Rafael Devers kept waving off pinch runner Jonah Cox (who is very fast) then pouted in the dugout and avoided anyone who tried to dab him up
This dude is weird lol
Just because he’s tall, foreign, and does all this performative look-at-me bullshit doesn’t mean he’s not a scumbag. This guy has the whole world fooled, drives me CRAZY.
Leave it to LaMelo Ball to break the NBA rulebook - where his delayed layup, which looked totally illegal, isn't actually covered by the rules at all... making it, dare I say, LEGAL?!?! You've gotta watch the whole breakdown, link below
Caleb Williams overtime game-winning TD to DJ Moore against the Packers was named the NFL’s Next Gen Stats Moment of the Year.
One of the greatest plays in Bears history.
Look at this box we got right here!
It comes from Macomb, Illinois and is home to the Western Illinois Leathernecks!
Thank you so much to Coach Davis and everyone at @WIUFootball for sending this box, keep it rollin, 'NECKS!
Caleb Williams is two seasons into his NFL career, and the discourse around him already feels rushed, emotional, and detached from how elite quarterbacks actually develop.
So let’s slow this down and talk reality.
Through two NFL seasons, Williams has already cleared benchmarks that many “great” quarterbacks didn’t hit until years later. He’s thrown roughly 47 touchdowns to just 13 interceptions, pushed past 7,400 passing yards, added legitimate rushing value, led multiple fourth-quarter comebacks, won his division, and delivered the Bears their first playoff win in over a decade.
That’s not hype. That’s production.
Year one was ugly — and that part matters. Poor offensive line play, excessive sacks, holding the ball too long, and an offense that lacked structure. But that profile isn’t unique. Early Drew Brees. Early Stafford. Early Josh Allen. Raw talent, flashes of brilliance, uneven efficiency. The league has always misjudged quarterbacks who don’t look polished immediately.
Year two is where the trajectory shifted — and this is the inflection point people are missing.
Touchdown-to-interception ratio spiked. The offense jumped into the top tier of the league. Chicago won close games late. Williams consistently delivered when the structure broke down. That’s the separator between quarterbacks who flame out and quarterbacks who scale.
What makes Caleb different isn’t just the stats — it’s how the production shows up.
He’s already making throws that break defensive rules. Off-platform lasers. Late-window shots under pressure. Fourth-down conversions where the play is dead for 99% of quarterbacks. These are the same types of throws that defined Rodgers, Mahomes, and peak Stafford — the kind you cannot teach, only refine.
And here’s the critical nuance: he’s doing this before he’s fully consistent.
Yes, the accuracy still fluctuates. Yes, there are missed layups. Yes, he sometimes presses. But that’s normal for quarterbacks who rely on creativity early while the mental game catches up. Josh Allen didn’t become Josh Allen until he cleaned up those exact same issues. Stafford didn’t win a Super Bowl until his efficiency caught up to his arm talent. Even Brees didn’t become Brees until year four.
This is what people get wrong: inconsistency early does not cap a quarterback’s ceiling — it often signals a very high one.
So where is Caleb Williams right now?
He’s past the “can he play?” phase. He’s past the “is he the guy?” phase. He’s squarely in the “can he polish the details?” phase — and that’s the phase elite quarterbacks break through from.
His ceiling is obvious: a top-tier NFL quarterback capable of carrying an offense, winning games late, and competing for MVPs and championships if the environment holds. The traits align. The moments align. The arc aligns.
His floor is no longer “bust.” That conversation ended in year two. The realistic floor now is a high-end starter — someone who can win games, stress defenses, and keep a franchise relevant even if he never becomes hyper-efficient.
The gap between that floor and his ceiling comes down to refinement, not talent.
And historically? That’s a gap the best quarterbacks close in years three and four.
If you’re judging Caleb Williams right now as finished, you’re not evaluating him — you’re projecting impatience.
Quarterbacks with this level of arm talent, playmaking under pressure, and early-career production don’t flame out. They evolve.
Chicago finally has a quarterback whose problems are correctable, not limiting.
That’s the difference.
Failed is quite the reach pal. Still waiting on a text/call from him after I got shipped off like a piece of garbage. Can’t wait to see you twice a year, Coach.