Pregame: Conference Championships
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
Conference Championships: New Orleans Saints travel to face Chicago Bears, one win from a Super Bowl berth. Kickoff: Sun January 21, 2007. Winner advances to the Super Bowl. Loser carries one of the year's hardest what-ifs into the offseason.[1][2]
Columnist
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
New Orleans Saints at Chicago Bears in the Conference Championships, with a Super Bowl berth on the line. The conference title round is the one that turns nameplates into legacy. For Chicago Bears, the home crowd at the venue is asked to be a player; for New Orleans Saints, the road environment is supposed to be the test that breaks lesser teams. Coaches will lean on what worked all year. Players will lean on what their bodies have left in them.
Around the league
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
New Orleans Saints and Chicago Bears have outlasted everyone else in their conference. One walks out of the venue with the conference title; the other walks out with a brutal what-if. Around the league, coaches are watching tape on both staffs for next year's prep. Every Super Bowl-bound team starts the offseason as the team to beat.
Trend analyst
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
New Orleans Saints versus Chicago Bears in the Conference Championships. The teams who reach this round have already proven they survive a long schedule; the stats that matter most now are the ones that compress: scoring differential, red-zone efficiency, turnover margin. At this stage of the year, the simple math is that defenses tighten and the team that protects the ball wins more often than the team that scores the most. Whichever side of New Orleans Saints-Chicago Bears cleans up the careless plays first usually walks out with the result. Conservative-game expectations should not surprise the reader; both staffs know exactly what worked all season and will lean hard on what travels. The early answer is the kicking game, where any swing of field position compounds.