'Still building' Bears offense stalls again, in a loss

For a second straight week, the Bears fell behind by double digits and were carried by their defense as they struggled to reach the red zone in a 19-13 loss to Houston on Sunday night.

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HOUSTON -- For a second straight week, the Chicago Bears fell behind by double digits and were carried by their defense in a game that played out much like their season opener. When the Bears needed Caleb Williams and the offense to come through on the final drive of "Sunday Night Football," the unit could not move the ball past midfield, and the result was a 19-13 loss to the Houston Texans . After throwing for 93 yards in the Bears' win over the Tennessee Titans in Week 1, Williams was better in moments against the Texans but struggled on a night when the spotlight exposed Chicago's pass protection and rushing woes.

The quarterback was pressured on 35% of his dropbacks in Houston, while Chicago's run game netted 71 yards on 22 attempts, including five scrambles from Williams for 44 yards. "When it finally connects and we're all in the same cylinder, it's going to be good," wide receiver DJ Moore said. "Right now, we're still building -- what can I say? -- we're building a puzzle together.



Until we get that puzzle fully complete, it's going to be an up-and-down road." Williams completed 23 of 37 passes for 174 yards with no touchdowns and two interceptions and was sacked seven times. The Bears' lone touchdown drive came before halftime, when Williams moved Chicago into the red zone -- its second trip inside the red zone in two games -- and capped off an eight-play, 49-yard drive with a 2-yard touchdown run from Khalil Herbert .

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We understood that this would be a process a little bit so we've got a lot of work [to do]. Reality in the NFL is kind of setting in a little bit for us offensively. We've got to regroup here and look at the mistakes we had this past week, this past game, and make those corrections and move on forward with it.

" According to Next Gen Stats, the Texans generated 23 pressures on 48 pass attempts, which included Williams taking seven sacks. The quarterback reported no significant injury following the game. "I'm a little bruised up," Williams said.

"I took a couple hits today. I'm going to get in ice tubs and do all the things I need to do to make sure my body is ready for tomorrow and practice and obviously next game." In two games, Williams has completed 14% of his passes while under duress.

The Bears have struggled to generate a downfield passing attack as Williams is 0-for-11 on throws traveling at least 15 yards downfield against the Titans and Texans, with all of those throws having been off target. Williams committed his first turnover of the season when Houston cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. picked off a pass intended for Moore in the third quarter.

The Texans then extended their lead to nine after Ka'imi Fairbairn connected on a 53-yard field goal. The rookie threw another interception early in the fourth quarter while escaping a sack attempt by defensive end Danielle Hunter , who tore Williams' jersey in the process. Williams lobbed a deep ball into triple coverage while looking for Kmet and was intercepted by Kamari Lassiter .

"There were certain points where I think he did a really good job riding up in the pocket and making some good throws, so some really good positives there to look at," coach Matt Eberflus said. "Then also he was able to evade the rush a couple times and get on the perimeter a couple times. Then he has to be careful with the football after he get out there when he throws the ball in a scramble drill.

So great learning moments there for him in terms of the pressure that you're talking about, of what to do and when to do it.".