if their young players — not to mention their first-time head coach and first-time offensive coordinator — can find ways to win. Doing so would hasten their development, even if it costs them draft position.

“You have to find ways to get that done,” Eberflus said. “You have to find ways to close games out. We’re excited about these next four games to be able to get ourselves in position to do that.”

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Aaron Rodgers beats Bears again, with no hard feelings

Bears fans saluted Aaron Rodgers as they always do Sunday at Soldier Field.

“A lot of middle fingers,” Rodgers said.

And Rodgers saluted them right back, except this time with an actual salute to Bears fans after a successful two-point conversion all but clinched a 28-19 victory.

“You never know when it’s going to be your last time playing at a place,” Rodgers said when asked about the salute to the fans at Soldier Field. “I’ve had a lot of great moments at this place. As much as the fans don’t really like me, I do have respect for the city of Chicago and their great sports fans here, and this stadium. It’s been a lot of fun over the years to go to battle, win or lose.”

It wasn’t a vintage Aaron Rodgers performance. Playing against a short-handed Bears defense with only one starter in the secondary, Rodgers completed 18-of-31 passes for 182 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions for a pedestrian 85.7 passer rating.

“We got the dub,” Packers running back A.J. Dillon said. “That’s Aaron Rodgers for you.”

Even in leading the Packers from a 19-10 deficit late in the third quarter with 18 unanswered points in the fourth quarter, there were none of the incredible Rodgers moments that have indelibly marked this era of the Bears-Packers rivalry. The Packers did more damage on the ground, rushing 11 times for 103 yards in thee decisive drives, while Rodgers threw for 60 yards — plus a 38-yard gain on a pass interference call on a deep ball to Christian Watson.

“You definitely draw a lot of confidence and good memories off this matchup,” Rodgers said. “We’ve had a tremendous amount of success during my time against them. It’s been a special rivalry that I’ve been a part of — and there were probably a lot of people that felt good at 19-10. So did I.”

As much as Rodgers respects the Bears-Packers rivalry, he doesn’t understand it as well as he thinks. There were probably very few Bears fans who felt good at 19-10. If anything, Rodgers himself has conditioned them to fear the worst.

And he delivered. And even if it was without his signature touch, this latest victory had his fingerprints all over it. It’s no coincidence the Packers executed flawlessly in crunch time with Rodgers in command.

“We put a lot on his plate to make sure we’re in the correct run calls, and he does a great job of handling that,” coach Matt LaFleur said. “He always gives you confidence that we can execute whatever the play is.”

Rodgers’ intuition played a key role. In fact, on Watson’s clinching 46-yard touchdown run on a jet sweep that gave the Packers a 28-19 lead with 1:51 to go, Rodgers was so certain the play would work he had the forethought to ask LaFleur whether Watson should score or maintain possession to burn time.

I expected them to play some man coverage, so at the last second I ran over to the sideline to verify we weren’t in a Rolex situation, where we wanted to not score,” Rodgers said. “And I think Matt was maybe a little surprised by the question.”

LaFleur said score, Watson did, and this game was over.

“This was a different Bears team,” Rodgers said. “Obviously Jaylon [Johnson] is a super-talented player but a lot of young guys are playing outside of that, other than [DeAndre Houston-Carson].

“But they’ve got a talent young quarterback [Justin Fields] who’s got a chance to be around for a long time. A really good running back [David Montgomery]. A stud young receiver. EQ [Equanimeous St. Brown] making plays, so it was a competitive game — but [I] definitely didn’t want to be walking in here [the post-game interview room] losing to the Bears. To win against the Bears is always a little more special.”

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Rookie Dalen Terry sits and waits while Bulls struggle with consistency

SACRAMENTO — There was some mop-up time in the blowout loss in Phoenix on Wednesday.

Four minutes of it to be exact.

Before that, a few minutes in the one-sided loss in New Orleans two weeks earlier.

And in between? Rookie Dalen Terry left the mop and bucket back in Chicago, and put some work in with the Windy City Bulls of the G League.

Sure, the No. 18 overall pick was hoping for more so far this season, especially with the Bulls so inconsistent from game-to-game, but the waiting game continued on Sunday.

Even with Javonte Green sidelined with a sore right knee and Alex Caruso playing with a sore ankle, there still weren’t those meaningful minutes for Terry off the bench.

And while it’s way too early to say this was how his entire season will set up, Terry admitted that it has felt like a redshirt year so far.

“It’s hard at times, but you’ve got to always know that everything happens for a reason,” Terry said. “This is basically like a redshirt year where I get to work out all the time. I know I’m not playing, but be a good teammate, be around the guys, that’s bigger than anything right now.

