Three Keys to a Chicago Bears Upset of Green Bay Packers

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Think back to the NFL offseason and Matt Eberflus watching basketball courtside at a Marquette game with Packers coach Matt LaFleur.
Bears fans have to hope Eberflus somehow gained some insight on that night into what makes LaFleur so dominant over the Bears. Aaron Rodgers was claiming to own the Bears but LaFleur has the real rights, not Rodgers.
With 10 straight wins over the Bears, LaFleur needs this win to establish the new longest winning streak in the series. The Packers and Brett Favre once won 10 straight over Dave Wannstedt's Bears, a streak that began in an ice storm on Halloween night, 1994 when they retired the jerseys of Gale Sayers and Dick Butkus about 20 years too late, and ended when Bryan Robinson's hand rose up to block a chip shot field goal and Tony Parrish recovered it on the Sunday after the emotional 1999 Soldier Field memorial to the late Walter Payton.
It doesn't seem to sound like it.
"We went against each other when he was back at Tennessee (as coordinators)," Eberflus recalled. "I do believe that he has grown in that capacity.
Elgton Jenkins has never lost to the #Bears. He enjoys going down to Chicago and the #Packers silencing their fans.
— John Miller (@JohnMillerNBC26) November 14, 2024
"When the game do come down to like the 3rd-4th quarter where we up, I like to just hear all the quietness and stuff like that and people leaving the stadium." pic.twitter.com/uJCY6hZTM4
"I do believe he has good weapons on the outside. That's beneficial. The tight end is a really good player. The protection is really good. They've got some solid offensive linemen up there. And the addition of the runner (Josh Jacobs)–the runner puts them in a position to be a run-first team. He really develops those guys up front to do the scheme. I think their offensive line coaches are really good and I believe they really want to stay ahead of the sticks. He calls it that way. There’s also the explosive side of it, with the explosive plays. I believe they’re No. 3 in runs and No. 10 in passes for explosive plays. They have that side of it, too."
The Packers always had a runner, whether it was Aaron Jones or Jacobs. They've always had good offensive lines, and no matter what they think of Love, Rodgers was definitely better through the course of his long career there.
LaFleur makes a difference. It's like when Mike Ditka coached the Bears to eight straight over the Packers or Lombardi. As great a coach as Vince Lombardi was, he never won more than five straight over the Bears.
OTD 1987#Packers #Bears @JimMcMahon throws a TD to Anderson on Chicago’s first offensive play
— Old Time Football 🏈 (@Ol_TimeFootball) November 8, 2024
pic.twitter.com/9dAG33Wa5C
So LaFleur has it going, and the Packers have dominated, but they have lost to other teams.
Here are the three keys to beating Green Bay.
3. Consistent Pressure
The Vikings beat the Packers in Green Bay and did it the way they usually do it. They applied extreme pressure to Love both on defense and offense.
🧀 Josh Jacobs over 69.5 Rushing Yards
— Harry Lock Picks (@HarryLockPicks) November 15, 2024
🏟️ Packers @ Bears
The Bears defense has allowed the fifth most yards-per-run this season.
Opponents have had a 70+ Yard rusher in the past two Chicago games and Jacobs has hit that mark in his last three matches.
Game state could help…
The Vikings turned up the offense like they can, and that forced Love to keep up. There's one way they applied pressure. More than anything else, they hit the Packers with the usual assortment of blitzes by defensive coordinator Brian Flores. Love still threw four touchdown passes. But he also threw three critical interceptions.
THE PLAYERS WHO GIVE BEARS A SHOT AT UPSETTING PACKERS
FRIDAY INJURY REPORT POSITIVE WITH MONTEZ SWEAT AND TACKLES
NFC NORTH MISSION IMPOSSIBLE BEGINS FOR THOMAS BROWN
WILL CHANGE TO BEARS MEETINGS TRIGGER POSITIVE RESULT?
The Bears are not a blitzing team like the Vikings, but when they do it they have been effective. More than anything else, they know how to rush the passer. Even after three straight losses and injuries to Montez Sweat, Andrew Billings and Darrell Taylor, they rank fifth in the league in ESPN's team pass rush win rate. The added advantage of playing at home can help in this regard. Mixing in a few Kyler Gordon slot blitzes or T.J. Edwards blitzing the A-gap couldn't hurt, either.
Whatever they do, they can't let Love be comfortable and the regular pass rush would best occur from between the tackles. In last season's finale, they had nothing to play for and it looked like it on the defensive front. With the exception of DeMarcus Walker, they all seemed to sleep-walk through the game. Love had forever to pick out targets and eventually did. They can't let this happen again and expect to be in the game.
