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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Patrick Finley

Bears defense holds on at end — again

Bears outside linebacker Robert Quinn hangs onto Giants quarterback Daniel Jones before he flips the ball for a completion Sunday. | Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

If the Bears’ Week 1 defensive stop was defined by what D’Andre Swift dropped — the ball in the end zone, with 6 seconds left — then Sunday’s was punctuated by what side judge Don Willard pulled from his pocket.

As the clock expired, Willard threw a flag toward Giants receiver Golden Tate, who had been blanketed by Bears safety Eddie Jackson on an incomplete pass from the 10 with the Bears up by four.

Tate wanted pass interference — and he got it. On himself. Willard ruled that Tate shoved down slot cornerback Buster Skrine earlier in his route.

“It was a nervous moment — not sure how the penalty was going to go,” defensive lineman Akiem Hics said after a 17-13 win against a depleted Giants team at Soldier Field. “But relieved to see we got one towards our side.”

The Bears’ defense has ended the past two games with a feeling of relief — not dominance. They’ve hung on to win, but the degree of difficulty remains concerning.

The Giants played three quarters Sunday without all-world rusher Saquon Barkley, who was carried off the field and carted off the sideline after being tackled by Jackson on the first play of the second quarter. The Giants fear he tore his ACL.

They played a half without Sterling Shepard after he limped to the locker room at halftime with an injured toe.

Against a Giants team whose 16 points in Week 1 ranked third-lowest in the NFL, the Bears gave up a 95-yard touchdown drive in the fourth quarter. They allowed two second-half field goals, both on short drives after Mitch Trubisky interceptions, and gave up 50 yards on the Giants’ final drive before it stalled.

“It’s almost as if we flipped — we flipped the game,” Hicks said. “We played hot – hot! – early and we’re kicking butt and we’re taking advantage of the plays we can take advantage of, and we get a little ease to it.”

The Giants didn’t have a first down in the first quarter. The Bears pitched a first-half shutout, forcing two takeaways, and then held them to one first down, total, on their first two drives of the third quarter.

On the Giants’ last three drives, though, the Bears allowed 14 first downs — a touchdown, a field goal and a goal-line stop.

“Very similar to us being in Detroit last week, right?” Hicks said. “Our backs are against the wall. We’re fighting to stay alive, to win the game.”

The Bears have reason to be optimistic, though.

On his first snap of the season, outside linebacker Robert Quinn — who signed a five-year, $70 million deal this offseason — forced Giants quarterback Daniel Jones to fumble.

Asked about the spark Quinn provides, Hicks used two words: “blazing good.”

“He’s somebody that can come off the edge with such ferocity and speed that, you know, he changes the math for the offense,” Hicks said.

The Bears envision Quinn, Khalil Mack and Hicks being the most dominant trio of their kind in the league. Sunday, after not being healthy in practice at the same all preseason, each sacked Jones.

Two plays after Mack’s fourth-quarter sack, Jackson jumped in front of tight end Kaden Smith, picked off a pass and ran the ball 54 yards for a touchdown. He was whistled for interference, though. The flag was late but correct: Jackson had bumped Smith’s left shoulder before the ball arrived.

The Giants kept the ball and eventually kicked a 37-yard field goal to pull within four halfway through the fourth quarter.

Jackson got a better result the next time a flag floated in his direction.

“The motivation is to win by any means necessary,” said safety Deon Bush, who intercepted Jones in the second quarter. “Everybody has plays that they wish that they could have back in the [last] drive, but at the end of the day, ultimately, we got the stop and we got the win.

“That’s our main goal every week.”

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