2005 Chicago Bears season

The 2005 season was the Chicago Bears' 86th season in the National Football League (NFL), and the second under head coach Lovie Smith. The team improved to an 11–5 record from a 5–11 record in 2004, earning them their first playoff berth and NFC North title since 2001 and the second seed in the NFC for the playoffs.

2005 Chicago Bears season
OwnerThe McCaskey Family
General managerJerry Angelo
Head coachLovie Smith
Home fieldSoldier Field
Results
Record11–5
Division place1st NFC North
Playoff finishLost Divisional Playoffs
(vs. Panthers) 21–29
Pro BowlersC Olin Kreutz
DT Tommie Harris
MLB Brian Urlacher
LB Lance Briggs
CB Nathan Vasher
SS Mike Brown
AP All-Pros
6
  • Lance Briggs (1st team)
  • Brian Urlacher (1st team)
  • Olin Kreutz (2nd team)
  • Tommie Harris (2nd team)
  • Mike Brown (2nd team)
  • Nathan Vasher (2nd team)

The season started off with the team trying to rebound from a 5–11 season under now coach Lovie Smith. Smith, in his first year with the Bears, had been eager to lead his young team to a Super Bowl, but a preseason injury to starting quarterback Rex Grossman spelled disaster for the Bears.[1]

The 2005 Bears started the season slowly, winning only one of their first four games. Despite their poor passing game, the Bears won eight consecutive games, through perseverance on defense and a solid running game. The Bears eventually clinched a playoff berth on Christmas Day against the Green Bay Packers. However, in their first playoff game in four years the Carolina Panthers upset the Bears, 29–21.

This season is notable for Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher winning Defensive Player of the Year. He was the first Bear to earn the award since 1988 when Mike Singletary won.

Offseason

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Additions Subtractions
WR Muhsin Muhammad (Panthers) G Rex Tucker (Rams)
WR Eddie Berlin (Titans) WR David Terrell (Patriots)
T Fred Miller (Titans) K Paul Edinger (Vikings)
T John St. Clair (Dolphins)

NFL Draft

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2005 Chicago Bears draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 4 Cedric Benson  Running back Texas
2 39 Mark Bradley  Wide receiver Oklahoma
4 106 Kyle Orton  Quarterback Purdue
5 140 Airese Currie  Wide receiver Clemson
6 181 Chris Harris  Safety Louisiana-Monroe
7 220 Rod Wilson  Linebacker South Carolina
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Undrafted free agents

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2005 Undrafted Free Agents of note
Player Position College
Jonathan Jackson Defensive end Oklahoma
Tyler Jones Kicker Boise State
Stephen Larsen Linebacker San Diego State
Matt McGhghy Guard Northern Illinois
Brandon McGowan Safety Maine
Greg Pauly Defensive tackle Notre Dame

Training camp

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Hopeful expectations were crushed as quarterback Rex Grossman's ankle was broken in the 2nd preseason game against the St. Louis Rams.[1] Backup quarterback Chad Hutchinson was benched and cut after struggling heavily in the next two preseason games against the Indianapolis Colts and Buffalo Bills. The Bears then turned to rookie Kyle Orton to lead their offense.

Rookie running back Cedric Benson held out of training camp over a contract dispute until just before the final preseason game. His absence in camp meant that Thomas Jones would be the starting running back going into the regular season.

Despite all these setbacks, the Bears were still hopeful because franchise middle linebacker Brian Urlacher had made it through the preseason in good health, unlike the year before when he battled injuries all season, beginning with a pulled hamstring on the first day of training camp.