#GoPackGo vs. #DaBears ! Green Bay is fresh off a bye as they travel to Chicago for a divisional game against the Bears. @GregCosell breaks down two run concepts shown by the Packers that were blocked efficiently and gained big yardage on 1st down.@DariusJButler | @GregCosell pic.twitter.com/VdrK7Mb4ZS
— NFL Matchup on ESPN (@NFLMatchup) November 15, 2024
2. Gap Control
The Bears talk all the time about being in their gaps and being gap sound on defense.
They are going against another 4-3 scheme now from Green Bay. When they're on offense, they can do now what the Packers try to do to them and that's get the Green Bay defense out of their gaps in the running game with motion, with jump cuts by runners or variations in the blocking scheme. Misdirection can be a disaster for a one-gap team attacking upfield. It can leave holes to run through.
On defense, being in their gap is the key to shutting down the Packers' biggest strength, and that's gaining bigger chunks on first down. The one problem the Bears have had in the run game at times is Gervon Dexter or their other defensive tackle getting too far upfield too quickly, even if they're in the gap. It becomes like a trap play and the Packers run in the hole behind them.
“If they don’t fire this guy, then they are truly telling you they don’t care.”@thekapman of @ESPNChicago joined us to help kickoff #Packers-#Bears week! 🐻
— Wilde & Tausch (@WildeAndTausch) November 12, 2024
Things appear to be going as well as you’d think in Chicago…
PODCAST: https://t.co/VNlTxk0jgm pic.twitter.com/CBa8HREq81
Both sides of the ball need to control the gaps and on defense this includes the linebackers with their roles because Green Bay's offense starts with a powerful running attack and Josh Jacobs.
1. Be Physical
The Packers might pass well but are a physical team and not a finesse team. People don't understand it when they see Love throwing to Jayden Reed and Romeo Doubs or Christian Watson. But it's always been about physicality.
The running game and the way their routes are set up allow them to be physical and to block effectively in the passing game after the catch.
The way to beat a physical team is by being just as physical, not by out-finessing them.
The Detroit Lions bullied the Packers with their offensive line and beat them. The Eagles did the same thing.
The George McCaskey era 🐻⬇️
— JAY🤘🏽🐻⬇️ (4-5) (@Directhim) November 12, 2024
12 years
3 General Managers
4 Head Coaches
10 Offensive Coordinators
0 playoff wins pic.twitter.com/AK8VTse0n5
Some of Green Bay's most frustrating losses since LaFleur has been there have been to the 49ers, with George Kittle and Deebo Samuel being physical in the passing game and the running backs pounding away at the Packers.
The Bears look more like a finesse team with D'Andre Swift carrying outside but he can run between the tackles and they can mix in Roschon Johnson runs, as well. They can go to Cole Kmet and Keenan Allen in the passing game. They can set up wide receiver screens to be physical with the cornerbacks. Allen might be older, but he's 6-foot-2, 215 pounds and still can punish a tackler at that size.
Getting it to DJ Moore in the screen game or to Rome Odunze are options, as well. Odunze is no small receiver at 6-3, 215.
Outmuscle them, outphysical them, and be physical on defense.
⚠️ Weather Warning ⚠️
— Fantasy Forecasts (@Fantasy4Casts) November 12, 2024
🚨 Green Bay Packers @ Chicago Bears 🚨
Sunday's game calls for:
✅ 22 mph wind gusts
✅ 14 mph sustained winds
✅ 25% chance of rain pic.twitter.com/iIdScauYAR
It sounds a lot like the approach when Ditka was coaching the Bears, the last time they had any sort of comfortable margin in the series with their rivals to the north.
It's what the Packers have been doing to the Bears all these years and Bears fans haven't realized it because they've been too upset about not having a quarterback while Green Bay had one.
The Packers have beaten the Bears 10 straight times by a touchdown or more.
— Paul Farrington (@paulfarrington_) November 14, 2024
The sky is falling in Chicago.
Green Bay is -5.5 this weekend…… pic.twitter.com/MXI2rLB8ny
Twitter: BearsOnSI

Gene Chamberlain has covered the Chicago Bears full time as a beat writer since 1994 and prior to this on a part-time basis for 10 years. He covered the Bears as a beat writer for Suburban Chicago Newspapers, the Daily Southtown, Copley News Service and has been a contributor for the Daily Herald, the Associated Press, Bear Report, CBS Sports.com and The Sporting News. He also has worked a prep sports writer for Tribune Newspapers and Sun-Times newspapers.