Instant analysis of Bears’ 31-24 win over Cowboys

The Bears dismantled the Cowboys 31-24 to win their third consecutive game, where QB Mitchell Trubisky found success against Dallas.

The Chicago Bears delivered a 31-24 beatdown of the Dallas Cowboys on Thursday Night Football to improve to 7-6 on the season. It was Chicago’s third straight win as they look to keep their playoff hopes alive in the final quarter of the season.

Coming off an impressive performance against the Lions, the Bears offense had its best performance of the season against a solid Cowboys defense. They totaled 31 points and 382 yards en route to a convincing win that has this offense riding high after struggling most of this season.

Mitchell Trubisky continues to thrive on Thursdays. Following an impressive three-touchdown performance against the Lions on Thanksgiving, which earned him FedEx Air Player of the Week honors, Trubisky one-upped himself with his best game of the season against Dallas when the Bears needed it most.

Trubisky completed 23-of-31 passes for 244 yards and three touchdowns with one interception for a passer rating of 115.5. He tossed two touchdowns to receiver Allen Robinson, who five receptions for 48 yards, as well as one to receiver Anthony Miller, who three catches for 42 yards.

While Trubisky lit the Cowboys up through the air, he also used his legs to make plays, something that he did successfully last season but has shied away from this year. Trubisky had 10 carries for 63 yards and a touchdown, and he was able to utilize his mobility to pick up key first downs.

Newly-minted NFC Special Teams Player of the Month Cordarrelle Patterson continued to prove his versatility on special teams and offense on Thursday. Patterson had two kick returns for 44 yards, and he added one reception for 33 yards on offense.

The Bears saw substantial production from their tight ends against the Cowboys, where J.P. Holtz and Jesper Horsted shined for Chicago. Holtz led the team in receiving with 3 receptions for 56 yards, including a 30-yard reception that set up the Bears’ first touchdown of the game. Horsted added 4 catches for 36 yards, which doubled his total catches in his previous two games.

While the score might not indicate it, the Bears defense took care of business against the NFL’s best passing offense. The Cowboys drove 75 yards in 17 plays on the opening possession, and it looked like they might have their way with Chicago. But the defense buckled down and contained quarterback Dak Prescott and running back Ezekiel Elliott, who was held to under 100 rushing yards for the fifth straight game.

While the Cowboys stacked yards and points against the Bears’ prevent defense in the fourth quarter, Chicago was able to stop one of the league’s best offenses without some of its biggest playmakers, including Akiem Hicks, Danny Trevathan, Prince Amukamara and Roquan Smith, who was injured on that first drive.

Linebacker Nick Kwiatkoski led the team in tackles with 10 combined tackles. Linebacker Khalil Mack and safety Eddie Jackson each had a sack of Prescott.

The Bears are riding a three-game winning streak with 10 days to prepare for a divisional contest against the Green Bay Packers. If Chicago can keep this momentum going — and the offense and defense continue to do their jobs — things should get interesting in these final three games.

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WATCH: Mitchell Trubisky finds Allen Robinson for 2nd TD vs. Cowboys

Bears QB Mitchell Trubisky and WR Allen Robinson connected for a score for the second time in the first half against the Cowboys.

The Chicago Bears offense has picked up right where they left off following their Thanksgiving win over the Detroit Lions.

Chicago’s offense has moved the ball on every one of their four possessions, including their second touchdown drive of the night.

In the waning minutes of the first half, the Bears offense orchestrated a 14-play, 68-yard touchdown drive that culminated in a Mitchell Trubisky 8-yard touchdown pass to Allen Robinson.

The touchdown was the second thrown by Trubisky and Robinson’s second touchdown of the night. It’s Robinson’s second multi-touchdown game of the season, his previous came against the Oakland Raiders in Week 5.

The Bears’ 17-point first half is the second best output of the season. They put up 21 points against the Washington Redskins in Week 3, the result of several takeaways.

Chicago leads Dallas 17-7 at halftime.

WATCH: Mitchell Trubisky connects with Allen Robinson for Bears’ first TD

The Bears scored on their second possession, where Mitchell Trubisky found Allen Robinson for a touchdown that tied the game.

The Chicago Bears wanted to get off to a fast start, and that they did.

After Mitchell Trubisky threw an interception on the Cowboys’ 1-yard line on the Bears’ opening possession, the offense responded with a six-play, 51-yard scoring drive.

Trubisky connected with wide receiver Allen Robinson for a 5-yard touchdown, which tied the game

It was the third consecutive game that Robinson has a touchdown reception.