“I talked to a few guys. I’ve talked to DeMar [DeRozan], I’ve talked to Pat [Williams] about it, and they just keep telling me, ‘Brah, you’re on a good team. This is a blessing and a curse.’ That’s what happens when you get drafted to a good team. Sometimes you get that year to really develop and learn, but you got to sit. If I was drafted to a bad team, maybe I play a lot, but we’re a bad team. There’s pros and cons both ways. I have to just be patient and make sure I don’t change my love for the game. I know I won’t.”

There was once a defensive-minded wing named Jimmy Butler that all but “redshirted” his rookie year with the Bulls, and as coach Billy Donovan pointed out, when Joakim Noah was a freshman at Florida under Donovan, he averaged six minutes a game.

Those are the examples that Terry was holding onto.

“I still think we’re committed to his development,” Donovan said of his rookie. “The piece of the development that’s probably hard for him is he’s not getting those game minutes, which is important in player development.

“If you’re playing him in the rotation, you’re actually taking someone else out too.”

That’s the missing puzzle piece for Donovan. If Terry goes into the rotation, who does he take out? The other part of it was Terry’s shot is still not consistent enough, and the game still seems to be on fast forward when he’s out there.

“Maybe going forward we feel like let’s get him in there and his energy will help, his skillset will help,” Donovan said. “I still think the growth of him as a player is still very critical. This can’t be a wasted year with limited minutes for him. He’s got to really continue to get better. To his credit he’s done that. He’s kept himself upbeat, he’s getting in the gym, he gets in early. He’s doing all the things he needs to be doing.”

Green with injury

According to Donovan, Green suffered the knee injury late in the Golden State game. He was receiving treatment in hopes of playing against the Kings, but there was still too much soreness Sunday morning.

The Bulls don’t play until Wednesday, so the hope was Green would be available then.

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College Football Playoff set; semis pit Georgia vs. Ohio State, Michigan vs. TCU

Can anyone slay the red-and-black dragon?

If so, it’s probably going to have to be the Big Ten that does it.

No. 4 Ohio State goes to Atlanta — the belly of the beast — to take the first crack at No. 1 Georgia in the Peach Bowl, one of two College Football Playoff semifinals on Dec. 31. If the Buckeyes can’t handle the unbeaten defending national champion, No. 2 Michigan could be next in line to try. The unbeaten Wolverines begin with No. 3 TCU in the Fiesta Bowl in Glendale, Arizona.

The final poll was revealed Sunday, with the playoff foursome and pairings unfolding as most expected they would. Still, critics have things to howl about, as always. Did Ohio State really deserve to get in despite getting throttled by Michigan in its last game and not playing for a conference championship? Is TCU, which didn’t lose until the Big 12 title game against Kansas State, really one of the best four teams in the country considering it opened as a 91/2-point underdog against an opponent not named Georgia? Is the playoff fully legit without Alabama, which would — and this is just a fact — be favored in a bowl matchup with any team in the land other than the big, bad Bulldogs?

This isn’t the first year things have broken heavily in favor of Ohio State during the committee’s final get-together. The Buckeyes — in the final four only because USC lost the Pac-12 title game — open as 61/2-point underdogs, a modest number that speaks to the ongoing perception that the talent level in Columbus poses a serious threat to any opponent, even an SEC superpower.

“It has been an emotional roller coaster,” coach Ryan Day said on ESPN. “But when you go through a few days where you think that maybe your whole season’s gone, and then all of a sudden you start to build hope and then you start to see the opportunity where everything’s right out in front of you, it’s almost like a second lease on life. …

“You get an opportunity to go play in this thing, you’re two games away from a national championship.”

And if the Buckeyes do beat Georgia, if onetime Heisman Trophy frontrunner C.J. Stroud outduels Stetson Bennett, if Marvin Harrison Jr. impacts the game like the best wide receiver in the country could, if Day’s sometimes-shaky defense rises up like Urban Meyer’s did to end the 2014 season — the first year of the playoff — with a national title, take a flying guess what might happen next.

An Ohio State-Michigan rematch for all the marbles. It boggles the mind just thinking about it.

Committee chair Boo Corrigan said no consideration was given to trying to avoid a Buckeyes-Wolverines repeat in the semifinal round. Maybe that’s true. Then again, it never fails to get harder to believe what the committee says the closer to the playoff we get.

The Buckeyes just plain backed in. Still, as Corrigan did the media rounds, he took pains to refer to the Buckeyes’ win against Notre Dame as a compelling one (even though it was an ugly game and the Irish are a run-of-the-mill team) and their loss to Michigan as having been more competitive than the final score indicated (it wasn’t).

