Stock Watch: Which Bears players impressed, struggled in Week 15?

Chicago has won two straight games. Here’s a look at how the stock is trending for some Bears players after Week 15.

The Chicago Bears kept their playoff hopes alive with a 33-27 win over the Minnesota Vikings in Week 15, where it was once again the Bears offense that carried the team to victory as the defense did come up with some big stops when they needed to.

There was plenty of good and bad — mostly good — for the Bears against the Vikings. Here’s a look at how the stock is trending for some Bears players after Week 15.

Cordarrelle Patterson avoided serious knee injury, could play vs. Jaguars

Bears KR/RB Cordarrelle Patterson is day-to-day with a knee injury heading into a Week 16 game against the Jaguars.

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The Chicago Bears had a bit of an injury scare in last Sunday’s win against the Minnesota Vikings when kick returner/running back Cordarrelle Patterson left the game with a knee injury in the first half.

Patterson later returned the game, where he returned kickoffs but wasn’t involved much in the run game, which gave starting running back David Montgomery more touches.

While Patterson returned, his status isn’t without its concerns. He is officially day-to-day with a knee injury, according to head coach Matt Nagy.

But according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, Patterson avoided a serious knee injury, and there’s a chance he could play against the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday.

If Patterson doesn’t suit up, the Bears will likely turn to receiver Anthony Miller to return kickoffs while relying heavily on Montgomery in the run game. Chicago did sign veteran running back Spencer Ware to the practice squad on Tuesday, which would give the Bears’ running back room some depth. Especially considering there are two inexperienced guys behind Montgomery.

We’ll see if Patterson’s condition improves headed into a pivotal match-up against the 1-13 Jaguars, where a playoff spot is on the line for Chicago in the final two weeks.

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Fantasy Football Targets, Touches and TDs: Week 16

Three key lessons to learn from a wild 2020 season.

Believe it or not, we’re down to championship week in the majority of fantasy leagues.

The uncharted road has been rocky and uncertain, and there has been ongoing doubt on whether we would ever reach this point. But still here we are, ready to determine league champions in the usual fashion in the most unusual of seasons.

Many, understandably, are ready to move on and forget anything and everything from Fantasy 2020, but there were lessons to be learned and others that were reaffirmed this season, and they’re worth a review before we completely turn our sights toward the offseason and 2021 draft prep.

Here are three lessons to take from Fantasy 2020, starting with …

Patience, please, with rookies, particularly the running backs

Remember back at midseason when the likes of Jonathan Taylor, Cam Akers, D’Andre Swift and J.K. Dobbins were fantasy non-factors?

Many of these mid-round rookie running back draft picks were relegated to the ends of benches or could even be found on the waiver wire after their original fantasy teams simply gave up on them.

And, looking back at some of the numbers, it’s easy to see why:

  • Over the season’s first 10 weeks, Taylor was fantasy’s 28th-ranked running back with an average of only 12.1 (point-per-reception) fantasy points per game. And, at the time (heading into Week 11), he was coming off a three-game span in which he produced a grand total of 102 total yards and one touchdown on 30 total touches.
  • Through Week 11, Akers’ season-long stat line (in eight games) consisted of 50 rushes for 201 yards, three receptions for 27 yards and one total TD. That was a grand total of 31.8 PPR points.
  • In the season’s first eight weeks, Swift had only two games with 15 or more fantasy points and had received 11 or more touches in a game only twice.
  • In the Baltimore Ravens’ first six games leading into their Week 7 bye, Dobbins was third among the team’s running backs with only 36 total touches, including 25 rushing attempts, and had totaled 228 yards and two TDs — good for 45.8 fantasy points.

Patience proved to be the key, however, as each of the four has become a fantasy factor in the season’s second half.

