Sunday, November 17, 2024

Will Caleb Williams be answer to Bears’ unending search for true franchise QB?

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In reality, the search for a true navy blue franchise QB extends back to the late 1940s. That was when Hall of Famer Sid Luckman was winding down his exemplary career (and the franchise whiffed on Layne, who was traded after a year as a third-stringer).

The search for the next Sid has lingered since.

Williams is the next hopeful, seemingly a can’t-miss QB prospect headed to a franchise that’s historically been a no-win situation for signal-callers.

The Bears are the only NFL franchise that has never had a quarterback throw for 4,000 yards in a season OR throw for 30 touchdowns, per NFL Research. Erik Kramer’s 1995 showings of 3,838 yards and 29 touchdowns remain the standards in Chicago single-season chronicle.

Williams threw for 4,537 yards and 42 touchdowns in his 2022 Heisman Trophy-winning season with USC.

Williams was also the first FBS player with 30-plus TD passes and 10-plus rushing TDs in consecutive seasons since Texas Tech’s Patrick Mahomes (2015-16). Of course, Mahomes has won three Super Bowls with the Kansas City Chiefs, who took him in the 2017 first round long after the Bears took Trubisky — though, in fairness, Mahomes wasn’t projected by many to go even as high as he did at No. 10 overall.

Unlike so many of the Bears’ first-rounders before him, Williams is, on paper, set up to succeed.

Per NFL Research, he’s the only first-round QB to join a team with multiple players who had 1,000 yards receiving in the season prior (Keenan Allen and DJ Moore) and also drafted a first-round wide receiver in the same class (Rome Odunze). The addition of running back D’Andre Swift and the emergence of tight end Cole Kmet should also solidify Williams’ skill position options.

Still, the stats and the history are daunting obstacles to hurdle.

In the Super Bowl Era, Bears quarterbacks are dead last in completion percentage (56.4), passing yards per attempt (6.5), yards per game (175), TD-INT ratio (0.9) and passer rating (71.4), per NFL Research.

As a rookie, Williams can become the first Bear to throw for 4,000 yards and/or 30 TDs.

He can back up the promise with results. However, it will take more than just one autumn in the Windy City to prove he’s the answer to the Bears unending search for the next Sid. That journey kicks off in September.

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