The Bears were outgained by the Titans 244-148 and did not score an offensive touchdown. Williams completed 14 of 29 passes for 93 yards and a 55.7 passer rating. Swift led the Bears in rushing with 30 yards on 10 carries.
“Offensive play, obviously we didn’t perform how we wanted to,” Williams said. “We want to be the most efficient team out there, myself included. Didn’t perform the way I wanted to. I missed a few passed that I normally don’t miss … Felt like I was in the right place at the right time, and I would say I was seeing it well. Just missed and misfired and placing the ball where I wanted to.”
The Titans took a 7-0 lead on Tony Pollard’s 26-yard touchdown run with :41 left in the first quarter, capping an 8-play, 79-yard drive. The score came after the Bears defense had forced three-and-outs on Tennessee’s first two possessions.
Velus Jones Jr. fumbled the ensuing kickoff, dropping the ball and kicking it forward, where it was recovered by the Titans’ Julius Chestnut at the Chicago 23.
Taylor recorded the Bears’ first sack of the season and Tennessee settled for Nick Folk’s 40-yard field goal, widening the margin to 10-0.
The Titans increased their lead to 17-0 on Levis’ 17-yard TD pass to tight end Chig Okonkwo with 3:44 remaining in the first half. The TD capped a 14-play, 73-yard drive that was sustained by Levis’ 22-yard pass to Calvin Ridley on third-and-15 and an offside penalty on Montez Sweat on third-and-5.
DeAndre Carter, who already had punt returns of 16 and 20 yards, returned the ensuing kickoff 67 yards to the Titans’ 34. That set up Santos’ 24-yard field goal, drawing the Bears to within 17-3 with :27 remaining in the first half.
The Titans outgained the Bears 88-5 in the first quarter and 179-51 in the first half.
The Bears offense stalled again on its first drive of the second half, punting on fourth-and-30 after two incomplete passes, two penalties and a sack.
But the defense and special teams saved the day, propelling the Bears to the season-opening victory.
After allowing two TDs and a field goal on three straight first-half possessions, the defense held the Titans scoreless in the second half.
“I think we had to sit back and realize who we are,” Stevenson said, “stop playing for the hype, stop playing for everything else around us and just realize that we put in work just for a moment like this.”
“We just responded,”…
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