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The Bears' nine championships are the second most by any team in NFL history. The franchise has captured 18 NFL divisional titles and four NFL conference championships. The Bears have also recorded the second most regular season victories of any NFL franchise. [5][6][7] The franchise has experienced three major periods of continued success in ...
The Bears won the 1941 meeting, 33–14, and eventually defeated the New York Giants in the 1941 NFL Championship Game, and the Packers won the 2011 meeting, 21–14, en route to a Super Bowl XLV win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. [194] The teams' first meeting was a victory for the Bears (known as the Staleys at the time) in 1921 in a shutout ...
The Bears won their next two games before losing their season finale to the Green Bay Packers, finishing the season with a 7–10 record and finishing last in the division for the second year in a row. [122] The Bears fired most of their offensive coaching staff after the game, including offensive coordinator Luke Getsy. [123]
NFC North. The National Football Conference – Northern Division or NFC North is one of the four divisions of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL). Nicknamed the " Black and Blue Division " for the rough and tough rivalry games between the teams, it currently has four members: the Chicago Bears, Detroit ...
Longest NFL / AFL / Super Bowl championship droughts through history. This list only shows droughts of 30 or more seasons for teams. A championship is listed as winning an NFL Championship (1920—1969), AFL Championship (1960—1969), and Super Bowl Championship (1966—present). Active droughts are listed in bold type.
At 4-6, the Bears’ chance of making the playoffs in football’s most competitive division is just 1%, per ESPN’s playoff projection model. But stealing wins against good teams (with no sub ...
1985 Chicago Bears season. The 1985 season was the Chicago Bears ' 66th in the National Football League (NFL) and their fourth under head coach Mike Ditka. The Bears entered 1985 looking to improve on their 10–6 record from 1984 and advance further than the NFC Championship Game, where they lost to the 15–1 San Francisco 49ers.
Home field for the 1933 title game was determined by the won-lost percentage in use at the time; the Western Division champion Chicago Bears (10–2–1, .833), having a better record than the Eastern Division champion New York Giants (11–3–0, .786), won the right to host the first