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Chicago Bears vs Washington Commanders Match Player Stats (Oct 13, 2025)

Jake Moody’s 38-yard field goal as time expired gave the Chicago Bears a 25–24 win over the Washington Commanders at Northwest Stadium on October 13, 2025, capping a nine-play drive made possible by Washington’s third turnover of the night. D’Andre Swift produced 175 scrimmage yards, including a 55-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter that pulled Chicago within two, while Jayden Daniels threw for three scores on 19-of-26 passing — and still left with the loss.



Game at a Glance

Chicago BearsWashington Commanders
Score2524
Record3–23–3
Total Yards386329
Passing Yards252211
Rushing Yards150124
Turnovers03
Sacks Allowed3 (–16 yds)3 (–6 yds)
Penalties9–84 yds5–40 yds
3rd Down3/103/8
Red Zone1/31/1
Possession28:2631:34

Date: October 13, 2025 | Venue: Northwest Stadium, Landover, MD | Attendance: 64,457 | Broadcast: ABC | Referee: Alex Moore


Scoring Summary

QtrTimeScoring PlayCHIWSH
1st10:41Jake Moody 47-yd FG — 9 plays, 41 yards30
1st2:27Jake Moody 48-yd FG — 8 plays, 36 yards60
2nd14:18Caleb Williams 1-yd rush (Moody PAT) — 5 plays, 35 yards130
2nd9:28Jayden Daniels → Chris Moore 22-yd TD (Gay PAT) — 8 plays, 65 yards137
3rd11:59Matt Gay 53-yd FG — 8 plays, 25 yards1310
3rd8:05Jake Moody 41-yd FG — 8 plays, 62 yards1610
3rd2:56Jayden Daniels → Luke McCaffrey 33-yd TD (Gay PAT) — 9 plays, 84 yards1617
4th11:27Jayden Daniels → Zach Ertz 6-yd TD (Gay PAT) — 6 plays, 63 yards1624
4th10:26Caleb Williams → D’Andre Swift 55-yd TD (2-pt conversion failed) — 3 plays, 61 yards2224
4th0:00Jake Moody 38-yd FG (walk-off) — 9 plays, 36 yards2524

Moody had a 48-yard attempt blocked on the opening play of the fourth quarter before converting the walk-off. He was signed off the practice squad days before the game after Cairo Santos was ruled out with a quadriceps injury.


Full Box Score: Team Stats

StatCHIWSH
Total Plays5960
Total Yards386329
Yards per Play6.55.5
1st Downs1922
— Passing1011
— Rushing87
— Penalty14
3rd Down3/10 (30%)3/8 (38%)
4th Down0/11/1
Passing Yards252211
Comp/Att17/2919/26
Yards per Pass*7.47.1
INT Thrown01
Sacks–Yards Lost3–163–6
Rushing Yards150124
Rushing Attempts2731
Yards per Rush5.44.0
Red Zone (Made/Att)1/31/1
Fumbles Lost02
Total Turnovers03
Penalties9–845–40
Possession28:2631:34
Def/ST Touchdowns00

*Yards per pass calculated on net passing yards (post-sack) divided by total dropbacks.


Passing Stats

Chicago Bears

PlayerC/ATTYDSAVGTDINTSACKSRTGQBR
Caleb Williams17/292528.7103–1698.628.1

Washington Commanders

PlayerC/ATTYDSAVGTDINTSACKSRTGQBR
Jayden Daniels19/262118.1313–6119.264.8

Williams’ lone touchdown pass — a 55-yarder to Swift in the fourth quarter — came after safety Quan Martin whiffed a tackle along the sideline. Daniels threw touchdown passes to Chris Moore (22 yards), Luke McCaffrey (33 yards), and Zach Ertz (6 yards). His first interception of the 2025 season came in the second quarter, picked off by Jaquan Brisker for a 32-yard return.


Rushing Stats

Chicago Bears

PlayerCARYDSAVGTDLG
D’Andre Swift141087.7019
Kyle Monangai5193.807
DJ Moore2105.006
Roschon Johnson166.006
Olamide Zaccheaus144.004
Caleb Williams414
Team271505.4119

Williams’ individual rushing yardage figure differs between sources (ESPN and AP Wire); team total of 150 yards is confirmed across all sources.

Washington Commanders

PlayerCARYDSAVGTDLG
Jacory Croskey-Merritt17613.6011
Jayden Daniels10525.2018
Jaylin Lane177.007
Jeremy McNichols252.504
Deebo Samuel1–10
Team311244.0018

Receiving Stats

Chicago Bears

PlayerTGTRECYDSAVGTDLG
D’Andre Swift326733.5155
Luther Burden III445112.8037
DJ Moore534214.0017
Rome Odunze523216.0021
Kyle Monangai112525.0025
Olamide Zaccheaus622412.0014
Colston Loveland32115.506
Cole Kmet2100
Team291725214.8155

Washington Commanders

PlayerTGTRECYDSAVGTDLG
Chris Moore534615.3122
Zach Ertz66437.2111
Jaylin Lane213737.0037
Luke McCaffrey113333.0133
Jeremy McNichols433010.0015
Deebo Samuel54153.809
Jacory Croskey-Merritt1177.007
Team241921111.1337

Ertz led Washington with six receptions on six targets — a 100% catch rate — going 2-for-2 on contested catches. Noah Brown (knee/groin) and Terry McLaurin (quadriceps) were both inactive, leaving Washington without two of Daniels’ top three receivers from earlier in the season. Chris Moore stepped into the void, making an acrobatic two-point-of-contact catch along the sideline for his 22-yard score.


