Gould’s OT Kick Sends Bears to NFC Title Game
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CHICAGO — Robbie Gould won it after Rex Grossman didn’t lose it and the Chicago Bears are back in the NFC championship game for the first time in 18 years.
Two swings of the foot by their All-Pro kicker — the final one a 49-yard field goal 4:58 into overtime — offset any shortcomings in Grossman’s passing and pushed the Bears to a 27–24 victory over the Seattle Seahawks yesterday.
The Bears also got a clutch completion from their erratic, oftencriticized quarterback to set up the winning kick.
The Bears will host the Saints next Sunday in the NFC championship game. Chicago has not been to the Super Bowl since January 1986 and New Orleans never has been that far.
Seattle got the ball first in overtime, but Chicago’s Israel Idonije forced an 18-yard punt by Ryan Plackemeier with a strong rush. Grossman hit Rashied Davis for a third-down pass of 30 yards to the Seattle 36, and the Bears (14-3) moved into position for the winning points.
“I’ve learned that he knows how to bounce back from tough situations,” coach Lovie Smith said of Grossman. “He’s been roasted the past couple weeks over all different kinds of things. He is our quarterback. … There was a lot of pressure on him and our entire football team and I thought they handled it well.”
Gould, who entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent and is now headed to the Pro Bowl, hit the 49-yarder, setting off a wild celebration at Soldier Field. He made his first 24 field goals this season, and 32 of 36 overall.
The Bears had won a division title and earned a first-round bye in their previous two playoff appearances, only to lose their first game at home, so their elation was tinged with relief. They won their first playoff game since January 1, 1995
The Seahawks (10–8), ravaged by injuries throughout the season, got a strong performance from Shaun Alexander. Alexander, who missed the first meeting between the teams, a 37–6 Chicago win in October, gained 108 yards and gave the Bears’ defense a tough time. He had a pair of touchdowns runs.
Grossman, whose season has been up-and-down since a hot start, completed 21-of-38 for 282 yards with an interception. It was quite an upgrade from his final performance of the regular season, when he had a quarterback rating of 0.0 in a loss to Green Bay.
Late in the fourth quarter, the Bears stacked up Alexander on a third-and-1 for no gain at the Chicago 44, and the Seahawks decided to go for it. But Matt Hasselbeck bobbled the snap and Lance Briggs threw Alexander for a 2-yard loss, turning the ball over to the Bears with just under two minutes to go.
After a short completion and two of Grossman’s passes were deflected — one was nearly intercepted — the Bears punted.
The Seahawks got the ball at the 20 with 1:38 to go and moved to the Bears 45 before Tank Johnson, whose legal problems have been a headache for his team this season, sacked Hasselbeck.
The Seahawks, last year’s NFC champs, took their first lead in the third quarter and momentarily silenced the bundled up crown at Soldier Field — temperatures were in the 30s — when Alexander ran up the middle for a 13-yard TD on a third-and-10 to make it 24–21.
Earlier, as Gould made a field goal that would have tied the game, Seattle’s Leroy Hill was called for jumping up and trying to induce a false start. Instead of the three points, the Bears got 5 extra yards on the penalty and a first down at the Seattle 13.
But Grossman’s pass went off Muhsin Muhammad’s shoulder pad and Pete Hunter, who had been working in a mortgage office before being signed before the playoffs, intercepted early in the fourth quarter.
Hasselbeck gave it right back on first down when his pass for Bobby Engram was intercepted by Ricky Manning Jr. at the 32. The Bears couldn’t convert and ended up punting.