2006 Chicago Bears season and Colorado Avalanche: Difference between pages

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{{NHL Team
{{Infobox NFL_season
|team_name = Colorado Avalanche
| logo = [[Image:ChicagoBears_100.png|Chicago Bears logo]]
|bg_color = #8B2942
| team = Chicago Bears
| yeartext_color = 2006white
|logo_image = Colorado Avalanche.gif
| record = 13-3
|conference = [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western]]
| division_place = 1st [[NFC North]]
|division = [[Northwest Division (NHL)|Northwest]]
| coach = [[Lovie Smith]]
| stadiumfounded = [[Soldier1972-73 WHA Fieldseason|1972]]
|history = '''[[Quebec Nordiques]]'''<br>[[1972-73 WHA season|1972]] - [[1994-95 NHL season|1995]]<br>'''Colorado Avalanche'''<br> [[1995-96 NHL season|1995]] - present
| playoffs = '''W''' NFC Divisional<br>'''W''' NFC Championship<br>'''L''' [[Super Bowl XLI]]
|arena = [[Pepsi Center]]
|city = [[Denver, Colorado]]
|media_affiliates = [[Altitude Sports and Entertainment|Altitude]]<br>[[KKFN|KKFN (950 AM)]]
|team_colors = Burgundy, Steel Blue, Black, Silver, and White
|Rival = [[Detroit Red Wings]]
|owner = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Stan Kroenke]]
|general_manager = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Francois Giguere]]
|head_coach = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Joel Quenneville]]
|president = [[Pierre Lacroix]]
|captain = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Joe Sakic]]
|minor_league_affiliates = [[Lake Erie Monsters]] ([[American Hockey League|AHL]])<br />[[Arizona Sundogs]] ([[Central Hockey League|CHL]])
|stanley_cups = [[1995-96 NHL season|1995-96]], [[2000-01 NHL season|2000-01]]
|conf_titles = [[1995-96 NHL season|1995-96]], [[2000-01 NHL season|2000-01]]
|division_titles = [[1995-96 NHL season|1995-96]], [[1996-97 NHL season|1996-97]], [[1997-98 NHL season|1997-98]], [[1998-99 NHL season|1998-99]], [[1999-00 NHL season|1999-00]], [[2000-01 NHL season|2000-01]], [[2001-02 NHL season|2001-02]], [[2002-03 NHL season|2002-03]]
}}
The '''Colorado Avalanche''' are a professional [[ice hockey]] team based in [[Denver, Colorado]], [[United States]]. They are members of the [[Northwest Division (NHL)|Northwest Division]] of the [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western Conference]] of the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL). The Avalanche have won the [[Stanley Cup]] twice, in 1996 and 2001. The franchise was founded in [[Quebec City|Quebec]] and were the [[Quebec Nordiques]] until moving to [[Denver, Colorado]] in 1995. The Avalanche have won 8 division titles and had gone to the playoffs in each of their first 10 seasons in the NHL, with the streak ending in 2007.<ref>{{cite web |title =Colorado Avalanche History|url =http://www.sportsline.com/nhl/teams/history/COL|publisher =CBS Sportsline|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> The Avalanche are also notable for being the first team in NHL history to win the Stanley Cup their first season after a re-___location.
The '''2006 [[Chicago Bears]] season''' was their 87th [[Regular Season (NFL)|regular season]] and 25th [[NFL playoffs|post-season]] completed in the [[National Football League]]. The club posted a 13-3 record, improving on their [[2005 Chicago Bears season|previous year’s]] record of 11-5. The Bears retained their [[NFC North]] divisional title, and won the [[NFC Championship|National Football Conference Championship]] title against the [[New Orleans Saints]], on [[January 21]], [[2007]]. The Bears played the [[Indianapolis Colts]] at [[Super Bowl XLI]], where they lost 29-17. They finished the [[2006 NFL season]] with the league’s second highest scoring offense, and third overall defense.
 
From the time of their move to Denver in 1995, until the end of the 1998-99 season, the Avalanche played their home games at [[McNichols Sports Arena|McNichols Arena]]. Since then, the Avalanche have called the [[Pepsi Center]] home. The Avalanche have a notable rivalry with the [[Detroit Red Wings]], partly due to both teams having met each other five times in seven years in the Western Conference playoffs between 1996 and 2002.<ref>{{cite news |title =Welcome to NHL's nastiest rivalry|url =http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=RM&p_theme=rm&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB4E6E5FAB223F2&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|author =Kravitz, Bob|publisher =Rocky Mountain News|date =1996-12-18|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref>
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===SummerFranchise camp=history==
===Quebec Nordiques (1972-1995)===
The preseason featured a brewing [[quarterback]] controversy when [[Rex Grossman]] struggled in his exhibition appearances and newly-signed veteran back-up [[Brian Griese]] moved the second team offense freely.
{{see also|Quebec Nordiques}}
The Quebec Nordiques were one of the [[World Hockey Association]]'s original teams when the league began play in [[1972-73 WHA season|1972]]. Though first awarded to a group in [[San Francisco]], the team quickly moved to [[Quebec City]] when the [[California]] deal soured due to financial and arena problems.<ref name="whanordiques">{{cite web |title =Quebec Nordiques|url =http://www.whahockey.com/nordiques.html|publisher =WHA Hockey|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> During their seven WHA seasons, the Nordiques won the [[Avco World Trophy]] once, in [[1976-77 WHA season|1977]] and lost the finals once, in [[1974-75 WHA season|1975]].<ref>{{cite web |title =WHA Yearly Standings|url =http://www.whahockey.com/whayearlystandings.html|publisher =WHA Hockey|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Two years later, in [[1979-80 NHL season|1979]], they entered the NHL, along with the WHA's [[Edmonton Oilers]], [[Hartford Whalers]], and [[Winnipeg Jets]].<ref>{{cite web |title =From the WHA to the NHL |url =http://www.nhl.com/history/062279.html|publisher =NHL|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref>
 
After making the postseason for seven consecutive years, from [[1980-81 NHL season|1981]] to [[1986-87 NHL season|1987]], the Nordiques fell into the league's basement.<ref name="nordiquesrecord">{{cite web |title =Quebec Nordiques Almanac|url =http://www.nordiquespreservation.com/record.html|publisher =Nordiques Preservation|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> In [[1991 NHL Entry Draft|1991]], for the third straight draft, Quebec had the first overall selection.<ref>{{cite web |title =NHL Entry Draft First Round Selections 1980-89|url =http://www.nhl.com/futures/firstround80_89.html#89|publisher =NHL|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title =NHL Entry Draft First Round Selections 1990-99|url =http://www.nhl.com/futures/firstround90_99.html|publisher =NHL|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Although [[Eric Lindros]], the draft's top-ranked player, had made it clear he did not wish to play for the Nordiques, they drafted him anyway.<ref>{{cite news |title =A look back: 1991|url =http://www.nhl.com/futures/2006draft/lookback_91_053106.html|author =Roarke,Shawn P.|publisher =NHL|date =2006-05-31|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Lindros did not even wear the jersey for the press photographs, only holding it when it was presented to him.<ref name="lindrosnhl">{{cite news |title =As expected, Quebec selects Lindros No.1|url =http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=NewsLibrary&p_multi=DSNB&d_place=DSNB&p_theme=newslibrary2&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0F360039496DAD62&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =1991-06-23|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> On advice from his mother, Lindros refused to sign a contract and began a holdout that would last over a year. On June 30, 1992, he was traded to the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] in exchange for five players, the rights to Swedish prospect [[Peter Forsberg]], two first-round draft picks, and $15 million ([[United States dollar|USD]]).<ref>{{cite web |title =Eric Lindros profile|url =http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8458515&tab=crst|publisher =NHL|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> The Lindros trade is seen (at least in hindsight) as one of the most one-sided deals in NHL history, and a major foundation for the Nordiques/Avalanche franchise successes over the next decade<ref>{{cite news |title =A Franchise deal. Lindros trade laid foundation for Nordiques/Avalanche drive to berth in Stanley Cup Final|url =http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=RM&p_theme=rm&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB4E536B44A621D&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|author =Benton, Jim|publisher =Rocky Mountain News|date =1996-06-06|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> and turned the Nordiques from one of the weakest teams in the NHL to a Stanley Cup contender almost overnight. In the first season after the trade, the [[1992-93 NHL season]], the Nordiques reached the playoffs for the first time in six years and would do so two seasons later.
The competition for the starting [[running back]] position went to [[Thomas Jones]] by default after sophomore running back [[Cedric Benson]] missed every preseason game with a shoulder injury inflicted in practice by [[Brian Urlacher]] and [[Mike Brown]].
 
While the team experienced on-ice success, the team was far less successful off the ice. Quebec City was the smallest market in the league and in 1995,<ref name="canadianencyc">{{cite news |title =Nordiques Move to Colorado|url =http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=M1ARTM0010425|author =Deacon, James|publisher =[[Maclean's]]|date =1995-05-06|accessdate =2007-05-11}}</ref> team owner [[Marcel Aubut]] asked for a bailout from Quebec's provincial government<ref>{{cite news |title =Quebec's Government Plans Bailout to keep Nordiques from moving|url =http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=PD&s_site=twincities&p_multi=SP&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB5DDC4964DA9E0&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =1994-04-09|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> as well as a new publicly funded arena.<ref name="canadianencyc"/> The bailout fell through and Aubut subsequently sold the team to a group of investors in [[Denver]].<ref>{{cite news |title =NHL's Nordiques sold, moving west to Denver \ Comsat Entertainment Group bought the team. Quebec had refused to fund a new hockey arena|url =http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=PI&s_site=philly&p_multi=PI&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB32BFD6ADCFF94&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|author =|publisher =Philadelphia Inquirer|date =1995-05-26|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> On May 1995, the COMSAT Entertainment Group, announced an agreement in principle to purchase the team.<ref name="mediaguidemisc">{{cite web |title =Miscellaneous/Community/Altitude|url =http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/PDF/321134_CA_MG_325-336.pdf|publisher =Colorado Avalanche|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref>. The deal became official on [[July 1]], [[1995]] and 12,000 season tickets were sold in the 37 days after the announcement of the move to Denver.<ref name="mediaguidemisc"/> The franchise was presented as the Colorado Avalanche on [[August 10]] [[1995]].<ref name="mediaguidemisc"/> They became the second NHL franchise to play in the city: the [[Colorado Rockies (NHL)|Colorado Rockies]] played in town from 1976 to 1982 when they moved to [[New Jersey]] to become the [[New Jersey Devils|Devils]].
=== Preseason results ===
{| class="wikitable"
! Date || Opponent || Result || Game site || Recap
|-style="background: #ffdddd;"
| [[August 11]], [[2006]] || [[San Francisco 49ers]] || '''L''' 14-28 || [[Monster Park]] || [http://www.chicagobears.com/team/GameBox.asp?game_id=426196 Recap]
|--style="background: #ddffdd;"
| [[August 18]], [[2006]] || [[San Diego Chargers]] || '''W''' 24-3 || [[Soldier Field]] || [http://www.chicagobears.com/team/GameBox.asp?game_id=424473 Recap]
|-style="background: #ffdddd;"
| [[August 25]], [[2006]] || [[Arizona Cardinals]] || '''L''' 16-23 || [[Soldier Field]] || [http://www.chicagobears.com/team/GameBox.asp?game_id=426197 Recap]
|--style="background: #ddffdd;"
| [[August 31]], [[2006]] || [[Cleveland Browns]] || '''W''' 20-7 || [[Cleveland Browns Stadium]] || [http://www.chicagobears.com/team/GameBox.asp?game_id=426198 Recap]
|}
 
===Colorado Avalanche (1995-Present)===
==2006 roster==
[[Image:Patrick_Roy_1999.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Goaltender [[Patrick Roy]], the winningest net minder in the NHL, played for the Avalanche from 1995-2003.]]
{| class="toccolours" style="border-collapse: collapse;"
|-
|colspan="7" align="center"|(as of 1/2/2007)
|-
|colspan=7 align="right" |{{Tnavbar|Chicago Bears roster|plain=1|nodiv=1}}
|-
|valign="top"|
'''[http://www.chicagobears.com/team/depthchart.asp DEPTH CHART]'''
 
====1995-2001====
'''Quarterbacks'''
After buying the team, the COMSAT Entertainment Group organized its Denver sports franchises, the Avalanche and the [[Denver Nuggets]] under a separate subsidiary, Ascent Entertainment Group Inc., which went public in 1995, with 80% of its stocks bought by COMSAT and the other 20% to be available on [[NASDAQ]].<ref name="nuggetscompanyhistory">{{cite web |title =Denver Nuggets - Company History|url =http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/Denver-Nuggets-Company-History.html|publisher =Funding Universe|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref>
*8&nbsp;&nbsp; [[Rex Grossman]]
*14 [[Brian Griese]]
*18 [[Kyle Orton]]
'''Offensive backs'''
 
The Colorado Avalanche played their first game in the [[McNichols Sports Arena]] in [[Denver]] on [[October 6]], [[1995]] winning 3-2 against the Detroit Red Wings.<ref>{{cite web |title = October 6, 1995 - Detroit Red Wings vs. Colorado Avalanche gamesheet|url =http://www.avalanchedb.com/gamesheets/95-96/199501.htm|publisher =Colorado Avalanche Database|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> Led by [[Captain (ice hockey)|captain]] [[Joe Sakic]], forward [[Peter Forsberg]], and defenseman [[Adam Foote]] on the ice and [[Pierre Lacroix]] as the [[General Manager (ice hockey)|general manager]] and [[Marc Crawford]] as the [[head coach]], the Avalanche got stronger when former [[Montreal Canadiens]] goalie [[Patrick Roy]] joined the team. Feeling humiliated for being left in the net after having let in 9 goals in 26 shots during a Canadiens game against the Red Wings, Roy joined the Avalanche on [[December 6]] [[1995]], together with ex-Montreal captain [[Mike Keane]] in a trade for [[Jocelyn Thibault]], [[Martin Rucinsky]] and [[Andrei Kovalenko]].<ref>{{cite news |title =Roy gets call he's in Hall|url =http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/nhl/article/0,2777,DRMN_23920_4810040,00.html|author =Sadowski, Rick|publisher =Rocky Mountain News|date =2006-06-29|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Roy would prove a pivotal addition for Colorado in the years to come.
*32 [[Cedric Benson]] RB
*47 [[Bryan Johnson (football player)|Bryan Johnson]] FB
*20 [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] RB
*37 [[Jason McKie]] FB
*29 [[Adrian Peterson (Chicago Bears)|Adrian Peterson]] RB
*48 [[J.D. Runnels]] FB
 
The Avalanche finished the regular season with a 47-25-10 record for 104 points, won the [[Pacific Division (NHL)|Pacific Division]] and finished second in the [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western Conference]]. Colorado progressed to the playoffs and won the series against the [[Vancouver Canucks]], the [[Chicago Blackhawks]] and [[Presidents' Trophy]] winners Detroit Red Wings. In the [[Stanley Cup]] [[Stanley Cup Final|Final]], the Avalanche met the [[Florida Panthers]], who were also in their first Stanley Cup final. The Avalanche swept the series 4-0. In Game Four, during the third [[overtime (ice hockey)|overtime]] and after more than 100 minutes of play with no goals, defenseman [[Uwe Krupp]] scored to claim the franchise's first Cup.<ref>{{cite news |title =No stopping the Avalanche - Colorado completes Cup sweep of Panthers with 3OT victory|url =http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=SAEC&p_theme=saec&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB03D7A86BE23F7&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|author =Ulman, Howard|publisher =Associated Press|date =1996-06-11|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> [[Joe Sakic]] was the playoff's scoring leader with 34 points (18 goals and 16 assists) and won the [[Conn Smythe Trophy]], awarded to the most valuable player to his team during the playoffs. The 1996 Stanley Cup was the first major professional championship won by a Denver team.<ref name="mediaguidemisc"/> With the Stanley Cup win, [[Russia]]ns [[Alexei Gusarov]] and [[Valeri Kamensky]] and Swede Peter Forsberg became members of the [[Triple Gold Club]], the exclusive group of ice hockey players who have won [[Ice hockey at the Olympic Games|Olympic gold]], [[Ice Hockey World Championship|World Championship gold]], and the Stanley Cup.<ref name="triplegoldclub">{{cite web |title =Triple Gold Club|url =http://www.iihf.com/archive/TGC.pdf|publisher =[[International Ice Hockey Federation]]|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref>
'''Receivers'''
*80 [[Bernard Berrian]]
*16 [[Mark Bradley]]
*17 [[Airese Currie]]
*81 [[Rashied Davis]]
*12 [[Justin Gage]]
*87 [[Muhsin Muhammad]]
 
In [[1996-97 NHL season|1996-97]], Colorado won, not only their Pacific Division, but the [[Presidents' Trophy]] as well for finishing the regular season with the best record of the entire league: 49-24-9 for 107 points. The team was also the league's best scoring with an average of 3.38 goals scored per game. The Avalanche met the two lowest seeds of the Western Conference in the first two rounds of the playoffs: the [[Chicago Blackhawks]] and the [[Edmonton Oilers]], who were beaten 4-2 and 4-1. During a rematch of the previous year Conference Final, the Avalanche lost against the Detroit Red Wings in a 4-2 series. The Red Wings went on to sweep the Stanley Cup final just as Colorado had done the year before. [[Sandis Ozolinsh]] was elected for the league's first all-star team at the end of the season.
'''Tight Ends'''
*88 [[Desmond Clark]]
*85 [[John Gilmore (football player)|John Gilmore]]
*82 [[Gabe Reid]]
'''Kickers'''
*9&nbsp;&nbsp; [[Robbie Gould]] K
*4&nbsp;&nbsp; [[Brad Maynard]] P
 
