Chicago Bears 2025 Season Snapshot
Chicago Bears sit at 9-4 through Week 14 — a team that looks legit on the surface thanks to a dominant running game and a turnover-generating defense, but with clear vulnerabilities (especially vs. the run and in passing efficiency) that temper how “complete” they are.
Overall Record & Recent Form
- Record: 9-4 (through Week 14).
- Recent stretch: 4-1 in their last 5 games (wins over Cowboys, Giants, Vikings, Steelers; loss to Packers).
- Several wins have been close; they’ve also had one blowout loss (at Detroit).
Offensive Performance (Chicago Bears)
- Points per game: 26.1
- Total offense: 374.3 yards/game
- Passing: 230.9 yards/game, 1.5 TDs/game, 58.2% completion, QB rating 89.1
- Rushing: 153.8 yards/game, 4.94 yards/carry — elite ground output
- Efficiency: 3rd down conversion 43.9%, Red zone TD% 58.5%
- Turnovers: 0.75 turnovers/game (good ball security)
Key takeaways:
- The offense is built around a very strong running attack that controls clock and drives scoring.
- Passing efficiency is a weakness — low completion% and a modest passing TD rate suggest the offense can stall if the run game is contained.
Defensive Performance (Chicago Bears)
- Points allowed: 25.6/game
- Total defense: 359 yards allowed/game
- Passing defense: 235.3 yards allowed/game, 67.4% completion allowed, 2.0 pass TDs/game
- Rush defense: 133.8 yards allowed/game, 5.18 yards/carry allowed — clear weakness
- Turnovers forced: 2.17/game (creating a lot of takeaways)
- Third-down defense: 36.2% allowed, Red zone allowed 61%
Key takeaways:
- Defense is opportunistic — forces a high number of turnovers, which masks some yardage problems.
- The defense struggles to stop the run (high YPC) and is vulnerable to teams that can run effectively or break contain.
Snapshot Comparison (Offense vs Defense)
| Stat | Offense | Defense |
|---|
| Points/Game | 26.1 | 25.6 (allowed) |
| Yards/Game | 374.3 | 359 (allowed) |
| Passing Yds/Game | 230.9 | 235.3 (allowed) |
| Rushing Yds/Game | 153.8 | 133.8 (allowed) |
| Turnovers/Game | 0.75 (committed) | 2.17 (forced) |
| 3rd Down % | 43.9% | 36.2% (allowed) |
Key Games & Context
- Signature wins: 31-14 vs Cowboys (dominant), 47-42 at Bengals (explosive offensive output).
- Troubling loss: 21-52 at Lions — showed vulnerability in blowout scenarios.
- Recent narrow wins (Giants, Vikings, Steelers) show resilience but also close margins that could flip late in season.
Are they as good as they look?
- Short answer: Mostly yes — they are a legitimate playoff contender, but not without caveats.
- Why they look good: dominant rushing attack (153.8 ypg), excellent turnover differential (defense forces ~2.17 TOs/game while offense minimizes giveaways), and winning record (9-4).
- Why to be cautious: pass offense inefficiency (58.2% comp) and a poor run defense (5.18 YPC allowed). Against elite offenses that can exploit the secondary or take advantage of run mismatches, Chicago can struggle and be outgained despite forcing turnovers.
What needs to improve (recommendations)
- Fix run defense: better interior tackling and run fits — limiting 133.8 rush yds/game and lowering 5.18 YPC should be priority.
- Improve passing efficiency: cleaner QB play and higher completion% (schemes/short passing) to reduce pass-dependency when the run is slowed.
- Limit big-play vulnerability: fewer explosive plays allowed will stabilize points allowed and reduce pressure on the offense.
- If they shore up the run defense and marginally improve passing efficiency, the Bears have a real chance to be a deep playoff team; as-is they’re a strong wild-card contender and potential division threat.
Final Recommendation / Conclusion
Conclusion: The Chicago Bears are for real — 9-4, a top-tier rushing attack, and a turnover-hungry defense make them a dangerous team. However, their run defense and passing efficiency are clear vulnerabilities. If those are addressed, they can move from “good contender” to a genuine threat in the postseason.