Let’s go again to the numbers …

  • Since Week 11, Taylor has been fantasy’s third-best running back, with only David Montgomery (26.5) and Derrick Henry (25.6) averaging more fantasy points than Taylor’s 22.0 per outing. The Indy rookie has rushed for 414 yards (sixth among RBs) and three TDs over that span and has added another 95 yards and a TD on 13 receptions.
  • After producing the aforementioned 201 yards and one TD on 50 carries in his first eight games, Akers has rushed for 390 yards and two scores on 74 attempts in four contests since. Only Dalvin Cook (96) and Henry (92) have logged more rushing attempts than Akers during that span.
  • In his three most recent games, Swift has had 11 or more touches and at least 15 fantasy points in each, including two of his three best games (25.9 points in Week 10 and 24.2 Sunday). He’s found the end zone in all three games for a total of four TDs in that span.
  • Since the Ravens’ Week 7 bye, Dobbins has paced the team with 92 touches and trails only QB Lamar Jackson with 460 yards from scrimmage, including 414 rushing, while scoring four TDs — one in each of the last four games he’s played in.

In season-long fantasy league, knowing when to hold ’em and when to fold ’em is an integral part of a winning strategy, but not all of the commodities carry equal weight.

Some rookies, like the Jaguars’ James Robinson, shine from the start. Most, though, require fantasy patience, especially at running back, where productive — and potentially productive — players are at a high premium, and young legs are inherently primed to thrive late in a season when it matters most.

Remember that and think twice next season when you’re tempted to send that highly touted but under-performing fourth-round rookie back packing at Halloween.

Hot and cold late-season QBs swing fantasy fortunes

Timing is everything in season-long fantasy leagues.

A scorching starter in the season’s first 13 weeks can flame out overnight come fantasy playoff time.

A pre-Thanksgiving pedestrian fantasy producer suddenly can erupt on a late-season tear and earn unexpected league-winner distinction.

That’s especially true at quarterback, fantasy’s highest-scoring position.

Following are two lists.

The first runs down fantasy’s top-12 quarterbacks from Weeks 1-11 (minimum six starts), their average fantasy points per start, and then how they’ve fared since — i.e. their respective ranking and fantasy-point average over the last month (Weeks 12-15, minimum two starts):

  1. Kyler Murray, 30.4 (12th, 21.5)
  2. Russell Wilson, 28.4 (23rd, 17.9)
  3. Josh Allen, 26.5 (third, 27.4)
  4. Patrick Mahomes, 26.4 (fourth, 26.3)
  5. Justin Herbert, 25.9 (20th, 18.1)
  6. Aaron Rodgers, 24.6 (eighth, 24.6)
  7. Deshaun Watson, 23.4 (seventh, 24.6)
  8. Tom Brady, 21.5 (11th, 21.9)
  9. Lamar Jackson, 21.5 (first, 31.3)
  10. Carson Wentz, 21.1 (32nd, 12.9)
  11. Gardner Minshew, 21.0 (NR, one start)
  12. Ryan Tannehill, 20.9 (sixth, 25.6)

Now, here’s the inverse: the top 12 fantasy QBs from the last four weeks (min. two starts) and their respective rankings, averages from the first 11 weeks

  1. Jackson, 31.3 (ninth, 21.5)
  2. Jalen Hurts, 29.6 (NR, no starts)
  3. Allen, 27.4 (third, 26.5)
  4. Mahomes, 26.3 (fourth, 26.4)
  5. Baker Mayfield, 25.7 (29th, 14.2)
  6. Tannehill, 25.6 (12th, 20.9)
  7. Watson, 24.6 (seventh, 23.4)
  8. Rodgers, 24.6 (sixth, 24.6)
  9. Kirk Cousins, 23.5 (21st, 19.0)
  10. Tua Tagovailoa, 21.9 (NR, 12.8 in 4 starts)
  11. Brady, 21.6 (eighth, 21.5)
  12. Murray, 21.5 (first, 30.4)

First, a nod to the consistency and reliability of Allen, Mahomes, Watson, Rodgers and Brady, who have continued to produce at a near-steady weekly QB1 level throughout the season.

On the flip side, though, reside the likes of Hurts, Mayfield, Cousins and Tagovailoa who have blossomed as weekly late-season QB starters after being fantasy non-factors and Wilson, Herbert and Wentz who have gone in the opposite direction.

Wentz, of course, was benched in favor of the rookie Hurts in Week 14, and all the latter has done is put up 21.3 and 37.8 points in his first two pro starts while rushing for 169 yards and accounting for five total TDs. Up next for the Philly freshman is a Week 16 date with the Cowboys, the eighth-most favorable matchup for fantasy QBs.

