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ChaChingBaby
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Agreed completely with the spirit of your post, as the league's offenses figured out how to beat those blitzes fairly easily in the years after that season.
But indeed the '85 Bears played and beat both the 49ers and Redskins during the regular season that year, with the 49ers game probably being their strongest NFC win on the schedule....
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/chi/1985.htm
1985 was a bad year for both the Niners and 'Skins.
Washington suffered a crucial set back when Joe Thiesmann had his career ending injury. He was not having a good season prior to that incident. (These years where he would come crashing back down to earth and have mediocre production are the reason he's not in the Hall of Fame despite having 2 All Pro honors, an MVP and a SB ring on his resume)
Montana was also injured a bit in 1985 and he posted a poor TD/INT ratio. The Niners in '85 and '86 were not the same team they would be a few years later.
The next year in 1986, Washington was waiting for the Bears and beat them in Chicago. I think that is the game where Jay Schroder ripped them to pieces. No elite QB? No problem when it's an old school Joe Gibbs team with his tweaked Air Coryell offense.
The 4-6 defense had a glaring weakness for covering the deep ball. Dan Marino exposed them in that 1985 MNF game. Thankfully, they didn't have to face another elite QB with deep threat receivers. The 49ers did not have that yet, but would a few years later after drafting Jerry Rice and the 'Skins had Art Monk whom they had no answer for.
IMO Joe Gibbs was the best coach of that era and Washington's decline since Synder bought the team is simply suffering karma from it. He won 3 SBs with 3 different QBs and his teams were always stacked. Before the 49ers got their 3rd, the Redskins were often called "team of the decade" during the 80's. I don't think there will ever be a team better than the 1991 Redskins. To me, they are the GOAT team and no one comes close.