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		Special teams miscues prove costly 
		for Bears in overtime loss to Vikings
 
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			 [November 25, 2024]  
			By JAY COHEN 
			CHICAGO (AP) — Cairo Santos had a field goal blocked — again. 
			DeAndre Carter muffed a punt in the second half. And those were just 
			the special teams mistakes for the struggling Chicago Bears.
 Santos' blocked field goal and Carter's turnover were part of 
			another sloppy performance for Chicago in its fifth consecutive 
			loss. The pair of miscues helped set up two of Minnesota's three 
			touchdowns in a 30-27 overtime victory.
 
 The Bears (4-7) closed out a miserable three-game homestand after 
			they won their first three games of the season at Soldier Field. 
			They were in position to beat Green Bay last weekend before Santos' 
			46-yard field goal attempt was blocked on the final play of the 
			Packers' 20-19 win.
 
 “It’s tough. ... When things just aren’t going your way, you gotta 
			put your head down and just keep going to work,” tight end Cole Kmet 
			said. “It’s not easy to do but that’s kind of where we’re at.”
 
 Chicago and Minnesota were tied at 7 when Caleb Williams threw 
			incomplete on third-and-4 at the Vikings 30 early in the second 
			quarter. Bears coach Matt Eberflus sent Santos out for a 48-yard 
			attempt, but it was knocked down by defensive lineman Jerry Tillery.
 
			
			 
			“I think it was the penetration with the trajectory of the ball,” 
			Santos said. “Had the ball started 3 or 4 inches to the right of 
			both those guys' hands, I think it still goes in through the 
			uprights.”
 Brian Asamoah returned the blocked kick 22 yards to set the Vikings 
			up with good field position. Sam Darnold then capped a six-play, 
			53-yard drive with a 5-yard TD pass to Jalen Nailor for a 14-7 lead 
			with 6:29 left in the first half.
 
 It was the third blocked field goal for Santos this year, the most 
			for Chicago in a single season since it also had three blocked in 
			2012. Santos also had a 43-yard try blocked in the fourth quarter of 
			a 35-16 victory over Jacksonville on Oct. 13.
 
			The Bears became the first NFL team to allow three blocked field 
			goals in a season since the Browns and Ravens each had three blocked 
			in 2022.
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            Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus looks on from he sideline 
			during the first half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota 
			Vikings, Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley) 
             
 
			 “Whenever that happens two games in a row we’ve got 
			to make sure we take a hard look in terms of the protection, the 
			technique and who we have in there,” Eberflus said. “So it's going 
			to be a big thing to look at.”
 Chicago trailed 17-10 when it forced a Minnesota punt midway through 
			the third quarter. Carter warned his teammates to get out of the 
			way, but it hit the ground and bounced off the inside of his right 
			leg before it was recovered by Bo Richter at the Bears 15.
 
 The Vikings turned the mental error into Aaron Jones' 2-yard 
			touchdown run and a 24-10 lead.
 
 “Gotta get out of the way of the ball. That’s on me,” Carter said. 
			“I let the team down today. Game shouldn’t have been in the 
			situation it was in. I felt bad for the guys.”
 
 Santos and Carter both played a role in a late rally for Chicago. 
			Carter had a 55-yard kickoff return, and Santos got an onside kick 
			to work before making a tying 48-yarder on the final play of 
			regulation.
 
 But the Bears stalled on the first possession of overtime, and 
			Darnold drove the Vikings downfield to set up Parker Romo's winning 
			29-yard field goal.
 
 “We're losing in the most unreal situations,” Bears receiver DJ 
			Moore said. “Now it's like the luck's got to go in our favor at some 
			point.”
 
			
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