Caleb is regressing every game as he goes down the old "Trubisky-Fields" road.
LINK This can’t continue. The Chicago Bears can’t go on like this. They can’t keep producing this brand of lousy, uninspired, miserable football.
It’s just not productive. Not healthy. Not justifiable.
On Sunday, the Bears entered Soldier Field to play an ideal get-well opponent in the 2-7 New England Patriots but left the lakefront with a 19-3 loss that wasn’t nearly as close as the score might have indicated. Even less entertaining too.
Gross. Embarrassing. Inept.
One of the worst teams in the NFL came to town, didn’t play all that well and departed with just its second victory in the last 62 days. And the Patriots didn’t break much of a sweat either.
They never trailed. They outgained the Bears by 186 yards. They seemed surprised, almost, that there wasn’t more resistance.
This can’t continue. It just can’t. Not without some sort of significant change.
LINK Bears' offense is broken, and it risks breaking Caleb Williams The Bears’ 19-3 loss to the worst-in the-league Patriots on a somber Sunday was as disillusioning an afternoon as the franchise has had in years.
The Bears offense is broken.
It risks breaking Caleb Williams.
That was the only conclusion to draw from the team’s 19-3 loss to the worst-in the-league Patriots on a somber Sunday, as disillusioning an afternoon as the franchise has had in years. On the way to their third consecutive loss, the 4-5 Bears failed to score a touchdown for the second game in a row, a span of 23 possessions. The Bears went two straight games without a touchdown for the first time in 20 years.
Williams was sacked a stomach-churning nine times, the result of his refusal to throw the ball away and playing behind an offensive line that, for most of the game, featured only one Week 1 starter because of injuries.