1960 Chicago Bears season

NFL team season

The 1960 Chicago Bears season was their 41st regular season completed in the National Football League. The team finished with a 5–6–1 record under George Halas, finishing fifth in the NFL Western Conference, a game below .500, a rare sight under a Halas coached team. The Bears lost all three games in December by significant margins, the last two being shutouts.

NFL Draft

Round Pick Player Position School/Club Team

Roster

1960 Chicago Bears final roster
Quarterbacks
  • 12 Zeke Bratkowski
  • 15 Ed Brown

Running backs

  • 28 Willie Galimore

Wide receivers

  • 46 Angelo Coia
  • 47 Johnny Morris

Tight ends


Offensive linemen
  • 63 Bob Wetoska T

Defensive linemen

  • 81 Doug Atkins DE
Linebackers
  • 31 Joe Fortunato
  • 61 Bill George

Defensive backs

  • 17 Richie Petitbon S

Special teams


Rookies in italics

Regular season

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 25 at Green Bay Packers W 17–14 1–0 City Stadium 32,150
2 October 2 at Baltimore Colts L 7–42 1–1 Memorial Stadium 57,808
3 October 9 Los Angeles Rams W 34–27 2–1 Wrigley Field 47,776
4 October 16 San Francisco 49ers W 27–10 3–1 Wrigley Field 48,226
5 October 23 at Los Angeles Rams T 24–24 3–1–1 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 63,438
6 October 30 at San Francisco 49ers L 7–25 3–2–1 Kezar Stadium 55,071
7 Bye
8 November 13 Baltimore Colts L 20–24 3–3–1 Wrigley Field 48,713
9 November 20 Detroit Lions W 28–7 4–3–1 Wrigley Field 46,267
10 November 27 Dallas Cowboys W 17–7 5–3–1 Wrigley Field 39,951
11 December 4 Green Bay Packers L 13–41 5–4–1 Wrigley Field 46,406
12 December 11 at Cleveland Browns L 0–42 5–5–1 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 38,155
13 December 18 at Detroit Lions L 0–36 5–6–1 Briggs Stadium 51,017

Note: Intra-conference opponents are in bold text.

  • A bye week was necessary in 1960, as the league expanded to an odd number (13) of teams (Dallas); one team was idle each week.

Game summaries

Week 1 at Packers

Week One: Chicago Bears (0–0) at Green Bay Packers (0–0)
Period 1 2 34Total
Bears 0 0 01717
Packers 0 7 7014

at New City Stadium, Green Bay, Wisconsin

  • Date: September 25
  • Game weather: 60 °F (16 °C)
  • Game attendance: 32,150
  • Box Score
Game information

First quarter

  • No scoring

Second quarter

  • GB – Jim Taylor 1-yard run (Paul Hornung kick). Packers 7–0. Drive:

Third quarter

  • GB – Paul Hornung 2-yard run (Paul Hornung kick). Packers 14–0. Drive:

Fourth quarter

  • CHI – Willie Galimore 18-yard run (John Aveni kick). Packers 14–7. Drive:
  • CHI – Rick Casares 26-yard run (John Aveni kick). Tie 14–14. Drive:
  • CHI – John Aveni 16-yard field goal. Bears 17–14. Drive:
Top passers
Top rushers
  • CHI – Rick Casares – 20 rushes, 79 yards, TD
  • GB – Jim Taylor – 16 rushes, 83 yards, TD
Top receivers

Week 9

1 234Total
Cowboys 0 070 7
• Bears 7 703 17
Scoring summary
1CHIRick Casares 5 yard run (John Aveni kick)Bears 7–0
2CHIJohnny Morris 20 yard pass from Ed Brown (John Aveni kick)Bears 14–0
3DALDon McIlhenny 64 yard pass from Don Heinrich (Fred Cone kick)Bears 14–7
4CHIJohn Aveni 20 yard field goalBears 17–7

[1]

Standings

NFL Western Conference
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W L T PCT CONF PF PA STK
Green Bay Packers 8 4 0 .667 7–4 332 209 W3
Detroit Lions 7 5 0 .583 7–4 239 212 W4
San Francisco 49ers 7 5 0 .583 7–4 208 205 W1
Baltimore Colts 6 6 0 .500 5–6 288 234 L4
Chicago Bears 5 6 1 .455 5–5–1 194 299 L3
Los Angeles Rams 4 7 1 .364 4–6–1 265 297 L1
Dallas Cowboys 0 11 1 .000 0–6 177 369 L1

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

References

  1. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com
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Chicago Bears
  • Founded in 1919
  • Formerly the Decatur Staleys (1919–1920) and the Chicago Staleys (1921)
  • Based in Chicago, Illinois
  • Headquartered in Lake Forest, Illinois
Franchise
Records
Stadiums
Culture
Lore
Rivalries
Minor league affiliates
Retired numbers
Key personnel
Division championships (21)
Conference championships (4)
League championships (9)
Media
  • Broadcasters
  • Radio:
  • Personnel:
  • Television:
    • WFLD (pre-season and most regular season games through Fox, official pre-game and post-game alternate)
    • Marquee Sports Network (official post-game and in-season programming)
  • Personnel:
    • Lou Canellis (gameday television host, pre-season sideline reporter)
    • Adam Amin (pre-season play-by-play)
    • Jim Miller (pre-season analyst)
Current league affiliations
  • Category:Chicago Bears
  • WikiProject Chicago Bears
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Chicago Bears seasons
Formerly the Decatur Staleys (1920) and the Chicago Staleys (1921)
Bold indicates NFL Championship (1920–69) or Super Bowl (1966–present) victory
Italics indicates NFL Championship (1920–69) or Super Bowl (1966–present) appearance


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