Preseason

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Week Date Opponent Score
HOF August 8 vs Miami Dolphins W 27–24
1 August 12 at St. Louis Rams L 13–17
2 August 20 at Indianapolis Colts W 24–17
3 August 26 Buffalo Bills W 16–12
4 September 1 Cleveland Browns L 6–16

Staff

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2005 Chicago Bears staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning


Roster

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2005 Chicago Bears roster
Quarterbacks (QB)

Running backs (RB)

Wide receivers (WR)

Tight ends (TE)

Offensive linemen (OL)

Defensive linemen (DL)

Linebackers (LB)

Defensive backs (DB)

Special teams

Practice squad

Reserve

Rookies in italics
53 active, 8 reserve, 8 practice squad

Regular season

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Schedule

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Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue
1 September 11 at Washington Redskins L 7–9 0–1 FedExField
2 September 18 Detroit Lions W 38–6 1–1 Soldier Field
3 September 25 Cincinnati Bengals L 7–24 1–2 Soldier Field
4 Bye
5 October 9 at Cleveland Browns L 10–20 1–3 Cleveland Browns Stadium
6 October 16 Minnesota Vikings W 28–3 2–3 Soldier Field
7 October 23 Baltimore Ravens W 10–6 3–3 Soldier Field
8 October 30 at Detroit Lions W 19–13 (OT) 4–3 Ford Field
9 November 6 at New Orleans Saints W 20–17 5–3 Tiger Stadium
10 November 13 San Francisco 49ers W 17–9 6–3 Soldier Field
11 November 20 Carolina Panthers W 13–3 7–3 Soldier Field
12 November 27 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 13–10 8–3 Raymond James Stadium
13 December 4 Green Bay Packers W 19–7 9–3 Soldier Field
14 December 11 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 9–21 9–4 Heinz Field
15 December 18 Atlanta Falcons W 16–3 10–4 Soldier Field
16 December 25 at Green Bay Packers W 24–17 11–4 Lambeau Field
17 January 1 at Minnesota Vikings L 10–34 11–5 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome

Standings

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NFC North
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(2) Chicago Bears 11 5 0 .688 5–1 10–2 260 202 L1
Minnesota Vikings 9 7 0 .563 5–1 8–4 306 344 W1
Detroit Lions 5 11 0 .313 1–5 3–9 254 345 L1
Green Bay Packers 4 12 0 .250 1–5 4–8 298 344 W1

Game summaries

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Week 1: at Washington Redskins

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 0 0 707
Redskins 0 3 609

at FedExField

Game information
Q2 – WAS – 7:34 – John Hall 40-yard field goal (WAS 3–0)

Q2 – WAS – 1:00 – John Hall 43-yard field goal (WAS 6–0)

Q3 – CHI – 11:28 – Thomas Jones 1-yard run (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 7–6)

Q3 – WAS – 2:54 – John Hall 19-yard field goal (WAS 9–7)

Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Lions 6 0 006
Bears 10 21 0738

at Soldier Field

  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: Sunny, 81 °F (27 °C)
  • Game attendance: 62,019
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck and Troy Aikman
Game information
Q1 – CHI – 10:10 – Thomas Jones 3-yard run (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 7–0)

Q1 – DET – 9:54 – Roy Williams 51-yard pass from Joey Harrington (kick failed) (CHI 7–6)

Q1 – CHI – 6:04 – Doug Brien 48-yard field goal (CHI 10–6)

Q2 – CHI – 11:34 – Bobby Wade 73-yard punt return (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 17–6)

Q2 – CHI – 1:14 – Muhsin Muhammad 28-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 24–6)

Q2 – CHI – 0:57 – Mike Brown 41-yard interception return (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 31–6)

Q4 – CHI – 12:13 – Thomas Jones 16-yard run (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 38–6)

Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bengals 10 0 7724
Bears 0 0 707

at Soldier Field

Game information
Q1 – CIN – 13:46 – Chad Johnson 18-yard pass from Carson Palmer (Shayne Graham kick) (CIN 7–0)

Q1 – CIN – 5:31 – Shayne Graham 33-yard field goal (CIN 10–0)

Q3 – CIN – 7:03 – Chris Henry 36-yard pass from Carson Palmer (Shayne Graham kick) (CIN 17–0)

Q4 – CHI – 13:30 – Thomas Jones 2-yard run (Doug Brien kick) (CIN 17–7)

Q4 – CIN – 11:56 – Chad Johnson 40-yard pass from Carson Palmer (Shayne Graham kick) (CIN 24–7)

This was Chicago's only loss at home during the season.

