Caleb Williams has spent the offseason living in that strange space where the national conversation can’t quite decide what to do with him. One outlet has him near the top of the quarterback conversation, another has him sliding farther down the board. The latest example came from CBS Sports, which ranked the league’s top 25 players 25 or younger and placed the Chicago Bears quarterback seventh.
The list had Bijan Robinson, Puka Nacua, Penei Sewell, Drake Maye, JSN, and Will Anderson Jr. ahead of Williams. That setup makes one thing obvious right away: the ranking isn’t built around positional value.
Even so, Williams at No. 7 raised eyebrows, especially with Maye slotting above him after a 2025 Super Bowl run in a weak AFC. Maye reached the Super Bowl without having to go through Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, or Joe Burrow.
There’s a case to be made for Robinson at No. 1 if you want to treat him as a generational talent and ignore position altogether. Beyond that, the logic gets harder to defend. Sewell and Anderson are both valuable, steady forces for their teams, but neither offers the kind of ceiling Williams does.
That’s the tension with these offseason rankings: they make for easy debate, but they don’t settle much. For Bears fans, the good news is that the calendar is finally moving toward football that matters. Training camps begin at the end of July, and then preseason games will finally give everyone something real to react to.
For Williams, the ranking is just another entry in a growing pile of outside opinions. He may act like he’s above the noise, but there’s no doubt he notices it. And if history says anything about great players, it’s that they know how to use that noise.
This one can go in the file with the rest of the bad takes. Williams is going to get his chance in 2026 to remind the league why he was the first overall pick.
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