Bears Nightcap: Williams, Loveland, and Monangai Spark Wild 47–42 Win Over Bengals ...Middle East

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Sunday’s game between the Bears and Bengals was chaos in its purest form — the kind of game that will be remembered, dissected, and replayed for years. For 57 minutes, it looked like Chicago would cruise to a statement win on the road. For the next 90 seconds, it looked like the Bears would collapse in one of the ugliest ways imaginable. And for the final 54 seconds, it felt like destiny.

Chicago’s 47–42 victory in Cincinnati was a fever dream — equal parts brilliance, heartbreak, and redemption. The Bears led by 14 points with under three minutes to go, only to watch Joe Flacco and the Bengals storm back with two quick touchdowns to seize a 42–41 lead. But then came the moment that flipped everything.

With 25 seconds left, rookie quarterback Caleb Williams uncorked a perfect 58-yard touchdown pass to rookie Colston Loveland — a throw and catch that will be remembered as one of the defining moments of the Bears’ 2025 season. It turned heartbreak into hysteria and chaos into catharsis.

WHAT A THROW! WHAT A MISSED TACKLE!Caleb Williams comes up huge in the 2 minute drill, and Loveland eats a missile to break free for the game-winner. The TALENT is undeniable. pic.twitter.com/txU0GKovEC

— Joe (@JoeA_NFL) November 2, 2025

“Caleb [Williams] delivered it right on the money in my chest, and I happened to like spin around and I was like, ‘man, I’m still up so I might as well try to go score this.’ It was tough, because if I got tackled, we might not have had time to go and clock it.” Loveland said of his game-winning score after the game.

“Jaw-dropping. Mind-bending. Unreal,” were the only words that came to mind after the Bears survived what should’ve been a disaster. They blew a 14-point lead in under three minutes, watched a sure win dissolve in a flurry of self-inflicted wounds, and still found a way to win. Williams finished 20-for-34 for 280 yards and three touchdowns, while Flacco threw for 470 yards and four scores in a losing effort.

The Collapse That Wasn’t

The Bears had seemingly put the game away with 2:58 remaining. Tremaine Edmunds intercepted Flacco and raced 96 yards to the end zone, appearing to seal it — until a replay review ruled Edmunds down at the 4-yard line. From there, everything unraveled. Chicago’s offense stalled, settling for a punt that turned into disaster when the Bengals drove down the field and scored on a 23-yard touchdown from Flacco to Noah Fant..

Moments later, the Bears failed to recover the ensuing onside kick. Flacco marched Cincinnati down the field again, finding Andrei Iosivas from nine yards out with 54 seconds left to take a 42–41 lead. What looked like a sure win had become a stunning collapse — until Caleb Williams reminded everyone why he was the No. 1 overall pick.

Williams engineered a furious, composed final drive, highlighted by the 58-yard touchdown to Loveland that reignited the Bears’ sideline and silenced Paycor Stadium. The defense, which had stumbled through the chaos, ended the game with an emphatic interception on a desperation heave from Flacco.

Nov 2, 2025; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams (18) celebrates with wide receiver Rome Odunze (15) after a Bears touchdown against the Cincinnati Bengals during the second quarter at Paycor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joseph Maiorana-Imagn Images

Colston Loveland’s Coming-Out Party

If there was one question Bears fans had entering Week 9, it was: When will Colston Loveland break out? The rookie tight end had shown flashes, but the big-play production hadn’t arrived — until Sunday.

Loveland caught six passes for 118 yards and two touchdowns, including the game-winner that saved the day. His third-quarter touchdown on a third-and-goal fade was impressive, but his final grab — a perfectly timed deep strike down the seam — was the stuff of legend. Williams trusted his rookie tight end to make a play, and Loveland did the rest.

It was the type of performance the Bears envisioned when they selected him with the No. 10 overall pick in April — a dynamic, athletic tight end capable of changing games. Loveland’s breakout gives Williams another dangerous weapon and offers a glimpse of what this offense could look like when everything clicks.

“Caleb trusted me,” Loveland said postgame. “I just wanted to make a play for him, for the guys. We weren’t losing that game.”

Nov 2, 2025; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Chicago Bears tight end Colston Loveland (84) celebrates with wide receiver Olamide Zaccheaus (14) after catching a 5-yard touchdown pass against the Cincinnati Bengals during the third quarter at Paycor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

Kyle Monangai: Next Man Up, Next Big Thing?

When D’Andre Swift was ruled out on Friday with a groin injury, few expected much from seventh-round rookie Kyle Monangai. By the end of the afternoon, the conversation had shifted.

Monangai ran for 176 yards on 21 carries — the most by a Bears rookie since Anthony Thomas’ 188-yard game in the same city back in 2001. His balance, vision, and patience behind the line were textbook, and his burst through contact gave Chicago a steady offensive rhythm when they needed it most.

His 39-yard sprint in the second quarter set up a DJ Moore jet-sweep touchdown that pushed the Bears’ lead to two scores. More importantly, his ability to keep the chains moving helped the Bears stay aggressive offensively without Swift.

“Nothing’s too big for him,” Bears Head Coach Ben Johnson said afterward. “He’s been ready since camp, and today he showed it.”

Monangai’s emergence adds another layer of intrigue to Chicago’s backfield — a unit that now looks deeper and more dynamic than at any point this season.

What It Means Moving Forward

They don’t get style points for nearly giving away a sure win, but they do get something even more valuable — belief. They’re now 5–3 heading into a crucial midseason stretch, and this game, for all its chaos, might end up defining who they are.

Williams showed poise under pressure. Loveland arrived as a legitimate offensive weapon. Monangai proved he belongs. And Ben Johnson’s team showed, once again, that it can take a punch — or several — and still find a way to get off the mat.

They didn’t make it easy, but for the first time in years, the Bears feel like a team that knows how to win — even when everything goes wrong.

Game Balls

Colston Loveland: 6 REC, 118 YDS, 2 TD Kyle Monangai: 26 CAR, 176 YDS; 3 REC, 22 YDS Caleb Williams: 20-34, 280 YDS, 3 TD, 0 INT, 114.8 RTG; 5 CAR, 53 YDS; 2 REC, 22 YDS, 1 TD Nov 2, 2025; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Chicago Bears running back Kyle Monangai (25) runs the ball and guard Joe Thuney (62) blocks against Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Joseph Ossai (58) during the first quarter at Paycor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joseph Maiorana-Imagn Images

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