Caleb Williams finally looked like the franchise quarterback Chicago’s been waiting for.
In the Bears’ 38-0 destruction of Buffalo, Williams gave us a glimpse of something we didn’t see nearly enough of in his rookie campaign: control. He wasn’t running for his life. He wasn’t out there trying to be Patrick Mahomes without the offensive line. He was calm, calculated, and efficient — exactly what Ben Johnson’s system demands.
This wasn’t just a couple of nice throws. This was a statement. Williams’ two drives weren’t about flashy stat-padding. They were about proof of concept. Proof that Ben Johnson’s offense can take the most sacked QB of 2024 (68 damn times) and turn him into a disciplined, structured field general. Proof that the Bears might finally — finally — have a quarterback who can win football games with his brain as much as his arm.
Let’s break down the five biggest takeaways from Williams’ best showing as a pro.
Subscribe to the BFR Youtube channel and ride shotgun with Dave and Ficky as they break down Bears football like nobody else.
1. Pocket Presence and Decision-Making Transformation
Last year, Caleb Williams was a walking “hold-my-beer” meme every time the pocket collapsed. Instead of cutting his losses, he’d bail, scramble, or force some hero-ball nonsense that usually ended in a sack, a pick, or him eating turf. That’s how you rack up 68 sacks in a season.
But against Buffalo? Whole different story.
When the pocket started caving on a screen, Williams didn’t panic. He didn’t try to bounce outside and turn the play into backyard chaos. Instead, he made a veteran decision: throwing the ball at his lineman’s feet. That’s boring football — and that’s exactly what the Bears need from him. It’s the kind of maturity that wins games in December, not just highlights on Twitter.
He finished the night 6-for-10 for 107 yards, a 130.0 passer rating, and, most importantly, zero “WTF was that?” throws. His opening drive completion streak (6-of-7 to start) showed he wasn’t out there hunting explosives — he was taking what the defense gave him. For a QB who used to hold onto the ball like it was his emotional support blanket, that’s massive progress.
The offensive line held up decently — only one holding call on Drew Dalman — but Williams rewarded them by not hanging them out to dry. That’s new. That’s growth.
2. Anticipation and Timing Mastery in Critical Situations
Quarterbacking in the NFL is about anticipation. If you wait to see the receiver open, it’s already too late. Rookie Caleb was guilty of that over and over. Saturday night? Different animal.
Two throws stood out:
The DJ Moore Out Route (3rd-and-5): This was surgical. Buffalo showed man with pressure looks. Williams stepped up, threw the ball before Moore even finished his break, and dropped it right on time. That’s not luck. That’s trust, timing, and confidence in the system.
The Rome Odunze Drop (3rd down): Yeah, it wasn’t caught. But the process was everything. Williams ripped the ball into a tight window, trusted his rookie wideout, and delivered it in stride. Odunze didn’t finish the play — but the quarterback did his part. Williams even admitted afterward, “I could’ve been better there”, but for having pressure in his face off the blitz pickup, it was still a decent throw.
These are the exact plays that separate the guys who can run an offense from the ones who need chaos to thrive. Williams finally looked like he trusted what he saw, trusted his guys, and trusted himself.
3. Timing and Rhythm in Ben Johnson’s Complex Offensive System
Ben Johnson didn’t come to Chicago to watch Caleb run around like a chicken with its head cut off. His system is timing-based, precision-based, and ruthless on quarterbacks who can’t process.
And Williams? He finally looked like he belonged.
On the opening 92-yard drive, Williams played point guard. Short hitches. Quick progressions. Tight end strikes. He found Cole Kmet for 28, Colston Loveland for 18, and DJ Moore for a crisp five on an out route that kept the chains moving. No hesitation. No backyard BS. Just rhythm.
The highlight, though, was the 36-yard touchdown to Olamide Zaccheaus. Williams hit him in stride out of the slot, Zaccheaus broke a tackle, and it was six. That’s how the system is supposed to work: timing, placement, YAC. That play looked like it came straight out of Johnson’s Detroit playbook.
This wasn’t Williams freelancing. This was Williams executing. That’s the difference.
4. Dealing with Adversity
For the first time in forever, the Bears scored on their opening drive. Let me repeat that: the Chicago Bears started a game with a touchdown drive. That alone feels like breaking a curse.
But what made it more impressive was the adversity baked in. They started pinned at their own 8 after a muffed kickoff return from Tyler Scott, and later in the drive were pushed back by a holding call on Drew Dalman that set up a tough 2nd-and-long. That’s the exact kind of sequence that buried Caleb last year. This time, he responded by dropping a dime downfield to Colston Loveland for 18 yards, flipping the drive’s momentum and showing he could keep his composure when things weren’t clean.
From there, he marched them 92 yards with patience and poise. The finishing touch? A 3rd-and-6 laser to Zaccheaus for the score. Williams identified the coverage, trusted the timing, and delivered on schedule. No hesitation. No panic. Just execution.
That’s a quarterback thriving in adversity — something he was flat-out bad at as a rookie. If this keeps up, the Bears won’t just be moving the ball — they’ll actually be cashing in.
5. Chemistry and Trust Building with Key Offensive Weapons
The Bears didn’t draft Rome Odunze at No. 9 just to make TikToks with Caleb. They drafted him to be a weapon. And while Odunze had the drop, the willingness from Caleb to fire that ball into a contested window tells us more than the result.
Williams also showed instant chemistry with his tight ends — a core feature of Johnson’s scheme. Kmet got a 28-yard strike. Loveland hauled in an 18-yarder. These aren’t dump-offs. These are chunk plays to guys who will be security blankets all season.
And of course, DJ Moore remains the rock. Williams trusted him on third down, hit him on the sideline, and showed he knows Moore is still WR1. Distributing the ball to multiple guys, hitting progressions, and not forcing it to one star? That’s how you keep defenses honest.
The rookie QB who stared down his first read is gone. This looked like a quarterback running an actual offense.
Bonus: Pre-Snap Command and Line Communication
We can’t ignore the little things. Williams looked decisive at the line. He made checks, communicated protections, and looked like he knew what the hell he was doing before the ball was snapped. Ben Johnson even praised him afterward: “His process is really clean right now.”
That’s huge. Because last year, Caleb looked like he was solving calculus at the line. Now? He looks like he’s driving the offense, not surviving it.
Final Verdict
Let’s be real: it’s the preseason. Buffalo wasn’t throwing the kitchen sink at him. Nobody’s fitting him for a gold jacket yet. But this wasn’t about numbers — it was about how he played.
Williams showed pocket maturity, anticipation, rhythm, poise, and chemistry with his weapons. He looked like a quarterback who can run Ben Johnson’s system, not fight against it.
That’s the pivot Bears fans have been praying for since Cutler left town.
If this version of Caleb Williams shows up in September, the NFC North isn’t just a two-team race between Detroit and Green Bay anymore. Chicago might actually matter again.