APGLENDALE, Ariz. - Six turnovers, 3 points on offense, and somehow the Chicago Bears are still unbeaten.
Somehow, some way, the Bears rallied from 20 points down at halftime and escaped with a 24-23 victory in Arizona on Monday night, leaving the shellshocked Cardinals to ponder yet another excruciating late-game collapse.
“Sometimes, when you’re a team of destiny, things like that happen,” Chicago coach Lovie Smith said.
The Bears are off to their best start in 20 years at 6-0. For that, they can thank their defense, punt returner Devin Hester and Arizona kicker Neil Rackers.
Rex Grossman gets no credit for this one.
“I’ve never played so bad and won a game like that,” said the Bears quarterback, who threw four interceptions and lost two fumbles. “It was unbelievable.”
Down 20-0 at halftime, Chicago returned two fumbles for touchdowns in the second half. Then Hester returned a punt 83 yards for a score with 2:58 remaining to take the lead.
Matt Leinart, who threw two first-quarter touchdowns and finished 24-for-42 for 232 yards, coolly directed Arizona downfield at the finish for a chance to claim a victory that appeared to be the Cardinals’ all night.
But Rackers, a Pro Bowl kicker last season who connected from 41, 28 and 29 yards earlier in the evening, missed a 41-yarder to the left with 53 seconds left for what would have been the game winner for Arizona (1-5).
“I was ready to hit it,” he said. “Unfortunately I hit the ground first, then I felt extremely sick to my stomach for my teammates and coaches and everybody else who deserved to win this game.”
Arizona coach Dennis Green was seething. Judging by his comments, he clearly didn’t believe the Bears lived up to the hype — or deserved to win.
“The Bears are who we thought they were!” he said, yelling at the top of his lungs and pounding on the podium at his postgame press conference. “Now, if you want to crown them, then crown (them)! But they are who they thought they were! And we let them off the hook!”
Green then stormed away.
Anquan Boldin caught 12 passes for 136 yards and a touchdown for the Cardinals, who blew a late lead at home for the third time this season. Similar collapses occurred against St. Louis and Kansas City.
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James carried 36 times for only 55 yards, an average of 1.5 yards. It was the most carries in an NFL game by a player while averaging less than 2 yards per attempt, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
James also had one very costly fumble.
After Grossman threw his fourth interception, the Cardinals were trying to use up time. But Brian Urlacher stripped the ball from James and Charles Tillman scooped it up for a 40-yard return to cut Arizona’s lead to 23-17 with five minutes left.
Urlacher finished with 11 tackles, seeming to find his way to the ball on nearly every play as the Cardinals were making their final drives.
“First of all they weren’t blocking me, so that was easy,” Urlacher said.
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