Jackson, meanwhile, is finally performing as the elite QB he was drafted to be (neck-and-neck with Mahomes this past summer as the top quarterback coming off the board) with at least 27.7 points in each of his three games since sitting out Week 12 due to a positive COVID-19 test.

And can it really be that Wilson, fantasy’s No. 2 QB over the first 11 weeks, is producing at a low-QB2 level while failing to score more than 19.02 fantasy points in three of the last four weeks?

We’d write it off as an aberration, but then again we saw almost the exact same pattern a year ago at this time when Wilson averaged the 27th-most points (15.5) at the position from Weeks 13-16 in a season in which he started hot and still finished with the fourth-most fantasy points at the position.

Matchups can certainly matter in the fantasy postseason

Here in this space three weeks ago, we ran through the easiest and toughest fantasy playoff schedules (Weeks 14-16), according to The Huddle’s handy Fantasy Strength of Schedule tool.

Using the same tool and adjusting the range of weeks, here are of some of the notable quarterback and running back Weeks 13-15 fantasy projections looking forward from Week 12. We’re focusing on the QBs and RBs as they seem to be the positions most affected by defensive matchups.

The Titans, Ravens and Vikings were all projected to have top-10 most favorable fantasy QB schedules over the last three weeks, so maybe the recent surges for Ryan Tannehill (fourth at the position in average fantasy points during that span), Jackson (first) and Cousins (10th) shouldn’t be all that surprising.

Tannehill is enjoying a late-year boom for the second straight season and is tied with Allen with a position-most 10 total TDs (eight passing, two rushing) over the last three weeks. He’s averaged 27.7 fantasy points (fourth among QBs) during that span and has taken full advantage of matchups against the Browns, Jaguars, three of seven defenses surrendering the most points to fantasy QBs.

There seems to be even more projection-to-performance correlation at running back as the SOS forecast pinpointed the Colts, Bears and Titans as having the top three most favorable Week 13-15 fantasy RB slates.

And your No. 1, 2 and 4 fantasy backs over that span? The Bears’ David Montgomery, the Colts’ Taylor and the Titans’ Henry, respectively.

Montgomery has totaled a position-most 80.8 PPR points, including five TDs, over the last three weeks after compiling 137.7 points and three TDs over the Bears’ first 11 games. But facing the Lions (most points allowed to fantasy RBs), Texans (second-most points allowed) and Vikings (17th-most points surrendered) in back-to-back-to-back weeks outings has vaulted the formerly pedestrian Montgomery into league-winning territory.

Now, certainly, matchups are not the end-all, be-all. And they usually don’t matter too much for locked-in fantasy studs or players suddenly receiving a high-volume of work at a low-volume position.

The Texans’ Watson, for instance, just got done feasting (1,034 yards of total offense, 65.4 fantasy points) on what was supposed to be the league’s third-most unfavorable Weeks 13-15 fantasy QB slate, while the league’s third-most unfavorable fantasy tight end itinerary similarly didn’t exactly hinder Washington TE Logan Thomas, who’s caught 28-of-31 targets over the last three weeks and averaged 19.4 fantasy points per outing.

But heed the Montgomery example above and definitely use matchups as one of the top tiebreakers when deciding between two-or-more similar players to fill the last spot in your starting postseason lineup or when evaluating a seemingly dead-even, do-I-do-it-or-do-I-decline midseason trade proposal.

Bears RB David Montgomery nominated for FedEx’s Ground Player of the Week

David Montgomery has been on a tear over the last month, but it was his Week 15 performance against the Vikings that was his best yet.

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The Chicago Bears offense has found new life with the run game and second-year running back David Montgomery, who has been on a tear over the last month.

But Montgomery’s best game came on Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings, where the Bears needed to win to keep their playoff hopes alive. And it was Montgomery’s stellar performance that led the way.

Montgomery gained 146 rushing yards on 32 carries (4.6 average) with two touchdowns. His rushing total and carries were both career highs.

That performance garnered Montgomery a nomination for FedEx’s Ground Player of the Week, where he’s up against the likes of Tennessee’s Derrick Henry and Green Bay’s Aaron Jones.

