Caleb Williams’ 6th-Ever Game Was An All-Time Great Bears Performance

Everybody was ready to declare Caleb Williams a bust before the first month of his career was over. His first two games were against strong defensive opponents and he predictably struggled. His 363-yard showing against Indianapolis was the first indication he was gaining some confidence in his ability (and willingness) to turn it loose. Next came the Los Angeles Rams, where Williams demonstrated efficiency by protecting the ball and not trying to do too much. Most felt his week five against Carolina was his breakout game, topping 300 yards with two touchdowns.

They had no idea what was coming.

Against the Jacksonville Jaguars in London, the #1 overall pick put on a show. In a remarkable display of his maturation, Williams went 23-of-29 for 226 yards, four touchdowns, and one interception. He also ran for 56 yards on four carries. It was only the second time in franchise history a rookie quarterback reached four touchdowns in a game. A Bears QB had only done 16 times across their century-loss existence. Again, this was Williams’ sixth-ever game.

Caleb Williams is doing far more than many expected.

Remember, he’s a rookie. Based on long-standing NFL doctrine, rookie quarterbacks typically struggle. That was the case through the first six quarters of the season. Since then, he has had eight touchdown passes and only two interceptions. What stands out the most is his command of the offense. This isn’t a situation where the quarterback just runs the play called by his coordinator. He is given full control to make adjustments at the line depending on what he sees. His ability to read blitz looks and coverages is much further along than anybody could’ve predicted.

Combine that with his arm strength and accuracy, and defenses are having a tougher and tougher time containing him. People will argue Caleb Williams has benefitted from a soft recent schedule. That is true. The key difference between him and previous Bears quarterbacks is he’s taking full advantage of them. That is what the good ones are supposed to do. CJ Stroud, who everybody believes is one of the best in the NFL already, had 345 yards and two TDs against Jacksonville last week.

If Williams is already that good? This team is one nobody wants to play.

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