After two weeks of the Ben Johnson Era, Chicago Bears fans have some urgent questions: 1. Where are the wins? 2. Where are Johnson's trademark gadget plays?
The Chicago Bears (0-2) will return home in Week 3 to take on the Dallas Cowboys (1-1) still looking to earn the first victory of the Ben Johnson Era and the perfect motivation to send a statement will be coming back to Soldier Field on Sunday.
It looks like a dream scenario for the Bears offense when they've scored touchdowns on two straight opening possessions, and extending the streak to three would constitute their first time in 30 years doing this three straight games to start a season.
NFL stars can't play forever, and retirement is coming sooner than later for some of the league's top players. These 25 players could call it quits following the 2025 season.
The Chicago Bears were blown out in Detroit on Sunday by the Lions in a 52-21 throttling, as head coach Ben Johnson made his return to Detroit for the first time since leaving the team this past January.
Tom Brady is set to call the Chicago Bears-Dallas Cowboys game on Sunday. The former NFL quarterback turned Las Vegas Raiders minority owner is going from his team’s coaching booth (where he was wearing a headset) to Chicago this week, and that could be a problem for the Bears, who play the Raiders in Week 4.
Chicago Bears head coach Ben Johnson was humbled by the team he left in the offseason, the Detroit Lions, in Week 2 of the new NFL season. Ben Johnson chose to be the head coach of a team in the same fierce division when he had enjoyed such success and admiration at the Detroit Lions, and it wasn’t a welcome reunion.
Evan McLean and Ross Read were back on their microphones in their regular Tuesday time slot, breaking down all things Chicago Bears and talking through the excruciating loss in Motown.
As years go by, it's easy to forget some of the players who suited up on the gridiron. While the quarterback is the one position in the NFL that is under
One hidden or secondary fear confronting the Bears heading into the season had to be their ability to adjust to a new defensive scheme. It didn't rate as high as all the change coach Ben Johnson was bringing along to the offense but it was there nonetheless.
I watched the film back of the Bears’ loss to the Lions in Week 2 so you don’t have to. It was every bit as grueling as I anticipated it would be as soon as I saw Detroit pull away from Chicago in the second half.
The Bears are only two games into the Caleb Williams-Ben Johnson era, but FOX Sports' Colin Cowherd can already envision a world where last year's No. 1 pick gets benched.
Chicago Bears coach Ben Johnson drew attention this week for his interactions — or lack thereof — with the Detroit Lions following Sunday’s blowout loss.
Chicago Bears fans are feeling pretty unsettled after the team's 0-2 start. The humiliating 52-21 loss to the Detroit Lions in Week 2 pushed that unsettled feeling closer to an all-out panic, but as is the case after every loss, clarity is forming after a few days of post-game mourning.
Tyler Dunne dropped a three-part bombshell days before the start of the Chicago Bears regular season. Dunne talked to former and current Bears staffers about Caleb Williams’ first season in Chicago, general manager Ryan Poles’ incompetence in the front office, and CEO Kevin Warren’s aura in Halas Hall.
It’s week two, and we’re talking about 50-burgers. Yes, the Chicago Bears are truly back. And by “back,” I mean the same as they’ve been since 2012. Yet, we still keep coming back.
An 0-2 start to the NFL season is never the plan, and for the Chicago Bears and their passionate fanbase, the initial results have been disheartening. A narrow home-opener loss followed by a defensive collapse against a division rival has many questioning the team’s trajectory.
He missed training camp as well as Chicago’s season opener while recovering from the injury. During the second quarter of the team’s blowout loss against the Lions in Week 2, he reaggravated the ailment.