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Bears-Packers Might Decide the Lions’ Entire Season

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
December 21, 2025
Bears-Packers Might Decide the Lions’ Entire Season

Detroit is 8–6 with three games left, sitting outside the current playoff field, and watching the odds bounce around like a pinball machine. The Athletic’s playoff predictor has the Lions sitting at 27% to make it after the Seahawks big win over the Rams on Thursday Night Football.

On the surface, that sounds like a team that needs a small miracle. But once you actually dig into the remaining schedules, and more importantly who is playing who, it starts to feel a lot less far‑fetched and a lot more like controlled chaos.

It all boils down to one main point: What the Bears do — and specifically what happens in Bears‑Packers in Week 16.

That game is the fork in the road. If Green Bay wins, Detroit paves themselves a smooth road to the playoffs. If Chicago wins, the whole thing turns into an off‑road adventure where Detroit is suddenly watching Colts‑49ers like their own season depends on it — because, in that version of the world, it very likely does.

The State of the Race: Where Detroit Sits With Three to Go

Detroit’s remaining schedule looks like this:

  • Week 16: at Steelers (8–6)

  • Week 17: vs Vikings (6–8)

  • Week 18: at Bears (10–4)

And it’s worth zooming out for a second, because for the second straight year, the tension around this team isn’t about whether the Lions can score enough points. It’s about whether they can survive the injuries defensively.

They’ve lived in the bottom half of the league in just about every major category you’d point to if you were trying to build a case against them: yards per game, points per game, yards per play, passing yards allowed — you name it. This hasn’t been a top-tier unit, and the numbers reflect that.

Much like last season, Detroit has spent long stretches trying to hold things together on defense with key pieces missing, especially in the secondary. That’s part of why the Lions have leaned so heavily into pressure — they’ve posted the fourth-highest blitz rate in the league, which isn’t necessarily who they want to be, but who they’ve had to be. When you’re banged up on the back end, you don’t have the luxury of sitting back and hoping coverage holds up forever.

The flip side is where the optimism comes in.

Detroit’s offense hasn’t just been good — it’s been elite. The Lions rank first in points per game, fourth in yards per game, second in yards per play, second in total touchdowns, and fourth in EPA per play. That’s not a hot streak. That’s an identity.

And that offense is good enough to mask defensive issues in a lot of situations, especially when Detroit plays with a lead and can dictate the flow of the game. They don’t need the defense to be dominant — they need it to be functional.

There’s also a quiet bit of context working in Detroit’s favor: the NFL is loaded with strong defenses this year, but a good chunk of them live in the NFC. And with Green Bay dealing with its own defensive questions — especially after the loss of Micah Parsons — Detroit isn’t the only contender trying to survive January by leaning on offense.

The Fork in the Road: Bears‑Packers in Week 16

Green Bay Packers quarterback Jordan Love (10) against the Washington Commanders on Thursday, September 11, 2025, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis.
Credit: Wm. Glasheen/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Before we even get into Detroit’s scenarios, you have to understand how much this one game changes everything.

This isn’t just another divisional matchup tucked into the schedule. This is the game that decides whether Detroit spends the next three weeks calmly mapping out a playoff path — or frantically flipping between broadcasts and rooting for teams they don’t care about.

If Green Bay Beats Chicago in Week 16…

Detroit grabs the reins. Win out, and they have a playoff spot.

Chicago’s ceiling gets capped right there. They lose the ability to stack wins that would force Detroit into scoreboard‑watching mode, and suddenly the Lions’ Week 18 trip to Chicago becomes what it should be: a de facto playoff game.

If Chicago Beats Green Bay in Week 16…

Detroit can still make it — but now the tone of the chase changes.

Instead of just focusing inward, the Lions suddenly have to look ahead to Week 17: Bears vs. 49ers, because the loser of that game becomes the team Detroit sets their sights on.

Scenario 1: Lions Win Out + Packers Win Week 16

Let’s start with the version of this story that doesn’t require you to watch Colts‑49ers like it’s your own Super Bowl.

This is the scenario I think is most likely, simply because I trust Detroit's offense and culture enough to carry them past the defensive struggles. 

Detroit winning out on its own does the heavy lifting. All Detroit needs from Green Bay is one specific result — a Packers win over the Bears in Week 16. That single game is enough to remove Chicago as a true roadblock.