Montgomery has recorded three 100-yard rushing games — including back-to-back 100-yard games — over the last four games. With a rejuvenated offensive line, better play-calling and new opportunities, Montgomery has been showing everyone why he’s one of the league’s exciting young backs to watch.

You can vote for Montgomery as the FedEx Ground Player of the Week here: https://www.nfl.com/voting/air-and-ground/ 

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Best plays from Chicago Bears’ 33-27 win over the Minnesota Vikings

Let’s take a look at the best plays by the Bears in their Week 15 win over the Vikings.

The Chicago Bears kept their playoff hopes alive with a 33-27 victory over the Minnesota Vikings, which featured some impressive drives by the offense and some big stands by the defense.

Let’s take a look at the best plays by the Bears in their Week 15 win over the Vikings.

Allen Robinson earned Bears’ highest grade on offense in Week 15

Chicago Bears receiver Allen Robinson was the team’s highest-graded player per PFF, in Week 15

Believe it or not, the highest-grade player on the Chicago Bears offense in Week 15 against the Vikings wasn’t running back David Montgomery. Instead, according to Pro Football Focus, it was wide receiver Allen Robinson.

Robinson, who secured four catches for 83 yards, ended Sunday’s victory with an 84.4 mark. A-Rob earned an elite 91.7 score from PFF after Week 14’s win over the Texans. Needless to say, he’s on a hot streak.

As for Montgomery, the Bears’ second-year back was actually just eighth among Chicago’s primary contributors on offense. His 67.9 grade ranked behind players like Jimmy Graham, Mitchell Trubisky, and Darnell Mooney.

Analytics aside, Montgomery was the Bears’ engine in their 33-27 win over the Vikings. He carried the ball 32 times for 145 yards and two touchdowns and looked every bit the part of an elite NFL starter. He’s up to 907 rushing yards on the season and an impressive 4.5 yards per carry.

On the other end of the spectrum was rookie tight end Cole Kmet, who played 64 snaps and scored the second-worst grade on offense with a 48.1.

Tunnel Vision of Week 15

Tunnel Vision – a look back at Sunday for fantasy free agents, injuries and notable performances.

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
 Josh Allen 359-33 4
 Ryan Tannehill 273-21 5
 Kyler Murray 406-25 4
 Jalen Hurts 338-63 4
 Lamar Jackson 243-35 4
Running Backs Yards TD
Tony Pollard 12-69
6-63
2
David Montgomery 32-146
1-16
2
Dalvin Cook 24-132
5-27
1
J.D. McKissic 13-51
9-56
1
Derrick Henry  24-147
2-5
1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Calvin Ridley 10-163 1
DeAndre Hopkins 9-169 1
Marvin Jones 10-112 1
Stefon Diggs 11-147 0
Zach Pascal 5-79 2
Tight Ends Yards TD
Darren Waller 9-150 1
Logan Thomas 13-101 0
Noah Fant 8-68 1
Travis Kelce 6-51 1
Mark Andrews 5-66 1
Placekickers XP FG
Cairo Santos 3 4
Tyler Bass 6 2
Nick Folk 0 4
Sam Ficken 2 3
Greg Zuerlein 5 2
Defense Sa ck-TO TD
Cowboys 2-4 1
Bills 3-1 1
Colts 5-2 0
Ravens 5-1 0
Seahawks 4-2 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Nick Mullens – Elbow
RB Raheem Mostert – Ankle
RB Le’Veon Bell – Arm
RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire – Knee
RB James Robinson – Ankle
TE Richard Rodgers – Shin
WR Collin Johnson – Concussion
WR Cordarrelle Patterson – Knee
WR Michael Gallup – Hip
WR Tre’Quan Smith – Ankle
WR Stefon Diggs – Foot

Chasing Ambulances

All fantasy playoffs are raging and this is no time to lose anyone. Heading into Week 16, there will be a few important players to track.

WR Stefon Diggs (BUF) – HC Sean McDermott has not updated Digg’s status after leaving the Thursday night win with a foot injury. Early indications are that the injury is not serious and shouldn’t be an issue this week at the Patriots.

