EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (Nov. 19, 2006) -- Mark Bradley turned and caught the short pass from Rex Grossman, and then realized Drew Coleman was the only thing standing between him and the end zone.
"Every receiver loves a one-on-one situation," the Chicago Bears' second-year standout said. "It's just you and the DB on the island, and may the best man win."
"He threw the ball based on where the corner was," Bradley said. "I turned up inside and there was a lot of daylight. The safeties came down and rolled back to the strong side. That's why it was wide open."
The Jets blitzed on the play in an attempt to fluster Grossman, but it backfired.
"He made a good move," Coleman said of Bradley. "It hurt, but we were still in the game."
Well, not really. Chicago (9-1) notched its second shutout this season -- the Bears blanked the Packers at Green Bay on Sept. 10. The Bears, coming off a 38-20 victory over the New York Giants, also became the first road team since the 1999 Washington Redskins to win two straight at the Meadowlands.
"New York has been good to us," Bears coach Lovie Smith said. "Coming here, a tough place to play, and getting two wins is big."
Next up is another tough road matchup against New England.
"Three weeks ago, we had a three-game stretch that looked pretty tough," Smith said. "Now we're down to one game and we're anxious to play a good New England Patriots team next."
Thomas Jones had 121 yards on 23 carries, and Grossman overcame an unproductive first half to go 11 of 22 for 119 yards and a touchdown.
"I never felt like we got into a rhythm," Grossman said. "But we didn't let them score, we ran the football well and we are going to win a lot of games doing that."
"We knew going into the game that we couldn't turn the ball over," Pennington said. "That was key, and we ended up having two turnovers that set us back a bit."
The game was supposed to be a measuring stick of whether the Jets are real playoff contenders. They might have to think twice about making postseason plans if this performance -- their second shutout of the season -- was any indication.
"None of us are shaking," receiver Laveranues Coles said. "We feel good about what we've been doing all year."
New York opened the second half by trying to catch the Bears off guard with an onside kick by Mike Nugent, but Chris Harris was able to recover at New York's 44.
"We kind of had a hunch that they might do something," Harris said. "That's this coach. That's his style. He does trick plays. We were kind of prepared for it."
Jones ran the ball on the next seven plays, setting up Robbie Gould's 20-yard field goal that gave Chicago a 3-0 lead 4:21 into the third quarter.
The teams were scoreless through the first half, but the Jets had the best scoring chance early in the second quarter.
"I was just reading his eyes," Urlacher said. "I don't think he saw me."
It was the second interception of Pennington's career in the red zone, and the first of two poor decisions that resulted in turnovers.
The Jets moved to the Bears' 30 late in the third quarter when Alex Brown put heavy pressure on Pennington, who lobbed a pass to Chris Baker that was easily picked off by Nathan Vasher.
"Where he came from, I don't know," said Pennington, who wanted to throw it away.
Pennington finished 19 of 35 for 162 yards passing and the two interceptions.
Notes: Chicago DE Adewale Ogunleye left late with an apparent injury, but Smith said it wasn't serious. ... WR Tim Dwight had a 28-yard run off a reverse on New York's third play from scrimmage, the Jets' longest rushing play of the season. ... RB Cedric Houston led the Jets with 50 yards rushing after missing the last five games with a knee injury.