Week 11 - Packers vs. Da Bears - 11/16 - 12 PM CST
Posted: Fri Nov 14, 2008 6:41 pm
CHICAGO (5-4) at GREEN BAY (4-5)
Sunday, Nov. 16 - Lambeau Field - 12 p.m. CST
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQxEvv4_8Mk

WITH THE CALL
- FOX Sports enters its 15th season as an NFL network television partner and will air the contest to a regional audience.
- Play-by-play man Joe Buck joins color analyst Troy Aikman in the booth with Pam Oliver serving as the sideline reporter.
BEARS COME TO LAMBEAU FOR ANNUAL RIVALRY
- Packers - Bears. No truer rivalry exists in the National Football League, and no two teams have met on the gridiron more than Green Bay and Chicago. Sunday marks the 176th installment in the venerable series.
- The game takes on an added importance as the Packers and Bears find themselves once again in a fight for supremacy in the NFC North Division. Green Bay stands a game behind Chicago and Minnesota.
- The Packers lost a hard-fought game last weekend to the Vikings, 28-27, when a field goal attempt in the closing seconds sailed wide right.
- After losing the first two games of the month on the road, the Packers look to get back on track at Lambeau Field, where they have won 11 of their last 14 regular-season games.
- Standing in the way is their oldest rival, the Chicago Bears. The clubs first met in 1921, when the Chicago Staleys beat the Packers 20-0.
- Names like Halas, Lombardi, Nitschke and Butkus only begin to define the history of the all-time series. Currently, the Bears own a 89-79-6 advantage.
- From 1994-2003, Green Bay won 18 of 20 games against Chicago. Since Lovie Smith's arrival to Chicago in 2004, the Bears have won six of eight including the last four contests at Lambeau Field.
- Head Coach Mike McCarthy is 1-3 against the Bears and is still searching for his first home win over the Bears.
- Chicago lost at home to the undefeated Tennessee Titans, 21-14, last weekend. Despite surrendering just 20 rushing yards to one of the league's most potent running games, the Bears could not overcome a 21-7 fourth-quarter deficit behind backup QB Rex Grossman.
ORTON OR GROSSMAN?
- The inevitable storyline all week will be the question of just who will start under center for Chicago. Backup QB Rex Grossman started last Sunday against the Titans after starter Kyle Orton was injured against Detroit.
- The Packers defense is plenty familiar with each quarterback. Orton started against the Packers last December, a 35-7 Bears win in arctic-like conditions. Orton also started against the Packers in 2005, a 19-7 Bears win. Both wins came in Chicago.
- Grossman is 3-1 in four career starts against the Packers, his last coming in the 2006 regular-season finale at Chicago. He only played the first half in that contest, completing 2-of-12 passes while turning the ball over four times - three interceptions and a fumbled snap. Two of the interceptions were returned for scores in a 26-7 Packers victory.
- Grossman's three wins against the Packers came in consecutive seasons at Lambeau Field (2004-06).

Sunday, Nov. 16 - Lambeau Field - 12 p.m. CST
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQxEvv4_8Mk

WITH THE CALL
- FOX Sports enters its 15th season as an NFL network television partner and will air the contest to a regional audience.
- Play-by-play man Joe Buck joins color analyst Troy Aikman in the booth with Pam Oliver serving as the sideline reporter.
BEARS COME TO LAMBEAU FOR ANNUAL RIVALRY
- Packers - Bears. No truer rivalry exists in the National Football League, and no two teams have met on the gridiron more than Green Bay and Chicago. Sunday marks the 176th installment in the venerable series.
- The game takes on an added importance as the Packers and Bears find themselves once again in a fight for supremacy in the NFC North Division. Green Bay stands a game behind Chicago and Minnesota.
- The Packers lost a hard-fought game last weekend to the Vikings, 28-27, when a field goal attempt in the closing seconds sailed wide right.
- After losing the first two games of the month on the road, the Packers look to get back on track at Lambeau Field, where they have won 11 of their last 14 regular-season games.
- Standing in the way is their oldest rival, the Chicago Bears. The clubs first met in 1921, when the Chicago Staleys beat the Packers 20-0.
- Names like Halas, Lombardi, Nitschke and Butkus only begin to define the history of the all-time series. Currently, the Bears own a 89-79-6 advantage.
- From 1994-2003, Green Bay won 18 of 20 games against Chicago. Since Lovie Smith's arrival to Chicago in 2004, the Bears have won six of eight including the last four contests at Lambeau Field.
- Head Coach Mike McCarthy is 1-3 against the Bears and is still searching for his first home win over the Bears.
- Chicago lost at home to the undefeated Tennessee Titans, 21-14, last weekend. Despite surrendering just 20 rushing yards to one of the league's most potent running games, the Bears could not overcome a 21-7 fourth-quarter deficit behind backup QB Rex Grossman.
ORTON OR GROSSMAN?
- The inevitable storyline all week will be the question of just who will start under center for Chicago. Backup QB Rex Grossman started last Sunday against the Titans after starter Kyle Orton was injured against Detroit.
- The Packers defense is plenty familiar with each quarterback. Orton started against the Packers last December, a 35-7 Bears win in arctic-like conditions. Orton also started against the Packers in 2005, a 19-7 Bears win. Both wins came in Chicago.
- Grossman is 3-1 in four career starts against the Packers, his last coming in the 2006 regular-season finale at Chicago. He only played the first half in that contest, completing 2-of-12 passes while turning the ball over four times - three interceptions and a fumbled snap. Two of the interceptions were returned for scores in a 26-7 Packers victory.
- Grossman's three wins against the Packers came in consecutive seasons at Lambeau Field (2004-06).