Robinson’s touchdown was set up by a 30-yard completion to tight end J.P. Holtz, who already has 3 catches for 56 yards on the night.

After an Eddy Pineiro field goal midway through the second quarter, the Bears lead the Cowboys 10-3.

Making sense of Mitchell Trubisky’s strong Thanksgiving performance

Following Bears QB Mitchell Trubisky’s impressive win vs. the Lions, fans are likely feeling a) optimistic, b) pessimistic or c) realistic.

It took twelve weeks, but for the first time in 2019, Mitchell Trubisky was very good on Thanksgiving against the Detroit Lions. On national TV, Trubisky delivered in a big way: 29-38 passing, 338 yards and 3 touchdowns with one interception for a passer rating of 118.1.

Scream bad Lions defense all you want, but Trubisky snatched victory from the jaws of defeat for perhaps the first time in his Bears career. After the Chicago defense let third-string quarterback David Blough score touchdowns on the first two drives of his NFL career, Trubisky led a valiant comeback, capped off by a nine-play, 90-yard drive in the fourth quarter that culminated with the go-ahead touchdown pass to David Montgomery.

Trubisky has had gaudier statistical games (see: last year’s efforts against Tampa Bay and Detroit), but this was the first time he truly put the Bears on his back and carried the team to victory. In those 2018 games, Chicago dominated in all three phases; on Thursday, they came from behind in a game the rest of the team didn’t play all that well. On top of that, it was on the road, in a game the Bears absolutely needed to win to keep their minuscule playoff hopes alive.

It’s an odd development in a season that, until now, seemed to derail any hopes of Trubisky being the franchise quarterback going forward. It has likely provoked a wide variety of reactions, and Bears fans might fall in one of three camps on how to view his strong performance.

The optimist’s view

Those who were holding onto hope for the third-year quarterback can reasonably point to Thursday’s performance and say, this was the Mitch Trubisky we were promised. He was accurate, efficient and decisive, completing over 75 percent of his passes. He dropped dimes all over the field, completing both of his passes that went over 20 yards in the air, both to Anthony Miller. He threw an interception, but came right back and threw a touchdown on the next drive.

Thursday was also the best that Matt Nagy’s offense looked all year, and is surely what the head coach imagined it would look like in 2019. Wide receivers Allen Robinson (8 catches, 86 yards and a touchdown) and Anthony Miller (9 catches, 140 yards) both had monster days. The passing game opened up holes for Montgomery, who averaged 4.7 yards per carry. The tight end made an athletic leaping touchdown catch, although it was Jesper Horsted instead of Trey Burton or Adam Shaheen.

The knock on Trubisky is rarely that he isn’t a skilled quarterback. His athleticism and arm talent have always been there. The issue has been erratic accuracy, coupled with an inability to diagnose defenses and run an offense. Thursday was an example of what it looks like when he puts it all together. That type of performance, on a consistent basis, can elevate this Chicago Bears team.

The pessimist’s view

Those who have completely given up on Trubisky will dismiss Thursday’s performance as an aberration and will have some justification in doing so. The Lions have a pitiful defense, ranking fourth to last in total yards allowed per game (398.1) and third to last in passing yards allowed per game (280.1). It was a borderline expectation that Trubisky would throw for 300 yards on this defense, which, by the way, was the first time he did it all year. And he still turned the ball over, on a terrible pass lofted late to Robinson that Darius Slay stepped in front of easily. It was just the Lions’ fifth interception of the season.

Yes, Trubisky won the Bears that game. But the instances in which he has lost games for the Bears this year far outnumber the wins. Against the Packers in Week 1, where he lofted a pass into double coverage in the end zone for a game-ending pick. Against the Eagles, where he managed only nine yards in the first half. Against the Chargers, where a fourth-quarter interception and fumble helped the team blow a late lead.

It was nice that Mitch managed to pull this game out and not ruin Thanksgiving. But he had been a subpar quarterback for the entire season until that point, and one good game against a bad defense isn’t going to make his future in Chicago any less murky.

The realist’s view

The measured take on Trubisky’s performance veers closer to the pessimists, but with a huge caveat. Yes, one good performance isn’t going to save a brutal season for the former second overall pick. The dreams of Trubisky being the guy are still likely over, and general manager Ryan Pace should still go quarterback hunting in the offseason, at least to bring in competition.

