Both of the following two sentences are true.
The Chicago Bears had first-and-10 on the Detroit Lions‘ 25-yard line with 46 seconds to go Thursday, trailing 23–20. The Bears, with a timeout in their back pocket, lost the game in regulation without attempting a field goal or turning the ball over.
How does that happen? After Caleb Williams was sacked with 36 seconds left leaving Chicago with third-and-26, Bears coach Matt Eberflus simply declined to call a timeout. That cost the Bears 30 seconds and forced Williams into a harried final throw with six seconds on the clock. Pass incomplete, game over.
The final sequence stunned the NFL world, who reacted in a variety of different ways—none of them Chicago-friendly.
Calls for Eberflus’s job abounded.
Williams took considerable flak for his inaction as well.
The events underscored a season of embarrassing losses for the Bears.
Chicago found itself memed into oblivion.
CBS analyst J.J. Watt was among many big names to express sympathy for Bears fans.
It feels like the clock is ticking on the current Chicago regime.
Jared Goff connected with Sam LaPorta for two touchdowns and the Detroit Lions extended their winning streak to 10 games by holding off the visiting Chicago Bea
Mike Mulholland/Getty ImagesDespite a strong second-half showing from quarterback Caleb Williams, the Chicago Bears dropped their sixth game in a row Thursday,
Quarterback Tommy DeVito (right forearm) and cornerback Deonte Banks (rib) were listed as questionable on the final injury report of the week. Jerma
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