In 1997, financial problems led to the selling of the Ascent Entertainment by COMSAT to the AT&T's Liberty Media Group for $755 million. Liberty put its sports assets immediately for sale.<ref name="nuggetscompanyhistory"/>
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In the following season, Colorado won the Pacific Division with a 39-26-17 record for 95 points. The Avalanche sent the largest delegation of the NHL to the [[1998 Winter Olympics]] [[Ice hockey at the 1998 Winter Olympics|ice hockey tournament]] in [[Nagano]], [[Japan]]: 10 players representing 7 countries and coach [[Marc Crawford]] for Canada.<ref>{{cite news |title =Avalanche blame Olympics for slide that won't stop|url =http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1208/is_n44_v222/ai_21251719|author =Elliott, Helene|publisher =[[Sporting News|The Sporting News]]|date =1998-11-02|accessdate =2007-07-16}}</ref> [[Milan Hejduk]] won the Gold Medal for [[Czech national ice hockey team|Czech Republic]], Alexei Gusarov and Valeri Kamensky got the Silver Medal for [[Russian national ice hockey team|Russia]] and [[Jari Kurri]] won the Bronze Medal for [[Finnish national men's ice hockey team|Finland]].<ref name="recordbook">{{cite web |title =Franchise Records|url =http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/PDF/321134_CA_MG_163-220.pdf|publisher =Colorado Avalanche|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> Colorado lost in their first playoff round against the [[Edmonton Oilers]] in a 7 game series, after having led the series 3-1. [[Peter Forsberg]] was the league's second highest scorer in the regular season with 91 points (25 goals and 66 assists) and was elected for the league's first all star team. After the end of the season, head coach Marc Crawford rejected the team's offer of a two-year deal.<ref>{{cite news |title =Crawford Bows Out - Avalanche Coach turns down team's offer of two-year deal|url =http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-7034317.html|author =Sadowski, Rick|publisher =[[Rocky Mountain News]]|date =1998-05-28|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> [[Bob Hartley]] was hired to the head coach position in June 1998.
'''Offensive line'''
*74 [[Ruben Brown]] G
*63 [[Roberto Garza]] C/G
*57 [[Olin Kreutz]] C
*65 [[Patrick Mannelly]] LS
*60 [[Terrence Metcalf]] G
*69 [[Fred Miller (American football)|Fred Miller]] T
*68 [[Anthony Oakley]] OL
*78 [[John St. Clair]] T
*76 [[John Tait (football)|John Tait]] T
 
In [[1998-99 NHL season|1998-99]], with the addition of the [[Nashville Predators]] to the league, the NHL realigned their divisions and the Colorado Avalanche were put in the new [[Northwest Division (NHL)|Northwest Division]]. Despite a slow 2-6-1 start, Colorado finished with a 44-28-10 record for 98 points, won the Northwest Division and finished second in the Western Conference. After beating the [[San Jose Sharks]] and the [[Detroit Red Wings]] in the first two rounds, Colorado met Presidents' Trophy winners [[Dallas Stars]] in the Conference Final, where they lost after a seven game series. Peter Forsberg was again elected to the league's first all-star team and [[Chris Drury]] won the [[Calder Memorial Trophy]] for the best rookie of the season. Together with [[Milan Hejduk]], both were elected for the [[NHL All-Rookie Team]] at the end of the season.
'''Defensive line'''
*97 [[Mark Anderson (football)|Mark Anderson]] DE
*70 [[Alfonso Boone]] DT
*96 [[Alex Brown (football player)|Alex Brown]] DE
*98 [[Dusty Dvoracek]] DT
*90 [[Antonio Garay]] DT
*91 [[Tommie Harris]] DT
*71 [[Israel Idonije]] DT
*99 [[Tank Johnson]] DT
*93 [[Adewale Ogunleye]] DE
*95 [[Ian Scott (football player)|Ian Scott]] DT
 
It was in the [[1999-2000 NHL season|1999-2000 season]] that the Colorado Avalanche played their first game in the new [[Pepsi Center]], that cost 160 million [[US dollars]].<ref name="ksepepsicenter">{{cite web |title =KSE/Pepsi Center|url =http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/PDF/321134_CA_MG_299-312.pdf|publisher =Colorado Avalanche|accessdate =2007-06-13}}</ref> Milan Hejduk scored the first goal of a 2-1 victory against the [[Boston Bruins]] on [[October 13]] [[1999]].<ref>{{cite web |title =2001 NHL All-Star Game - Pepsi Center Facts|url =http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/hockey/nhl/2001/all_star/pepsi_center/|publisher =[[Sports Illustrated]]|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> The Avalanche finished the season with a 42-28-11-1 record for 96 points and won the Northwest Division. Between [[January 10]] and [[February 7]], the Avalanche had their longest winning streak ever with 12 games.<ref name="recordbook"/> Before the playoffs, the Avalanche strengthened their defense for a run towards the Stanley Cup. On March 6, [[1999-2000 NHL season|2000]], the [[Boston Bruins]] traded future [[Hockey Hall of Fame]]r defenseman [[Ray Bourque]] and [[Forward (ice hockey)|forward]] [[Dave Andreychuk]] to Colorado for [[Brian Rolston]], [[Martin Grenier]], [[Samuel Pahlsson]], and a first-round draft pick. Bourque, who had been a Bruin since [[1979-80 NHL season|1979-80]], requested a trade to a contender for one last shot at a Stanley Cup.<ref name="bourque">{{cite news |title =For Bourque, at long last Stanley!|url =http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=290833|author =Roarke, Shawn P.|publisher =[[National Hockey League|NHL]]|date =2007-03-22|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> However, and just as the year before, Colorado lost in the Conference Final against the Dallas Stars in a seven game series after beating both the Phoenix Coyotes and the Detroit Red Wings in 4-1 series. [[Joe Sakic]] won the [[Lester B. Pearson Award]] for the outstanding player of the regular season, elected by the members of the [[NHL Players Association]].
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In July 2000, after years of intrigue and several failed negotiations, the Avalanche, the Denver Nuggets and the Pepsi Center were finally bought by business [[entrepreneur]] and [[Wal-Mart]] heir [[E. Stanley Kroenke|Stan Kroenke]] in a $450 million deal. Liberty retained only 6.5% stake of the sports franchises. The deal included a guarantee to the city of Denver that the teams would not be relocated for at least 25 years. After the deal, Kroenke organized his sports assets under Kroenke Sports Enterprises.<ref name="nuggetscompanyhistory"/>
'''Linebackers'''
*94 [[Brendon Ayanbadejo]] OLB
*55 [[Lance Briggs]] OLB
*92 [[Hunter Hillenmeyer]] LB
*53 [[Leon Joe]] OLB
*58 [[Darrell McClover]] OLB
*54 [[Brian Urlacher]] MLB
*52 [[Jamar Williams]] LB
*59 [[Rod Wilson]] MLB
 
The [[2000-01 NHL season|2000-01]] season was the best season the team has ever had. The Avalanche won the Northwest Division and captured their second Presidents' Trophy after having finished the regular season with 52-16-10-4 for 118 points. Joe Sakic finished the regular season with 118 points (54 goals and 64 assists), only three behind [[Jaromir Jagr]]'s 121 points. On [[February 4]], [[2001]], the Colorado Avalanche hosted the [[51st National Hockey League All-Star Game|51st NHL All-Star Game]]. [[Patrick Roy]], Ray Bourque and Joe Sakic played for the North America team, who won 14-12 against the World team, that featured Milan Hejduk and Peter Forsberg. All but Hejduk were part of the starting lineups.<ref name="recordbook"/> Before the playoffs, the Avalanche acquired star defenseman [[Rob Blake]] and center [[Steven Reinprecht]] from the [[Los Angeles Kings]] in exchange for [[Adam Deadmarsh]], [[Aaron Miller]] and their first-round [[2001 NHL Entry Draft|2001 Draft]] pick.<ref>{{cite news |title =Kings take Avs' Aulin to complete Blake trade|url =http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-72313179.html|author =Sadowski, Rick|publisher =Rocky Mountain News|date =2001-03-23|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> In the playoffs, Colorado swept their Conference Quarterfinal against the [[Vancouver Canucks]]. In the Conferece Semifinal, the Avalanche won the [[Los Angeles Kings]] in a seven game series, after having wasted a 3-1 lead. After the last game of the series, Peter Forsberg underwent surgery to remove a [[ruptured spleen|ruptured]] [[spleen]] and it was announced that he would not play until the following season. The injury was a huge upset for the team; former NHL goaltender [[Darren Pang]] considered it "devastating (...) to the Colorado Avalanche".<ref>{{cite news |title =Doctor: Full recovery is expected|url =http://espn.go.com/nhl/playoffs2001/2001/0510/1194333.html|author =[[Associated Press]]|publisher =[[ESPN]]|date =2001-05-10|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> The team would overcome Forsberg's injury: in the Conference Final, Colorado won the [[St. Louis Blues]] in 4-1 series and progressed to the Stanley Cup Final, where they faced the [[New Jersey Devils]], the Stanley Cup holders. The Avalanche won the series 4-3, after winning the last game at the [[Pepsi Center]] 3-1. After being handed the Cup from [[NHL Commissioner]] [[Gary Bettman]], captain Joe Sakic immediately turned, and gave it to Ray Bourque, capping off Bourque's 22-year career with his only championship.<ref>{{cite news |title =Avalanche beat Devils to capture Stanley Cup|url =http://www.usatoday.com/sports/hockey/cup01/games/2001-06-09-njcol.htm|author =Allen, Kevin|publisher =USA Today|date =2001-06-10|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Joe Sakic was the playoffs leading scorer with 26 points (13 goals and 13 assists). He won the [[Hart Memorial Trophy]], given to the league's most valuable player during the regular season, the [[Lady Byng Memorial Trophy]], awarded to the player that has shown the best sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct combined with performance in play, the Lester B. Pearson Award and shared the [[NHL Plus/Minus Award]] with [[Patrik Elias]] of the Devils. Patrick Roy won the [[Conn Smythe Trophy]], awarded to the playoffs' most valuable player. [[Shjon Podein]] was awarded the [[King Clancy Memorial Trophy]] for significant humanitarian contributions to his community, namely his work on charitable organizations and his own children's foundation.<ref>{{cite web |title =2000-01 King Clancy Memorial Trophy - Podein, Shjon|url =http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SilverwareTrophyWinner.jsp?tro=KCT&year=2000-01|publisher =Legends of Hockey|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> Ray Bourque and Joe Sakic were elected to the league's first all-star team; Rob Blake was elected to the second all-star team.
'''Cornerbacks'''
*23 [[Devin Hester]]
*24 [[Ricky Manning, Jr.]]
*33 [[Charles Tillman]]
*31 [[Nathan Vasher]]
*21 [[Dante Wesley]]
 
====2001-present====
'''Safeties'''
[[Image:Avslineup.jpeg|right|thumb|250px|Avalanche players warming up in 2006]]
*30 [[Mike Brown (American footballer)|Mike Brown]] SS
The Avalanche have failed to reach the Stanley Cup Finals since 2001. In the [[2001-02 NHL season|2001-02 season]], the team finished the regular season with 99 points of a 45-28-8-1 record and won the Northwest Division. Colorado had the league's lowest goals conceded: 169, which makes an average per game of 2.06. The NHL season was interrupted once again for the [[2002 Winter Olympics]], in [[Salt Lake City]], [[Utah]]. The Colorado Avalanche had 9 players representing 6 countries. [[Canadian national men's hockey team|Canada]] won the [[Ice hockey at the 2002 Winter Olympics|ice hockey tournament]] and [[Rob Blake]], [[Adam Foote]] and [[Joe Sakic]] won Gold medals. [[American national men's hockey team|American]] [[Chris Drury]] got a silver medal.<ref name="recordbook"/> With the win, Blake and Sakic became members of the [[Triple Gold Club]].<ref name="triplegoldclub"/> After advancing through the first two rounds of the playoffs with a 4-2 series win against the [[Vancouver Canucks]] and a 4-3 series win against the [[San Jose Sharks]], the Avalanche met their rivals of the [[Detroit Red Wings]] in the playoffs for the 5th time in 7 years. In a seven game series, Colorado had a 3-2 lead after five games, but lost Game 6 at home 2-0 and then the Red Wings won the deciding game at home 7-0. Like in 1997, Detroit went on to win the Stanley Cup. [[Patrick Roy]] won the [[William M. Jennings Trophy]], given to the goaltenders of the team with fewest goals scored against. Roy was elected for the league's first all-star team, together with Joe Sakic; Rob Blake was elected for the second all-star team.
*22 [[Tyler Everett]] SS
*46 [[Chris Harris (football player)|Chris Harris]] FS
*35 [[Todd Johnson]] SS
*36 [[Brandon McGowan]] S
*38 [[Danieal Manning]] FS
*27 [[Nick Turnbull]] FS
*44 [[Cameron Worrell]] SS
 
The following season, [[2002-03 NHL Season|2002-03]], saw the Avalanche claim the NHL record for most consecutive division titles, nine,<ref name="divtitrec">The 1994-95 Division title was won while the franchise was still in Quebec and together with the 8 titles the Avalanche won between 1995-96 and 2002-03 makes the record number of 9 consecutive division titles</ref> breaking the [[Montreal Canadiens]] streak of eight, won between 1974 and 1982.<ref>{{cite news |title =NHL Hockey: Colorado Avalanche Team Report|url =http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-99870515.html|author =|publisher =[[The Sports Network]]|date =2003-04-10|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> The division title came after a bad start by the team, that led to the exit of head coach [[Bob Hartley]], in December.<ref>{{cite news |title =Roy, Avs put clamps on Red Wings|url =http://www.usatoday.com/sports/hockey/games/2003-02-06-avalanche-redwings_x.htm|author =Allen, Kevin|publisher =[[USA Today]]|date =2003-02-06|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> General Manager [[Pierre Lacroix]] promoted assistant coach [[Tony Granato]] to the head coach position.<ref>{{cite news |title =Avs bench change: Hartley out, Granato in|url =http://www.usatoday.com/sports/hockey/nhl/avalanche/2002-12-18-hartley_x.htm|author =Brehm, Mike|publisher =[[USA Today]]|date =2002-18-12|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> The team's playoff spot seemed in doubt, at one point, but the Avalanche managed to finish with 105 points, ahead of the division rivals Vancouver Canucks by one. The race to the title was exciting, namely the second-to-last game of the season, as the Avalanche needed to win the game to stay in the race, and [[Milan Hejduk]] scored with 10 seconds left in overtime to beat the [[Anaheim Ducks|Anaheim]].<ref>{{cite news |title = Colorado 4, Anaheim 3|url = http://sportsline.com/nhl/gamecenter/recap/NHL_20030404_COL@ANA|author =| publisher =CBS Sportsline|dateG=2003-04-05|accessdate =2007-05-06}}</ref> The title was guaranteed in the final day of the regular season, when the Avalanche won the [[St. Louis Blues]] 5-2 and the Vancouver Canucks lost against the [[Los Angeles Kings]] 2-0.<ref>{{cite news |title =Avalanche win game, Northwest; Hejduk gets 50th|url =http://sportsline.com/nhl/gamecenter/recap/NHL_20030406_STL@COL|author =|publisher =CBS Sportsline|date =2003-04-06|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> In the playoffs, the Avalanche blew a 3-1 series lead over the [[Minnesota Wild]], and lost in overtime of Game 7 to be eliminated from the first round of the playoffs.<ref>{{cite news |title = Minnesota 3, Colorado 2|url =http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/hockey/nhl/recaps/2003/04/22/col_min/|author =|publisher =Sports Illustrated|dateG=2003-04-22|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Peter Forsberg won the [[Art Ross Trophy]] for the leading scorer of the regular season, which he finished with 106 points (29 goals, 77 assists). Forsberg also won the [[Hart Memorial Trophy]] for the regular season's most valuable player and shared the [[NHL Plus/Minus Award]] with teammate [[Milan Hejduk]]. Hejduk scored 50 goals to win the [[Maurice 'Rocket' Richard Trophy]] for the best goalscorer of the regular season. Forsberg was elected to the league's first all-star team; Hejduk was elected to the second all-star team.
|width="25"|&nbsp;
|valign="top"|
 
After that season, Patrick Roy retired and the Avalanche signed star wingers [[Paul Kariya]] and [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]] from the [[Anaheim Ducks|Mighty Ducks of Anaheim]].<ref>{{cite news |title =Patrick Roy retires after 18 years|url =http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2003/05/28/roy_retires030528.html|author =|publisher =[[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|CBC]]|date =2003-05-28|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title =Avalanche sign Kariya, Selanne to one-year deals|url =http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/hockey/news/2003/07/03/avs_signings_ap/|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =2003-07-03|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Both failed to live up to the expectations: Kariya spent most of the [[2003-04 NHL season|2003-04 season]] injured and Selanne scored only 32 points (16 goals and 16 assists) in 78 games.<ref>{{cite news |title =Passion is back for Selanne|url =http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/sports_columnists/article/0,1299,DRMN_83_5422098,00.html|author =Sadowski, Rick|publisher =[[Rocky Mountain News]]|date =2007-03-16|accessdate =2007-05-17}}</ref> Having "nine elite players"<ref>{{cite news |title =2003-2004 NHL Season Preview: Colorado Avalanche|url =http://proicehockey.about.com/cs/nhlseasonpreview/a/03_04avalanche.htm|author =Fitzpatrick, Jamie|publisher =[[About.com]]|date =2003-09-02|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref>, "the most talented top six forwards on one team since the days of the [[Edmonton Oilers]]"<ref>{{cite news |title =Avs' silver lining has a cloud|url =http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?page=2003pvw/col|author =Heika, Mike|publisher =[[ESPN]]|date =2003-09-24|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> was not good enough as the franchise failed to win the Northwest division title, ending the NHL record streak. The 40-22-13-7 record was good enough for 100 points, one less than the Northwest division winners Vancouver Canucks. Colorado won the Conference Quarterfinal against the [[Dallas Stars]] in a five game series, but lost in the Semifinal against the [[San Jose Sharks]] in a six game series. Joe Sakic became the only Avalanche player ever to be chosen as the All-Star Game Most Valuable Player during the [[54th National Hockey League All-Star Game|2004 NHL All-Star Game]], when he scored a [[hat-trick]]. Sakic was elected for the league's first all-star team at the end of the season and won the [[NHL/Sheraton Road Performer Award]].<ref name="recordbook"/>
'''Practice squad'''
*72 [[Copeland Bryan]] DE
*83 [[Mike Hass]] WR
*75 [[Mark LeVoir]] T
*64 [[Tyler Reed]] G
*84 [[Brandon Rideau]] WR
*45 [[Dwayne Slay]] LB
*86 [[Richard Angulo]] TE
 
The [[2004-05 NHL season]] was canceled due to an [[2004-05 NHL lockout|unresolved lockout]]. During the lockout, many Avalanche players played in European leagues.<ref name="nhleuropelockout">{{cite web|url=http://www.tsn.ca/nhl/feature/?fid=9951&hubname=|title=NHLers in Europe|publisher=TSN|accessdate=2006-10-31}}</ref> [[David Aebischer]] returned home with [[Alex Tanguay]] to play for [[Switzerland|Swiss]] club [[Hockey Club Lugano|HC Lugano]]; Milan Hejduk and Peter Forsberg returned to their former teams in their native countries, [[HC Pardubice]] and [[MODO Hockey]]. Other nine players of the Avalanche 2003-04 roster played in European league during the lockout.<ref name="nhleuropelockout"/>
|}
 
