It’s been more than five months since a last-second Cody Parkey field goal clanked (twice) off the uprights at Soldier Field, and the Philadelphia Eagles celebrated a playoff victory on the Bears’ home turf.

It was a brutal ending to the season for the franchise, and Parkey is now currently unemployed.

Still, Bears coach Matt Nagy isn’t letting his team forget just yet.

He’s using the painful memory as motivation.

Bears running back Tarik Cohen told Adam Schein on Mad Dog Sports radio that Nagy often shows the ending to that playoff game in team meetings.

“He just shows us the last seconds of the game,” Cohen said. “He shows us the crowd’s reaction, our reactions from the sideline, and he just tells you ‘never forget that hurt,’ you know, and that we want to get back to that place and have a different outcome. So that drives us and motivates to get through practice every day.”

ICYMI: Tarik Cohen tells @AdamSchein Bears HC Matt Nagy shows the team the last few seconds of the playoff game vs the Eagles during team meetings so they "never forget that hurt" pic.twitter.com/xc9lWMyid8 — Mad Dog Sports Radio (@MadDogRadio) June 19, 2019

While it was the defining moment in a negative way from the Bears’ perspective, for the Eagles it was a signature moment in an up-and-down season that ended a round later against the Saints in a different kind of heart-breaking fashion. The Eagles had went up against New Orleans 14-0 and never scored again in a 20-14 loss that all but ended on a drop from receiver Alshon Jeffery late in the game on a catchable pass.

So, the Eagles look back on that Bears game with a bit more positivity. Perhaps nobody more than safety Deiondre’ Hall, traded from Chicago to the Eagles right before last season.

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“One of the best feelings in football wins in my football career, going back to Soldier Field and winning,” Hall said. “To go back there and have a dominant game and come out with a victory was amazing.”

Of the celebration after the missed kick, Hall said: “Shoot, I was on the sideline and then I was on the field. It was just like taking a knee then we heard the ‘ding’ and then it went off in celebration mode. That was one of the greatest football moments in my football career.”

The ‘Double Doink’ lives on.

Zack Rosenblatt may be reached at zrosenblatt@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @ZackBlatt. Find NJ.com on Facebook.