Colin Cowherd Takes Shocking Caleb Williams Stance

Colin Cowherd's dramatic U-turn on Caleb Williams has left Bears fans questioning the authenticity of his praise amidst rare positive media coverage.

Chicago Bears fans are used to hearing plenty of national noise about their team, and most of it has not been flattering. So when Colin Cowherd spent a stretch hammering Caleb Williams, that fit the usual script. The surprise came later, when Cowherd swung so hard in the other direction that he now has Williams sitting at No. 3 in his quarterback rankings, trailing only Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen.

That kind of turn is hard to miss, especially from someone who built a reputation on loud, attention-grabbing opinions. Cowherd’s latest take on Williams feels less like a measured evaluation and more like a full embrace of the quarterback he once spent plenty of time tearing down.

The anti-Williams run started before Williams ever played a snap for Chicago. Cowherd had put out a report saying Williams and his camp were "anti-Chicago" ahead of the 2024 NFL Draft, then later walked those comments back.

That was only the beginning. More than a year later, after Williams’ rookie season, Cowherd was still taking shots, arguing that Ben Johnson and Williams would not work together. He said Johnson would"struggle to fix" Williams, a line that landed especially strangely given how early Williams was in his NFL career.

Now, with Williams approaching his third season, Cowherd has gone from skeptic to superfan. Bears fans can certainly enjoy the validation that comes with a national voice speaking glowingly about their quarterback. After years of hearing the franchise get buried, any positive attention feels like a change of pace.

But this latest ranking pushes things pretty far. No. 3 is a massive leap, and it puts Williams ahead of a long list of quarterbacks most people would still slot above him, including Lamar Jackson, Joe Burrow, Dak Prescott, and others.

So yes, it’s nice for Bears fans to hear the praise. It’s unfamiliar, but it’s nice. Still, Cowherd’s latest pivot has gone well past believable and into the kind of over-the-top territory that makes the whole thing feel more like a show than a serious football judgment.

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