It’s Aaron Rodgers’ will vs. Bears’ might
The letdown in the second half of last year’s opener taught the Bears’ defense a valuable lesson — ‘keep swinging’ when you’ve got an opponent on the ropes.
The Packers’ comeback victory over the Bears in last year’s season opener at Lambeau Field was a testament to the power of Aaron Rodgers and the inspirational impact a great player can have on his teammates, his coaches and his home fans.
“When I came back on the field at halftime [after getting injured on a sack in the first half], I think everybody started to believe a little bit,” Rodgers said. “The ovation was loud, although we were down 17-0 and 20-0 when I took the field. I think everybody had that belief.”
But it was an intangible effect on the Bears side that also played a role. “On the [Bears] side, up 17-0 going into the half, [there was] kind of a feeling like, ‘We can coast to the finish here,’” Rodgers said.
The Bears don’t deny their culpability in fueling a comeback that would win Rodgers the “Moment of the Year” Award at the NFL honors show last year. “Most definitely there was [a letdown],” safety Eddie Jackson said. “You’ve got your foot on their neck and you took your foot off the gas and they were able to come back.
“But that was last year. This year’s a new team, new face and we’ve got new goals. Right now it’s for us to go out Thursday and dominate. It’s to play four quarters of Chicago Bears football. We want to keep swinging on defense. Offense keep making plays.”
Even in defeat, the debacle against the Packers in the opener last year is seen in retrospect as a building block for the Bears, because they learned their lesson. They wilted in the heat in Miami and were out-foxed by the Patriots, but the Bears showed a much stronger resolve that closed out key games against the Lions, Vikings and Rams — and even Rodgers in a 24-17 victory over the Packers at Soldier Field on Dec. 16. Rodgers had no touchdown passes, one interception, five sacks and a 68.9 passer rating.
“I wouldn’t say [the opener against the Packers] was too much of a hurt. Just a lesson learned,” Jackson said. “We learned from it and built from it and got better from it. Now we know what we can walk into and what we can expect — for us to play four quarters.”
The opener against Rodgers and the Packers on Thursday night at Soldier Field will be a chance for the Bears defense to confirm a couple of key offseason narratives — that the transition from coordinator Vic Fangio to Chuck Pagano was seamless; and that with Khalil Mack and Roquan Smith having a full offseason and training camp, the defense can actually get better when some observers anticipate they will regress.
“We’re excited to let it go and to finally get out there and play,” safety Prince Amukamara said. “Especially the starters who haven’t seen a lot of action in the preseason, we’re just excited to take the leashes off.”
With Mack, defensive end Akiem Hicks and Jackson giving them elite players at all levels, the Bears’ defense is going in with supreme confidence. And as Nagy indicated, part of the onus is on the offense to keep the pressure on Rodgers instead of providing him fuel with three-and-outs. That was another lesson from last year’s opener.
“We as an offense learned a lot in that game,” coach Matt Nagy said. ”We just want to try to fix those things.”
And even then, the specter of Rodgers always looms.
“Anytime you have that kind of quarterback, anything can happen,” Nagy said. “He’s proven that over and over again.”