Bears coach Ben Johnson gets another shot at Commanders 9 months after they ended his season

Three months after the Commanders broke Bears cornerback Tyrique Stevenson’s brain, they broke Bears head coach Ben Johnson’s heart.

Johnson was the Lions’ offensive coordinator when they hosted the Commanders on Jan. 18 in the divisional round of the NFC playoffs. The Lions never had won a Super Bowl — they had won only three playoff games since 1958 — but eyed a chance to break through, having earned the No. 1 seed and home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs.

Instead, the Lions turned the ball over five times. They tried to beat the Commanders in a shootout and fell 45-31.

Two days later, the Bears hired Johnson. And just as Stevenson will have a chance to avenge his ‘‘Fail Mary’’ flop, Johnson will get an opportunity to beat the team that ended his Lions tenure Monday at Northwest Stadium in Landover, Maryland.

With the Lions’ defense weakened by injuries, Johnson threw the playbook at the Commanders. Quarterback Jared Goff threw the ball 40 times and had three of those passes intercepted and one returned for a touchdown.

‘‘You feel a little bit of pressure on offense to go score for score, and you don’t want to fall behind by two scores against a good team like that,’’ Johnson said last week. ‘‘So [I] might have been a little bit more aggressive with the play-calls and got away from the game plan a little bit based on how that game went.’’

Johnson had running back David Montgomery throw a pass on a trick play, and it gained 20 yards. When he asked wide receiver Jameson Williams to do the same in a 10-point game with 12 minutes left, Williams threw an interception. Perhaps that’s why Commanders defensive coordinator Joe Whitt called Johnson ‘‘gimmicky’’ last week, saying that ‘‘trick plays are going to be alive’’ again Monday.

‘‘You go in . . . believing you’re going to win, but we made too many mistakes,’’ said Bears wide receivers coach Antwaan Randle El, who served in the same role with the Lions last season. ‘‘It wasn’t what we were accustomed to doing, and it bit us.’’

Lost in the crushing defeat was the fact that the Lions totaled 521 yards, the third-most of the Johnson era. That’s proof of concept for Monday — provided the Bears’ defense is stout enough to ensure he doesn’t have to chase points the way he did in the playoffs.

‘‘There’s some space in that defense to try to make a play,’’ Randle El said.

It’s up to the Bears to make them.

One week after averaging a season-best 6.75 yards per play against the Cowboys, the Bears averaged a season-worst 4.23 against the Raiders. Before marching for a fourth-quarter touchdown to take the lead in that game, the Bears had averaged 2.4 yards per play.

They can’t expect to beat the Commanders if they play the way they did against the Raiders. The Commanders allow 20.2 points per game, the 10th-lowest total in the league. Johnson compared the Commanders’ energy — fast and violent — to that of the Raiders, given that Commanders head coach Dan Quinn is a former Pete Carroll pupil.

‘‘Shoot, you need to play complementary football to beat this team,’’ Johnson said. ‘‘This is a really good football team. These guys play hard. They play inspired football.’’

The game will be full of storylines, from the Bears drafting quarterback Caleb Williams one spot ahead of the Commanders’ Jayden Daniels in 2024 to the Bears having chosen former head coach Matt Eberflus over Quinn, who was one of the other finalists for the job at the time.

Then there’s Stevenson, who committed one of the most inexcusable gaffes of the last decade last season, turning his back to the snap as the Commanders ran a ‘‘Hail Mary’’ pass that landed in the arms of the wide receiver he was supposed to be covering.

The Bears went downhill from there, losing 10 games in a row and firing offensive coordinator Shane Waldron and, eventually, Eberflus.

‘‘Going back to a hostile environment,’’ Stevenson said. ‘‘[Commanders fans] are going to do their best job to rattle me as much as they can. The best thing I can do is come out here and show these 10 [defensive teammates] I’m locked in and ready to go.’’

Asked whether he thought the Bears were looking to avenge the ‘‘Fail Mary’’ loss, Johnson said, ‘‘You’d have to talk to those guys about it.’’ But it’s clear he looks for motivation anywhere he can find it.

Including in his own past.

Johnson said last year there was ‘‘no irony’’ in the fact the Lions were getting ready to face the Commanders in the playoffs, given that Johnson interviewed for the Commanders’ head-coaching position that went to Quinn in January 2024. He might have landed it, too, had he wanted the job.

After the Lions lost to the 49ers in the NFC Championship Game, the Commanders arranged for a second interview with Johnson — only for him to change his mind while Commanders executives were flying to Michigan to meet with him. Johnson since has said that he wasn’t ready to leave the Lions.

After last season, he was. The Commanders made sure his season ended earlier than he wanted it to.

Three months after the Commanders broke Bears cornerback Tyrique Stevenson’s brain, they broke Johnson’s heart.
McLaurin and Samuel are the Commanders’ top wide receivers, and Brown caught the winning touchdown in the “Fail Mary” game last season.
The team is required to announce Sunday if Santos doesn’t travel to the Washington area. The deadline to promote Jake Moody from the practice squad is Monday at 3 p.m.
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