Kurt Warner understands more than most about the quarterback position. He didn’t reach the Hall of Fame by accident. During his long, winding career, he also learned the mistakes teams could make in developing younger guys. While most remember Warner for his incredible runs in St. Louis and Arizona, they often forget he had a brief stint in the mid-2000s with the New York Giants. Here, he learned some lessons about how it can be so easy to mismanage a high draft pick. That lesson could be easily applied to Caleb Williams by the Chicago Bears.
In 2004, the Giants started Warner while keeping #1 overall pick Eli Manning on the bench. However, around the end of November, the team decided to make a switch. It didn’t go well. Manning couldn’t even complete 40% of his passes with one touchdown and six interceptions. The low point came against Baltimore, where he went 4-of-18 for 27 yards and two interceptions. Warner came in to finish the game after Manning was benched. Rather than push to get more playing time, though, the veteran told the coaches they could not do that again.
The Bears must stay the course with Caleb Williams.
Last week was a reminder that nothing about this season will be smooth. It never is with rookie quarterbacks. They must let him go out there, make mistakes, and learn how to handle the challenges of the NFL. New York took Warner’s advice. They stuck with Manning for the rest of the year, finishing with five touchdowns and three interceptions, including a win over Dallas in the season finale. This wasn’t the first case of such an approach proving correct. Matthew Stafford endured the same learning experiences in Detroit. Now he’s one of the NFL’s best.
Bears fans aren’t feeling the most patient these days. That is hardly surprising. After getting burned by quarterback missteps for years, they’re dying to say they finally have a franchise guy. Watching Caleb Williams struggle in his debut against Tennessee must’ve stung. Is this another misfire? The Bears didn’t even flinch after the game. It was made clear they knew moments like this were coming. Growing pains are inevitable. The trick is to keep pushing forward. As Williams stacks games, his experience will lead to better play.
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Warner always understood that. The hard part is waiting it out.
There are three things I look at when evaluating people in high-pressure jobs. 1) Do they look like they can answer the questions required to get better if there are setbacks? 2) Do they have a grasp of the situation at hand and their role in it? 3) Are they willing to do what is necessary to improve even if it is uncomfortable? Caleb stared down the competition last week and knew immediately what needed to improve. His evaluation of success is a win. That’s the only thing that matters. Stats will give people a warm fuzzy feeling, but wins… Read more »
Some of us expected growing pains. Can’t fall for the hype so often.
Caleb will be fine. I have no doubts about it. It’s time for the Bears, and better yet, it’s his time. No panic here.
Stay the course with Caleb. What else could you possibly do? I reckon just fix the offensive line for now.