GREEN BAY, Wis. — The Green Bay Packers couldn't finish games, so now their season is finished.
Green Bay's inability to protect second-half leads all season proved costly when the Packers lost 31-27 to the Chicago Bears in an NFC wild-card playoff game that they'd led 21-3 at halftime and 21-6 through three quarters.
This marked the fourth time they lost a game they had led by at least nine points in the second half. That doesn't even include a 40-all tie at Dallas in which they led 13-0 in the first half.
Two days after that playoff collapse, the Packers (9-8-1) packed up their things Monday saying they must develop more of a finishing instinct to avoid continuing this habit of early playoff exits.
This pattern started when Green Bay followed up two impressive wins to start the season by giving up 13 straight points in the last four minutes of a 13-10 loss at Cleveland. The Packers blew three more late leads during their five-game skid that ended the season.
They led 23-14 in the third quarter of a 34-26 loss at Denver in which All-Pro defensive end Micah Parsons tore his anterior cruciate ligament. They allowed 10 straight points in the last two minutes of the fourth quarter of a 22-16 overtime loss at Chicago last month. They blew an even bigger lead at Chicago in the playoffs.
Chicago won its past two meetings with the Packers despite never running an offensive play while ahead in either game.
''I think everybody's got to look in the mirror, and we got to find ways to be able to dig deeper when (stuff) gets harder, because it's always going to get harder,'' safety Xavier McKinney said. ''If you go deep into the playoffs, the deeper you go, the harder the games are going to be. You're going to have to play 60 minutes and find ways to scratch and claw and win these games.''