‘Wait for my dresses’: Caleb Williams is the Zoomer QB to shake up the hidebound Bears
The franchise has long been dismissed as backwards looking. But it is set to draft a star who happily pushes back on athlete stereotypes
Among the NFL's heirloom franchises, the Chicago Bears are the still living in the last century - the pride of George Papa Bear" Halas, a league founding father. From their neoclassical stadium to their 101-year-old owner-matriarch to their stubborn reverence for Bear Weather" (ie: lake-effect winter conditions that only affect the other team), everything about the franchise is old-fashioned. Even the Bears being in position to select a quarterback with the first pick in this month's draft has arrived about 30 years too late in a league where the passing game dominates. What's notable is that the passer in their sights isn't the second-coming of 1940s hero Sid Luckman or a Harvard man or some other statuesque golden boy. It's Caleb Williams, Gen Z's poster boy quarterback.
On paper, Williams would appear to possess precisely the resume that Virginia McCaskey, the owner-matriarch in question, might describe as the cat's pajamas." He went to USC - a college football program that Chicagoland's many Notre Dame fans at least respect. He won the Heisman trophy, putting him in a league with early Bears two-way star Johnny Lujack. And Williams played most of his college games in the LA Memorial Coliseum, one of the few stadiums left that can rival Soldier Field's antiquity - so he shouldn't be a snob about the patchy quality of the Bears natural home turf.
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