Defensive Stats

Chicago Bears Defense

PlayerTOTSOLOSACKSTFLPDQB HTS
Tremaine Edmunds1230000
T.J. Edwards940000
Kevin Byard630100
Nahshon Wright540110
Gervon Dexter Sr.521.5001
Shemar Turner440100
Montez Sweat320010
Dominique Robinson320.5001
Jaquan Brisker320010
D’Marco Jackson310000
Jonathan Owens310000
Tyrique Stevenson300000
Noah Sewell220000
Chris Williams211.0001
Nick McCloud210000
Dayo Odeyingbo210000
Kyler Gordon200000
Daniel Hardy200000
Roschon Johnson110000
Andrew Billings100000
Elijah Hicks100000
Team74343.0333

Interceptions: Jaquan Brisker — 1 INT, 32-yard return

Washington Commanders Defense

PlayerTOTSOLOSACKSTFLPDQB HTS
Bobby Wagner940100
Trey Amos730010
Frankie Luvu641.0111
Jeremy Reaves531.0101
Quan Martin530120
Daron Payne520000
Darnell Savage420000
Jalyn Holmes410000
Jer’Zhan Newton320000
Jacob Martin310001
Mike Sainristil300010
Von Miller210.5001
Antonio Hamilton Sr.210000
Dorance Armstrong210.5001
Percy Butler210000
Preston Smith200000
Marshon Lattimore110000
Jayden Daniels110000
Javon Kinlaw100000
Colson Yankoff100000
Luke McCaffrey100000
Jordan Magee100000
Team70313.0455

Interceptions: None


Turnovers

TeamTypePlayerDetails
WashingtonInterceptionJayden Daniels → Jaquan Brisker2nd quarter, 32-yard return
WashingtonFumble LostJacory Croskey-Merritt2nd fumble in consecutive weeks
WashingtonFumble LostDaniels/Croskey-Merritt (botched exchange)4th quarter, Chicago ball with 3:07 remaining

Fumbles

Chicago Bears

PlayerFUMLOSTREC
Caleb Williams100
Kyler Gordon001
Nahshon Wright001
Team102

Washington Commanders

PlayerFUMLOSTREC
Jayden Daniels211
Jacory Croskey-Merritt110
Team321

Washington entered Week 6 with three total turnovers through five games. They matched that number in one night. The fumbled handoff between Daniels and Croskey-Merritt — the running back’s second fumble in consecutive weeks — came with Washington protecting a two-point lead and under four minutes left. Chicago needed 36 yards and three minutes.


Special Teams

Kicking

PlayerFGPCTLONGXPPTS
Jake Moody (CHI)4/580.0%481/113
Matt Gay (WSH)1/250.0%533/36

Moody’s field goal log: 47 yd ✅ · 48 yd ✅ · 41 yd ✅ · 48 yd ❌ (blocked, Q4 opening) · 38 yd ✅ (walk-off)

Moody had been cut by San Francisco in September 2025 after missing two attempts in Week 1.

Punting

PlayerNOYDSAVGTBIN 20LG
Tory Taylor (CHI)210653.00153
Tress Way (WSH)13030.00130

Kick Returns

PlayerNOYDSAVGLGTD
Devin Duvernay (CHI)512024.0310
Luke McCaffrey (WSH)412731.8370

Punt Returns

PlayerNOYDSAVGLGTD
Jaylin Lane (WSH)199.090
Chicago Bears

PFF Grades (Week 6)

PlayerPosTeamGradeNotes
D’Andre SwiftRBCHI85.6108 rush yards, 42 after contact; 67 receiving yards, 1 TD
Quan MartinSWSH79.9Highest-graded Washington defender; missed tackle allowed Swift’s 55-yd TD
Marshon LattimoreCBWSH0 receptions allowed in 38 coverage snaps
Zach ErtzTEWSH6/6 on targets, 2/2 contested catches, 83.3% receiving success rate

Full individual grades require a PFF+ subscription. Swift’s 85.6 and Martin’s 79.9 were published in PFF’s Week 6 grades report.


Injury Report (Post-Game)

Chicago Bears: WR DJ Moore remained in the Washington area overnight for precautionary medical evaluation. LB Noah Sewell was ruled out with a concussion in the second quarter.

Washington Commanders: DE Dorance Armstrong left with a hamstring injury, returned in the third quarter to record his sixth sack of the season, then exited again. WR Terry McLaurin (quadriceps) missed his third consecutive game. WR Noah Brown (knee/groin) missed his fourth straight.


Washington outgained Chicago, held the ball longer, converted third downs at a better rate, and got a 119.2 passer rating from Daniels. Three turnovers made every one of those advantages irrelevant. Moody converted the field goal that mattered most.


Sources: ESPN, Pro Football Reference, Pro Football Focus, Associated Press

Bobby Smith
Bobby Smithhttps://thesportie.com/
Bobby A. Smith is a Senior Sports Analyst with over nine years of professional experience, specializing in forensic analysis of game strategy and player performance. His work provides a definitive lens on a broad spectrum of professional sports, delivering expert commentary on the NFL, NBA, MLB, WNBA, Soccer, Boxing, Cricket, F1, and NASCAR. Unlike surface-level reporting, Bobby’s analysis is known for identifying the critical, game-deciding patterns that raw statistics often obscure. Every article is grounded in rigorous, fact-based research and an unwavering commitment to journalistic integrity.

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