But at the very least, Mitch gave the team a lifeboat to cling to. The Bears playoff hopes have been declared dead a number of times now, but if they had lost and gone to 5-7, it would have been the final nail in the coffin. Now, at 6-6, they should be able to sneak into the playoffs if they win out. The obvious problem is that they will have to do it against the Cowboys, Packers, Chiefs and Vikings – all teams currently in playoff position. Even if they can beat the struggling Cowboys on Thursday night, they have to go into Lambeau Field and defeat Aaron Rodgers.

Yet in giving the team a very unlikely avenue to the playoffs, he also gave himself a very unlikely avenue to saving his Bears career. If Trubisky can beat those four teams in a row, stack some solid performances together and somehow put together a playoff run, his entire subpar season would be forgiven. All of a sudden, the team would feel much better about their quarterback situation going forward.

The chances may be slim, but after Thursday, it at least feels like there is some positive energy in the Bears locker room for the first time in 2019. The Athletic wrote that there was “plenty of praise for Trubisky in a joyous locker room,” with many reports noting that this win felt different from the others. Maybe the team can rally around Trubisky and recapture their 2018 form. Chicago did beat Rodgers and Kirk Cousins down the stretch last season – and Trubisky played efficient, mistake-free football along the way.

It’s all unlikely. There’s a much higher chance that all the positive energy is gone within a week or two, and we’re back to evaluating Cam Newton trade scenarios. But at least after Thursday, there is some semblance of hope. Which is all Bears fans can ask for right now.

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5 takeaways from Bears’ 24-20 comeback win over Lions

The Bears defeated the Lions 24-20, as they improved to 6-6 on the season. There was plenty to digest from this Thanksgiving game.

The calendar may have said Thanksgiving, but it was beginning to feel a lot like September as the Chicago Bears have a winning streak for the first time in two months, beating the Detroit Lions 24-20 to improve to 6-6 on the season.

Both teams landed blows on their first two drives, scoring touchdowns to make the score 7-7. The Lions attempted to pull away but never led by more than 10 points. Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky then led his team to touchdown drives in the third and fourth quarter, putting the Bears ahead for good, while the defense survived a last-ditch effort from rookie quarterback David Blough, making his first NFL debut on the national stage.

Like sides at a Thanksgiving dinner, there were many different takeaways from this game, such as the continued strong play of inside linebacker Roquan Smith, what’s going on with special teams and Chris Tabor, how the referees could miss a blatant roughing the passer call on Trubisky, or how valuable wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson is to this team. But here are my 5 takeaways that stuck out to me most during this latest Bears win.

1. Mitchell Trubisky finally played like it was 2018

Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports

Ever since he suffered his shoulder injury back in 2018 when the Bears defeated the Vikings, Trubisky simply hasn’t been the same. Prior to the injury, he had been on a heater, throwing for over 300 yards four times in six weeks and averaging a quarterback rating of 112.3 during that span.

After over a year, he finally returned to that form, at least for one game, throwing for 338 yards and three touchdowns with a 118.1 quarterback rating. For the most part, Trubisky looked sharp, leading the Bears to their first opening-drive touchdown since Week 4 and orchestrating a 90-yard scoring drive late in the fourth quarter that ended up being the game winner.

His day wasn’t perfect, as he did look timid at times while running and under-threw wide receiver Allen Robinson on a crossing route, resulting in an interception, but it’s clear this was easily his best game since last year’s win against the Lions at Soldier Field. The question is, can he build on it and string together these types of performances to mount one final playoff push?

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Stud and duds from Bears’ Thanksgiving win over Lions

For the first time all season, the Chicago Bears’ offense stepped up when their defense needed them to. Chuck Pagano’s unit had surprising trouble with Detroit Lions undrafted rookie quarterback David Blough, but Mitchell Trubisky and company found …

For the first time all season, the Chicago Bears’ offense stepped up when their defense needed them to.

Chuck Pagano’s unit had surprising trouble with Detroit Lions undrafted rookie quarterback David Blough, but Mitchell Trubisky and company found the endzone three times to hold on for the 24-20 victory.

With no Taylor Gabriel or Ben Braunecker, Chicago’s weapons stepped up to help Trubisky break 300 yards for the first time all season against a Lions team in free fall.

Matt Nagy had plenty to be thankful for on his Thursday afternoon. Here are the studs and duds from Week 13.

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WATCH: Bears offense scores on opening possession vs. Lions

The Bears offense did the impossible and scored on their opening possession for just the second time this season.

One thing that the Chicago Bears offense has struggled to do this season was get off to a quick start. They managed to do just that against the Detroit Lions.