Week 5: at Cleveland Browns

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 0 3 7010
Browns 3 3 01420

at Cleveland Browns Stadium

  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: 73 °F (23 °C)
  • Game attendance: 73,079
  • TV announcers (Fox): Ron Pitts and Tim Ryan
Game information
Q1 – CLE – 4:17 – Phil Dawson 19-yard field goal (CLE 3–0)

Q2 – CHI – 9:01 – Robbie Gould 44-yard field goal (3–3)

Q2 – CLE – 0:37 – Phil Dawson 44-yard field goal (CLE 6–3)

Q3 – CHI – 5:29 – Marc Edwards 8-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 10–6)

Q4 – CLE – 3:02 – Antonio Bryant 33-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Phil Dawson kick) (CLE 13–10)

Q4 – CLE – 2:24 – Antonio Bryant 28-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Phil Dawson kick) (CLE 20–10)

Week 6: vs. Minnesota Vikings

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Vikings 0 3 003
Bears 0 7 71428

at Soldier Field

  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: Sunny, 60 °F (16 °C)
  • Game attendance: 62,143
  • TV announcers (Fox): Sam Rosen and Bill Maas
Game information
Q2 – MIN – 6:55 – Paul Edinger 23-yard field goal (MIN 3–0)

Q2 – CHI – 0:37 – Desmond Clark 3-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7–3)

Q3 – CHI – 7:28 – Desmond Clark 2-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 14–3)

Q4 – CHI – 13:03 – Thomas Jones 24-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 21–3)

Q4 – CHI – 4:11 – Thomas Jones 1-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 28–3)

Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Ravens 0 6 006
Bears 7 0 3010

at Soldier Field

Game information
Q1 – CHI – 0:19 – Marc Edwards 9-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7–0)

Q2 – BAL – 8:46 – Matt Stover 40-yard field goal (CHI 7–3)

Q2 – BAL – 0:26 – Matt Stover 29-yard field goal (CHI 7–6)

Q3 – CHI – 2:52 – Robbie Gould 23-yard field goal (CHI 10–6)

Before the game, Bears great Walter Payton, who died in 1999, was honored by teammate Dan Hampton, who played together in the Bears' 1985 season.[2]

Week 8: at Detroit Lions

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Quarter 1 2 34OTTotal
Bears 0 13 00619
Lions 3 0 73013

at Ford Field

Game information
Q1 – DET – 4:11 – Jason Hanson 32-yard field goal (DET 3–0)

Q2 – CHI – 9:29 – Muhsin Muhammad 23-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7–3)

Q2 – CHI – 1:51 – Robbie Gould 38-yard field goal (CHI 10–3)

Q2 – CHI – 0:17 – Robbie Gould 20-yard field goal (CHI 13–3)

Q3 – DET – 3:15 – Kevin Jones 6-yard run (Jason Hanson kick) (CHI 13–10)

Q4 – DET – 13:20 – Jason Hanson 30-yard field goal (13–13)

OT – CHI – 8:43 – Charles Tillman 22-yard interception return (CHI 19–13)

Bears rookie Mark Bradley was placed on injured reserve this game, and was replaced by Justin Gage.[3] Bradley had recorded 18 receptions for 230 yards at the time of his injury.

Week 9: at New Orleans Saints

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 7 3 7320
Saints 3 7 0717

at Tiger Stadium

Game information
Q1 – NO – 12:18 – John Carney 22-yard field goal (NO 3-0)

Q1 – CHI – 6:26 – Justin Gage 4-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (7–3)

Q2 – NO – 9:57 – Donté Stallworth 15-yard pass from Aaron Brooks (John Carney kick) (NO 10-7)

Q2 – CHI – 0:22 – Robbie Gould 35-yard field goal (10–10)

Q3 – CHI – 7:29 – Adrian Peterson 6-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 17–10)

Q4 – NO – 7:44 – Aaron Brooks 1-yard run (John Carney kick) (17–17)