If the Lions finish 11–6, it becomes extremely difficult for the rest of the bubble to keep them out. At that point, you’re not asking for help — you’re daring the rest of the NFC North to find a way to say no.

You’re not asking for a miracle.

You’re asking Detroit to close like a playoff team.

Week 16: Lions at Steelers — The “Can You Win a Grown‑Up Road Game?” Test

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) comes off the field after failing to convert on third down in the second quarter of the NFL Week 11 game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Cincinnati Bengals at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh on Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025. The Steelers led 10-6 at halftime.
Credit: Sam Greene/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

If Detroit’s season is going to end with a playoff spot, it probably starts with one thing: showing you can win an ugly game in a tough building.

Pittsburgh is 8–6 too, which makes this one feel like a playoff game without the branding.

Why it’s scary

Pittsburgh games are rarely comfortable. Especially this year. You just don't what version of this defnese you're going to get, or what version of the 42 year-old quarterback you're going to get on a week-to-week basis.

The Steelers want to control tempo, win on third down, and make you earn everything. Fortunatley for the Lions, their run game should allow them to dictate time of possion in this matchup. 

Why I Like Detroit

The Lions haven’t just been one of the league’s better offenses — they’ve been one of the most reliable ones. They can score in multiple ways and, more importantly, they can adjust based on how a defense tries to play them. If you want to sit back, they’ll nickel-and-dime you with the quick game to Amon-Ra St. Brown. If you get aggressive, they’re more than happy to hit you with play‑action shots. Miss a tackle in space on Gibbs, and suddenly you’re giving up explosive plays that can swing momentum.

The Steelers know it, too. This is an offense that can turn one missed assignment into seven points, and that forces defenses to play honest for all four quarters. You can’t relax.

The Steelers’ Defense Is Built to Create Chaos

Pittsburgh has spent the entire season leaning into disruption. They’re third in takeaways per game right now with 1.7, and they’ve built a defensive identity around speeding quarterbacks up and stealing possessions. Short fields are their best friend.

They don’t need to dominate you snap after snap. They just need one moment — one strip sack, one tipped ball, one panic throw — and suddenly the game feels like it’s slipping through your fingers.

So the Lions must:

  • Protect the football. You can’t give the Steelers free possessions and expect to survive.

  • Stay ahead of the chains. Living in 2nd‑and‑12 is exactly where Pittsburgh wants you.

  • Take Points. Field goals can win you games at this point of the season.

If Detroit does those three things, they can win this game without needing it to be pretty.

If they don’t, you’re playing a tight, stressful road game in December — and that’s never where you want to be.

Week 17: Vikings at Lions — The “Don’t Trip” Game

Aug 9, 2025; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) scrambles for a gain against the Houston Texans during the first quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium.
Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images

Minnesota is 6–8, but that doesn’t mean this is anywhere close to a freebie.

Divisional games have a way of ignoring records, and the Vikings have been annoying enough this year to remind you of that. They’re not playing for the postseason anymore, but they are playing for pride.

What makes this matchup tricky is that the Vikings’ offense is built around rhythm. They want to stay on schedule, stay ahead of the sticks, and keep things manageable. And divisional teams almost always have something they can lean on — one concept, one matchup, one tendency — that keeps them hanging around longer than they probably should.

Detroit’s job is to take that comfort away.

This can’t be a game where the Lions ease into it and assume things will work themselves out. If Minnesota gets into a rhythm early, they’re good enough to make this feel way harder than it needs to be.

What Detroit Needs

  • Start fast. Don’t let this turn into one of those games where you spot them an early lead and spend three quarters trying to claw your way back.

  • Make Minnesota sustain drives. No freebies. No busted coverages that turn short throws into chunk gains.

  • Build confidence for the secondary. J.J. McCarthy has had his struggles this season. If Detroit can force him into a couple bad decisions — or even just make him hesitate — it does more than help in this game. It gives a banged‑up back end some confidence heading into a Week 18 matchup where discipline and trust will matter even more.

This is the definition of a game Detroit should win — which is exactly why they can’t afford to treat it casually. 

