Over the past few weeks, head coach Ben Johnson and the Chicago Bears had searched for their killer instinct.
Winning hadn’t been the problem. The Bears had won eight of their last nine games ahead of Friday’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles. But Chicago failed to develop its killer instinct to put teams away earlier and instead used various methods to win in dramatic fashion.
On Friday, the Bears found it in front of a national audience by stopping the NFL’s most controversial play.
Chicago stole Friday’s momentum and potentially changed the nation’s opinion of the team when the Bears forced a fumble on the Eagles’ infamous “tush push” play. Instead of squandering the momentum like it had many times this year, Chicago used it to score back-to-back touchdowns on its way to a

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