Bears-Friendly Website Has a Wild Vikings Take

The world isn’t necessarily high on the Minnesota Vikings in 2026, mainly because new quarterback Kyler Murray’s reputation is at a career low point. But one website really took the cake last week, bashing the Vikings and calling them a non-threat this season.
DaWindyCity.com took it upon itself to declare the Vikings a laughable squad, which is strange because Minnesota beat Chicago once last year and was one tackle away from a sweep.
Bears-Themed Media Thinks the Vikings Are a Joke

Nick Halden: Just Go Ahead and Write Off the Vikings
Halden did the honors, assessing an article about a J.J. McCarthy taunting penalty — of all things — last year. He wrote, “The Bears can already write Vikings off list of 2026 NFC North threats. No question, the Bears have zero reason to fear the Vikings and should be able to pencil in two wins in each of the team’s divisional matchups.”
“Having such a poor decision-maker at quarterback simply cannot be overcome. No question, the Bears have zero reason to fear the Vikings and should be able to pencil in two wins in each of the team’s divisional matchups. Having such a poor decision-maker at quarterback simply cannot be overcome.”
For good measure, he added, “The Bears still need to approach the Vikings with their best attack due to the familiarity, but barring injuries or a complete coaching failure, Minnesota simply isn’t a threat. This is evidenced by a series of quarterback decisions that doomed a once-productive rival offense.”
The Very QB He’s Making Fun Of … Helped Beat the Bears Last Season
Last year, before the Bears morphed into a playoff-bound squad, they hosted the Vikings in Week 1, McCarthy’s first career start. The youngster looked shaky throughout the contest — that happens to first-time starters — but McCarthy turned on the jets when it mattered the most.
McCarthy personally abused the Bears, leading his team to a come-from-behind triumph, and at the time, sending his personal momentum through the roof. Vikings fans thought, “We got our man” for the long haul at quarterback — before various struggles and injuries for the 22-year-old.
For his troubles, McCarthy even won NFC Offensive Player of the Week.
So for Halden to chide McCarthy as a terrible quarterback, well, it just doesn’t make much sense after he saw firsthand how McCarthy could cook and beat Chicago — in his inaugural game.
Bears Got One Whiff of Success
This must be the price of success. Chicago won a playoff game in 2025 — its first since 2010 — and now that fan base or blogging community can punch down. A similar phenomenon emerged in 2023 (and remains) for the Detroit Lions. For years, the Lions were the laughingstock of the NFC North, the kid brother to the Green Bay Packers, Vikings, and sometimes even the Bears.

Then, Dan Campbell arrived, and Detroit became a serious team, nearly reaching the Super Bowl in 2023. They fell short and orchestrated the largest collapse in NFC Championship history, but that didn’t stop fans from changing their personality — “same ‘ol Lions” shifted to the big bad wolves of the NFC North.
That appears to be happening with some Bears fans and writers.
Showtime Soon
Halder’s assertion: “No question, the Bears have zero reason to fear the Vikings,” will be put to the test in less than 10 weeks. The NFL season kicks off September 9th, and any summer prognostication will meet its maker.
The Bears will have a chance to personify Halder’s bold take by claiming the Vikings are a joke no one needs to worry about. Chicago also won oodles of close games in 2025, and when that happens, teams usually regress to the mean.

Fox Sports‘ Greg Auman wrote about the Vikings last month, “If the Minnesota Vikings had found ways to put up more points last season, they would’ve made the postseason for a second straight year.”
“They had a top-10 defense with coordinator Brian Flores, going 7-2 in games where they scored 20 points or more. That suggests if the offense can get back to 2024 levels, they could be a surprise team in the NFC North.”
Finally, Chicago and Minnesota will do battle at least twice in 2026. If there is nothing to fear about the Vikings, the Bears should seamlessly sweep the purple team, a feat it has not accomplished in seven years.
Oddsmakers list the Bears’ win-over-under at 9.5, with the Vikings a whisker behind at 8.5. The two clubs first meet on September 20th — Week 2.

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