After the [[2004-05 NHL lockout]] and the implementation of a salary cap, the Avalanche were forced to let go some of their top players. Peter Forsberg and Adam Foote were lost to free agency in order to save some room in the cap for Joe Sakic and Rob Blake.<ref>{{cite news |title =Sakic, Blake to stay; Forsberg, Foote up in air|url =http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?id=2116068|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =2005-07-26|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Although the salary cap was a blow to one of the biggest spenders of the league,<ref>{{cite news |title =Winners, losers, undecided in wake of free-agent frenzy|url =http://www.sportsline.com/nhl/story/8790788|author =Goldstein, Wes|publisher =CBS Sportsline|date =2005-08-31|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> the Colorado Avalanche finished the [[2005-06 NHL season|2005-06 regular season]] with a 43-30-9 record for 95 points, good enough to finish second in the Northwest division, seven behind the [[Calgary Flames]] and tied with the Edmonton Oilers. The league stopped in February for the [[2006 Winter Olympics]] in [[Torino]], [[Italy]]. The Avalanche sent an NHL leading 11 players from 8 countries.<ref>{{cite news |title =East's snubs wait for
==Uniform combinations==
their Olympic chances|url =http://www.nhl.com/features/east/east_notebook122705.html|author =Gormley, Chuck|publisher =NHL|date =2005-12-27|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> [[Finnish national men's ice hockey team|Finnish]] [[Antti Laaksonen]] got the silver medal, while [[Ossi Väänänen|Ossi Vaananen]] ended up not playing due to an injury; [[Czech national ice hockey team|Czech]] Milan Hejduk won a bronze medal.<ref name="recordbook"/> In the NHL playoffs, Colorado beat the team with the 2nd best record in the Western Conference, the Dallas Stars, in a five game series. In the Conference Semifinals, the Avalanche were swept for the first time ever, by the [[Mighty Ducks of Anaheim]]. The day after the loss, [[Pierre Lacroix]], who had been the General Manager of the franchise since 1994 when they were in Quebec, resigned and [[François Giguère|Francois Giguere]] was hired.<ref>{{cite news |title =Lacroix steps down as Colorado GM|url =http://www.usatoday.com/sports/hockey/nhl/avalanche/2006-05-12-lacroix-resigns_x.htm|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =2006-05-12|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title =Avs hire Giguere as team's general manager|url =http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?id=2456902|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =2006-05-24|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> Lacroix remains to this day as President of the franchise.<ref>{{cite web |title =Pierre Lacroix Profile|url =http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/Team/StaffBio.aspx?SID=7|publisher =Colorado Avalanche|accessdate =2007-02-25}}</ref>
[[Image:CHI_3517.gif|140px]]
[[Image:CHI_3518.gif|140px]]
[[Image:BearsOrange.png|140px]]
[[Image:CHI_3519.gif||140px]]
[[Image:CHI_3520.gif|140px]]
 
By the beginning of the [[2006-07 NHL season|2006-07 season]] Joe Sakic and Milan Hejduk were the only two remaining members from the 2001 Stanley Cup winning squad. Joe Sakic is the only player left from the team's days in Quebec (though Hejduk was drafted by the Nordiques), but [[Paul Stastny]], son of Nordiques legend [[Peter Stastny]], also provides a link to the past. The Avalanched missed the playoffs for the first time in their history. The team had a 15-2-2 run in the last 19 games of the season to keep their playoffs hopes alive until the penultimate day of the season. A 4-2 loss against the [[Nashville Predators]] on April 7, with Peter Forsberg assisting the game winning goal scored by Paul Kariya, knocked Colorado out of the playoff race.<ref>{{cite news |title =Predators 4, Avalanche 2|url =http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?service=page&page=Recap&gameNumber=1225&season=20062007&gameType=2|author =|publisher =[[Associated Press]]|date =2007-04-07|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> The team won the last game of the season against the Calgary Flames on the following day and finished 4th in the Northwest Division and 9th in the Western Conference with a 44-31-7 record for 95 points, one less than the eight seed Calgary. During that last game of the season, Joe Sakic scored a goal and two assists and became the second-oldest player in NHL history to reach 100 points, behind only [[Gordie Howe]], who had 103 points at age 40 in the 1968-69 season.<ref>{{cite news |title =Avalanche 6, Flames 3|url =http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?service=page&page=Recap&gameNumber=513&season=20062007&gameType=2|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =2007-04-08|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> Until the Avalanche's 2006-2007 season, no team in the history of the NHL had ever made it to 95 points without earning a spot in the playoffs.<ref>{{cite news |title = Avs Win Season Finale |url =http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/GameDay/BoxScore.aspx?PGID=93&NID=893|author =|publisher =Associated Press|date =2007-04-08|accessdate =2007-06-17}}</ref> In the [[Eastern Conference (NHL)|Eastern Conference]], three teams progressed to the [[2007 NHL playoffs|playoffs]] with less than 95 points: the [[New York Rangers]] (94), the [[Tampa Bay Lightning]] (93), and the [[New York Islanders]] (92).
 
===Rivalry with the Detroit Red Wings===
In [[1995-96 NHL season|1996]], the Colorado Avalanche met the [[Detroit Red Wings]] in the Western Conference Finals and won the series 4-2. During Game 6, as Red Wings player [[Kris Draper]] was skating toward the bench, he was checked into the boards face-first by Avalanche player [[Claude Lemieux]].<ref name="bloodfeud">{{cite book | last =Dater| first = Adrian| title =Blood Feud: Detroit Red Wings vs. Colorado Avalanche| publisher =Taylor Trade Publishing| date =2006| url =http://www.denverpost.com/books/ci_5106839| isbn =1589793196}}</ref> As a result, Draper had to undergo facial reconstructive surgery, and had to have his jaw wired shut for five weeks.<ref name="avsrw10y">{{cite news |title =Happy anniversary to Red Wings, Avalanche|url =http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=neumann/070326|author =Neumann, Thomas|publisher =ESPN|date =2007-03-26|accessdate =2007-03-27}}</ref> After the incident, Lemieux received many threats from Red Wings players and fans, including goalie [[Chris Osgood]].<ref name="bloodfeud"/>
 
In the following season, in the last regular season meeting between the Avalanche and Red Wings on March 26, 1997, a brawl known as [[Brawl in Hockeytown]] broke out. The game ended with 9 fights, 11 goals, 39 penalties, 148 penalty minutes, one hat-trick (by [[Valeri Kamensky]]) and a goalie fight between Stanley Cup champion goalies [[Patrick Roy]] and [[Mike Vernon]].<ref name="avsrw10y"/> Claude Lemieux was one of the players singled out by the Red Wings players.<!--needs to be reworded, but I'm not sure how.--> The Red Wings ended up winning the game in overtime 6-5.<ref name="avsrw10y"/> Both teams met again in the Conference Finals that season, with the Red Wings emerging victorious, and going on to win the Stanley Cup. In the following five years, the Avalanche and the Red Wings met three times in the playoffs, with Colorado winning the first two and losing the last.
During the 2006 season, the Bears reintroduced three combinations of jerseys. During their week eight game against the [[San Francisco 49ers]], the Bears wore special orange jerseys in the spirit of [[Halloween]]. They also proceeded to wear all-white uniforms during their final two away games. Additionally, the Bears wore all-blue uniforms during their season finale against the [[Green Bay Packers]].
 
This rivalry is often considered one of the most intense rivalries in the NHL by the press and fans.<ref>{{cite news |title =Part II -- Top rivalries|url =http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/preview2005/news/story?id=2172427|author =|publisher =ESPN|date =2005-10-29|accessdate =2007-03-27}}</ref>
==Regular season schedule and standings==
 
===The sell-out streak===
{| class="wikitable"
After a record 487 consecutive games, the NHL's longest consecutive attendance sellout ended with the Avalanche on [[October 16]], [[2006]], after a reported attendance of 17,681, which is 326 under capacity at the [[Pepsi Center]] before a game against the [[Chicago Blackhawks]]. The streak began on [[November 9]], [[1995]], the Avalanche's eighth [[regular season]] home game during the [[1995-96 NHL season]], before a sellout of 16,061 at the [[McNichols Sports Arena]] versus the [[Dallas Stars]].<ref>{{cite news |title =Avs see sellout streak get away|url =http://www.denverpost.com/avalanche/ci_4503924|author =Frei, Terry|publisher =Denver Post|date =2006-10-17|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> The Avalanche recorded their 500th home sellout in their 515th game in Denver on [[January 20]] [[2007]], against the [[Detroit Red Wings]], a game the Avs would win 3-2.<ref>{{cite news |title = Avalanche Reaches 500th Sellout In Denver |url =http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/News/NewsDetails.aspx?NID=780|author =|publisher =Colorado Avalanche|date =2006-01-20|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref>
! Week || Date || Opponent || Result || Game site || TV || Record
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 1 || [[September 10]], [[2006]] || [[Green Bay Packers]] || '''W''' 26–0 || [[Lambeau Field]] ||[[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 1-0
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 2 || [[September 17]], [[2006]] || [[Detroit Lions]] || '''W''' 34–7 || [[Soldier Field]]||[[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 2-0
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 3 || [[September 24]], [[2006]] || [[Minnesota Vikings]] || '''W''' 19–16 || [[Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome]]||[[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 3-0
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 4 || [[October 1]], [[2006]] || [[Seattle Seahawks]] || '''W''' 37–6 || [[Soldier Field]] || [[NBC Sunday Night Football|NBC]] ||align="center"| 4-0
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 5 || [[October 8]], [[2006]] || [[Buffalo Bills]] || '''W''' 40–7 || [[Soldier Field]] || [[NFL on CBS|CBS]] ||align="center"| 5-0
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 6 || [[October 16]], [[2006]] || [[Arizona Cardinals]] ||'''W''' 24-23 || [[University of Phoenix Stadium]] || [[Monday Night Football|ESPN]] ||align="center"| 6-0
|-
|align="center"| 7 ||colSpan=6 align="center"|''Bye''
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 8 || [[October 29]], [[2006]] || [[San Francisco 49ers]] ||'''W''' 41-10 || [[Soldier Field]]||[[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 7-0
|-style="background: #ffdddd;"
|align="center"| 9 || [[November 5]], [[2006]] || [[Miami Dolphins]] ||'''L''' 13-31 || [[Soldier Field]] ||[[NFL on CBS|CBS]] ||align="center"| 7-1
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 10 || [[November 12]], [[2006]] || [[New York Giants]] ||'''W''' 38-20 || [[Giants Stadium]] || [[NBC Sunday Night Football|NBC]] ||align="center"| 8-1
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 11 || [[November 19]], [[2006]] || [[New York Jets]] ||'''W''' 10-0 || [[Giants Stadium]] || [[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 9-1
|-style="background: #ffdddd;"
|align="center"| 12 || [[November 26]], [[2006]] || [[New England Patriots]] ||'''L''' 13-17 || [[Gillette Stadium]] || [[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 9-2
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 13 || [[December 3]], [[2006]] || [[Minnesota Vikings]] ||'''W''' 23-13 || [[Soldier Field]] || [[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 10-2
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 14 || [[December 11]], [[2006]] || [[St. Louis Rams]] || '''W''' 42-27|| [[Edward Jones Dome]] || [[Monday Night Football|ESPN]] ||align="center"| 11-2
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 15 || [[December 17]], [[2006]] || [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] || '''W''' 34-31|| [[Soldier Field]] || [[Fox Sports|FOX]] ||align="center"| 12-2
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
|align="center"| 16 || [[December 24]], [[2006]] || [[Detroit Lions]] || '''W''' 26-21|| [[Ford Field]] || [[Fox Sports|FOX]] || align="center"| 13-2
|-style="background: #ffdddd;"
|align="center"| 17|| [[December 31]], [[2006]] || [[Green Bay Packers]] || '''L''' 7-26 || [[Soldier Field]] || [[NBC Sunday Night Football|NBC]] ||align="center"| 13-3
|}
 
==Team colors and jersey==
===NFC North Division standings===
[[Image:Colorado-alternate.gif|thumb|left|100px|Avalanche's alternate logo: the foot of Howler]]
'''x''' ''- clinched playoff berth''
{{h3|Logo}}
'''y''' ''- clinched division''
The Colorado Avalanche logo is composed by a [[Burgundy (color)|burgundy]] letter '''''A''''' with snow wrapped around, similar to an [[avalanche]]. There is a hockey puck in the lower-right end of the snow, wrapping around the logo. Around the whole logo, there's a blue oval.
'''z''' ''- clinched homefield advantage''
'''*''' ''- clinched first-round bye''<br>
''W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against''
<div style="float:left; width:48%;">
{| class="wikitable" cellpadding="3" border="1"
|- bgcolor="#ccffff"
| colspan="8" align="center" | '''[[NFC North]]'''
|- bgcolor="#efefef"
!Team!!W!!L!!T!!PCT!!PF!!PA!!&nbsp;
|- align="center"
|align="left"| '''*yz'''-[[Chicago Bears]]
|13||3||0||.812||427||255
|<small>''Details''</small>
|- align="center"
|align="left"| [[Green Bay Packers]]
|8||8||0||.500||301||366
|<small>''[[2006 Green Bay Packers season|Details]]''</small>
|- align="center"
|align="left"| [[Minnesota Vikings]]
|6||10||0||.375||282||327
|<small>''[[2006 Minnesota Vikings season|Details]]''</small>
|- align="center"
|align="left"| [[Detroit Lions]]
|3||13||0||.188||305||398
|<small>''[[2006 Detroit Lions season|Details]]''</small>
|-
|}
</div><br clear="all"/>
 
The team's alternate logo is the foot of Howler, and can be seen on the shoulders of the Avalanche's home and away jerseys.
==Week-by-week results==
{{clear}}
===Week 1: at Green Bay Packers===
{{h3|Jerseys}}
{{Linescore Amfootball|
[[Image:Avalanche200607jerseys.GIF|thumb|350px|right|Avalanche jerseys for the 2006-07 season: Home and away (top) and 3rd jersey (bottom)]]
|Road='''Bears'''
The Avalanche jerseys have not changed since their first season in 1995. The team colors are burgundy, blue and white. The home jersey, which was the team's road jersey until 2003 when the [[National Hockey League|NHL]] decided to switch home and road jerseys,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.statenews.com/article.phtml?pk=15112|title=NHL 'quacked' up with hockey jersey switch|first=Kristofer|last=Karol|publisher=[[State News]]|date=[[January 27]], [[2003]]|accessdate=2006-08-30}}</ref> is dominantly burgundy and dark blue in color. There are two black and white [[zigzag]] lines along the jersey, one in the shoulders, the other near the belly. Between them, the jersey is burgundy, outside those lines it is dark blue. Similar lines exist around the neck. The Avalanche logo is in the center of the jersey. On top of the shoulders, there is the alternate logo, one on each side. The away jersey is similar, just with different colors. The burgundy part on the home jersey is white on the away jersey, the light blue part is burgundy and the black and white lines became white and dark blue.
|R1=7||R2=9||R3=3||R4=7||RT=26
|Home=Packers
|H1=0||H2=0||H3=0||H4=0||HT=0
}}
''at [[Lambeau Field]], [[Green Bay, Wisconsin]]''
*'''Game time:''' 4:15 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/3:15 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 62 [[Fahrenheit|°F]] (cloudy)
*'''TV announcers ([[Fox Sports|FOX]]):''' [[Sam Rosen]] (play-by-play) and [[Tim Ryan]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 70,918
*'''Referee:''' [[Tony Corrente]]
 
The Avalanche introduced a third jersey during the 2001-02 season.<ref>{{cite news |title =OILERS 4, AVALANCHE 1 "Third jersey' to make debut on Halloween|url =http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=DP&p_theme=dp&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EF431E783FCBE23&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|author =Dater, Adrian|publisher =Denver Post|date =2001-10-19|accessdate =2007-03-26}}</ref> It is dominantly burgundy. "Colorado" is spelled in a diagonal across the jersey where the logo is on the other jerseys. From the belly down, three large horizontal stripes, the first and the last being black and the middle one being white. In the middle of the arms, there are 5 stripes, black, white and burgundy from the outside inside in both sides.
====Game summary====
The Bears won their season opener on the road with a 26-0 victory over their long-time rival, the [[Green Bay Packers]], ending the Packers' 233-game scoring streak (the fourth-longest streak in NFL history and the second-longest active streak behind the [[Minnesota Vikings]]). It was the first shutout of the Packers since a 10-0 loss to the Bears on Oct. 17, 1991 and the first shutout of Packers quarterback [[Brett Favre]]'s 16-year career.
 
