Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Year in Review of SportsCenter (a.k.a. The Best of SportsCenter) is seen annually during the month of December, featuring a look back at the past year in sports, including highlights of the top games of the year (such as the 2006 Rose Bowl), as well as the top news stories of the year.
The Bears opened the 2023 season with a 0–4 record, extending the team losing streak to 14 (longest in team history; dating back to the 2022 season). [152] The team bounced back by winning five of their last eight games, but finished with a 7–10 record, placing last in the NFC North for the second consecutive season.
Sports in Chicago include many professional sports teams. Chicago is one of eleven U.S. cities to have teams from the five major American professional team sports (baseball, football, basketball, hockey, and soccer). Chicago has been named as the "Best Sports City" by Sporting News three times: 1993, 2006, and 2010.
The Bears are expected to extend general manager Ryan Poles’ contract for three more years, in order to align it with the contract signed by new head coach Ben Johnson, according to a feature ...
The Bears hold an 11-8 record all-time in Thanksgiving matchups against the Lions, including a three-game winning streak (2018, 2019, 2021). The Lions have lost seven straight Thanksgiving games ...
Caleb Sequan Williams (born November 18, 2001) is an American professional football quarterback for the Chicago Bears of the National Football League (NFL). Following one season of college football with the Oklahoma Sooners, he played for the USC Trojans and won the Heisman Trophy in 2022 after setting single-season school records in passing yards and touchdowns.
With the Bears in the middle of their most difficult portion of their schedule, we’re forecasting Chicago's final 11 games.
The Chicago Bears franchise was founded as the Decatur Staleys, a charter member of the American Professional Football Association (APFA). The team moved to Chicago, Illinois, in 1921 and changed its name to the Bears in 1922, the same year the APFA changed its name to the National Football League (NFL).