As Julius Peppers entered the locker room, he spoke for nearly everyone
in the organization and probably its fan base when he exclaimed,
"Winning ugly."
It trumps the alternative -- being on the
losing side of an ugly win. The Bears rebounded from a horrendous first
three quarters of offensive football to claim a 23-22 victory over the
Panthers on Sunday at Soldier Field. Robbie Gould atoned for an earlier
miss with a game-winning 41-yard field goal as time expired.
The Panthers did what losing
teams do in squandering a 19-7 lead in the fourth quarter. Jay Cutler,
who was sacked six times in the first half, fired a 12-yard touchdown
pass to tight end Kellen Davis, and cornerback Tim Jennings returned his
second interception of Cam Newton 25 yards for a touchdown. Then, after
the Panthers went back ahead, Cutler executed the 2-minute drill for
Gould's winning kick as the Bears improved to 6-1.
"That was an
ugly one," said Jennings, who leads the NFL with six interceptions.
"Offense didn't play well. Defense didn't play well. Special teams, we
didn't get big plays."
Cutler never would have been in position
for a final drive had the Bears not forced the Panthers to settle for
five field goals, including Justin Medlock's 45-yarder with 2 minutes,
27 seconds remaining that bounced in off the right upright and staked
the Panthers to a 22-20 lead. A first down by the Panthers would have
given them a chance to run out the clock, but the defense held and
forced Medlock to kick.
With 16:30 left in the game, the
statistics were badly skewed. At that point, the Panthers had the ball
for 30:22 to 13:08 for the Bears. Carolina led in total yards 369-61,
and the Bears had produced minus-10 yards passing as the sacks wiped out
what little gains had been made. Fans were booing.
"Those
first 31/2 quarters were just ugly," said Cutler, who added that the
bruised ribs he suffered Monday against the Lions were not an issue.
Gould missed a 33-yard field goal at the start of the fourth quarter,
but after a defensive stop, Cutler connected with Davis for the
touchdown. On the next play from scrimmage, Steve Smith slipped, and
Jennings hauled in a high pass for an easy pick and score. It was the
Bears' sixth interception return for a touchdown, a club record for a
season and an NFL record through seven games.
Suddenly, the
Bears led in a game that looked lost. Driving for the victory, Newton
(20 of 39, 314 yards) missed Smith (seven catches, 118 yards) in the end
zone, and the Bears needed only a Gould field goal to win after
Medlock's 45-yarder.
What happened looked as easy as
pitch-and-catch. Cutler, who finished 19 of 28 for 186 yards, hit four
passes to Brandon Marshall and one to Earl Bennett. They were quick
slants that easily moved the Bears downfield.
"They were
playing one coverage, and we just kept hitting them and hitting them and
hitting them," Cutler said. "That's pretty much it."
That is
exactly how the Panthers (1-6) felt. Cornerback Captain Munnerlyn said
the Panthers were locked in Cover-4 and suggested defensive coordinator
Sean McDermott should have changed it up.
"I just play the
defense they call, but you gotta switch it up," Munnerlyn said. "I felt
like Jay Cutler, he knew what we were in. So he knew the weakness of the
defense and they attacked it.
"(Cutler) was real rattled. I
feel like we did a great job on him. We know once you get after Jay
Cutler, I think Charles Woodson said it, he'll fold. But he kept
fighting, he overcame that and he got his team the win."
With his glass half-full, Bears coach Lovie Smith sees it all from a different perspective.
"There's no such thing as an ugly win," he said. "To me, the team that
deserves the win always ends up on top at the end. We'll definitely
cherish this."
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