There’s a strong case to make for Caleb Williams as the top quarterback in the NFC North, and it starts with the stuff you can’t teach. The Chicago Bears quarterback has already flashed the kind of arm talent and playmaking ability that separates good quarterbacks from the ones who can tilt a game all by themselves.
FanSided’s Sayre Bedinger put it plainly when ranking Williams ahead of the rest of the division.
"If we're talking about best arm talent in the division, Williams is at the top. If we're talking about the best dual-threat at the position in the division, Williams is probably at the top as well."
"There are many reasons why Williams is already on the cover of the Madden video game, and why he's considered one of the brightest young stars in the league."
Williams backed up that buzz with a huge 2025 season. He threw for a franchise-record 3,942 yards and 27 touchdowns against seven interceptions, while also adding four more scores as a runner and receiver. On top of that, he authored an NFL-record seven comebacks and game-winning drives, with six coming in the regular season and one more in the Bears’ playoff win over the Green Bay Packers in the NFC Wild Card Round.
Bedinger said he would have leaned toward Detroit Lions quarterback Jared Goff if the argument were based purely on steady production year after year. That’s fair enough.
Goff has proven plenty. But Williams brings a different kind of ceiling, the sort built on raw physical gifts that show up in moments when the game is hanging by a thread.
Last season provided plenty of those moments. Williams hit DJ Moore on both of his game-winning touchdowns against the Packers, connected with Rome Odunze on fourth down in the playoff game against Green Bay, and delivered the striking Moore touchdown pass against the Cleveland Browns in the regular season.
For all the fireworks, there’s still work to do. Accuracy remains the biggest issue, and Williams has yet to finish a season with a completion percentage above 63% in his first two NFL seasons.
Even so, the upside is loud enough that people are already talking MVP for the young quarterback, and it could realistically happen.
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What makes this development more interesting is how quickly Thieneman seems to be absorbing everything around him. The Bears see him as a defensive back who can move around the formation, and his early placement with the starters hints at a bigger plan taking shape before training camp even opens. If he keeps trending this way, Chicago may not have to wait long to find out just how much responsibility the rookie can handle. [Read more 🡒]
