Caleb Williams keeps landing in the same tricky neighborhood whenever the quarterback conversation gets serious: not quite with the untouchables, but too talented to shove into the background.
That’s the space Bryan DeArdo of CBS Sports carved out in his latest quarterback tiers, and it’s a pretty clean fit for the debate around Williams. The argument around him has been easy to see from both sides.
If you believe in his growth and upside, he looks like a future elite quarterback. If you’re focused on the low completion percentage and rough rookie numbers, the skepticism hangs around.
DeArdo didn’t go with a straight ranking. He used tiers, which makes the whole thing feel a lot more honest.
At the top are five quarterbacks he calls transcendent talents: Matthew Stafford, Lamar Jackson, Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, and Joe Burrow. These are the guys who can tilt a game almost by themselves.
Below that comes a much larger group of 12 quarterbacks, and this is where Williams fits the conversation. DeArdo labels them borderline stars - players who can look like stars in one game and disappear in the next. That inconsistency is the separator.
The group includes Jalen Hurts, Sam Darnold, Bo Nix, Jayden Daniels, Jared Goff, Brock Purdy, Jordan Love, Justin Herbert, Dak Prescott, Drake Maye, Trevor Lawrence, and Williams’ kind of profile. The order inside the tier can move around from week to week, matchup to matchup, and that’s the point.
There may be a few names in that group people want to argue about, but the larger idea is hard to miss: these quarterbacks have real star potential, even if they don’t show it every Sunday.
And that’s why quarterback debates get so heated this time of year. If you’ve got one of the top five, the argument is about where they sit among the best of the best. Once you fall into the next tier, the conversation gets messier fast.
Williams can be viewed as the sixth-best quarterback or the 18th-best quarterback, and in this framework, the difference isn’t nearly as dramatic as it sounds. It’s the line between near-elite and below average, and that’s exactly why this spot feels right for him.
Some weeks he looks elite. Some weeks he looks below average. That’s the reality DeArdo’s tier captures, and it’s why Williams belongs right in the middle of this debate.
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