QB Nick Mullens (SF) – Injured his elbow in the loss to the Cowboys and was replaced by C.J. Beathard for the final series. HC Kyle Shanahan hasn’t addressed Mullens injury but was asked about changing quarterbacks anyway. He wouldn’t discuss that with the press which is a sure sign that a change could be made. The 49ers are in a lost season and winning or losing doesn’t matter much. But Mullens threw two interceptions and lost a fumble, so Beathard may see playing time at the Cardinals this week.

RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire (KC) – The Chiefs’ rookie injured his knee in the win over the Saints and needed to be helped from the field since he couldn’t put any pressure on it. HC Andy Reid said that an X-ray was negative. According to Reid, “Clyde got twisted up into the splits.” His legs were sore and they will continue to evaluate him. Le’Veon Bell would inherit a bigger load if Edwards-Helaire misses time, though even he was banged up at the end of the game as well. The Chiefs host the Falcons and could win that game without their rookie, so practice will be important to see where he stands at the end of the week.

RB Raheem Mostert (SF) – Left the loss to the Cowboys after re-aggravating the same ankle injury that made him miss games earlier in the season. He was already bothered by it last week in practice. If he misses this meaningless game  at the Cardinals, Jeff Wilson and Tevin Coleman would see more use.

RB James Robinson (JAC) – Left the loss to the Ravens with an ankle injury and never returned. There was little information from the team about the injury and more should be known by Wednesday. Dare Ogunbowale replaced him in the game but he only ran the ball twice. The Jaguars host the Bears this week and have even less reason to win the game since they now own the No. 1 overall draft pick in April. Ogunbowale would take the start of Robinson cannot play, but he’s been the only consistently productive player for the offense and switching to the second string is unlikely to offer much fantasy value.

 

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

QB Aaron Rodgers (GB) – After far exceeding all expectations this season, right when you needed him most, Rodgers beats the Panthers, barely, with 143 passing yards and one touchdown. He ran in a score to salvage his fantasy value but he’d been a 300-yard, three-touchdown kind of guy this year when he played anything like the No. 25 defense versus quarterbacks.

RB Leonard Fournette (TB) – He replaced Ronald Jones this week, and more importantly, the soon-to-be free agent got a chance to audition for any other team looking at game tape. Fournette ran for only 49 yards on 14 carries but rushed in two touchdowns versus the Falcons that sport a Top-10 defense against running backs. Didn’t hurt his stock but didn’t wow anyone either. This week in Detroit could be big if Jones remains out.

QB Matt Ryan (ATL) – After  six straight weeks with moderate yardage and seven touchdowns combined, it seemed safe enough to count Ryan out for the rest of the year. But versus the Buccaneers, he passed for 356 yards and three touchdowns with no turnovers. Probably won’t repeat in Kansas City this week, but trap games are happening.

RB Todd Gurley (ATL) – He’s been limited by the chronic knee condition that led to his leaving the Rams. Against the Buccaneers defense, he only ran once for a net one-yard loss and added two catches for 15 years. Gurley’s not going to be any more durable next year.

RB J.K. Dobbins (BAL) – Mark Ingram was a healthy scratch this week and Dobbins went on to score a touchdown in his fourth straight game. He’s still limited to no more than 15 carries per game, but he’s assumed the primary rusher role and should be even better in 2021.

WR Brandon Aiyuk (SF) – The rookie was expected to compliment Deebo Samuel but he’s been mostly injured and Aiyuk has a firm grasp on the No. 1 wideout role with the 49ers. He caught nine passes for 73 yards and a score in Dallas which means in his last seven games, he’s either caught a touchdown or gained 100 yards. For a team that doesn’t pass much.

RB Tony Pollard (DAL) – Ezekiel Elliott was a surprise scratch on Sunday and Pollard took the primary role.  He gained 69 yards and two touchdowns on only 12 carries and added six catches for 63 yards as one of the highest-scoring fantasy running backs for Week 15. That ought to get Ezekiel back in the game.

RB David Johnson (HOU) – Duke Johnson was inactive on Sunday and Johnson had to shoulder the receiving role as well as be the primary rusher. He only ran eight times for 27 yards and they gave Buddy Howell five carries for 22 yards. But Johnson went from never catching a pass since Week 7 to a career-high 11 receptions for 106 yards.  Even Duke Johnson only managed six catches for 24 yards when they played the Colts just two weeks back.

