Some odd stuff happened over the weekend in Sportsball World, and personally, given that it's the holiday season, I think it's because someone slipped something funny in the celestial egg nog.
(I strongly suspect Buddy the Elf. You can't tell me syrup is one of the four food groups unless Buddy jazzed it up somehow.)
Anyway, it was a definite "Wait ... what?" sort of weekend. So let's review, shall we?
* The Bears beat the Packers in overtime, which was bizarre enough, but they walked it off on a perfect Caleb Williams deep ball to DJ Moore from 47 yards away. Best throw of the NFL season, and it came from a guy who supposedly doesn't have the deep ball in his toolbox.
Also, it was the sixth W the Bears have put up this season after trailing with fewer than two minutes to play. This time a Carlos Santo field goal with 1:59 left in regulation and Williams' off-balance throw to Jahdae Walker with 24 seconds left erased a 10-point deficit and forced overtime.
Some weird stuff goin' on in Chi.
* The Seattle Seahawks beat the Los Angeles Rams on a play that, had it worked, wouldn't have worked.
Allow me to explain.
See, the Seattles were doing for a two-point conversion and the win, and decided a bubble screen was the way to do that. Now, it's a law of nature that the bubble screen hardly ever works, and especially in the NFL, where the speed of defenses simply gobble up attempts to string them out.
But, the Seahawks gave it a shot anyway. Sam Darnold turned and threw. Had he completed the pass, the play would have failed, because the Rams of course had it covered.
But what's this?
Here came a Rams defender, leaping high to bat Darnold's throw into the air. The ball sailed up and into the end zone, where, after a mad scramble (because the throw was behind the line of scrimmage, and therefore a lateral), a Seahawk picked it up. Conversion good, Seahawks win.
You know what they say: Man plans, God laughs.
Only in this case, God was wearing a throwback Steve Largent jersey. Must have been.
* Speaking of God laughing, the shine is apparently off his bromance with the Detroit Lions. This is because the Lions scored a touchdown on the last play of the game to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, only to find out they didn't really beat the Steelers.
Here's what happened: Trailing by 12 with less than four minutes to play, the Lions mounted a stirring comeback, only to get not one but two touchdowns called back for offensive pass interference. And both were legit calls.
The second happened on the last play of the game, after Jared Goff completed a pass to Amon-Ra St. Brown at the goal line. St. Brown was wrapped up before breaking the plane, but he alertly lateraled back to Goff, who ran it in for the score that turned a 29-24 loss into a 30-29 victory.'
Except it didn't.
Because earlier in the play, St. Brown pushed off on his defender to get open. Shoved the guy right down to the ground. Blatant as blatant gets.
So, yes, the play ended in a Detroit touchdown. But the infraction occurred before the touchdown, so the touchdown didn't count.
Some weird stuff goin' on in Motown, too.
* And last but not least ...
Your Purdue-Fort Wayne Mastodons did it again.
Head coach Jon Coffman, Corey Hadnot II and the gang went up to South Bend yesterday, and by gumphrey they brought Upset City with them. Again.
Knocked off Notre Dame on its home floor, the Dons did, 72-69. Hadnot scorched the Irish for 29 points, Mikale Stevenson added 18, and for the second time in two years, PFW put a Big East notch in its belt.
In 2023, the Dons took out DePaul. And let's not forget 2016 and 2017, when Coffman's guys upset Indiana in back-to-back years.
Man's just got a knack for ruining a big boy's day, it seems.