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Lions’ painful reality about losing Ben Johnson hits after one Bears drive

While Detroit Lions fans are still coping with the blowout loss they experienced against the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, life continued to punch them square in the mouth the next day. Former Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson took the field for the first time as the Chicago Bears head coach and, to the surprise of no one in Detroit, his offense went down the field and scored a touchdown on their first drive.

The drive saw the Bears go on a 10-play, 61-yard drive that lasted 5:41 and resulted in Caleb Williams running the ball in for a touchdown to put Chicago up 7-0 just like that. The Bears very much looked like the Lions have looked offensively the past few years and it's certainly not what the Lions fan base wanted to see. Lions fans hoped that losing Johnson wouldn't impact their team too much and that, selfishly, he'd struggle leading the Bears' offense, especially early on.

CALEB WILLIAMS TAKES IT IN HIMSELF 🔥

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— ESPN (@espn) September 9, 2025

While it's only one drive, seeing Williams go down the field and put the ball in the end zone, something he and the Bears offense struggled to do a year ago, further put the loss of Johnson into perspective. To make matters worse, their offense looked mostly inept in the 27-13 loss to the Packers on Sunday in their first game without Johnson running the offense. So, not only did their offense struggle in their first game of the post-Johnson era but his new offense thrived.

Lions’ nightmare without Ben Johnson became clear on Bears’ first drive

There probably wasn't much the Lions could do to keep Johnson from taking the Bears head coach job in the offseason but seeing him leave was still painful, especially since he went to a hated division rival. Lions fans definitely hope that the team can rebound offensively without him but if their struggles continue this year and the Bears suddenly can't stop scoring, it'd be something fans would have a tough time stomaching.

It's only the first quarter of a Week 1 game for Chicago but this would absolutely sting less if the Lions offense hadn't been so inefficient on Sunday. Let's hope that the tides turn quickly and the Lions can rebound under new offensive coordinator John Morton and that Johnson's Bears crash back down to earth sooner rather than later.

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