Monday, June 24, 2024

Former Bears QB Reveals Toughest Hurdle Caleb Williams Faces In Chicago

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Erik Kramer knows what playing football in Chicago is like. He had more success than most at it, even if his time was cut short by injuries. His 1995 season is still the best a Bears quarterback has ever had, with 3,838 yards and 29 touchdowns to only ten interceptions. He may not be an all-time great, but he knows what it takes to thrive at the position in this city. So, any insight he can give about Caleb Williams is worth hearing. Waddle & Silvy asked him about it on ESPN 1000.

In his mind, Kramer isn’t worried about Williams’ talent. That is obvious. His concern is whether the young QB will play the game the right way. He doesn’t want Williams abandoning his progressions as a passer in favor of taking off running. Hit the open man first. Patrick Mahomes had the same problem during his first season as a starter. If the first read wasn’t there, he’d start scrambling around. It worked because Mahomes was gifted in that department, but it would’ve never sustained long term. Thankfully, he started his progressions down the stretch of that year.

If Williams can learn to do the same, he’ll be good.

Caleb Williams must trust the guys around him.

He won’t have to do everything himself. There will be three gifted wide receivers and a rock-solid tight end to throw to in the passing game. Not only that, but Kramer believes the Bears’ offensive line is slept on. It is much better than people give it credit for. Justin Fields made it difficult to see because of his tendency to hold the ball too long. If Williams plays on time like a normal quarterback should, their protection should shine. One thing is certain. This supporting cast is far better than the one he left behind at USC.

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Kramer is correct. The big hurdle is learning how to play the position like a professional. That improvisational stuff will always be there when he needs it. Caleb Williams has to embrace the conventional style. Read the defense before the snap, get into the correct play, manipulate coverage with your eyes, and keep the footwork on time and in rhythm. It’s not easy. That is why so few people can play the position. The Bears believe Williams can. He has the intelligence, work ethic, and processing speed to do so. Does he have the discipline? We shall soon find out.

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Dr. Steven Sallie
Dr. Steven Sallie
Jun 24, 2024 1:18 pm

If that OL does not improve and gel, the Texans will win the game. Put another way from a fave film, Nobody Lives, my hero states to a petty criminal just before he drops him headfirst into a grinder, “You know what I hate about the common criminal? They are just so average.” So why have great WRs and good RBs, but only a mediocre OL with 1-2 holes. It better get fixed before TN.

BearDownTX
Jun 24, 2024 9:55 am

It’s funny that this horrible offensive line was not horrible when a QB actually got the ball out on time. In 5 games played Bagent was sacked 5 times, once per game average. Fields was sacked 44 times in 13 games! The line is not as bad as people are saying, Fields was just that bad, and they can’t block forever!
If CW can read the field and deliver the ball on time we will see a much improved line and line grades!

dabear01
dabear01
Jun 23, 2024 7:24 pm

I think the first 4 games will just be him getting use to the pocket, after that we’ll see how good he really can be.

jmscooby
Jun 23, 2024 6:14 pm

I agree, Dr. Poles came from KC and we have seen them change out both of their starting tackles in one offseason. Our offense is designed to be QB friendly, with an option on every play. We have a dynamic group of TEs/WRs. As long as we can fortify the interior, we should be able to get the ball out quickly. RoJo and Swift will get some work up the gut to force defenders to maintain their gap integrity, something McVay has gone back to, IIRC. Caleb’s style of play is not a run first QB. He modeled his game… Read more »

Dr. Steven Sallie
Dr. Steven Sallie
Jun 23, 2024 5:52 pm

To go through the progressions consistently, the QB needs to remain confident, poised, focused, and stay on his feet in the pocket ready to step forward to pass. That means the OL needs to be better than adequate.

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