==Seasons and records==
Although the Bears dominated the game on both sides of the ball, they were unable to finish in the [[red zone]], scoring only one touchdown on offense. Quarterback [[Rex Grossman]] went 18/26 for 262 yards with 1 touchdown and 1 interception, for a 98.6 [[passer rating]]. In the running game, [[Thomas Jones]] ran for 63 yards on 21 carries while [[Cedric Benson]] picked up 34 yards on 11 tries.
===Season-by-season record===
''This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Avalanche. For the full season-by-season history, see [[Colorado Avalanche seasons]]''
 
'''''Note:''' GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes''
Scoring consisted of four [[Robbie Gould]] field goals and two touchdowns (the first on a 49-yard pass from Grossman to [[Bernard Berrian]] on the sixth play of the Bears' 78-yard opening drive and the second on an 84-yard fourth quarter punt return by rookie [[Devin Hester]]). [http://sports-att.espn.go.com/nfl/recap?gameId=260910009]
 
<small>Records as of April 9, 2007.</small><ref name="hockeydb">Hockeydb.com, [http://hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/teamseasons.php?tid=690 Colorado Avalanche season statistics and records]</ref>
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - CHI - 12:05 - 49 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-0)
 
{| class="wikitable"
Q2 - CHI - 13:44 - Robbie Gould 40 yd FG (CHI 10-0)
|- style="background-color:#dddddd;" |
|Season || GP || W || L || T || OTL || Pts || GF || GA || PIM || Finish || Playoffs
Q2 - CHI - 6:29 - Robbie Gould 39 yd FG (CHI 13-0)
|-
 
| [[2001-02 NHL season|2001-02]] || 82 || 45 || 28 || 8 || 1 || 99 || 212 || 169 || 1007 || 1st, Northwest || Lost in Conference Finals, 3-4 ([[Detroit Red Wings|Red Wings]])
Q2 - CHI - 4:38 - Robbie Gould 28 yd FG (CHI 16-0)
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
 
| [[2002-03 NHL season|2002-03]] || 82 || 42 || 19 || 13 || 8 || 105 || 251 || 194 || 1084 || 1st, Northwest || Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 3-4 ([[Minnesota Wild|Wild]])
Q3 - CHI - 1:47 - Robbie Gould 30 yd FG (CHI 19-0)
|-
| [[2003-04 NHL season|2003-04]] || 82 || 40 || 22 || 13 || 7 || 100 || 236 || 198 || 1293 || 2nd, Northwest || Lost in Conference Semifinals, 2-4 ([[San Jose Sharks|Sharks]])
Q4 - CHI - 14:06 - [[Devin Hester]] 84 yd punt return TD (Gould kick) (CHI 26-0)
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
 
| [[2004-05 NHL season|2004-05]] || colspan="11"| ''Season cancelled due to [[2004-05 NHL Lockout]]''
===Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Lions
|R1=0||R2=0||R3=7||R4=0||RT=7
|Home='''Bears'''
|H1=10||H2=14||H3=7||H4=3||HT=34
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 68 [[Fahrenheit|°F]]
*'''TV announcers ([[Fox Sports|FOX]]):''' [[Sam Rosen]] (play-by-play) and [[Tim Ryan]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,181
*'''Referee:''' [[Mike Carey]]
 
====Game summary====
The Bears continued their productive momentum by defeating the [[Detroit Lions]] at Soldier Field. The game drew much hype after [[Roy Williams]] of the Detroit Lions guaranteed a victory against the Bears. After being forced to punt on their first possession, the Bears’ defense struck back by forcing [[Detroit Lions]]’ quarter back [[Jon Kitna]] to fumble deep within Lions’ territory. [[Rex Grossman]] managed to capitalize on the fumble by throwing a three-yard touchdown pass to [[John Gilmore]]. After the kickoff, the Bears’ defense came up strong again by forcing [[running back]] [[Kevin Jones]] to fumble, which allowed [[Robbie Gould]] to kick a 32-yard field goal. Following another Lions’ punt, Grossman managed to throw a 17-yard touchdown pass to [[Bernard Berrian]] in the dying minutes of the first half.
 
The Lions’ started the second half by making a threatening advance into Bears’ territory. After being offset by an offside penalty and a sack from [[Tommie Harris]], [[Jason Hanson]] was forced to attempt a 40-yard field goal. Hanson missed, and allowed the Bears to set up shop near the midfield. After several passing attacks, Grossman threw a 31-yard touchdown pass to [[Desmond Clark]].
 
Following the start of the third quarter, the Lions’ managed to enter the Bears’ red zone for the first time in the game. After several failed passing and running attempts, Kitna managed to score the Lions’ lone touchdown through a quarterback sneak. Following an exchange of possession, Grossman fumbled the football. Fortunately for the bears, the Lions’ failed to capitalize on the fumble, which allowed the Bears to set up another Grossman to Gilmore touchdown pass. The Bears capped their scoring spree with 45-yard field goal.
 
Grossman threw four touchdowns for 289 yards, and left the game with a 148.0 rating. Furthermore, Grossman was named the "FedEx Air Player of the Week". [http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/recap?gameId=260917003][
 
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - CHI - 10:11 - 3 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[John Gilmore]] ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-0)
 
Q1 - CHI - 6:19 - Robbie Gould 32 yd FG (CHI 10-0)
Q2 - CHI - 14:16 - 41 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Bernard Berrian]] (Gould kick) (CHI 17-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 3:36 - 31 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Desmond Clark]] (Gould kick) (CHI 24-0)
Q3 - DET - 10:20 - [[Jon Kitna]] 1 yd TD run ([[Jason Hanson]] kick) (CHI 24-7)
 
Q3 - CHI - 0:32 - 5 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to John Gilmore (Gould kick) (CHI 31-7)
 
Q4 - CHI - 10:03 - Robbie Gould 45 yd FG (CHI 34-7)
 
===Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Bears'''
|R1=3||R2=0||R3=6||R4=10||RT=19
|Home=Vikings
|H1=3||H2=3||H3=0||H4=10||HT=16
}}
''at [[Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome]], [[Minneapolis, Minnesota]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' Dome
*'''TV announcers ([[Fox Sports|FOX]]):''' [[Dick Stockton]] (play-by-play) , [[Daryl Johnston]] (color commentator), and [[Tony Siragusa]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 63,754
*'''Referee:''' Scott Green
 
====Game summary====
The Bears offense was limited by a resurgent [[Minnesota Vikings]] defense, but fourth-quarter heroics from both the offense and defense resulted in a 19-16 victory.
 
[[Rex Grossman]] overcame an uneven performance, including an interception returned seven yards for the Vikings' only touchdown, to throw a game-winning touchdown pass to [[Rashied Davis]] with 1:53 remaining in the game (the first 4th quarter TD pass of his career). Grossman finished with 23 completions in 41 attempts, for 274 yards, with one touchdown and two interceptions.
 
The Bears running game was limited to only 54 yards on 18 attempts by [[Thomas Jones]], but the defense proved the difference in allowing only three Vikings field goals. [[Tommie Harris]] provided the decisive play, knifing into the Vikings backfield to force a fumble with less than four minutes remaining and the Bears trailing 16-12. [[Adewale Ogunleye]] recovered in Vikings territory, and the stage was set for the game-winning drive.
 
Kicker [[Robbie Gould]] went 4-for-4 and remained perfect on the season. [[Muhsin Muhammad]] caught 9 passes for 118 yards. [[Mike Brown]] forced another Vikings fumble.
 
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - MIN - 10:49 - [[Ryan Longwell]] 31 yd FG (MIN 3-0)
 
Q1 - CHI - 6:20 - [[Robbie Gould]] 41 yd FG (3-3)
Q2 - MIN - 1:08 - Ryan Longwell 26 yd FG (MIN 6-3)
 
Q3 - CHI - 10:53 - Robbie Gould 24 yd FG (6-6)
 
Q3 - CHI - 3:18 - Robbie Gould 31 yd FG (CHI 9-6)
 
Q4 - MIN - 14:53 - [[Antoine Winfield]] 7 yd interception return TD (Longwell kick) (MIN 13-9)
 
Q4 - CHI - 10:37 - Robbie Gould 49 yd FG (MIN 13-12)
Q4 - MIN - 7:27 - Ryan Longwell 41 yd FG (MIN 16-12)
 
Q4 - CHI - 1:53 - 24 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Rashied Davis]] (Gould kick) (CHI 19-16)
 
===Week 4: vs. Seattle Seahawks===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Seahawks
|R1=3||R2=3||R3=0||R4=0||RT=6
|Home='''Bears'''
|H1=7||H2=13||H3=14||H4=3||HT=37
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 8:15 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/7:15 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 75 [[Fahrenheit|°F]] (clear)
*'''TV announcers ([[NBC Sports|NBC]]):''' [[Al Michaels]] (play-by-play) and [[John Madden (football)|John Madden]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,225
*'''Referee:''' [[Terry McAulay]]
 
====Game summary====
The Bears defeated the defending [[National Football Conference|NFC]] Champion [[Seattle Seahawks]] by a score of 37-6. After holding the Bears' offense to a quick [[three-and-out]], Seattle managed to draw first blood with a field goal on their second drive, but the Bears responded with a touchdown pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] on their next possession. Bears' [[defensive back]] [[Ricky Manning, Jr.]] recorded two first half interceptions, and the Bears offense put the game virtually out of reach by the half, leading by a score of 20-6.
 
The offense rolled through the Seahawks with [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] picking up 98 yards on 24 carries and scoring twice, and [[Bernard Berrian]] on the receiving end of a perfectly placed 40 yard touchdown pass in the second half. With the Seahawks' running game taken away, the Bears' defensive line pulverized [[Matt Hasselbeck]], recording five sacks (two of these by [[defensive tackle]] [[Tommie Harris]], his fourth and fifth on the season). Bears' kicker [[Robbie Gould]] remained perfect on the year, racking up 3 more field goals.
 
Following the game's aftermath, Rex Grossman was awarded the [[FedEx]] Air Player of the Week Award, while Tommie Harris was named the NFL's Defensive Player of the Week. Furthermore, coach [[Lovie Smith]] was named the NFL's Head Coach of the Week.
 
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - SEA - 8:58 - [[Josh Brown (football)|Josh Brown]] 23 yd FG (SEA 3-0)
 
Q1 - CHI - 2:27 - 9 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-3)
 
Q2 - CHI - 13:33 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (CHI 10-3)
 
Q2 - CHI - 6:23 - Robbie Gould 20 yd FG (CHI 13-3)
 
Q2 - CHI - 2:25 - [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] 3 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 20-3)
 
Q2 - SEA - 0:27 - Josh Brown 24 yd FG (CHI 20-6)
 
Q3 - CHI - 10:05 - Thomas Jones 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 27-6)
 
Q3 - CHI - 0:51 - 40 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Bernard Berrian]] (Gould kick) (CHI 34-6)
 
Q4 - CHI - 7:43 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (CHI 37-6)
 
===Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Bills
|R1=0||R2=0||R3=0||R4=7||RT=7
|Home='''Bears'''
|H1=6||H2=21||H3=3||H4=10||HT=40
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 73 [[Fahrenheit|°F]]
*'''TV announcers ([[NFL on CBS|CBS]]):''' [[Jim Nantz]] (play-by-play) and [[Phil Simms]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,206
*'''Referee:''' [[Bill Carollo]]
 
====Game summary====
The Bears demolished the [[Buffalo Bills]] by a score of 40-7. The victory marked the second straight week that the Bears had defeated their opponent by more than thirty points. Also, the game marked the return of former Bears head coach [[Dick Jauron]].
 
The game started on an explosive note, as Bears linebacker [[Brendon Ayanbadejo]] recovered a fumble from Bills punter [[Brian Moorman]]. The recovery allowed kicker [[Robbie Gould]] to kick a 42-yard field goal. After an unsuccessful Bills drive, a Bears’ drive resulted in a 43-yard Gould kick, tying [[Kevin Butler]]'s record of 16 consecutive made field goals.
 
Hoping to rebound from the 6-0 deficit, the Bills' next drive was thwarted as [[Alex Brown]] sacked [[J.P. Losman]] to force a punt. After receiving the punt, the Bears mixed the run and pass effectively on the ensuing drive, leading to a [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] touchdown.
 
After [[Lance Briggs]] intercepted a Losman pass, the Bears' drive concluded with [[Cedric Benson]]'s first NFL touchdown. Following a [[Mark Anderson (football)|Mark Anderson]] sack, and resulting Buffalo punt, Grossman threw a 62 yard pass to Berrian, and later a short touchdown pass to [[Rashied Davis]]. After the kickoff, Losman threw another interception to [[Ricky Manning, Jr.]]
 
The second half did not look any better for the Bills, as the Bears’ defensive lineman, [[Alex Brown]] picked off another Losman pass. The Bears capitalized on the interception with a 32-yard field Gould field goal, which broke Butler’s previous consecutive field goal record. Following several scoreless drives, Gould kicked a 41-yard field goal. With victory assured, Bears’ coach [[Lovie Smith]] choose to bench Grossman for veteran backup [[Brian Griese]].
 
During the dying minutes of the lopsided match-up, the Bears special teams forced a fumble, which was recovered by [[Israel Idonije]]. The recovery gave the Bears excellent field position, and they capitalized with another Benson rushing touchdown. After the Bears halted another Bills drive, Benson fumbled the ball, allowing the Bills to recover and score their lone touchdown. Despite the massive margin of victory, parts of the home crowd were upset with the Bears, and even key members of the defense were upset with themselves for failing to shut out the Bills. The Bills touchdown marked the first time since [[September]] of the [[2005 NFL season|2005 regular season]] that the Bears allowed another team to score a passing touchdown at [[Soldier Field]] during the regular season. [http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/boxscore?gid=20061008003] That TD ended the Bears 11-quarter streak of not allowing their opponents to score a TD.
 
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - CHI - 9:07 - [[Robbie Gould]] 42 yd FG (CHI 3-0)
 
Q1 - CHI - 3:43 - Robbie Gould 43 yd FG (CHI 6-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 13:01 - 8 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] (Gould kick) (CHI 13-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 8:30 - [[Cedric Benson]] 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 20-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 4:22 - 15 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Rashied Davis]] (Gould kick) (CHI 27-0)
 
Q3 - CHI - 7:05 - Robbie Gould 32 yd FG (CHI 30-0)
 
Q4 - CHI - 6:05 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (CHI 33-0)
 
Q4 - CHI - 4:36 - Cedric Benson 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 40-0)
 
Q4 - BUF - 1:06 - 5 yd TD pass from [[J.P. Losman]] to [[Lee Evans (American football)|Lee Evans]] ([[Rian Lindell]] kick) (CHI 40-7)
 
===Week 6: at Arizona Cardinals===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Bears'''
|R1=0||R2=0||R3=10||R4=14||RT=24
|Home=Cardinals
|H1=14||H2=6||H3=3||H4=0||HT=23
}}
''at [[University of Phoenix Stadium]], [[Glendale, Arizona]]''
*'''Game time:''' 8:30 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/7:30 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 73 [[Fahrenheit|°F]] (clear)
*'''TV announcers ([[Monday Night Football|ESPN]]):''' [[Mike Tirico]] (play-by-play), [[Tony Kornheiser]] (color commentator) and [[Joe Theismann]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 63,977
*'''Referee:''' [[Jerome Boger]]
 
====Game summary====
The Bears traveled to the [[University of Phoenix Stadium]] to play the [[Arizona Cardinals]], their former cross-town rivals. The game marked the Bears’ first [[Monday Night Football]] appearance since 2003. Although the Bears were expected to defeat the Cardinals by a considerable margin, the Cardinals nearly managed to strip the Bears’ of their sixth win.
 
After [[Adrian Peterson]] returned the opening kick-off, the Bears failed to pick up any offensive momentum and succumbed to a quick three and out. Quarterback [[Matt Leinart]] made an early offensive impact by throwing two first quarter touchdowns, to [[Bryant Johnson]] and [[Anquan Boldin]]. The situation got even worse for the Bears as Rex Grossman turned the ball over four times in the first half, allowing [[Pro Bowl]] Kicker [[Neil Rackers]] to extend the Cardinals halftime lead to 20-0.
 
The Bears gave an impressive defensive performance in the third quarter by limiting the Cardinals to only three points – the only points the Cardinals would score during the second half. At the end of the Bears' only successful drive of the night, Bears’ kicker Robbie Gould kicked a 23-yard field goal, putting the team on the board.
 
The Bears defense managed to turn the game's momentum during the dying seconds of the third quarter. Bears’ [[defensive ends]] [[Mark Anderson (football)|Mark Anderson]] sacked Leinart, resulting in a fumble that was returned for a touchdown by [[Mike Brown (American footballer)|Mike Brown]]. Even though Grossman threw two interceptions during the fourth quarter, the Cardinals failed to capitalize on their possessions. Ultimately, [[Brian Urlacher]] stripped the ball from Cardinals’ running back [[Edgerrin James]]. [[Charles Tillman|Charles "Peanut" Tillman]] picked up the loose ball and returned it for a 40-yard touchdown.
 
After failing to move the ball into striking distance yet again, the Cardinals punted to [[Devin Hester]]. The "Windy City Flyer" backpedaled upon receiving the punt, but then burned the Cardinals for an 83-yard touchdown, which allowed the Bears to seize the lead with less than three minutes remaining. Rackers had one final opportunity to win the game for the Cardinals, but missed a 40-field goal.
{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#b0c4de; width:20em;" cellspacing="5"
| style="text-align: left;" | "The Bears are who we thought they were, and that’s why we took the damn field. Now, if you want to crown them, then crown their ass! But, they are who we thought they were, and we let them off the hook!."
|-
| [[2005-06 NHL season|2005-06]]<sup>1</sup> || 82 || 43 || 30 || — || 9 || 95 || 283 || 257 || 1130 || 2nd, Northwest || Lost in Conference Semifinals, 0-4 ([[Mighty Ducks of Anaheim|Mighty Ducks]])
| style="text-align: right;" | ~'''''[[Dennis Green]]'''''
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| [[2006-07 NHL season|2006-07]] || 82 || 44 || 31 || — || 7 || 95 || 272 || 251 || 864 ||4th, Northwest || Did not qualify
|}
 
:<sup>1</sup> <small>As of the [[2005-06 NHL season]], all games tied after regulation will be decided in a shootout; SOL (Shootout losses) will be recorded as OTL in the standings.</small>
The Bears’ come from behind victory marked the first time since 1997 that the Bears managed to win a Monday Night game. Although the Bears won by a score of 24-23, the offense failed to find the end zone. Grossman left the game with only 148 passing yards, six turnovers, and a 10.7 quarterback rating. Also, [[defensive backs]] Mike Brown and Ricky Manning left the game with injuries. Brown's would prove to be season-ending. Cardinals’ head coach [[Dennis Green]] exploded in the postgame press conference, storming off after the first few questions. Later in the week, Green fired offensive coordinator [[Keith Rowen]]. [http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/boxscore?gid=20061016022] [http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news;_ylt=Av6vQ5ZO9YwKZOmzYbrU1gNDubYF?slug=ap-cardinals-coordinatorfired&prov=ap&type=lgns]
 
===Franchise leaders===
The game was watched in 10.8 Million homes, making it the third-highest total in cable television history. Considering that the game was also shown on local television in Chicago and Arizona, it is estimated that over 11.98 Million people watched the game. Furthermore, this was the first time that an NFL game on cable drew more viewers than a game during the same week that aired on regular television. [http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news;_ylt=AvFKpDsZYgEZv5O.L5kirOGA2bYF?slug=ap-mondaynightratings&prov=ap&type=lgns]
''Note: This list does not include stats from the [[Quebec Nordiques]] ([[WHA]] & [[NHL]]).''
<small>Records as of April 9, 2007.</small><ref name="avsdbrb">{{cite web |title =Regular Season Record Books|url =http://www.avalanchedb.com/recordbooks/regular/page1.htm|publisher =Colorado Avalanche Database|accessdate =2007-05-12}}</ref>
{{col-start}}
{{col-2}}
{{h4|Regular season}}
*Games played: [[Joe Sakic]], 811
*Goals: Joe Sakic, 376
*Assists: Joe Sakic, 587
*Points: Joe Sakic, 963
*Penalty minutes: [[Adam Foote]], 809
*Wins: [[Patrick Roy]], 262
*Shutouts: Patrick Roy, 37
{{col-2}}
{{h4|Playoffs}}
*Games played: Joe Sakic, 150
*Goals: Joe Sakic, 75
*Assists: [[Peter Forsberg]], 93
*Points: Joe Sakic, 167
*Penalty minutes: Adam Foote, 266
*Wins: Patrick Roy, 81
*Shutouts: Patrick Roy, 18
{{col-end}}
 
