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Cairo Santos, Devin Duvernay deliver key special teams plays in final minute of Bears' comeback …

Three carries from running back D'Andre Swift brought the Bears to the 31-yard line, where Johnson felt comfortable putting the game at the feet of Santos, who wanted redemption for his 45-yard miss earlier in the fourth quarter.

"I had to come back through on the next play for the team," Santos said. "For special teams, it wasn't our cleanest game as well, but we're just resilient. Duv' making a play like that, just to lift our special teams in this game, and me getting a chance to seal the game for special teams, is kind of the identity that coach Hightower has built here.

"It's not gone our way in a lot of ways for special teams and myself, but I'm always going to be battling for this team, for this city, for these coaches. Just blessed for the opportunity."

Duvernay's longest return of the season came at the most opportune time and earned the veteran a game ball from Johnson, who told reporters he's "been waiting for one of those from \[Duvernay\]."

The 6-year pro and two-time Pro Bowl selection credited his success to the "design of the play" as well as near-perfect execution by the return unit.

Duvernay believes the special teams' clutch response in the final minute starts with Hightower's consistent messaging and the players' resiliency through all four quarters.

"The game's not over till 0:00 on the clock," Duvernay said. "We've just got to keep playing the game, keep playing, and we know our plays will come … \[It's\] just staying with it, just knowing we impact games. We're not just there just to be there. We really impact games and hopefully win the game for the team. HT just preaches staying with it, that we can help this team win and preaches impact."

Both Santos and Duvernay acknowledged that special teams has areas to clean up from the victory, despite the successful comeback efforts. Still, the group helped make history Sunday.

With his season-long 54-yard field goal in the third quarter, Santos became the Bears' all-time leader in made field goals from 50-plus yards with 24, passing Robbie Gould. While Santos repeatedly acknowledged that the 2025 season hasn't gone exactly how he planned, most notably due to missing a pair of games with an injury, he appreciates the spot he's in now.

"All the things that have happened for me with injuries or games I wasn't my best, they all kind of teach you lessons too," Santos said. "When I show up today, it's all because of those lessons I learned before, that that's the version I am today. So in a way, I'm thankful for everything that happens, and it teaches me things, and I can only execute the way I did today because of those lessons I've learned. "

For Santos, who has now played in 158 career games and attempted 302 field goals, the win means much more than his personal accolades or records. Seeing how the 2025 Bears have evolved and stuck together through five fourth-quarter comebacks this season has been a thrilling ride for the veteran.

"It's amazing, especially to see how we're winning games," Santos added. "The last couple seasons, we saw the opposite of that, even with a team that we felt like we had trust in each other. I think we've grown so much to learn to win these games.

"It's amazing to see week in and week out, you're in these games and you kind of know guys are going to step in. When it's your turn, you've gotta do it for each other."

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