Q4 – CHI – 0:06 – Robbie Gould 28-yard field goal (CHI 20–17)

 
Saints quarterback Aaron Brooks passes against the Bears at Tiger Stadium

Due to damage from Hurricane Katrina to the Louisiana Superdome, the Saints were forced to host the game at LSU's Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge.[4] The Saints scored first on a John Carney field goal, but the Bears struck back with a Kyle Orton to Justin Gage touchdown pass. After the Saints scored on an Aaron Brooks touchdown pass to Donté Stallworth, Robbie Gould tied the game on a 35-yard field goal. In the second half, Adrian Peterson gave the Bears the lead on a 6-yard run, which was countered with Brooks scoring on a 1-yard touchdown run in the fourth. Orton eventually threw a 22-yard pass to Muhsin Muhammad to set up a game-winning field goal from Gould with six seconds left in the game. Gould eventually scored on a 28-yard field goal to give the Bears a 20–17 lead. The Saints' last chance to march 65 yards to win was crushed when Brooks' pass to Az-Zahir Hakim was intercepted by Nathan Vasher. The win was the Bears' fourth-straight, which hasn't been accomplished by the team since their 2001 season.[5] In the first quarter, Bears running back Thomas Jones went out with an injury, but his backups Adrian Peterson and Cedric Benson combined for 137 yards and a touchdown.[3]

Week 10: vs. San Francisco 49ers

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
49ers 0 3 339
Bears 0 7 01017

at Soldier Field

  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: Overcast, 50 °F (10 °C)
  • Game attendance: 62,153
  • TV announcers (Fox): Sam Rosen and Bill Maas
Game information
Q2 – SF – 8:57 – Joe Nedney 30-yard field goal (SF 3–0)

Q2 – CHI – 0:00 – Nathan Vasher 108-yard missed field goal return (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7–3)

Q3 – SF – 9:38 – Joe Nedney 34-yard field goal (CHI 7–6)

Q4 – CHI – 14:33 – Adrian Peterson 7-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 14–6)

Q4 – SF – 10:54 – Joe Nedney 29-yard field goal (CHI 14–9)

Q4 – CHI – 7:40 – Robbie Gould 37-yard field goal (CHI 17–9)

Week 11: vs. Carolina Panthers

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Panthers 0 0 033
Bears 10 3 0013

at Soldier Field

  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: Cloudy, 44 °F (7 °C)
  • Game attendance: 62,156
  • TV announcers (Fox): Sam Rosen and Bill Maas
Game information
Q1 – CHI – 11:50 – Muhsin Muhammad 3-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7–0)

Q1 – CHI – 5:41 – Robbie Gould 33-yard field goal (CHI 10–0)

Q2 – CHI – 7:52 – Robbie Gould 39-yard field goal (CHI 13–0)

Q4 – CAR – 8:31 – John Kasay 38-yard field goal (CHI 13–3)

Week 12: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 7 3 3013
Buccaneers 3 0 0710

at Raymond James Stadium

Game information
Q1 – CHI – 11:50 – John Gilmore 1-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7–0)

Q1 – TB – 2:12 – Matt Bryant 27-yard field goal (CHI 7–3)

Q2 – CHI – 0:17 – Robbie Gould 25-yard field goal (CHI 10–3)

Q3 – CHI – 3:47 – Robbie Gould 36-yard field goal (CHI 13–3)

Q4 – TB – 7:00 – Mike Alstott 2-yard run (CHI 13–10)

Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Packers 0 7 007
Bears 0 9 01019

at Soldier Field

Game information
Q2 – CHI – 13:34 – Robbie Gould 21-yard field goal (CHI 3–0)

Q2 – GB – 7:03 – Samkon Gado 2-yard run (Ryan Longwell kick) (GB 7–3)

Q2 – CHI – 4:33 – Robbie Gould 40-yard field goal (GB 7–6)

Q2 – CHI – 0:02 – Robbie Gould 25-yard field goal (CHI 9–7)

