There are multiple reasons why Caleb Williams is showing rapid improvement with the Chicago Bears. Head coach Ben Johnson said it starts with the footwork. The second-year quarterback has gotten much better at keeping his feet calm, using them to avoid pressure and direct his passes. It explains his improved accuracy and sack avoidance. There is also the growing mastery of pre-snap. Williams is getting better at identifying what defenses are showing and making adjustments at the line to counter them.
All of those things are essential to his current and future success. However, Williams is also doing something else people haven’t noticed yet. He is spreading the ball around. If you go back and look at most great quarterbacks in their early years, most of them tend to lean on a select few options in the passing game. Jayden Daniels focused consistently on Terry McLaurin and Zach Ertz last year. Patrick Mahomes was locked in on Tyreek Hill and Travis Kelce in 2018. Williams was no different. The Bears’ target share from 2024 skewed heavily towards three options. In fact, only five players caught 5% or more of the passes that season.
2024
- DJ Moore: 26.56%
- Keenan Allen: 22.96%
- Rome Odunze: 19.16%
- Cole Kmet: 10.43%
- D’Andre Swift: 9.86%
Things have shifted dramatically through the first three games of this year. Williams has begun utilizing his entire arsenal. No fewer than eight players have caught at least 5% of the target share.
2025:
- Odunze: 28.42%
- Moore: 16.84%
- Olamide Zaccheaus: 16.84%
- Swift: 12.63%
- Kmet: 7.36%
- Luther Burden: 6.31%
- Colston Loveland: 6.31%
- Kyle Monangai: 5.26%
Caleb Williams has already learned to spread the ball around.
Any respectable football expert will tell you the toughest quarterbacks to defend were the ones who had no pre-conceived notions about where the ball goes. They’re throwing to the open guy. Tom Brady was a master at this for two decades. The same was true of Aaron Rodgers. When defenses know the ball won’t go exclusively to three or four guys, it gets much harder to defend plays. Coaches always talk about making them defend every blade of grass. This is what they’re talking about. Caleb Williams has said multiple times that Rodgers was his favorite quarterback growing up. Brady is somebody he’s sought advice from a lot. It appears he’s been listening to what they have to say.
Subscribe to the BFR Youtube channel and ride shotgun with Dave and Ficky as they break down Bears football like nobody else.
There is a long way to go before Williams earns the respect of people around the league. It starts with winning more football games. Hopefully, that happens in the coming weeks.












Hmmmm,I wonder who could have downvoted mocking Lamberts use of that Dunn article with no sources cited? Who oh who could it be? It’s a huge mystery
Ha, Lambert has finally exhausted those really insightful Tyson Dunn article quotes from unnamed sources He’s back to rah, rah Pom-pom waiving.
In Dublin, Wentz is playing well. The Bears will be hard pressed to win against the Vikings in Minnesota if Carson performs this well or well enough. Mason running well too. Jefferson too. Addisson is back.
Want to create a better financial future?
Start making over $15,000 each month from home! I earned $16,600 last month from this simple online job, which has made all the difference in my life. The independence it offers has improved my happiness and productivity. If you’re looking to change your situation, follow the instructions and get started with online earnings today!
OpenThis →→ Jobathome1.Com
Yeah Dr I see that Rodgers is doing well. Still can’t stand just like when he was with Green Bay. But I don’t care about any of that what really bothers me is Minnesota looks bad. Especially with McCarthy under Center..
My question is how the hell did we managed to lose this team with him Center??