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Chicago Bears Quarterback Caleb Williams Makes Franchise History
David Banks-Imagn Images

If you’ve spent any time freezing your toes off along the lakefront in January, you know the history of the Chicago Bears quarterback position is less of a “rich tradition” and more of a haunted house tour. It is a position where hope usually goes to die, buried under a pile of overthrow passes and shattered expectations.

But on a frigid Sunday against the Detroit Lions, the ghosts finally took a day off.

In the fourth quarter of a grinding game, Caleb Williams did something no Bears signal-caller has done since the days when Friends was still airing new episodes on NBC. With a 25-yard touchdown strike to Jahdae Walker, Williams officially surpassed Erik Kramer’s single-season passing record of 3,838 yards.

A Record 30 Years In the Making

For three decades, Bears fans have watched other franchises effortlessly churn out 4,000-yard passers while they tried to talk themselves into Rex Grossman or Mitchell Trubisky.

The record-breaking moment wasn’t just a stat pad; it was a spark of life. Soldier Field had been quiet, watching the offense struggle against a stout Lions front. But when Williams stepped up and delivered that laser to Walker just 44 seconds into the final frame, the roar from the stands wasn’t just about the six points. It was the collective exhale of a fanbase that finally has a guy.

Williams Focused On Legacy, Not Just Stats

While the fans were checking the history books, the Bears’ coaching staff tried their best to play it cool. Head Coach Ben Johnson, in peak “coach speak” mode earlier in the week, called the record “tertiary” to the goal of winning.

Chasing the Elusive 4,000-Yard Club

Now that Kramer’s ghost has been busted, there is one final frontier left for Williams. The Chicago Bears remain the only franchise in the NFL without a 4,000-yard passer. It is a statistical anomaly so embarrassing it almost feels intentional.

With the single-season yardage crown now resting on his head, Williams has his sights set on that nice, round number. But more importantly, he has this team heading to the playoffs with actual momentum.

For the first time in a long time, the quarterback play in Chicago isn’t the problem—it’s the solution. And frankly, after 30 years of wandering the quarterback wilderness, Bears fans don’t care if the record is “tertiary.” They just care that the kid can play.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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