====ScoringFranchise summary=records===
''Note: This list does not include records from the [[Quebec Nordiques]] ([[WHA]] & [[NHL]]). Items in '''bold''' are NHL records.'' <small>Records as of April 9, 2007.</small><ref name="avsdbrb"/>
 
{{h4|Regular season}}
Q1 - ARI - 7:06 - 11 yd TD pass from [[Matt Leinart]] to [[Bryant Johnson]] ([[Neil Rackers]] kick) (ARI 7-0)
*Most goals in a season: [[Joe Sakic]], 54 (2000-01)
*Most assists in a season: [[Peter Forsberg]], 86 (1995-96)
*Most points in a season: Joe Sakic, 120 (1995-96)
*Most penalty minutes in a season: [[Chris Simon]], 250 (1995-96)
*Most game-winning goals in a season: Joe Sakic, 12 (2000-01)
*Most points in a season, rookie: [[Paul Stastny]], 78 (2006-07)
*'''NHL record longest points streak, rookie: Paul Stastny, 20 games (2006-07)'''
*'''NHL record most consecutive games played by a defenseman: [[Karlis Skrastins]], 495 games (2000-2007 - 270 with the Nashville Predators and 225 with the Avalanche)'''
*Best [[Plus/minus|+/-]] record in a season: [[Milan Hejduk]] and Peter Forsberg, +52 (2002-03)
*Most wins in a season: [[Patrick Roy]], 40 (2000-01)
*Most shutouts in a season: Patrick Roy, 9 (2001-02)
*Best goal against average in a season: Patrick Roy, 1.94 (2001-02)
 
{{h4|Playoffs}}
Q1 - ARI - 0:54 - 26 yd TD pass from Matt Leinart to [[Anquan Boldin]] (Rackers kick) (ARI 14-0)
*Most goals in a playoff season: Joe Sakic, 18 (1996)
*Most assists in a playoff season: Peter Forsberg, 18 (2002)
*Most points in a playoff season: Joe Sakic, 34 (1996)
*Most penalty minutes in a playoff season: [[Adam Foote]], 62 (1997)
 
{{h4|Team}}
Q2 - ARI - 4:15 - Neil Rackers 41 yd FG (ARI 17-0)
*'''Most consecutive division titles (1994-5 through 2002-3), 9'''<ref name="divtitrec"/>
*Most points in a season: 118 (2000-01)
*Most wins in a season: 52 (2000-01)
*Most goals: 336 (1995-96)
*Largest margin of victory: 10 (Dec. 12, 1995 vs San Jose (12-2))
 
==Current roster==
Q2 - ARI - 0:00 - Neil Rackers 28 yd FG (ARI 20-0)
<small>As of April 27th, [[2006-07 NHL season|2007]]. [http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/team/PlayersNumber.asp]</small>
 
{| width=90%
Q3 - CHI - 7:22 - [[Robbie Gould]] 23 yd FG (ARI 20-3)
!colspan=6 |<center><big>Goaltenders
|- bgcolor="#dddddd"
!width=5%|#
!width=5%|
|align=left!!width=15%|'''Player'''
!width=8%|Catches
!width=9%|Acquired
!width=37%|Place of Birth
 
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q3 - ARI - 1:47 - Neil Rackers 29 yd FG (ARI 23-3)
|align=center|'''31'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|SVK}}
|[[Peter Budaj]]
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2001 NHL Entry Draft|2001]]
|[[Banská Bystrica]], [[Czechoslovakia]]
 
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q3 - CHI - 0:02 - [[Mike Brown (American footballer)|Mike Brown]] 3 yd fumble return TD (Gould kick) (ARI 23-10)
|align=center|'''60'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Jose Theodore]]
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2005-06 NHL season|2006]]
|[[Laval, Quebec]]
|}
 
{| width=90%
Q4 - CHI - 5:00 - [[Charles Tillman]] 40 yd fumble return TD (Gould kick) (ARI 23-17)
!colspan=6 |<center><big>Defensemen
|- bgcolor="#dddddd"
!width=5%|#
!width=5%|
|align=left!!width=15%|'''Player'''
!width=8%|Shoots
!width=9%|Acquired
!width=37%|Place of Birth
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q4 - CHI - 2:58 - [[Devin Hester]] 83 yd punt return TD (Gould kick) (CHI 24-23)
|align=center|'''2'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}}
|[[Ken Klee]]
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2006-07 NHL season|2006]]
|[[Indianapolis, Indiana]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
===Week 7: Bye===
|align=center|'''3'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|LVA}}
|[[Karlis Skrastins]]
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2003-04 NHL season|2003]]
|[[Riga]], [[Soviet Union|U.S.S.R.]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Celebration of the Bears' miraculous win over Arizona was tempered by the news that starting safety [[Mike Brown (American footballer)|Mike Brown]] was lost for the season with torn ligaments in his foot. The rest of the team was able to work toward renewed good health for the San Francisco game.
|align=center|'''4'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}}
|[[John-Michael Liles]]
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2000 NHL Entry Draft|2000]]
|[[Zionsville, Indiana]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
===Week 8: vs. San Francisco 49ers===
|align=center|'''5'''
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|Road=49ers
|[[Brett Clark]]
|R1=0 ||R2=0 ||R3=0 ||R4=10 ||RT=10
|align=center|L
|Home='''Bears'''
|align=center|[[2001-02 NHL season|2002]]
|H1=24 ||H2=17 ||H3=0 ||H4=0 ||HT=41
|[[Wapella (Saskatchewan)|Wapella]], [[Saskatchewan]]
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 55 [[Fahrenheit|°F]] (sunny/clear)
*'''TV announcers ([[Fox Sports|FOX]]):''' [[Pat Summerall]] (play-by-play) and [[Brian Baldinger]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,200
*'''Referee:''' [[Ron Winter]]
 
|-bgcolor="eeeeee"
====Game summary====
|align=center|'''6'''
The Bears returned to Soldier Field to play the [[San Francisco 49ers]]. Prior to the game, Lovie Smith announced that the Bears would don their alternative orange jerseys to commemorate the upcoming [[Halloween]] holiday, and asked Bear fans to wear orange clothing to create an “orange swarm” [http://www.chicagobears.com/news/NewsStory.asp?story_id=2590].
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}}
|[[Jeff Finger]]
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[1999 NHL Entry Draft|1999]]
|[[Houghton, Michigan]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
The game itself was a real-life horror flick for the 49ers. After the Bears were forced to settle with a 43-yard [[Robbie Gould]] field goal on their opening drive, [[Maurice Hicks]] fumbled on the following kick-off return. The excellent field position resulted in a [[Thomas Jones]] 7-yard touchdown run. After two unsuccessful drives, [[Brian Urlacher]] tipped an [[Alex Smith]] pass, and managed to intercept it with one hand before it hit the ground. Once again, excellent field position resulted in a touchdown, with [[Rex Grossman]] throwing a 5-yard touchdown pass to [[Muhsin Muhammad]].
|align=center|'''27'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|FIN}}
|[[Ossi Vaananen]]
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2003-04 NHL season|2004]]
|[[Vantaa]], [[Finland]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
With the game slipping out of the 49ers’ grasp, Alex Smith fumbled while scrambling for a first down. [[Tommie Harris]] recovered the fumble, which allowed [[Cedric Benson]] to rush for his third career touchdown. After an unsuccessful 49ers drive, Grossman threw a touchdown pass to [[Desmond Clark]], which was later complimented by a 36-yard Robbie Gould field goal. Before the Bears would end the first half, they extended their lead to 41 points after Grossman threw another touchdown pass to Clark.
|align=center|'''34'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}}
|[[Kurt Sauer]]
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2000 NHL Entry Draft|2004]]
|[[St. Cloud, Minnesota]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
After a scoreless third quarter, [[Frank Gore]] rushed 54 yards to set up a 23-yard [[Joe Nedney]] field goal. Alex Smith then threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to [[Antonio Bryant]]. A later Alex Smith fumble sealed the 49ers’ fate, as the Bears went on to win, 41-10. The Bears improved to 7-0 for the first time since winning the [[Super Bowl XX|Super Bowl]] in [[1985]]. Furthermore, the Bears' 41 point explosion tied the franchise record for most points scored in one half. The other game being the [[NFL Championship Game, 1940|1940 NFL Championship]], where the Bears defeated the [[Washington Redskins]] 73-0. [http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/boxscore?gid=20061029003&page=plays]
|align=center|'''44'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}}
====Scoring summary====
|[[Jordan Leopold]]
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2006-07 NHL season|2006]]
|[[Golden Valley, Minnesota]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q1 - CHI - 12:10 - [[Robbie Gould]] 43 yd FG (CHI 3-0)
|align=center|'''71'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Patrice Brisebois]]<small> ([[Injured reserve|IR]])</small>
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2005-06 NHL season|2005]]
|[[Montreal, Quebec]]
|}
 
{| width=90%
Q1 - CHI - 10:46 - [[Thomas Jones]] 7 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0)
!colspan=7 |<center><big>Forwards
|- bgcolor="#dddddd"
!width=5%|#
!width=5%|
|align=left!!width=15%|'''Player'''
!width=8%|Position
!width=8%|Shoots
!width=9%|Acquired
!width=37%|Place of Birth
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q1 - CHI - 2:01 - 5 yard TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] (Gould kick) (CHI 17-0)
|align=center|'''8'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}<!--Note: Wolski plays for Team Canada-->
|[[Wojtek Wolski]]<sup>1</sup>
|align=center|LW
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2004 NHL Entry Draft|2004]]
|[[Zabrze]], [[Poland]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q1 - CHI - 1:06 - [[Cedric Benson]] 1 yd TD run (Gould Kick) (CHI 24-0)
|align=center|'''12'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Brad Richardson]]
|align=center|C/LW
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2003 NHL Entry Draft|2003]]
|[[Belleville, Ontario]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q2 - CHI - 10:37 - 1 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Desmond Clark]] (Gould kick) (CHI 31-0)
|align=center|'''14'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Ian Laperriere]] - '''[[Captain (ice hockey)#Alternate captains|A]]'''
|align=center|RW/C
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2004-05 NHL season|2004]]
|[[Montreal, Quebec]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q2 - CHI - 3:20 - Robbie Gould 39 yd FG (CHI 34-0)
|align=center|'''15'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Andrew Brunette]] - '''[[Captain (ice hockey)#Alternate captains|A]]'''
|align=center|LW
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2005-06 NHL season|2005]]
|[[Sudbury, Ontario]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q2 - CHI - 0:10 - 27 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Desmond Clark (Gould kick) (CHI 41-0)
|align=center|'''19'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Joe Sakic]] - '''[[Captain (ice hockey)|C]]'''
|align=center|C
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[1987 NHL Entry Draft|1987]]
|[[Burnaby, British Columbia]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q4 - SF - 11:35 - [[Joe Nedney]] 23 yd FG (CHI 41-3)
|align=center|'''20'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
Q4 - SF - 6:49 - 16 yd TD pass from [[Alex Smith]] to [[Antonio Bryant]] (Nedney kick) (CHI 41-10)
|[[Mark Rycroft]]
|align=center|RW/LW
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2006-07 NHL season|2006]]
|[[Penticton, British Columbia]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
===Week 9: vs. Miami Dolphins===
|align=center|'''23'''
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|align=center|{{flagicon|CZE}}
|Road='''Dolphins'''
|[[Milan Hejduk]]
|R1=0||R2=14||R3=7||R4=10||RT=31
|align=center|RW
|Home=Bears
|align=center|R
|H1=3||H2=7||H3=3||H4=0||HT=13
|align=center|[[1994 NHL Entry Draft|1994]]
}}
''at |[[SoldierÚstí Fieldnad Labem]], [[Chicago, IllinoisCzechoslovakia]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 55 [[Fahrenheit|°F]] (partly cloudy)
*'''TV announcers ([[NFL on CBS|CBS]]):''' [[Greg Gumbel]] (play-by-play) and [[Dan Dierdorf]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,206
*'''Referee:''' [[Peter Morelli]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
====Game summary====
|align=center|'''26'''
The Bears cruised into [[Soldier Field]] in hopes of finding an easy victory over the [[Miami Dolphins]]. However, in a fashion reminiscent of the [[1985 NFL season]], the Dolphins trampled over the Bears by a score of 31-13.
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}} <!--plays for Team USA-->
|[[Paul Stastny]]
|align=center|C
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2006-07 NHL season|2006]]
|[[Quebec City, Quebec]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
The six Bears turnovers were unquestionably the key to the game. [[Rex Grossman]] threw three interceptions, one of which was returned for a touchdown by [[Jason Taylor (American football player)|Jason Taylor]]. The Bears gained momentum during the second quarter, when an [[Alex Brown]] interception led to a 30-yard Grossman touchdown pass to [[Muhsin Muhammad]]. Then, a botched Dolphins’ field goal galvanized the Bears’ hopes for a second half comeback.
|align=center|'''28'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Ben Guite]]
|align=center|RW
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2006-07 NHL season|2006]]
|[[Montreal, Quebec]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Unfortunately, the Bears struggled to establish a strong offensive presence, putting up only three points from a [[Robbie Gould]] field goal during the third. Not even a [[Nathan Vasher]] interception could turn the tide of the game, as Grossman the last two of his interceptions. The Bears lost the game by a final score of 31-13, marking their first regular season home loss since week three of the [[2005 NFL season]]. The game also marked the first time since the [[2004 NFL season]] that the Bears defense gave up more than 150 yards rushing.
|align=center|'''29'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}}
|[[Scott Parker (ice hockey)|Scott Parker]]
|align=center|RW
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2006-07 NHL season|2007]]
|[[Hanford, California]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Also, Bears punt return specialist [[Devin Hester]] had a nightmarish game. Hester averaged less than 5.5 yards/return and fumbled on two punt returns, one resulting in a touchdown. [[Jason McKie]], [[Bernard Berrian]], [[Dante Wesley]], and [[Brian Urlacher]] were forced to leave the game with injuries. For the second time in history, the Dolphins thwarted the Bears’ hopes for a [[Perfect Season]].
|align=center|'''39'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|USA}}
|[[Tyler Arnason]]
|align=center|C/LW
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2006-07 NHL season|2006]]
|[[Oklahoma City, Oklahoma]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
====Scoring summary====
|align=center|'''40'''
Q1 - CHI - 0:04 - [[Robbie Gould]] 38 yd FG (CHI 3-0)
|align=center|{{flagicon|SVK}}
|[[Marek Svatos]]
|align=center|RW
|align=center|R
|align=center|[[2001 NHL Entry Draft|2001]]
|[[Košice]], [[Czechoslovakia]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q2 - MIA - 10:47 - 5 yd TD pass from [[Joey Harrington]] to [[Marty Booker]] ([[Olindo Mare]] kick) (MIA 7-3)
|align=center|'''53'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Brett McLean]]
|align=center|C/LW
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2004-05 NHL season|2004]]
|[[Comox, British Columbia]]
 
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Q2 - MIA - 10:32 - [[Jason Taylor (American football)|Jason Taylor]] 20 yd interception return TD (Mare kick) (MIA 14-3)
|align=center|'''87'''
|align=center|{{flagicon|CAN}}
|[[Pierre Turgeon]] <small> ([[Injured reserve|IR]])</small>
|align=center|C
|align=center|L
|align=center|[[2005-06 NHL season|2005]]
|[[Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec|Rouyn, Quebec]]
|}
 
*To see the player roster and bios, click [http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/Team/Roster.aspx here.]
Q2 - CHI - 1:57 - 30 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] (Gould kick) (MIA 14-10)
 
<small>1. Wojtek Wolski plays for Team Canada. He was born in Poland but became a naturalized Canadian citizen in 1990. </SMALL>
Q3 - MIA - 13:13 - 6 yd TD pass from Joey Harrington to [[Wes Welker]] (Mare kick) (MIA 21-10)
 
===Honored Members===
Q3 - CHI - 1:02 - Robbie Gould 38 yd FG (MIA 21-13)
{{see also|List of Colorado Avalanche players|Colorado Avalanche notable players and award winners}}
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: right; margin: 0em 0em 1em 1em; width: 215px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
|- align="center" bgcolor=#CDC0B0
! colspan="3" | Players with most games for the Colorado Avalanche
|- align="center" bgcolor=#EEDFCC
| Player || Games || Years
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Joe Sakic]] || 811 || 1995-present
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Milan Hejduk]] || 624 || 1998-present
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Adam Foote]] || 592 || 1995-2004
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Peter Forsberg]] || 533 || 1995-2004
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Stephane Yelle]] || 505 || 1995-2002
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Patrick Roy]] || 478 || 1995-2003
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Alex Tanguay]] || 450 || 1999-2006
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Adam Deadmarsh]] || 405 || 1995-2001
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Jon Klemm]] || 393 || 1995-2001
|- align="center" bgcolor=#FFFFFF
| [[Eric Messier]] || 385 || 1996-2003
|- align="center" bgcolor=#EEDFCC
| colspan="3" align="center" | ''Source: [http://hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/ttotdisplay.php?tid=690 HockeyDB.com]''<br>''<small>As of April 9, 2007 - Regular Season data<small/>''
|}
''Retired Numbers'': The Avalanche have retired two numbers: '''77''' of [[Ray Bourque]] and '''33''' of [[Patrick Roy]].<ref>{{cite news |title =Patrick Roy #33 to Be Retired|url =http://www.sportzdomain.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=14361&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0|author =|publisher =http://www.sportzdomain.com|date =2003-05-29|accessdate =2007-03-25}}</ref> The number '''99''' of [[Wayne Gretzky]] is retired league-wide. The numbers retired when the franchise was in Quebec were entered back into circulation after the move to Colorado.
 
