NFL team season
The 1951 season was the Chicago Bears ' 32nd in the National Football League . The team failed to improve on their 9–3 record from 1950 and finished at 7–5 under head coach and owner George Halas , fourth in the NFL's National Conference, but only a game behind winner Los Angeles , the eventual league champion . This season was a drop off from the previous season's tiebreaker playoff appearance.
The Bears lost twice to the crosstown Cardinals , who won just three games.[ 1] [ 2] The season finale was played in frigid conditions at Wrigley Field and cost the Bears a share of the conference title.[ 2]
Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance 1 September 30 at Green Bay Packers W 31–20 1–0 City Stadium 24,666 2 October 7 at Chicago Cardinals L 14–28 1–1 Comiskey Park 33,781 3 October 14 New York Yanks W 24–21 2–1 Wrigley Field 37,697 4 October 21 San Francisco 49ers W 13–7 3–1 Wrigley Field 42,296 5 October 28 at Detroit Lions W 28–23 4–1 Briggs Stadium 34,778 6 November 4 at Washington Redskins W 27–0 5–1 Griffith Stadium 21,737 7 November 11 Detroit Lions L 28–41 5–2 Wrigley Field 43,709 8 November 18 Green Bay Packers W 24–13 6–2 Wrigley Field 36,771 9 November 25 at Cleveland Browns L 21–42 6–3 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 40,969 10 December 2 Los Angeles Rams L 17–42 6–4 Wrigley Field 50,286 11 December 9 at New York Yanks W 45–21 7–4 Yankee Stadium 13,075 12 December 16 Chicago Cardinals L 14–24 7–5 Wrigley Field 15,085 Note: Intra-conference opponents are in bold text.
1 2 3 4 Total • Bears 10 7 7 7 31 Packers 0 6 7 7 20
Scoring summary Q1 CHI White 8 yard run (Lujack kick)CHI 7–0 Q1 CHI Blanda 46 yard field goalCHI 10–0 Q2 CHI Rykovich 1 yard run (Lujack kick)CHI 17–0 Q2 GB Mann 12 yard pass from Thomason CHI 17–6 Q3 CHI Dottley 1 yard run (Lujack kick)CHI 24–6 Q3 GB Cloud 1 yard pass from Thomason (Cone kick)CHI 24–13 Q4 CHI Hunsinger 5 yard run (Lujack kick)CHI 31–13 Q4 GB Cloud 1 yard run (Cone kick) CHI 31–20
[ 3]
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.
Franchise Records Stadiums Culture Lore Rivalries Minor league affiliates Retired numbers Key personnel Division championships (21) Conference championships (4) League championships (9) Media Broadcasters Radio: Personnel: Television: WFLD (pre-season and most regular season games through Fox , official pre-game and post-game alternate) Marquee Sports Network (official post-game and in-season programming) Personnel: Lou Canellis (gameday television host, pre-season sideline reporter) Adam Amin (pre-season play-by-play) Jim Miller (pre-season analyst) Current league affiliations
Formerly the Decatur Staleys (1920) and the Chicago Staleys (1921)