Q4 – CHI – 8:22 – Robbie Gould 35-yard field goal (CHI 12–7)

Q4 – CHI – 3:06 – Nathan Vasher 45-yard interception return (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 19–7)

Week 14: at Pittsburgh Steelers

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 3 0 069
Steelers 7 7 7021

at Heinz Field

Game information
Q1 – PIT – 9:16 – Hines Ward 14-yard pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Jeff Reed kick) (PIT 7–0)

Q1 – CHI – 2:30 – Robbie Gould 29-yard field goal (PIT 7–3)

Q2 – PIT – 7:25 – Jerome Bettis 1-yard run (Jeff Reed kick) (PIT 14–3)

Q3 – PIT – 5:23 – Jerome Bettis 5-yard run (Jeff Reed kick) (PIT 21–3)

Q4 – CHI – 13:38 – Thomas Jones 1-yard run (kick failed) (PIT 21–9)

Week 15: vs. Atlanta Falcons

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Falcons 0 3 003
Bears 0 6 10016

at Soldier Field

Game information
Q2 – ATL – 10:16 – Todd Peterson 30-yard field goal (ATL 3–0)

Q2 – CHI – 6:33 – Robbie Gould 35-yard field goal (3–3)

Q2 – CHI – 3:20 – Robbie Gould 29-yard field goal (CHI 6–3)

Q3 – CHI – 8:17 – Thomas Jones 1-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 13–3)

Q3 – CHI – 0:53 – Robbie Gould 39-yard field goal (CHI 16–3)

Week 16: at Green Bay Packers

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 7 7 10024
Packers 0 7 01017

at Lambeau Field

  • Game time: 5:00 p.m. EST/4:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: Clear, 34 °F (1 °C)
  • Game attendance: 69,757
  • TV announcers (Fox): Sam Rosen and Bill Maas
Game information
Q1 – CHI – 5:00 – Muhsin Muhammad 12-yard pass from Rex Grossman (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7–0)

Q2 – GB – 12:05 – Noah Herron 1-yard run (Ryan Longwell kick) (7–7)

Q2 – CHI – 5:05 – Thomas Jones 2-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 14–7)

Q3 – CHI – 9:39 – Robbie Gould 45-yard field goal (CHI 17–7)

Q3 – CHI – 4:01 – Lance Briggs 10-yard interception return (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 24–7)

Q4 – GB – 7:54 – Antonio Chatman 85-yard punt return (Ryan Longwell kick) (CHI 24–14)

Q4 – GB – 1:54 – Ryan Longwell 26-yard field goal (CHI 24–17)

The win marked the first time since 1991 that the Bears swept the Green Bay Packers.[6]

Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 3 0 0710
Vikings 0 17 71034

at Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome

Game information
Q1 – CHI – 5:14 – Robbie Gould 22-yard field goal (CHI 3–0)

Q2 – MIN – 14:53 – Paul Edinger 54-yard field goal (3–3)

Q2 – MIN – 7:37 – Ciatrick Fason 2-yard run (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 10–3)

Q2 – MIN – 0:03 – Travis Taylor 17-yard pass from Brad Johnson (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 17–3)

Q3 – MIN – 3:58 – Mewelde Moore 7-yard pass from Brad Johnson (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 24–3)

Q4 – MIN – 14:52 – Paul Edinger 27-yard field goal (MIN 27–3)

Q4 – CHI – 7:08 – Justin Gage 4-yard pass from Jeff Blake (Robbie Gould kick) (MIN 27–10)

Q4 – MIN – 5:10 – Michael Bennett 61-yard run (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 34–10)

Playoffs

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NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers

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Quarter 1 2 34Total
Panthers 7 9 7629
Bears 0 7 7721

at Soldier Field

Game information
Q1 – CAR – 14:05 – 58 yd TD pass from Jake Delhomme to Steve Smith (Kasay kick) (7–0 CAR)

Q2 – CAR – 14:57 – John Kasay 20 yd FG (CAR 10–0)