''Hall of Famers'': Ray Bourque played in the NHL for 22 seasons with the [[Boston Bruins]] and was traded, by request, to Colorado in 2000 so he could have a chance of winning the Stanley Cup before retiring.<ref name="bourque"/> In a feat termed Mission 16W, the Avs were able to win the Stanley Cup, thus allowing Bourque the championship he had been seeking for 22 seasons.<ref>{{cite news |title ='Mission 16W' accomplished for Avalanche|url =http://www.usatoday.com/sports/hockey/cup01/2001-06-11-avalanche-cover.htm|author =Allen, Kevin|publisher =[[USA Today]]|date =2001-06-10|accessdate =2007-05-11}}</ref>
Q4 - MIA - 10:00 - 24 yd TD pass from Joey Harrington to [[Chris Chambers]] (Mare kick) (MIA 28-13)
 
[[Patrick Roy]] played from 1995 to 2003 in Colorado and won two Stanley Cups with the Colorado Avalanche. Roy recorded 551 career victories, the most career wins for any goaltender in the NHL.<ref>{{cite web |title =Legends of Hockey - Roy, Patrick|url =http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p200602&type=Player&page=bio&list=ByYear#photo|publisher =[[Hockey Hall of Fame]]|accessdate =2007-05-11}}</ref>
Q4 - MIA - 1:09 - Olindo Mare 20 yd FG (MIA 31-13)
 
Both Bourque and Roy were inducted into the [[Hockey Hall of Fame]]. The only other Avalanche player to be inducted is [[Jari Kurri]] who played the last season of his career with the franchise, yet his jersey does not hang from the rafters at the Pepsi Center.<ref>{{cite web |title =Legends of Hockey - Colorado Avalanche|url =http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsPlayersByTeam.jsp?team=Colorado+Avalanche|publisher =[[Hockey Hall of Fame]]|accessdate =2007-05-11}}</ref>
===Week 10: at New York Giants===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Bears'''
|R1= 3||R2=7 ||R3=14 ||R4=14 ||RT=38
|Home=Giants
|H1= 7||H2=6 ||H3=7 ||H4= 0||HT=20
}}
''at [[Giants Stadium]], [[East Rutherford, New Jersey]]''
*'''Game time:''' 8:15 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/7:15 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 55 [[Fahrenheit|°F]] (Rain/Mostly Cloudy)
*'''TV announcers ([[Sunday Night Football|NBC]]):''' [[Al Michaels]] (play-by-play) and [[John Madden (football)|John Madden]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 78,641
*'''Referee:''' [[Ed Hochuli]]
 
====Game summary====
The Bears traveled to [[Giants Stadium]] to face the [[New York Giants]]. The game was highly anticipated, as it was the first game in league history to benefit from the NFL’s [[NFL on television#Flexible-scheduling|flexible scheduling]]. Furthermore, leading up to the game Giants receiver [[Plaxico Burress]] provided plenty of fodder for the Chicago media by calling the Bears’ cornerbacks “beatable”. Nevertheless, the Bears went on to beat the Giants by a score of 38-20.
 
The Bears gave up some big gains on the Giants' opening drive but held the Giants to a 33-yard field goal attempt, which kicker [[Jay Feely]] missed. Two plays after the miss, the Giants pressured [[Rex Grossman]] into throwing an interception to [[Mathias Kiwanuka]], who returned the ball to the Bears one-yard line. [[Brandon Jacobs]] ran the ball in from there for the first touchdown of the game.
 
After the Bears' offense continued to struggle, cornerback [[Charles Tillman]] picked off [[Eli Manning]] while covering Burress. The interception led to a 49-yard [[Robbie Gould]] field goal. After several unsuccessful drives, the Bears stumbled again when [[Thomas Jones]] fumbled the ball over to the Giants. The Giants capitalized with a 46-yard field goal. After the Bears allowed a 39-yard punt return, Feely went on to kick another field goal, giving the Giants a comfortable 10-point lead.
 
On their next possession, in the final minutes of the first half, several penalties pushed the Bears’ to a 3rd-and-22 situation. On a game-changing play, Thomas Jones exploited the Giants' prevent defense by taking a draw handoff 26 yards, the longest 3rd down conversion on a run since 1999. The drive was topped off by a Grossman touchdown pass to [[Mark Bradley]]. At halftime, the Giants led 13-10.
 
The Bears started the third quarter with a quick drive down the field which culminated in another turnover. [[Muhsin Muhammad]] fumbled on the Giants' two-yard line, preventing the Bears from scoring their second touchdown, but giving the Giants horrible field position. The Giants were forced to punt from their own one-yard line. After regaining possession, Grossman engineered another scoring drive, culminating in a 10-yard touchdown pass to Muhammad. With momentum going the Bears' way, and after an earlier season-ending injury to the Giants' starting left tackle, Bears defensive end [[Alex Brown]] beat backup tackle [[Bob Whitfield]] and sacked Eli Manning, forcing a fumble which was recovered by [[Adewale Ogunleye]]. The Bears used the turnover to set up a Grossman to [[Desmond Clark]] touchdown pass, extending the Bears' lead to 24-13.
 
The Giants were on the verge of creating a fourth quarter comeback after Barber and Jacobs combined with effective running on a Giants' touchdown drive. However, The Bears defense prevented the Giants from scoring another touchdown. Feely attempted 51-yard field goal, but the kick fell short. [[Devin Hester]] caught the ball in the endzone, hesitated as if taking a knee, but instead ran the ball 108 yards for a touchdown. “The Windy City Flyer” tied teammate [[Nathan Vasher]]‘s record for the longest play in NFL history (also on a missed field goal return on November 13, 2005).
 
The Bears sealed their victory after Chris Harris picked off Eli Manning on the Giants' next possession. The interception set up another Thomas Jones touchdown. Grossman threw for 246 yards and three touchdowns, making up for the costly early interception. Tiki Barber recorded 141 yards, but injured his thumb during the game and was only sporadically effective. Muhsin Muhammad and Thomas Jones each amassed over 100 yards receiving and rushing, respectively, while the Bears put up a total of 341 offensive yards. The win over the Giants allowed the Bears to temporarily hold their first place ranking in the [[National Football Conference]].
 
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - NYG - 9:55 - [[Brandon Jacobs]] 1 yd TD run ([[Jay Feely]] kick) (NYG 7-0)
 
Q1 - CHI - 5:59 - [[Robbie Gould]] 49 yd FG (NYG 7-3)
 
Q2 - NYG - 13:25 - Jay Feely 46 yd FG (NYG 10-3)
 
Q2 - NYG - 2:21 - Jay Feely 40 yd FG (NYG 13-3)
 
Q2 - CHI - 0:35 - 29 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Mark Bradley]] (Gould kick) (NYG 13-10)
 
Q3 - CHI - 8:20 - 10 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] (Gould kick) (CHI 17-13)
 
Q3 - CHI - 5:35 - 2 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Desmond Clark]] (Gould kick) (CHI 24-13)
 
Q3 - NYG - 3:26 - Brandon Jacobs 8 yd TD run (Feely kick) (CHI 24-20)
 
Q4 - CHI - 11:49 - [[Devin Hester]] 108 yd missed FG return TD (Gould kick) (CHI 31-20)
 
Q4 - CHI - 8:20 - [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] 2 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 38-20)
 
===Week 11: at New York Jets===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Bears'''
|R1=0 ||R2=0 ||R3=3 ||R4=7 ||RT=10
|Home=Jets
|H1=0 ||H2=0 ||H3=0 ||H4=0 ||HT=0
}}
''at [[Giants Stadium]], [[East Rutherford, New Jersey]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 47 [[Fahrenheit|°F]] (overcast)
*'''TV announcers ([[NFL on FOX|FOX]]):''' [[Joe Buck]] (play-by-play), [[Troy Aikman]] (color commentator), and [[Pam Oliver]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 77,632
*'''Referee:''' [[Gene Steratore]]
 
====Game summary====
During week eleven, the Chicago Bears returned to [[Giants Stadium]] to play the [[New York Jets]]. While the Bears managed to record their second shut-out win of the year, their offense struggled throughout the first half the game, and managed only ten points in the second half.
 
The first half of the game consisted of unsuccessful drives by both teams. After several running plays by [[Leon Washington]] and [[Cedric Houston]] gave the Jets a scoring opportunity in the Bears’ red zone, quarterback [[Chad Pennington]] threw an interception to [[Brian Urlacher]]. The Bears could not capitalize on the turnover, and ended up punting the football away.
 
The Bears got their biggest break during the second quarter. After two penalties and a sack pushed the Bears to a 3rd and long, [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] broke a 17-yard run. However, the referees on the field ruled that he had fumbled the ball. Upon further review, it was determined that Jones was downed by contact before fumbling the ball, allowing Chicago to punt the ball on forth down. Neither team managed to put any points on the board before the half ended.
 
The Jets opened the second half by attempting an [[onside kick]]. The move did not fool the Bears, and [[Chris Harris (football player)|Chris Harris]] recovered inside Jets territory. The Bears used the change in momentum to set up a 20-yard [[Robbie Gould]] field goal. After returning possession, Bears' cornerback [[Nathan Vasher]] intercepted Pennington. But once again, the Bears could not turn the turnover into points.
 
The Bears eventually managed to score the game's lone touchdown after [[Rex Grossman]], facing a safety blitz, threw a short pass to [[Mark Bradley]] which the speedy receiver turned into a 54-yard touchdown. The Bears picked up their ninth victory of the season, and tied the [[Indianapolis Colts]] for the NFL's best record following their loss to the [[Dallas Cowboys]]. Thomas Jones rushed for 121 yards, while Grossman threw for 119 yards and one touchdown. The victory over the Jets marked the first time in two games that the Bears did not turn over the ball.
 
====Scoring summary====
 
Q3 - CHI - 10:39 - [[Robbie Gould]] 20 yd FG (CHI 3-0)
 
Q4 - CHI - 14:50 - 57 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Mark Bradley]] (Gould kick) (CHI 10-0)
 
===Week 12: at New England Patriots===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Bears
|R1=0||R2=3||R3=0||R4=10||RT=13
|Home='''Patriots'''
|H1=0||H2=10||H3=0||H4=7||HT=17
}}
''at [[Gillette Stadium]], [[Foxborough, Massachusetts]]''
*'''Game time:''' 4:15 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/3:15 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 56 °[[Fahrenheit|F]] (clear)
*'''TV announcers ([[NFL on FOX|FOX]]):''' [[Joe Buck]] (play-by-play), [[Troy Aikman]] (color commentator), and [[Pam Oliver]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 68,756
*'''Referee:''' [[Walt Coleman]]
 
[[Bryan Trottier]], who was an assistant coach when the Avalanche won their second Stanley Cup in 2001, was inducted to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1997 (as a player).<ref>{{cite web |title =Legends of Hockey - Trottier, Bryan|url =http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p199702&type=Player&page=bio&list=ByTeam&team=Colorado%20Avalanche#photo|publisher =[[Hockey Hall of Fame]]|accessdate =2007-05-11}}</ref>
====Game summary====
Following two consecutive wins at [[Giants Stadium]], the Bears were eager to finish their three game road trip at [[Gillette Stadium]] against the [[New England Patriots]]. Similar to the week ten confrontation with the [[Miami Dolphins]], turnovers were the main story in the Bears’ 17-13 loss against the Patriots.
 
==Leaders==
The Bears established a firm defensive performance after [[Charles Tillman]] intercepted a ball knocked loose from Patriots tight end [[Benjamin Watson]]. The Bears’ offense failed to capitalize on the interception, and turned to [[Robbie Gould]] to kick a 40-yard field goal. However, a false start prior to the kick pushed the Bears’ back to the 45-yard line. [[Richard Seymour]] then blocked the Gould attempt, ending Gould's streak at 26 consecutive field goals. Then, [[Rex Grossman]] and [[Olin Kreutz]] had a miscue, which resulted in a botched snap within the Patriots’ ten-yard line, resulting in a turnover. The Patriots' next drive resulted in running back [[Laurence Maroney]] scoring a touchdown. The Bears could only respond with a 46-yard Gould field goal. Then, after an exchange of punts, Patriots kicker [[Stephen Gostkowski]] kicked a 52-yard field goal at the end of the first half. The Patriots led 10-3 at halftime.
{{h3|Team captains}}
{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#b0c4de; width:20em;" cellspacing="5"
''Note: This list of team [[Captain (hockey)|captains]] does not include captains from the [[Quebec Nordiques]] ([[WHA]] & [[NHL]]).''
| style="text-align: left;" | "Brian said, ‘You made me look bad.’ I said, ‘You make my whole team look bad’. "
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
|-
!rowspan="1"|
| style="text-align: right;" | ~'''''[[Tom Brady]]''''' [http://www.dailyherald.com/sports/rozner.asp?id=253994]
!rowspan="1"|Nat
!rowspan="1"|From
!rowspan="1"|To
!colspan="1"|Notes
|-
|align=left|[[Joe Sakic]]
|{{flagicon|Canada}}
|align=left|1995
|align=left|present
|
|-
|align=left|[[Sylvain Lefebvre]]
|{{flagicon|Canada}}
|align=left|1997
|align=left|1998
|Interim
|}
 
{{h3|General Managers}}
 
''Note: This list does not include general managers from the [[Quebec Nordiques]] ([[WHA]] & [[NHL]]).''
The Bears finally began to gain momentum after [[Danieal Manning]] recovered a Patriots’ fumble. [[Rex Grossman]] then threw an interception to Samuel, which was followed immediately by a Patriots' turnover as Tillman picked off a tipped [[Tom Brady]] pass. The Bears then proceeded to tie the game at 10-10 after [[Cedric Benson]] rushed for a two-yard touchdown. The Patriots responded with a long drive ending in a Brady touchdown pass to [[Benjamin Watson]].
 
After the Bears chose to kick a field goal with 3:31 remaining, the Patriots drove down the field, bleeding the clock with a 17-13 lead. With victory almost in their grasp, safety Daniael Manning forced Patriots running back [[Corey Dillon]] to fumble the football deep within the Bears’ territory. On the next play, with 1:52 remaining, Grossman attempted to throw a deep pass to [[Rashied Davis]] in single coverage, but [[Asante Samuel]] intercepted the pass. Although the Bears lost the game, [[Bernard Berrian]] amassed over one hundred receiving yards, while [[Thomas Jones]] and Benson combined to rush for over 150 yards. Despite the absence of [[Ricky Manning Jr.]], who received a suspension from the NFL, the Bears’ secondary recorded two interceptions, and picked up one fumble. The defense forced five turnovers overall.
 
====Scoring summary====
 
Q2 - NE - 9:07 - [[Laurence Maroney]] 1 yd TD run ([[Stephen Gostkowski]] kick) (NE 7-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 4:04 - [[Robbie Gould]] 46 yd FG (NE 7-3)
 
Q2 - NE - 0:01 - Stephen Gostkowski 52 yd FG (NE 10-3)
 
Q4 - CHI - 14:53 - [[Cedric Benson]] 2 yd TD run (Gould kick) (Tied 10-10)
 
Q4 - NE - 8:22 - 2 yd TD pass from [[Tom Brady]] to [[Benjamin Watson]] (Gostkowski kick) (NE 17-10)
 
Q4 - CHI - 3:31 - Robbie Gould 32 yd FG (NE 17-13)
 
===Week 13: vs. Minnesota Vikings===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Vikings
|R1=0||R2=3||R3=3||R4=7||RT=13
|Home='''Bears'''
|H1=0||H2=7||H3=14||H4=2||HT=23
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 18 °[[Fahrenheit|F]] (sunny)
*'''TV announcers ([[Fox Sports|FOX]]):''' [[Dick Stockton]] (play-by-play), [[Daryl Johnston]] (color commentator), and [[Tony Siragusa]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,221
*'''Referee:''' [[Tony Corrente]]
 
====Game summary====
After the loss to New England, the Bears returned to [[Soldier Field]] to play the [[Minnesota Vikings]]. The weather conditions were brutal throughout the game; the below-freezing temperatures and swirling winds provided almost a clichéd background for a rivalry game in the black and blue division. Despite another poor offensive performance, the Bears managed to defeat the Vikings 23-13 to secure their second consecutive NFC North Championship.
 
The Bears started the game on a bad note, as [[Rashied Davis]] fumbled on the opening kickoff return. The Bears defense prevented the Vikings from scoring and forced a punt. The Bears failed to move the ball, and punted the ball back to the Vikings. Then, Bears defensive back [[Danieal Manning]] intercepted Vikings quarterback [[Brad Johnson (American football)|Brad Johnson]], but on the ensuing possession, Vikes linebacker [[Napoleon Harris]] intercepted Bears quarterback [[Rex Grossman]]. Following two more stalled drives, Grossman threw another interception on a deep pass attempt to wide receiver [[Bernard Berrian]].
 
Fortunately for the Bears, the Vikings failed to capitalize on the ensuing possession and were forced to punt to [[Devin Hester]]. The Windy City Flyer picked up the bouncing punt, dodged several tackles, and beat Vikings punter [[Chris Kluwe]] for a 45-yard touchdown return. The return tied Hester for the all-time team record for return touchdowns scored in a season. The Vikings could only respond by kicking two field goals, while Grossman and Johnson exchanged interceptions.
 
The Bears finally began to pick up momentum in the third quarter when [[Ricky Manning, Jr.]] picked off Johnson and and returned the ball for a 54-yard touchdown. Then, on the next play from scrimmage, [[Brian Urlacher]] intercepted Johnson, which allowed [[Cedric Benson]] to rush for a 24-yard touchdown. Vikings head coach [[Brad Childress]] benched Johnson in favor of [[Brooks Bollinger]]. However, the Vikings began to break apart when running back [[Ciatrick Fason]] was drilled in the endzone for a safety. Not even a late touchdown and on side kick recover could fire up the Vikings, as Bollinger was injured during the fourth quarter. Childress choose to play rookie quarterback [[Tarvaris Jackson]], who sealed his team's fate when he fumbled on the team's final possession.
 
With their tenth win of the season, the Bears secured their second consecutive NFC North Title. Additionally, the Bears became the first team in the NFL to clinch a playoff berth, and tied themselves for the best record in the NFL. Spoiling any celebrations, however, Grossman's poor performance (a 1.3 QB rating) earned him a hail of taunts and jeers from Bears fans at Soldier Field. Also, [[Tommie Harris]] and [[Nathan Vasher]] left the game with knee and hamstring injuries, respectively.
 