RB Sony Michel (NE) – Damien Harris was inactive this week because of his ankle and Michel reclaimed the lead rusher role. He only ran ten times but gained 74 yards with no run more than 17 yards. He’s making a case to stay next year in the convoluted, murky committee that will all but certainly remain.

RB Salvon Ahmed (MIA) – He was questionable to play against the Pats with a shoulder injury that forced him to miss three games. But with Myles Gaskin on the COVID-19 list, Ahmed not only started, he gained 122 yards and a touchdown on 23 carries, plus caught a five-yard pass. Matt Breida also added 12 runs for 86 yards, so when Gaskin returns, this will be a very crowded backfield.

RB David Montgomery (CHI) – The Bears rarely allowed Montgomery to run more than 14 times per game and insisted on pretending that Cordarrelle Patterson was a running back. But over the last month, Montgomery has been one of the highest-scoring fantasy backs with at least one or two touchdowns  and well over 100 total yards each week. Either HC Matt Nagy figured out what we all knew for two years, or Montgomery’s dramatic upswing has Will Fuller overtones yet to be uncovered. Montgomery went from averaging 52  to 108 rushing yards per game. Don’t question it. He only scored twice in the first nine games and then six more in just the last four.

RB Derrick Henry (TEN) – Already set a personal best with 1,679 rushing yards this year with two games to go. He’d need 161 rushing yards in each game to break 2,000 yards and while facing the Packers and Texans might offer that opportunity, the Titans dialed him back after he gained 147 yards and a score on 24 rushes. They let Darrynton Evans have eight carries to finish out the game. Prudent? Sure. A missed opportunity? Who cares? No one wants to hear the Henry owner complain about anything.

WR DK Metcalf (SEA) – Left the win over the Football Team after grabbing his hamstring but returned and led the team with five catches for 43 yards. He’s only 64 yards away from passing Steve Largent’s team record of 1,287 yards in a season. He trails only DeAndre Hopkins (1,324) and Stefon Diggs (1,314) for the NFL lead.

TE Logan Thomas (WAS) – The sixth-year tight end may be on his fourth NFL team, but looks like he is going to stick. He’s risen to the No. 6 fantasy tight end and just caught 13 passes for 101 yards in the loss to the Seahawks. That’s three more catches in a game than any other Washington player this year.

Los Angeles Rams – Christmas just got a little colder and less merry in Southern California. Feels like they should have to wear a big, red “J” on their jersey for a week. No, wait, make that a giant “J” in Gotham Green.

 

Huddle player of the week

Jalen Hurts  –  Nudged out Josh Allen by less than one point as the highest-scoring fantasy player. The Eagles rookie threw for 338 yards and three touchdowns plus ran for 63 yards on 11 rushes with another score. While they lost to the Cardinals, he gets to try it all again in Dallas this weekend. So, this is what the Eagles offense looks like. “No, Carson, no one wants to be a backup quarterback. But some people have no options. People like you, Carson.”

Salute!

Drama 101 – Somebody has to laugh, somebody has to cry

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Ryan Tannehill 273-21 5 QB Russell Wilson 121-52 1
RB Tony Pollard 32-146
1-16
2 RB Todd Gurley 1-(-1)
2-15
0
RB Salvon Ahmed 23-122
1-5
1 RB Kenyan Drake 8-21
2-14
0
WR Zach Pascal 5-79 2 WR Amari Cooper 2-(-7)
2-10
0
WR Kendrick Bourne 4-86 1 WR Keenan Allen 1-(-1)
1-17
0
WR Russell Gage 5-68 1 WR Robby Anderson 1-(-1)
2-21
0
TE Tyler Higbee 4-67 1 TE T.J. Hockenson 2-18 0
PK Cairo Santos 3  XP   4 FG PK Will Lutz   1 XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 178 Huddle Fantasy Points = 37

Now get back to work…

Bears vs. Vikings game recap: Everything we know

In what was essentially a playoff game, the Bears fought to keep their postseason hopes alive with a 33-27 win over the Vikings.