Q2 – CAR – 6:26 – John Kasay 38 yd FG (CAR 13–0)

Q2 – CHI – 2:58 – Adrian Peterson 1 yd TD run (Robbie Gould kick) (CAR 13–7)

Q2 – CAR – 0:00 – John Kasay 37 yd FG (CAR 16–7)

Q3 – CHI – 11:21 – 1 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Desmond Clark (Gould kick) (CAR 16–14)

Q3 – CAR – 2:07 – 39 yd TD pass from Jake Delhomme to Steve Smith (Kasay kick) (CAR 23–14)

Q4 – CHI – 13:23 – Jason McKie 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CAR 23–21)

Q4 – CAR – 8:04 – 1 yd TD pass from Jake Delhomme to Kris Mangum (kick failed) (CAR 29–21)

The Bears hosted their first playoff game since the 2001 season against the red hot Panthers, fresh off a victory over Eli Manning and the New York Giants.

Things were bad from the beginning for the Bears, who allowed a 58-yard Jake Delhomme TD pass to Steve Smith just 55 seconds into the game. Cornerback Charles Tillman slipped on the play, and it only signified things to come the rest of the game for the vaunted Bears defense.

The Panthers added two field goals to their total before the Bears got their first points.

The Bears offense got off to a slow start, having their first 5 possessions end in punts. Their first score came midway through the second quarter, when running back Adrian Peterson scored a touchdown on a 1-yard run. The Bears had opted to go for it on 4th down to get the score, cutting the Carolina lead to 13–7. Before the half expired, the Panthers' John Kasay kicked a 37-yard field goal with 5 seconds left in the half, extending the lead to 16–7.

The Bears offense came out at halftime firing on all cylinders, mounting an 8-play, 68-yard drive to close to within 2 points of the Panther lead. It was a balanced drive that led to the score, with the Bears running and passing 5 times each, with Rex Grossman capping the drive with a 1-yard TD pass to Desmond Clark.

The spark provided by the offense was short-lived, as midway through the 3rd quarter, Delhomme went deep to Steve Smith again, this time for a 39-yard touchdown that put the Panthers up 23–14. Chris Thompson, a reserve defensive back for the Bears, fell down on the play to let Smith slip past him.

The Bears managed to score one more time on a drive that started with 2:07 remaining in the 3rd quarter. Grossman completed 3 of 4 passes on the drive, and running back Thomas Jones almost scored on a 7-yard run. After a replay challenge by Carolina, however, the officials reversed the call to say that Jones had fumbled into the endzone, which would have resulted in a Carolina touchback. However, a major facemask penalty on Carolina defensive back Marlon McCree gave Chicago a first down at the Carolina 3. From there, fullback Jason McKie rumbled in for a touchdown, making the score 23–21 to the Panthers.

The Panthers extended their lead once more with a 1-yard Delhomme pass to tight end Kris Mangum. Kasay missed the extra point try though, making the Panthers' lead 29–21.

When the Bears offense started moving the ball once more, disaster struck for the Bears, as on a 3rd-and-10 play from the Carolina 37-yard line, Grossman threw an ill-advised interception to Ken Lucas.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Second major injury in two years for Bears QB". ESPN. August 13, 2005. Retrieved November 28, 2019.
  2. ^ America's Game: The Super Bowl Champions, "#2. 1985 Chicago Bears." Premiered on CBS, Feb. 3, 2007
  3. ^ a b "NFL Game Center: Chicago Bears at New Orleans Saints – 2005 Week 9". NFL.com. Archived from the original on January 29, 2013. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
  4. ^ "Saints' home games: 4 at LSU, 3 in Alamodome". ESPN. September 12, 2005. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
  5. ^ "Chicago Bears vs. New Orleans Saints – Recap". ESPN. November 6, 2005. Archived from the original on November 2, 2012. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
  6. ^ Mayer, Larry (December 25, 2013). "Was schedule different due to holiday?". Chicago Bears. Archived from the original on December 28, 2013. Retrieved December 27, 2013.
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  NODES
chat 1
Note 3