Things are on the rise for the Chicago Bears, and the crossed fingers for fans of this team are finally in the hive to bend the corner. A low season of monsters that included numerous large operations to improve the offensive line, and the hiring of Ben Johnson, the best offensive mind in the NFL to become a chief coach must make Caleb Williams much more productive.
While many things are looking for the moment of a new book could not be worse, as special as it is put to the field marshal of the Bears franchise. Seth Wickersham from ESPN will launch American Kings: A Biography of the Field MarshalAnd as part of his investigation, time passed significantly with the Williams camp before the 2024 NFL draft, and the reports are bathroom.
It is one thing to have reservations about being chosen by a terrible team in the No. 1, but according to Wickersham, the reservations that Caleb and his family had about Chicago were so pronounced that Carl Williams, Caleb’s father, analyzed how the field marshal could avoid the draft, potentially playing in the UFL for a season, and even spoke with Archie Manning about how he managed to guarantee that Eli did not play for the chargers when he was selected in 2004.
“Chicago is the place that quartbacks are going to that. […] I don’t want my son to play for the Bears, “Williams told several agents in 2024.
Before giving this by hand and simply a dominant father, there was decent evidence behind the group. In recent years, the Bears, the tasks Mitchell Trubisky and Justin Fields, blaming the quartbacks on both occasions for the team’s struggles and shortening their careers as a result. It was enough for Caleb Williams Himseld to be summoned with concerns about going to Chicago.
“I want to go there? I don’t think I can do it with [former Bears offensive coordinator Shane] Waldron. “
It was Caleb’s desire to start playing for the Vikings, and the Williams camp pressed Beying to make an exchange with Minnesota for the general selection number 1.
“I need to go to the Vikings,” he told his father.
“Let’s do it,” his father replied. But both Caleb and Carl knew that an exchange to a division rival was extremely unlikely.
The general manager of the Bears Ryan Poles remained firm, with Count Williams, “we are writing you regardless of what.”
Now, to be fair for both the Williams and the Bears family, Caleb was apparently sold so that it could turn the franchise after a prior visit to the Draft. That said, relying on this is too worked when his acceptance of the Bears only arrived after his father sought to avoid the draft, a commercial proposal was rejected and the only option seemed to be dressed in Chicago.
Should the Bears fans worry? Not precisely. Obviously, it hurts to discover that his quartback wanted to do everything in his possession not to come to his team, but he really cannot blame him when the main office in Chicago was about to dirty a rookie field marshal with a horrible coast coach in Matt Eberflus and a mediocre offensive coordinator in Shane Waldron.
That changes now, and Johnson is indisputably the adequate man for work. This is likely to end only a radar failure, but it will definitely make waves for a few days.