In what was essentially a playoff game, the Chicago Bears fought to keep their postseason hopes alive with a 33-27 win over the Minnesota Vikings. It certainly felt like a playoff game, especially with the back-and-forth in the second half, Cairo Santos’ clutch field goals and a failed Vikings Hail Mary at the end of the game.

The Bears offense was once again the talk of the game, as they put up 30 points for the third straight game. It was another beautifully-called game by offensive coordinator Bill Lazor, who leaned heavily on running back David Montgomery — who had 146 yards on 32 carries — and continued to utilize quarterback Mitchell Trubisky’s strengths.

While Chicago’s defense struggled containing Vikings running back Dalvin Cook, who had his best outing against the Bears with 132 yards on 24 carries,  they did come up big with the game on the line. Chicago’s defense came up with a big stop on fourth-and-1, which gave the ball back to the Bears offense and led to a field goal that put them up six. The defense also survived a late rally by the Vikings in the final minute, breaking up a Hail Mary attempt.

The Bears advance to 7-7 on the season and keep their slim playoff chances alive. After losing six straight games, Chicago has won their last two and still have something to play for in late December.

Studs and duds from Bears’ 33-27 victory against the Vikings

The Bears defeated the Vikings 33-27, keeping their hopes for a postseason berth alive. Here are the studs and duds from Sunday’s game.

Week 15 was a pseudo playoff game for both the Chicago Bears and Minnesota Vikings. With both teams coming into the week at 6-7, the loser would see their playoff chances all but evaporate going forward.

When the dust settled, the Bears emerged victorious with a 33-27 win, climbing back to .500 and keeping their hopes for a postseason berth alive. Here are the studs and duds from Sunday’s game.

Instant analysis of Bears’ 33-27 win over the Vikings in Week 15

The Chicago Bears kept their playoff chances alive with a 33-27 win over the Minnesota Vikings.

There was a time during the 2020 season that the Chicago Bears were on a six-game losing streak and all hope was lost. Now, after a 33-27 win over the Minnesota Vikings, the Bears’ chances for a postseason spot looms large.

It wasn’t the ideal start for both teams as the Bears started the game with a three-and-out, but the Vikings did the same. However, on the next possession for both teams, they were able to find the end zone.

Quarterback Mitchell Trubisky found rookie receiver Darnell Mooney for an eight yard touchdown to start the game, but the Vikings responded with a touchdown pass of their own from quarterback Kirk Cousin to receiver Adam Thielen from three yards. The Bears were able to respond with a Cairo Santos 42-yard field to give the Bears a 10-7 lead into the second quarter.

Halfway through the second quarter, the Bears were able to extend their lead with a one-yard rushing touchdown from running back David Montgomery. The Bears offense was powered by Montgomery with 32 carries for 146 yards and two touchdowns.

Just before halftime, the Bears and Vikings exchanged field goals that would give the Bears a 20-10 lead. The Vikings would got the ball to start the second half and they were cut into the Bears’ lead with a one-yard rushing touchdown from running back Dalvin Cook.

Even with the Vikings starting strong in the second half, the Bears never gave up and found ways to answer Minnesota. After the Cook touchdown, the Bears responded with a 14-yard rushing touchdown from Montgomery.

The Vikings kicked a 22-yard field goal, then the Bears kicked a 20-yard field goal. However, the Vikings scored on a 20-yard pass from Cousins to Tyler Conklin, then the Bears got themselves into the red zone and Trubisky tossed an ill-advised interception to Viking rookie cornerback Cameron Dantzler in the endzone.

Leading 30-27, the Vikings had a chance to keep their postseason chances alive, but they failed as the Bears defense forced a turnover on downs. The Bears weren’t able to get a first down to end the game, but Santos extended their lead to 33-27 as the Vikings had 0:56 to work for a comeback.

The Vikings had moved the ball into Bears territory after a few throws by Cousins, but they had to rely on a Hail Mary with seven seconds left in the game. The pass was deflected into the air by safety Eddie Jackson in the end zone and it resulted in an incompletion to give the Bears their seventh win of the season.

The Bears aren’t in the playoffs just yet, but they are still in the hunt. The team the Bears have to keep an eye on and root against is the Arizona Cardinals. The Cardinals will take on the Philadelphia Eagles in the evening, while the Bears will get ready for the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 16.