“Again,” Corrigan said, “we looked at getting the right four teams.”

That’s the whole idea — for one more season after this one. Starting in 2024, the playoff will expand to 12 teams and there will be so much more to argue and complain about. It’ll be a delight.

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White Sox officially signs Mike Clevinger

The White Sox and right-hander Mike Clevinger have finalized a one-year, $12 million contract.

The White Sox front office has announced the signing of free agent right-hander Mike Clevinger, Sunday, the first official day of the Winter Meetings.

The south-side franchise agreed to a one-year, $12 million deal with the free agent starter that includes a mutual option for 2024.

Clevinger, 31, went 7-7 with a 4.33 ERA over 1141⁄3 innings pitched in 22 starts and one relief appearance for the San Diego Padres in 2022.

OFFICIAL: The #WhiteSox and free agent right-handed pitcher Mike Clevinger have agreed to terms on a one-year, $12-million contract, which includes a mutual option for the 2024 season. https://t.co/3aWTmeXRML

In his first full season after recovering from a second Tommy John surgery, Clevinger from May 17 through Aug. 1 posted a 3-3 record with a 2.81 ERA in 10 games (nine starts).

The veteran joins an all-right-handed starting unit that also includes Dylan Cease, Lance Lynn, Michael Kopech and Lucas Giolito. Johnny Cueto, one of the Sox’ top starters in 2022, is a free agent.

Chicago is looking to bounce back from a disappointing 2022 season, when it went 81-81 and finished 11 games back of surprising American League Central champion Cleveland.

Hall of Fame manager Tony La Russa stepped down in October, and Pedro Grifol was hired Nov. 1.

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Bears kicker Cairo Santos: ‘I just gotta do my job’

Bleary-eyed and frustrated, Cairo Santos didn’t try to explain away what happened Sunday.

“I just gotta do my job,” he said after a 28-19 loss to the rival Packers. “I’m done making any excuses. There’s no excuse out there. It’s frustrating. I try to put in my ‘A’ product every day. I felt like I’ve done a great job there all year — I can be confident in saying that.

“On Sunday … the extra point consistency’s not there.”

With about six minutes left in the first half, Santos pushed an extra point right. He told holder Trenton Gill he thought he made it — everything felt pure, but it faded.

Santos was 21-for-24 on extra points before Sunday, with two misses coming in the Week 1 downpour and the third in a one-point loss to the Lions.

Amazingly, he’s missed four extra points this year — and only two field goals.

One of the two missed field goals came Sunday, and it might have swung the game. With about 12 minutes left and the Bears up two, Santos’s 40-yarder was blocked by Packers defensive tackle Dean Lowry.

Rookie tackle Braxton Jones was blocking Lowry but said his “bad pad level” allowed the Northwestern alum to get his hands up. Santos didn’t believe the kick was low.

Bears coach Matt Eberflus said he talked to Santos for after the game to give him support. The kicker was already dreading having two weeks to think about the misses.

“You can’t wait for the next opportunity,” he said. “Going through a bye week, it stings even more.”

Leatherwood plays

Alex Leatherwood played his first snaps for the Bears, rotating with starting right tackle Riley Reiff.

The Bears claimed the 2021 first-round pick from the Raiders at the start of the season. Leatherwood then missed a month on the Non-Football Injury list after contracting mononucleosis. He lost 25 pounds and struggled to regain his conditioning.

“The first couple of weeks back, it was pretty rough,” he said. “There’s a lot of fatigue. … But I’m good to go now.”

Eberflus said Leatherwood had a good week of practice — an opportunity given him when Reiff missed Wednesday. Leatherwood was excited by playing well Sunday.

“Knowing that you get good blocks and people acknowledge it, it feels good,” he said. “It makes me want to go even harder, so I appreciate it.”

Claypool guts through

Six minutes into the second quarter, receiver Chase Claypool caught a 17-yard pass and twisted his right knee as he was tackled, fumbling. He went to the injury tent twice and ran on the sideline while testing a soft knee brace.

Claypool returned and finished with five catches for 28 yards.

He was unavailable after the game.

This and that

o The Bears and Packers entered Sunday’s game tied with an NFL-best 786 wins all-time. The Packers left Soldier Field with 787, marking the first time the Bears since 1921 haven’t had a share of the all-time lead.

o Fullback Khari Blasingame fell ill Saturday and was inactive. Tight end Trevon Wesco took his place but left in the first quarter with a leg injury.

Jason Lieser contributed to this story.

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