Bears beat Vikings 17-13

Published 2:49 pm Monday, January 2, 2012

MINNEAPOLIS  — Jared Allen gave the Minnesota Vikings a show and the Chicago Bears a workout in this otherwise-meaningless season finale.
In the end, the Bears had a feel-good-yet-painful victory to stop their five-game losing streak. Allen and the Vikings were left with another near-miss.
Charles Tillman’s interception return in the second quarter gave the Bears the lead for good on Sunday, and they held on to beat the Vikings 17-13 despite Allen getting 3 1/2 of Minnesota’s seven sacks and a late injury to Brian Urlacher, the soul of Chicago’s defense.
“This was one of the most fun games I’ve played in,” Allen said.
Allen finished the season with 22 sacks, just behind Michael Strahan’s mark of 22 1/2 for the New York Giants in 2001.
The Vikings held the Bears to a season-low 209 total yards and forced three turnovers but still managed to lose, a fitting finish to this forgettable season.
Joe Webb relieved Christian Ponder at quarterback for the Vikings (3-13) for the third time in the last month, but the scrambling Webb wasn’t able to keep the Vikings from matching their worst record in franchise history, set first in 1984. The Vikings claimed the third pick in next year’s draft after going 0-6 in the NFC North, the first time in their 51 years they’ve failed to win a division game.
The Bears (8-8) were left to wonder all winter what could’ve been had quarterback Jay Cutler not broken his thumb and running back Matt Forte not sprained his knee. Josh McCown fared far better over the last two weeks than Cutler’s first fill-in, Caleb Hanie, but the Bears still missed the playoffs for the fourth time in five years.
“I definitely think he can hold his head up. He came here and helped our football team. He gave us a spark,” said coach Lovie Smith.
Smith said Urlacher sprained the medial collateral ligament in his left knee, which bent awkwardly in the end zone while he helped break up a pass in the fourth quarter. Urlacher was able to walk off the field without assistance, but he was in enough pain initially that he briefly covered his face with his hand. Smith acknowledged he’s concerned about Urlacher, but also noted his recuperative history.
“He heals a little bit quicker than most people, so he should be OK,” Smith said.
But will be the Bears be all right next season?
“We’re a good football team and we’re going to try and keep as many of our coaches and players together as possible,” Smith said. “We don’t want to tear this team down and start over or anything like that. This is a good football team, and we’re going to win a lot of games with this core remaining the same.”
Despite having Allen in his face all day, the defensive end blowing by left tackle J’Marcus Webb often until the tight ends started to help, McCown finished 15 for 25 for 160 yards and a second-quarter touchdown to Roy Williams with one interception.
“We’ve had some ups and downs, but to finish the year off and start the year off with a win to push us into this year is something special. I think we will come back next year and win more than eight games. I can promise you that,” Williams said.
Vikings coach Leslie Frazier didn’t make the same promise, but he expressed the same confidence. Frazier hasn’t expressed any concern about his job status, even raving earlier in the week about how supportive team owners have been.
“We’ll have a meeting after the season … but the meeting will be about how not to be 3-13 in 2012,” Frazier said. “We have to be a lot better.”
Ponder went 4 for 10 for 28 yards before aggravating a hip pointer he sustained a month ago. Webb, who rallied the Vikings to victory last week at Washington and brought them within 1 yard of a win at Detroit on Dec. 11, went 17 for 32 for 200 yards. He netted only 2 yards on four rushes.
The Vikings had their share of gaffes familiar to this at-times-woeful season. Most notable was Ponder’s 13th interception, a poorly thrown pass behind Toby Gerhart that bounced off the running back’s hands and into the arms of Tillman for an untouched 22-yard return. That was the third pick six in the last five games against Ponder, the first-round draft pick who took over as the starter for the seventh game of the season.
“It stinks that the season played out the way it did, but I think it’s a building block to improve upon next year,” Ponder said.

Email newsletter signup