====Scoring summary====
 
Q2 - CHI - 12:20 - [[Devin Hester]] 45 yd punt return TD ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-0)
 
Q2 - MIN - 8:54 - [[Ryan Longwell]] 23 yd FG (CHI 7-3)
 
Q3 - MIN - 10:07 - Ryan Longwell 30 yd FG (CHI 7-6)
 
Q3 - CHI - 4:33 - [[Ricky Manning, Jr.]] 54 yd interception return TD (Gould kick) (CHI 14-6)
 
Q3 - CHI - 3:04 - [[Cedric Benson]] 24 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 21-6)
 
Q4 - CHI - 13:59 - Safety, [[Ciatrick Fason]] tackled in [[end zone]] by [[Tank Johnson]] (23-6)
 
Q4 - MIN - 5:40 - Ciatrick Fason 4 yd TD run (Longwell kick) (CHI 23-13)
 
===Week 14: at St. Louis Rams===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Bears'''
|R1=0 ||R2=14 ||R3=14 ||R4=14 ||RT=42
|Home=Rams
|H1=0 ||H2=13 ||H3=0 ||H4=14 ||HT=27
}}
 
''at [[Edward Jones Dome]], [[St. Louis, Missouri]]''
*'''Game time:''' 8:30 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/7:30 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' Dome
*'''TV announcers ([[Monday Night Football|ESPN]]):''' [[Mike Tirico]] (play-by-play), [[Tony Kornheiser]] (color commentator), and [[Joe Theismann]] (color commentator)
*'''Game attendance:''' 66,234
*'''Referee:''' [[Jeff Triplette]]
 
====Game summary====
Eight days and three hundred miles later, the Bears traveled to [[St. Louis, Missouri]] to play the [[St. Louis Rams]]. Prior to the game, a quarterback controversy arose between [[Rex Grossman]] and [[Brian Griese]] regarding the Bears’ starting quarterback position. Grossman, who finished the preceding game with a quarterback rating of 1.3, was eager to make a statement, and rebound against the same team which injured him during last year's preseason. Grossman rose to the occasion, and spearheaded the Bears to a 42-27 victory over the Rams, while rookie CB [[Devin Hester]] had a record-breaking performance. Also, many spectators of the [[Monday Night Football]] game may remember Senator [[Barack Obama]]'s humorous introduction prior to the game's start.
 
The first quarter went scoreless, as it was beginning to look like a defensive struggle throughout the game. That tide quickly turned early in the second quarter, as the Rams jumped out in front on a short touchdown pass from quarterback [[Marc Bulger]] to wide receiver [[Torry Holt]]. The Rams botched the snap on the extra point attempt, and led 6-0. Hester then returned the ensuing kickoff 94 yards for the Bears first score. The Rams marched back downfield on the Bears defense and scored again, this time on a 2-yard plunge by running back [[Steven Jackson]]. Bears quarterback [[Rex Grossman]] silenced his critics, and bounced back from two poor performances. He threw his first touchdown pass to wideout [[Bernard Berrian]] shortly before halftime. The Rams had a chance to take the halftime lead, but kicker [[Jeff Wilkins]] missed a field goal, and the Bears led 14-13 at the break.
 
The Bears went on to score 21 points to open the second half, with rushing touchdowns by running back [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] and running back [[Adrian Peterson (Chicago Bears)|Adrian Peterson]], and another Grossman touchdown to wide receiver [[Muhsin Muhammad]]. The Rams finally got back on the board midway through the fourth quarter, when Bulger and Holt connected on another short touchdown pass. But history repeated itself, as Hester responded on the ensuing kickoff again with a 96-yard touchdown return. The Rams completed the scoring with Bulger throwing his third touchdown to Jackson, but it was too late.
 
The Bears' finally secured their victory after cornerback [[Charles Tillman]] intercepted Bulger. Hester broke the NFL record for combined return touchdowns in a single season with six returns. He also became the sixth player in NFL history to return two kicks in a single game. For his performance, he earned the [[National Football Conference|NFC]] Special Teams Player of the Week Award. On a low note, kicker [[Robbie Gould]] uncharacteristically missed two field goal attempts, and the Bears announced that defensive tackle [[Tommie Harris]] would miss the remainder of the season with a severe hamstring injury.
 
====Scoring summary====
Q2 - STL - 12:45 - 1 yd TD pass from [[Marc Bulger]] to [[Torry Holt]] (bad snap on PAT attempt) (STL 6-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 12:32 - [[Devin Hester]] 94 yd kickoff return TD ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-6)
 
Q2 - STL - 7:43 - [[Steven Jackson]] 2 yd TD run ([[Jeff Wilkins]] kick) (STL 13-7)
 
Q2 - CHI - 3:30 - 34 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] (Gould kick) (CHI 14-13)
 
Q3 - CHI - 8:40 - [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] 30 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 21-13)
 
Q3 - CHI - 3:31 - 14 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] (Gould kick) (CHI 28-13)
 
Q4 - CHI - 13:04 - [[Adrian Peterson (Chicago Bears)|Adrian Peterson]] 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 35-13)
 
Q4 - STL - 7:35 - 6 yd TD pass from Marc Bulger to Torry Holt (Wilkins kick) (CHI 35-20)
 
Q4 - CHI - 7:22 - Devin Hester 96 yd kickoff return TD (Gould kick) (CHI 42-20)
 
Q4 - STL - 4:41 - 6 yd TD pass from Marc Bulger to Steven Jackson (Wilkins kick) (CHI 42-27)
 
===Week 15: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Buccaneers
|R1=0 ||R2=3 ||R3=7 ||R4=21 ||R5=0 ||RT=31
|Home='''Bears'''
|H1=7 ||H2=14 ||H3=3 ||H4=7 ||H5=3 ||HT=34
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 49° [[Fahrenheit|F]] (partly sunny)
*'''TV announcers ([[Fox Sports|FOX]]):''' [[Dick Stockton]] (play-by-play), [[Daryl Johnston]] (color commentator), and [[Tony Siragusa]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,260
*'''Referee:''' [[Larry Nemmers]]
 
====Game summary====
The Bears improved to 12-2 and secured home field advantage throughout the [[National Football Conference|NFC playoffs]] with a thrilling overtime victory over their former division rival [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]]. The Bears entered the game without [[Pro Bowl]]ers [[Mike Brown]], [[Nathan Vasher]] and [[Tommie Harris]]. Additionally, [[Lovie Smith]] deactivated defensive tackle [[Tank Johnson]] due to [[Tank Johnson#Legal Problems|Tank's legal problems]].
 
The Bears took the lead midway through the first quarter when [[Rex Grossman]] connected with [[Desmond Clark]] on a 24 yard touchdown pass. The Bucs responded on a 45 yard [[Matt Bryant]] field goal in the second quarter. The Bears scored two more touchdowns before the half ended by [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] and Clark again. They went into halftime with a 21-3 lead.
 
The Bears opened the second half scoring with a 38 yard field goal by [[Robbie Gould]]. Bucs quarterback [[Bruce Gradkowski]] was ineffective and benched in favor of [[Tim Rattay]]. Rattay lead the Bucs to their first touchdown since Thanksgiving, a 14 yard run by [[Mike Alstott]] with seconds left in the third quarter. On the ensuing kickoff, the Bears' dangerous return man [[Devin Hester]] fumbled the kickoff, and set the Bucs up nicely deep in Bears' territory. Rattay capitalized with a touchdown pass to tight end [[Alex Smith (tight end)|Alex Smith]]. That reduced the deficit to seven points. The Bears seemingly put the game away when scoring on a four yard touchdown run by [[Cedric Benson]]. However, Rattay and the Bucs were not finished, as he threw two long touchdown passes to [[Joey Galloway]] and [[Ike Hilliard]] to tie the game before the end of regulation to send the game into overtime.
 
The Bucs won the overtime coin toss and elected to receive, but Smith fumbled on the Bucs opening drive of overtime, and the Bears recovered. The Bears marched downfield, and Gould attempted to win the game on a 37 yard field goal attempt. He missed it wide left, and the score remained tied. The teams each had two more possessions, and on the Bears' final drive, Grossman hit [[Rashied Davis]] on a key 28 yard pass to set up the game winning field goal by Gould. Grossman finished the game with a career-high 339 yards passing.
 
The Bears win, coupled with a loss earlier in the day by the [[New Orleans Saints]], gave them homefield advantage throughout the playoffs. Also, Grossman threw a career high two touchdowns for 339 yards, while Desmond Clark caught two touchdowns for 125 yards. Grossman became the first Bear to throw for over 300 since [[Jim Miller]] in 2002. For his performance, he was named [[National Football Conference|NFC]] Offensive Player of the Week.
 
====Scoring summary====
 
Q1 - CHI - 7:42 - 24 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Desmond Clark]] ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-0)
 
Q2 - TB - 8:19 - [[Matt Bryant]] 45 yd FG (CHI 7-3)
 
Q2 - CHI - 3:58 - [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] 5 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 14-3)
 
Q2 - CHI - 0:23 - 12 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Desmond Clark (Gould kick) (CHI 21-3)
 
Q3 - CHI - 5:22 - Robbie Gould 38 yd FG (CHI 24-3)
 
Q3 - TB - 0:23 - [[Mike Alstott]] 14 yd TD run (Bryant kick) (CHI 24-10)
 
Q4 - TB - 14:13 - 9 yd TD pass from [[Tim Rattay]] to [[Alex Smith (tight end)|Alex Smith]] (Bryant kick) (CHI 24-17)
 
Q4 - CHI - 9:23 - [[Cedric Benson]] 4 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 31-17)
 
Q4 - TB - 6:13 - 64 yd TD pass from Tim Rattay to [[Joey Galloway]] (Bryant kick) (CHI 31-24)
 
Q4 - TB - 3:44 - 44 yd TD pass from Tim Rattay to [[Ike Hilliard]] (Bryant kick) (31-31)
 
OT - CHI - 3:37 - Robbie Gould 25 yd FG (CHI 34-31)
 
===Week 16: at Detroit Lions===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Bears'''
|R1=3 ||R2=14 ||R3=0 ||R4=9 ||RT=26
|Home=Lions
|H1=7 ||H2=0 ||H3=14 ||H4=0||HT=21
}}
''at [[Ford Field]], [[Detroit, Michigan]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' Dome
*'''TV announcers ([[Fox Sports|FOX]]):''' [[Sam Rosen]] (play-by-play), [[Tim Ryan]] (color commentator), and Jay Glazer (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 60,665
*'''Referee:''' [[Terry McAulay]]
 
====Game summary====
The Bears traveled to [[Detroit, Michigan]] in hopes of another victory over the [[Detroit Lions]] on [[Christmas Eve]]. However, the game was seemingly meaningless, as the Bears’ had already clinched the NFC’s top playoff seed in the previous week. Therefore, the Bears’ experimented with different defensive and offensive plans en route to a thrilling victory over the Lions.
 
The Bears started the game by initiating a balanced attack, which was capped off by a [[Robbie Gould]] field goal. Two drives later, the Lions responded by a [[John Kitna]] to [[Dan Campbell]] touchdown pass. However, the Bears struck back through a 13-yard [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] touchdown pass. Later, [[Adrian Peterson (Chicago Bears)|Adrian Peterson]] ended the half by rushing for two-yard touchdown.
 
The Lions opened the second half quite strongly; John Kitna threw two touchdowns to [[Mike Furrey]] and [[Roy Williams (wide receiver)|Roy Williams]], allowing the Lions to establish a 21-17 lead over the Bears. The Bears chipped away at the lead by recording a 36-yard field goal. With the game still within the Bears’ reach, [[Lovie Smith]] opted to substitute [[Brian Griese]] in place of Grossman. Griese managed to move the ball with relative ease, allowing the Bears to set up a 39-yard field goal. Later, Bears’ defensive end [[Mark Anderson]] drilled Kitna at Detroit’s 37 yard line, resulting in a fumble that was recovered by [[Adewale Ogunleye]]. The fumble allowed Gould to kick a 44-yard field goal.
 
Kitna and Lions attempted to engineer a last second touchdown drive, but their hopes were grounded after [[Mike Williams (wide receiver)|Mike Williams]] failed to catch a pass in the end zone during the game’s dying seconds. The Bears’ last minute heroics allowed them sweep the Lions for the second consecutive year, and earn a 13-2 record.
 
====Scoring summary====
 
Q1 - CHI - 8:38 - [[Robbie Gould]] 36 yd FG (CHI 3-0)
 
Q1 - DET - 2:32 - 23 yd TD pass from [[Jon Kitna]] to [[Dan Campbell]] ([[Jason Hanson]] kick) (DET 7-3)
 
Q2 - CHI - 14:05 - 13 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] (Gould kick) (CHI 10-7)
 
Q2 - CHI - 0:26 - [[Adrian Peterson (Chicago Bears)|Adrian Peterson]] 2 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 17-7)
 
Q3 - DET - 10:53 - 20 yd TD pass from Jon Kitna to [[Mike Furrey]] (Hanson kick) (CHI 17-14)
 
Q3 - DET - 4:27 - 2 yd TD pass from Jon Kitna to [[Roy Williams (wide receiver)|Roy Williams]] (Hanson kick) (DET 21-17)
 
Q4 - CHI - 12:21 - Robbie Gould 36 yd FG (DET 21-20)
 
Q4 - CHI - 5:13 - Robbie Gould 39 yd FG (CHI 23-21)
 
Q4 - CHI - 2:50 - Robbie Gould 44 yd FG (CHI 26-21)
 
===Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Packers'''
|R1=13||R2=10||R3=0||R4=3||RT=26
|Home=Bears
|H1=0||H2=0||H3=7||H4=0||HT=7
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 8:15 p.m. [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/7:15 p.m. [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 50° [[Fahrenheit|F]] (cloudy)
*'''TV announcers ([[NBC Sunday Night Football|NBC]]):''' [[Al Michaels]] (play-by-play), [[John Madden (football)|John Madden]] (color commentator), and [[Andrea Kremer]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,287
*'''Referee:''' [[Bill Vinovich]]
 
====Game summary====
After their road victory against the [[Detroit Lions]], the Bears returned home to finish their season against their archenemy, the [[Green Bay Packers]]. On [[December 24]], the NFL announced that they would move to game to a primetime slot, making it the final game of the 2006 regular season.
 
The Bears struggled to contain Packers' quarterback [[Brett Favre]] during the game’s opening quarter, allowing him to throw for a touchdown and over 100 yards. The Packers’ lead was extended when two of [[Rex Grossman]]’s passes were intercepted and returned for touchdowns. Even with the miscues and the crowd enthusiastically booing, Grossman, as planned, was not pulled in the first half. As expected, [[Lovie Smith]] started [[Brian Griese]] in the 2nd half, and he took the helm of the Bears offense for the remainder of the game.
 
Despite struggling to gain any momentum whatsoever, punter [[Brad Maynard]] threw a 37-yard pass to [[Adrian Peterson]] off a fake punt. The attempt was in vain, however, as Griese threw an interception only plays later. Griese’s only highlight came in towards the end of the third quarter, when he threw a 75-yard touchdown pass to [[Mark Bradley]]. Favre, in contrast, threw two touchdowns and one interception for 285 yards. [[Cedric Benson]] proved to be the Bears' only offensive threat, by rushing for 109 yards on 13 attempts.
 
The Bears lost their second consecutive season finale. Favre appeared at the end of the game, and gave a tearful interview with a NBC Sports correspondent, where he admitted his future as professional was still questionable. Additionally, Grossman’s four turnovers, zero [[passer rating]], and press conference comments (where he admitted to being underprepared) drew criticism both from fans and the media as the Bears' regular season came to an end.
 
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - GB - 9:31 - 9 yd TD pass from [[Brett Favre]] to [[Donald Driver]] ([[Dave Rayner]] kick) (GB 7-0)
 
Q1 - GB - 0:50 - [[Nick Collins]] 55 yd interception return TD (kick failed) (GB 13-0)
 
Q2 - GB - 2:54 - Dave Rayner 25 yd FG (GB 16-0)
 
Q2 - GB - 0:34 - [[Patrick Dendy]] 30 yd interception return TD (Rayner kick) (GB 23-0)
 
Q3 - CHI - 0:34 - 75 yd TD pass from [[Brian Griese]] to [[Mark Bradley]] ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (GB 23-7)
 
Q4 - GB - 10:39 - Dave Rayner 46 yd FG (GB 26-7)
 
==Post Season==
{{main|NFL playoffs, 2006-07}}
The Bears clinched a [[Active NFL playoff appearance streaks|playoff berth]] after defeating the [[Minnesota Vikings]] during week thirteen. They obtained a first round bye the following week, and later secured the [[NFC]]'s first playoff seed. This ensured the Bears home field advantage for the NFC's Divisional and Conference games.
 