Week 18: Lions at Bears — The “Hammer Game”

If Detroit gets to Week 18 with everything on the line, this is exactly the kind of finale the NFL dreams about. Real playoff implications, a divisional matchup, and a storyline that doesn’t need any help from the hype machine.

Ben Johnson, in his first year running things in Chicago, has the Bears within reach of a division title. That alone would be impressive. Doing it immediately after leaving Detroit — where he became the hottest head‑coaching name on the market two years in a row — just adds another layer to it. You know there’s some emotion baked in there, even if no one ever says it out loud. Watching the Lions’ offense continue to hum while he’s on the opposite sideline can’t be nothing.

At the same time, this isn’t just about narrative. From a football standpoint, it’s fascinating. That Detroit defense will have a better feel for Ben Johnson’s tendencies, timing, and sequencing than any other team in the league. They’ve seen it. They’ve practiced against it. They know what it looks like when things are going right — and where the stress points are when they aren’t.

You don’t need to manufacture drama. It’s already there in this one.

The "Bears Win Week 16" Scenarios

Detroit Lions running back Jahmyr Gibbs (0) and running back David Montgomery (5) sign autographs for fans after 38-30 win over Baltimore Ravens at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, Md. on Monday, Sept. 22, 2025.
Credit: Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Branch A: Bears Win Week 16, but Lose to the 49ers in Week 17

This is the version of the Bears‑win scenario that Detroit fans can actually live with.

If Chicago pulls the upset against Green Bay in Week 16 but then goes on the road and loses to San Francisco in Week 17, Detroit is back in control of their own destiny. Win your games, and that’s it — no extra conditions, no praying for miracles, no flipping between broadcasts on Sunday night.

Branch B: Bears Win Week 16, and the 49ers Lose Out

This is where things start to feel strange.

Technically, San Francisco doesn’t have to lose every remaining game. They just have to lose the right ones — to the Colts in Week 16 and the Seahawks in Week 18. That’s the combination that knocks the 49ers down far enough to clear space for Detroit.

Is it possible? Sure.

Is it comfortable? Absolutely not.

Because asking for help from a Colts team led by 44‑year‑old Philip Rivers — hoping he can summon one more mistake‑free night — is not where you want to find yourself.

Detroit Can Lose to the Steelers or Vikings and Still Get In?

Now for the part that sounds fake until you actually see it laid out.

There's a real, legitimate path, even if Detroit loses one of the next two games.

That’s wild for a team sitting with 27% chances to make it right now, according to The Athletic Playoff Simulator.

The catch, of course, is that this back door only opens under one very specific condition: Chicago has to completely fall apart.

That means the Bears lose all three:

  • to the Packers in Week 16,

  • to the 49ers in Week 17,

  • and to the Lions in Week 18.

Suddenly, the Lions get a full game of breathing room, where a stumble against Pittsburgh or Minnesota doesn’t immediately end the conversation. The Lions still need to take care of business in Week 18 — that part never changes — but the pressure certainly gets a lot lighter.

The Scenarios That Send the Lions to Cabo

Detroit Lions quarterback Jared Goff (16), left, talks to offensive coordinator Ben Johnson before a play against Chicago Bears during the first half at Ford Field in Detroit on Thursday, Nov. 28, 2024.
Credit: Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

If you’re reading this and thinking, “cool, so Detroit is definitely getting in,” pump the brakes just a bit.

Not because Detroit can’t do it — they absolutely can — but because what Ben Johnson is building in Chicago feels very real, and it deserves to be acknowledged. This isn’t some fluky team hanging around on vibes. The Bears have been well-coached, balanced, and opportunistic, especially on defense.

I may think the Lions are the better team right now, particularly offensively, but that doesn’t take away from the job Chicago has done this season. If Detroit gives them short fields, the Bears are more than capable of taking advantage. They’re well-rounded, they’re confident, and they’re not going to treat Week 18 like anything other than a playoff game of their own.

And if Detroit drops that game in Chicago, the escape routes start to disappear. At that point, you’re talking about one lonely path left — Green Bay losing out — which, given who the Packers are and who they’re playing, is asking for a lot.

So yes, there are multiple ways for Detroit to get in. There’s even a weird back door that allows for a stumble earlier in the stretch run. But there’s no safety net if the Lions don’t handle business in Chicago.

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.

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