The Bears drove 50 yards in six plays to jump out to a quick 7-0 lead over the Lions. Mitchell Trubisky was 4-for-4 for 31 yards on the drive, which culminated in a 10-yard touchdown pass to receiver Allen Robinson.

Return man Cordarelle Patterson cranked off a 57-yard return to open the game, which set the Bears up at the 50-yard line.

Chicago scored on their opening possession for just the second time this season.

The Bears and Lions are tied 7-7 early in the first quarter.

Bears WR Allen Robinson lifts Bears offense in win vs. Giants

Things were ugly on offense for the Bears, but they were made better by the performance of WR Allen Robinson in a winning effort vs. Giants.

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While things were certainly ugly for the Chicago Bears offense against the New York Giants, they could’ve been much uglier if not for wide receiver Allen Robinson.

Robinson was quarterback Mitchell Trubisky’s target of choice, and for good reason, as he caught six passes for 131 yards and a touchdown in the Bears’ 19-14 victory over the Giants.

“It’s just about finishing strong — not even me personally, but helping this team push through all the adversity,” Robinson said, via the Sun-Times. “It’s always fun to have a game like that and have everything be clicking.

“Throughout these last five games, [I’m] trying to have a few more games like that. Hopefully it transfers to some wins.”

Robinson accounted for nearly half of Trubisky’s 278 passing yards, and it would’ve been more if not for a Cody Whitehair hands to the face penalty that negated a Trubisky to Robinson 60-yard completion.

“Of course it’s frustrating whenever you have any play that’s negated, but you’ve gotta move on and make more plays,” Robinson said. “Stuff like that happens. There could be a flag almost every play.”

At this rate, Robinson, who has 63 receptions for 764 yards and four touchdowns, is poised to eclipse the 1,000-yard mark this season.

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Instant analysis of Bears’ 19-14 win over Giants

Like most of the Chicago Bears’ wins this year, Week 12 wasn’t pretty, but they got the job done against an inferior opponent. The Bears got back into the win column on Sunday, beating the New York Giants 19-14 to improve to 5-6 on the year. After a …

Like most of the Chicago Bears’ wins this year, Week 12 wasn’t pretty, but they got the job done against an inferior opponent.

The Bears got back into the win column on Sunday, beating the New York Giants 19-14 to improve to 5-6 on the year.

After a slow first half that only produced three points, the Bears came out firing the second half, scoring two touchdowns and holding the Giants to seven points.

Mitchell Trubisky completed 25 of 41 passes for 278 yards, his highest total of the season, for one touchdown and two interceptions. He also ran for a score as well.

His touchdown through the air was a 32-yard dart to Allen Robinson in the third quarter, who led all players with 131 receiving yards on six catches.

On defense, Khalil Mack returned to his All-Pro form, strip-sacking Giants QB Daniel Jones to set up Trubisky’s rushing touchdown to put them up 19-7.

Jones did lead a late rally, scoring on a heave to WR Golden Tate on a 4th and 18 to pull the Giants within one score, but that’s as close as they would get. The Giants were also burned by two missed field goals by kicker Aldrick Rosas.

The Bears continue to play well enough to beat bad opponents on their schedule. While Trubisky flashed with crisp throws to Robinson and Anthony Miller, he also threw a pair of back-breaking interceptions that were simply bad decisions.

The defense shines when they play with the lead, but once again gives up a touchdown late in the fourth quarter. As a whole, the team simply plays too inconsistently and struggles to put together a complete game.

A short week awaits them as they travel to Detroit (3-7-1) for a second-straight Thanksgiving matchup as they attempt to keep their extremely slim playoff hopes alive.

Studs and Duds from Bears’ Week 12 win over Giants

The Chicago Bears’ victory over the New York Giants followed a familiar script for the 2019 season. The offense was allergic to first downs in the first half as they fell behind an inferior opponent. Something changed at halftime and Mitchell …

The Chicago Bears’ victory over the New York Giants followed a familiar script for the 2019 season.

The offense was allergic to first downs in the first half as they fell behind an inferior opponent.

Something changed at halftime and Mitchell Trubisky looked like a new quarterback in the third quarter, giving the Bears a lead and giving the fans new hope.

Then in the fourth quarter, the defense forgets how to play football, Trubisky turns back into a pumpkin, and the Giants keep it close with one final drive to win it.

This time, Chicago’s defense held strong and they went to celebrate Club Dub for beating a two-win opponent.

Still, the signs of life the Bears showed on both sides of the ball brought some excitement back to a season that was lacking it.

Here are the studs and duds from win number five.

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