===Post Season schedule===
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Round || Date || Opponent || Result || Game site || TV
!rowspan="1"|
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
!rowspan="1"|Nat
|align="center"|NFC Divisional || [[January 14]], [[2007]] || [[Seattle Seahawks]]|| '''W''' 27&ndash;24 || [[Soldier Field]] ||[[Fox Sports|FOX]]
!rowspan="1"|From
|-style="background: #ddffdd;"
!rowspan="1"|To
|align="center"|NFC Championship || [[January 21]], [[2007]] || [[New Orleans Saints]]|| '''W''' 39&ndash;14 || [[Soldier Field]] ||[[Fox Sports|FOX]]
|-
|-style="background: #ffdddd;"
|[[Pierre Lacroix]]
|align="center"|[[Super Bowl XLI]]|| [[February 4]], [[2007]] ||[[Indianapolis Colts]]||'''L''' 17&ndash;29 || [[Dolphins Stadium]] ||[[CBS Sports|CBS]]
|{{flagicon|Canada}}
|1995
|2006
|-
|[[François Giguère|Francois Giguere]]
|{{flagicon|Canada}}
|2006
|present
|}
 
{{h3|Head coaches}}
===NFC Divisional playoff: vs [[2006 Seattle Seahawks season|Seattle Seahawks]]===
''Note: This list does not include head coaches from the [[Quebec Nordiques]] ([[WHA]] & [[NHL]]).''
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Seahawks
|R1=0||R2=14||R3=10||R4=0|||R5=0||RT=24
|Home='''Bears'''
|H1=7||H2=14||H3=0||H4=3||H5=3||HT=27
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 1:00 PM [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/12:00 PM [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 32[[Fahrenheit|°F]] (Cloudy)
*'''TV announcers ([[NFL on FOX|FOX]]):''' [[Joe Buck]] (play-by-play), [[Troy Aikman]] (color commentator), [[Pam Oliver]] (field reporter), and [[Chris Myers]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 62,184
*'''Referee:''' [[Gerry Austin]]
 
<small>Records as of April 9, 2007.</small><ref name="hockeydb"/>
====Game summary====
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
The Bears advanced to the NFC Championship game by defeating the [[Seattle Seahawks]] on January 14, 2007. In a hard-fought battle, the Bears had to rely on all “four phases” of the game to win 27-24 in overtime.
|-
!rowspan="2"|
!rowspan="2"|Nat
!rowspan="2"|From
!rowspan="2"|To
!colspan="7"|Regular Season
!colspan="4"|Playoffs
|-
!G!!W!!L!!T!!OTL!!SOL!!Pct!!G!!W!!L!!Pct
|-
|align=left|[[Marc Crawford]]
|{{flagicon|Canada}}
|align=left|[[1995-96 NHL season|1995]]
|align=left|[[1997-98 NHL season|1998]]
||246||135||75||36||—||—||.622||46||29||17||.630
|-
|align=left|[[Bob Hartley]]
|{{flagicon|Canada}}
|align=left|[[1998-99 NHL season|1998]]
|align=left|[[2002-03 NHL season|2002]]
||359||193||108||48||10||—||.618||80||49||31||.613
|-
|align=left|[[Tony Granato]]
|{{flagicon|USA}}
|align=left|[[2002-03 NHL season|2002]]
|align=left|[[2003-04 NHL season|2004]]
||133||72||33||17||11||—||.647||18||9||9||.500
|-
|align=left|[[Joel Quenneville]]
|{{flagicon|Canada}}
|align=left|[[2005-06 NHL season|2005]]
|align=left|present
||164||87||61||—||6||10||.579||9||4||5||.444
|}
 
==See also==
The Bears took the opening kickoff and started strongly with a 7-minute-plus scoring drive capped by a four-yard touchdown run by [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]]. The Seahawks responded later in the first quarter with a [[Matt Hasselbeck]] to [[Nate Burleson]] touchdown pass. Facing a tie game, [[Rex Grossman]] wasted no time responding; on the first subsequent play from scrimmage, Grossman threw a 68-yard touchdown pass (a career high) to [[Bernard Berrian]].
*[[List of Colorado Avalanche players]]
*[[Head Coaches of the Colorado Avalanche]]
*[[Quebec Nordiques]]
*[[List of NHL players]]
*[[List of NHL seasons]]
*[[List of Stanley Cup champions]]
 
==References==
After trading possessions with the Seahawks, Grossman fumbled late in the second quarter while attempting to break away from pass rushers. The turnover gave the Seahawks a short field, allowing [[Shaun Alexander]] to rush for a four-yard touchdown. On the next drive, the Bears scored another touchdown via a Thomas Jones run to end the half. The Seahawks got back into the game when Alexander scored on a 15-yard touchdown run. [[Josh Brown]] shortly followed that with a field goal, giving the Seahawks a 24-21 lead.
{{h4|General}}
<div class="references-small">
* {{cite web|url=http://hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/teamseasons.php?tid=690|title=Colorado Avalanche season statistics and records|publisher=The Internet Hockey Database|accessdate=2007-03-25}}
</div>
 
{{h4|Footnotes}}
The Bears nearly retook the lead on a long drive which ended the third quarter, but a botched catch by [[Muhsin Muhammad]] led to an interception. On the following play, Hasselbeck threw an interception to [[Ricky Manning, Jr.]] allowing the Bears to set up a [[Robbie Gould]] field goal. The Bears held the Seahawks from scoring and sent the game to overtime, where a Grossman to [[Rashied Davis]] pass set up a game winning 49-yard [[Robbie Gould]] field goal.
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
<references/></div>
 
==External links==
Grossman rebounded from his previous performance, throwing for 282 yards with one touchdown and interception. Jones and [[Cedric Benson]] rushed for a combined total of 111 yards, while Berrian and Davis put up 105 and 80 receiving yards, respectively. Ultimately, Gould’s last minute heroics enabled the Bears to win their first playoff game since 1994, and win their first divisional game since 1989. The Bears advanced to the NFC Championship game to play the [[New Orleans Saints]].
*[http://www.coloradoavalanche.com/ Official website of the Colorado Avalanche]
*[http://www.avalanchedb.com/index.htm Largest Colorado Avalanche Database]
 
{{start box}}
====Scoring summary====
{{succession box | before = [[New Jersey Devils]] | title = [[Stanley Cup]] Champions | years = [[1995-96 NHL season|1995-96]] | after = [[Detroit Red Wings]]}}
Q1 - CHI - 8:35 - [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] 9 yd TD run ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-0)
{{succession box | before = [[New Jersey Devils]] | title = [[Stanley Cup]] Champions | years = [[2000-01 NHL season|2000-01]] | after = [[Detroit Red Wings]]}}
{{end box}}
 
{{Colorado Avalanche}}
Q2 - SEA - 14:54 - 16 yd TD pass from [[Matt Hasselbeck]] to [[Nate Burleson]] ([[Josh Brown]] kick) (7-7)
{{NHL}}
{{Colorado Sports}}
 
[[Category:Colorado Avalanche| ]]
Q2 - CHI - 14:36 - 68 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] (Gould kick) (CHI 14-7)
[[Category:Quebec Nordiques]]
 
[[Category:Sports clubs established in 1995]]
Q2 - SEA - 2:29 - [[Shaun Alexander]] 4 yd TD run (Brown kick) (14-14)
 
Q2 - CHI - 0:48 - Thomas Jones 7 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 21-14)
 
Q3 - SEA - 9:56 - Josh Brown 40 yd FG (CHI 21-17)
 
Q3 - SEA - 4:57 - Shaun Alexander 13 yd TD run (Brown kick) (SEA 24-21)
 
Q4 - CHI - 4:24 - Robbie Gould 41 yd FG (24-24)
 
OT - CHI - 10:02 - Robbie Gould 49 yd FG (CHI 27-24)
 
===NFC Championship: vs [[2006 New Orleans Saints season|New Orleans Saints]]===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road=Saints
|R1=0||R2=7||R3=7||R4=0||RT=14
|Home='''Bears'''
|H1=3||H2=13||H3=2||H4=21||HT=39
}}
''at [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago, Illinois]]''
*'''Game time:''' 3:00 PM [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/2:00 PM [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 28[[Fahrenheit|°F]] (Cloudy, Snow)
*'''TV announcers ([[NFL on FOX|FOX]]):''' [[Joe Buck]] (play-by-play), [[Troy Aikman]] (color commentator), [[Pam Oliver]] (field reporter), and [[Chris Myers]] (field reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 61,047
*'''Referee:''' [[Terry McAulay]]
 
====Game summary====
The Chicago Bears returned to [[Soldier Field ]] to play the second-seeded [[New Orleans Saints]] for the right to represent the [[National Football Conference|NFC]] in [[Super Bowl XLI]]. On a cold field with unsure footing, and eventually falling snow, the Bears defeated the Saints 39-14 to claim their first NFC Championship since the [[1985 Chicago Bears season|1985 Season]].
 
The Bears started the game by forcing three quick turnovers and establishing a fairly quick 9-0 lead, through three [[Robbie Gould]] field goals. After initally and repeatedly pounding the Saints' interior line with Cedric Benson, they went back to starter Thomas Jones, who carried the ball on every play of an 8-play, 69-yard drive, including a short touchdown run, to make the score 16-0. After holding the Saints at bay offensively for a majority of the first half, the Bears allowed the Saints to score a late touchdown through a 13-yard pass from Saints Quarterback [[Drew Brees]] to [[Marques Colston]] after [[Charles Tillman|Peanut Tillman]] initally stumbled on the play. Early in the third quarter, [[Reggie Bush]] scored on an 88-yard swing pass from Brees, cutting the lead to two points. Though the Bears were unable to move the ball during most of the third quarter, they were able to regain some momentum after the Saints’ kicker [[Billy Cundiff]] failed to convert a long field goal.
 
After the Bears were stopped again, punter [[Brad Maynard]] pinned the Saints at their own five yard line. The Bears applied tremendous pressure on Brees, forcing an [[intentional grounding]] penalty in the [[end zone]] for the safety, which became the game'smajor turning point. Two Bears' possessions later, Grossman finally got the passing game going, leading his team down the field on four straight completions. The last was a 33-yard pass to [[Bernard Berrian]], who made a spectacular falling catch for a touchdown. Later, [[Adewale Ogunleye]] forced and recovered a fumble after sacking Brees, which lead to a [[Cedric Benson]] touchdown. The Bears were not done yet; Jones scored another touchdown, and [[Nathan Vasher]] crushed any hopes of Saints comeback by intercepting one of Brees' final passes.
 
The Saints had more net offensive yards than the Bears, but four Saints turnovers, and none for the Bears, proved the difference. After the game, Bears’ owner Virginia McCaskey was presented the [[George Halas Trophy]], named after her late father, former Bears owner [[George Halas]]. With the win, [[Lovie Smith]] became the first African American coach to achieve a Super Bowl berth. In [[Super Bowl XLI]], The Bears would match up against the [[Indianapolis Colts]], and Smith would face his mentor, [[Tony Dungy]].
 
====Scoring summary====
Q1 - CHI - 0:41 - [[Robbie Gould]] 19 yd FG (CHI 3-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 13:40 - Robbie Gould 43 yd FG (CHI 6-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 8:52 - Robbie Gould 24 yd FG (CHI 9-0)
 
Q2 - CHI - 1:56 - [[Thomas Jones (football player)|Thomas Jones]] 2 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 16-0)
 
Q2 - NO - 0:46 - 13 yd TD pass from [[Drew Brees]] to [[Marques Colston]] ([[John Michael Carney|John Carney]] kick) (CHI 16-7)
 
Q3 - NO - 12:20 - 88 yd TD pass from Drew Brees to [[Reggie Bush]] (Carney kick) (CHI 16-14)
 
Q3 - CHI - 5:27 - [[Safety (football score)|Safety]], intentional grounding by Drew Brees in the [[end zone]] (CHI 18-14)
 
Q4 - CHI - 14:23 - 33 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Bernard Berrian]] (Gould kick) (CHI 25-14)
 
Q4 - CHI - 11:37 - [[Cedric Benson]] 12 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 32-14)
 
Q4 - CHI - 4:19 - Thomas Jones 15 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CHI 39-14)
 
===[[Super Bowl XLI]]: vs [[2006 Indianapolis Colts season|Indianapolis Colts]]===
{{Linescore Amfootball|
|Road='''Colts'''
|R1=6||R2=10||R3=6||R4=7||RT=29
|Home=Bears
|H1=14||H2=0||H3=3||H4=0||HT=17
}}
''at [[Dolphin Stadium]], [[Miami Gardens, Florida]]''
*'''Game time:''' 6:25 PM [[North American Eastern Standard Time Zone|EST]]/5:25 PM [[Central Standard Time Zone|CST]]
*'''Game weather:''' 67° F (19.6° C), Mostly Cloudy; Rain
*'''TV announcers ([[NFL on CBS|CBS]]):''' [[Jim Nantz]] (booth play-by-play), [[Phil Simms]] (booth color commentator), [[Solomon Wilcots]] (sideline reporter), [[Steve Tasker]] (sideline reporter), [[Lesley Visser]] (in-stadium reporter), and [[Sam Ryan]] (in-stadium reporter)
*'''Game attendance:''' 74,512
*'''Referee:''' [[Tony Corrente]]
 
====Game summary====
=====First half=====
[[image:Lions378498588 3df378a361.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The two lions outside of the [[Art Institute of Chicago]] are decorated to show support for the Bears]]
[[Super Bowl XLI]], the first Super Bowl to be played entirely in intemperate weather, saw the Bears take on the [[Indianapolis Colts]] at [[Dolphin Stadium]] in Miami. The Bears struck early, as [[Devin Hester]] returned the opening kickoff 92 yards for a touchdown. Again, things looked up for the bears when on the ensuing Colts possession, [[Peyton Manning]] was intercepted by [[Chris Harris]]; however, the Bears could only muster a three and out. The Colts then struck on a 53 yard touchdown pass from Manning to [[Reggie Wayne]], but a botched snap resulted in an unconverted point after touchdown.
 
Deciding not to kick deep to Hester again, the Colts squib kicked, and Bears backup [[Tight End]] Gabe Reid received the ball, and promptly fumbled it while being tackled. The Bears convalesced when on the ensuing snap, Manning aborted and fumbled a handoff as [[Alex Brown]] disrupted a play in the backfield. With momentum again on their side, the Bears handed off to [[Thomas Jones]] for a 52 yard run to the Colts 5, his longest run of the year. Chicago then raised its score to 14 as [[Rex Grossman]] passed to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] for a 4 yard touchdown. The Bears held Indianapolis to a three and out on the ensuing possession, but [[Cedric Benson]] fumbled after a [[Bob Sanders]] hit two plays into the Bears possesion. The teams then exchanged three and outs, with Benson leaving the game due to a knee injury. Indianapolis scored again on their first possession of the 2nd quarter, with an [[Adam Vinatieri]] 29 yard field goal.
 
After another Bears three and out, Manning and [[Dominic Rhodes]] marched the Colts down the field to take the lead 16-14, with Rhodes scoring on a 1 yard touchdown run. Again, the Bears went three and out. With almost 4 minutes left in the first half, the Colts began to march down the field in much the same way as their previous possession, but [[Charles Tillman|Peanut Tillman]] forced and recovered a Bryan Fletcher fumble. Chicago's offense then continued to struggle as Grossman fumbled the ensuing snap, [[Raheem Brock]] recovering. With :02 left in the half, Vinatieri uncharacteristically missed a 36 yard field goal.
 
=====Second half=====
The Colts again marched the ball down the field during their first possession of the second half, with a 13 play, 56 yard drive that resulted in a 24 yard Vinatieri field goal, increasing the Indianapolis lead to five. The Bears' offensive woes continued when after a few successful plays, Grossman was sacked. Then on the next play, Grossman fumbled his ''second'' snap of the game, recovering the ball himself but losing 10 yards. Dominic Rhodes again hurt the Bears with one 36 and two 8 yard runs on the ensuing drive. After a 6 play, 62 yard drive, Vinatieri lined up and converted another field goal, this time from 20 yards.
 
The Bears would respond on their last drive of the 3rd quarter with a [[Robbie Gould]] 44 yard field goal, making the score 22-17 in favor of Indianapolis. The Bears' defense held the Colts to 23 yards and no points on their next possession. After the Colts' punt resulted in a touchback, Thomas Jones opened the Bears' 4th quarter with a run of 12 yards, which was called back due to a holding penalty. Three plays later, Grossman threw an interception returned for a touchdown to [[Chicago]] native Kelvin Hayden. Grossman continued his struggles as the third pass on the ensuing drive, intended for [[Bernard Berrian]], was under-thrown and picked off by Sanders, with 9:55 left in the 4th quarter. With the scoreboard reading 29-17 in favor of the Colts, the two teams traded possessions until the clock expired. [[Tony Dungy]] became the first African American coach to win the Super Bowl, besting his friend Lovie Smith.
 
====Scoring summary====
 
Q1 - CHI - 14:46 - [[Devin Hester]] 92 yd kickoff return TD ([[Robbie Gould]] kick) (CHI 7-0)
 
Q1 - IND - 6:50 - 53 yd TD pass from [[Peyton Manning]] to [[Reggie Wayne]] (pat failed) (CHI 7-6)
 
Q1 - CHI - 4:34 - 4 yd TD pass from [[Rex Grossman]] to [[Muhsin Muhammad]] (Gould kick) (CHI 14-6)
 
Q2 - IND - 11:17 - [[Adam Vinatieri]] 29 yd FG (CHI 14-9)
 
Q2 - IND - 6:09 - [[Dominic Rhodes]] 1 yd TD run (Vinatieri kick) (IND 16-14)
 
Q3 - IND - 7:26 - Adam Vinatieri 24 yd FG (IND 19-14)
 
Q3 - IND - 3:16 - Adam Vinatieri 20 yd FG (IND 22-14)
 
Q3 - CHI - 1:14 - Robbie Gould 44 yd FG (IND 22-17)
 
Q4 - IND - 11:44 - [[Kelvin Hayden]] 56 yd interception return TD (Vinatieri kick) (IND 29-17)
 
==2007 Pro Bowl==
{{main|2007 Pro Bowl}}
Eight members of the Chicago Bears were selected to play in the [[2007 Pro Bowl]]. [[Olin Kreutz]], [[Tommie Harris]], [[Lance Briggs]], [[Brian Urlacher]], [[Robbie Gould]], [[Devin Hester]], and [[Brendon Ayanbadejo]] were selected by NFL fans through out the nation to represent the Bears. [http://www.chicagobears.com/news/NewsStory.asp?story_id=2825] The eight selections are the most from any team in the NFC. The Bears have not sent this many players to Honolulu since the 1986 [[Pro Bowl]], which succeeded the [[1985 NFL season]], when they sent nine. On January 25, Bears' left guard [[Ruben Brown]] was named to his ninth Pro Bowl, taking the spot of injured [[Shawn Andrews]] of the [[Philadelphia Eagles]].[http://www.chicagobears.com/news/NewsStory.asp?story_id=2980] However, Harris, Urlacher, Kreutz, and Briggs missed the Pro Bowl on the account of injuries.
 
== Epilogue ==
After a well-fought season, the Bears returned back to Chicago in hopes of replicating their success in the [[2007 NFL season]]. Though the [[2007 Chicago Bears season|2007 season]] holds a more challenging schedule the Bears will have to face many issues prior to September. [[Ian Scott]], [[Lance Briggs]], [[Ruben Brown]], and [[Alfonso Boone]] will become free agents pending a contract agreement with the Bears’ management. Additionally, the Bears may lose [[Lovie Smith]] and [[Ron Rivera]] on somewhat similar terms.[http://www.suntimes.com/sports/football/bears/243104,CST-SPT-bearnt05.article]
 
Nevertheless, the Bears’ 2006 season had many high points. While [[Rex Grossman]] struggled at times, he became one of the most productive Bears quarterbacks in Bears’ history in more than a decade. Thomas Jones also became the first Bears’ running back to rush for two consecutive 1,000-yard seasons since [[Neal Anderson]] in the early [[1990]]s. Rookie [[Devin Hester]] rewrote the history books with his record breaking returns and game changing performances.
 
==External links==
* [http://www.chicagobears.com/team/schedule.html 2006 Chicago Bears Schedule and Results]
* [http://www.chicagobears.com/team/stats.html Official Statistics]
* [http://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/chi2006.htm Pro Football Reference entry]
{{Chicago Bears seasons}}
 
[[be-x-old:Каларада Эвеланш]]
[[Category:2006 National Football League season by team|Chicago Bears]]
[[bg:Колорадо Авеланш]]
[[Category:Chicago Bears]]
[[cs:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[da:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[de:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[fr:Avalanche du Colorado]]
[[hr:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[lv:Kolorādo "Avalanche"]]
[[nl:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[ja:コロラド・アバランチ]]
[[no:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[pl:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[pt:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[ru:Колорадо Эвеланш]]
[[sk:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[sh:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[fi:Colorado Avalanche]]
[[sv:Colorado Avalanche]]