Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

NOISE POLLUTION

There might be a few concerns with Williams, but his play outweighs everything

- Pfinley@suntimes.com @patrickfin­ley JASON LIESER jlieser@suntimes.com @JasonLiese­r

INDIANAPOL­IS — Those who know USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams personally find it annoying, though maybe a little amusing, that the people taking swipes at him appear to be too far removed from him to be truly informed.

That’s one of the challenges for the Bears, who have the No. 1 pick in the draft and met briefly with Williams at the NFL Scouting Combine: discerning what’s accurate and what matters.

The upside to Williams’ breakout season in 2022, when he won the Heisman Trophy, was that it establishe­d him as the clear top choice in the draft this year, but it also left tons of time for analysts, talkshow hosts and the multitudes on social media to fill by nitpicking his game and questionin­g his character.

Is he high maintenanc­e? Is he me-first? Is he too concerned with things other than football? Is he weird for painting his fingernail­s? Is he soft for crying and hugging his mom after a loss? The open season on Williams has been endless and mostly ridiculous.

“It’s been unfavorabl­e to him, and it’s been a little bit unfair,” said Penn State offensive tackle Olu Fashanu, who spent three years with Williams at Gonzaga College High School in Washington, D.C. “I know the type of guy he is. I still talk to him to this day. It sucks when you see headlines and different quotes, but that’s the name of the game.

“But it doesn’t affect him at all. He’s just gonna keep being himself.”

NFL teams seem fine with Williams being himself, or at minimum are giving far more weight to his play than anything else. Three scouts from AFC teams told the Sun-Times during the combine that while there are various concerns, they all reached the same conclusion: They’d take Williams in a heartbeat.

Declining to work out or undergo medical assessment­s at the combine was unconventi­onal, but inconseque­ntial because he’ll happily do that for the individual teams that actually have a chance of drafting him. Wil

liams did take measuremen­ts Saturday at Lucas Oil Stadium, though, and checked in at 6-1 and 214 pounds. As he said Friday, that’s close to Aaron Rodgers’ size. His arms are 32 inches, his wingspan is 75 inches and his hands are 9¾ inches.

Those are merely details to Williams, who advised everyone to “go ahead and watch [film] to see how I am as a competitor.” Over the last two seasons at USC, he completed 67.5% of his passes, averaged 314.2 yards per game and threw 72 touchdown passes against 10 intercepti­ons.

That talent has been obvious since childhood.

“It was like Superman,” said Oklahoma offensive tackle Walter Rouse, who played at Williams’ rival high school. “It was clear he was going to be destined for greatness.”

Whereas Justin Fields has wowed as a runner but underwhelm­ed as a passer, Williams’ ability to create with his legs and arm dovetails perfectly with the direction of modern football. He’s in a tier by himself in this draft class.

Whether people buy into the supposed red flags or not, he’s almost certainly going No. 1, and it’s up to Bears general manager Ryan Poles whether he wants to use the top pick on him or cash it in for a wealth of assets in a trade. His most likely course is to draft Williams and trade Fields.

Poles and coach Matt Eberflus know Fields well after two-plus years of working together at Halas Hall, and for whatever frustratio­ns they have with his performanc­e as a passer, they love his constituti­on. Fields is thickskinn­ed, relentless and no-nonsense. He’s mentally and physically resilient. The locker room loves him.

The goal over the next month and a half leading up to the draft is to gauge Williams’ readiness in those categories. The Bears will do that by talking to dozens of former teammates and coaches.

“I can’t say one bad thing about him,” USC offensive lineman Jarrett Kingston said Saturday. “He’s the ultimate leader. He’s not afraid to get in your face and make sure you’re doing the right thing, but he’s also not in your face all the time.

“There’s a lot of noise about Caleb, but . . . he’s not what it’s all made out to be [in the media].”

Williams could’ve asserted his own influence on the narrative over the last few months, of course, but said Friday he prefers to keep quiet publicly. Until the combine, he hadn’t done anything to squash the rumor that he’d try to pull a power play to avoid going to the Bears. Poles dismissed that as untrue to his knowledge, and Williams said Friday he looked forward to the opportunit­y to “create and rewrite history” if they drafted him.

His overall handling of his public image raised questions — for some at least — about his inner circle’s ability to navigate the ups and downs of a celebrity who will only grow more popular once he joins the NFL. Williams doesn’t have an agent, instead relying on his father, Carl, and other advisers.

He certainly is doing things uniquely, but he’s in a unique position. He’s the clear frontrunne­r to go No. 1. His father is a savvy businessma­n with a career in commercial real-estate developmen­t. Williams made unpreceden­ted millions in NIL money as a star in Los Angeles.

He’s going to force NFL teams to adjust to him rather than conform to longstandi­ng expectatio­ns. That’s not inherently a problem. Teams need to get used to it because others will follow. Even in this draft, top wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. isn’t hiring an agent and didn’t work out at the combine.

New and different don’t necessaril­y mean bad. And none of it seems significan­t enough to sway any team from selecting him.

 ?? SARAH STIER/GETTY IMAGES ?? USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams might have his naysayers, but he did win the Heisman Trophy in 2022.
SARAH STIER/GETTY IMAGES USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams might have his naysayers, but he did win the Heisman Trophy in 2022.
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 ?? PATRICK FINLEY ??
PATRICK FINLEY
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 ?? AP (TOP), GETTY IMAGES ?? Caleb Williams has had a memorable college career at USC, but some critics choose to focus on his relationsh­ip with his parents (including his mother, Dayne Price, whom he greeted after a game against UCLA in November) or his painted fingernail­s.
AP (TOP), GETTY IMAGES Caleb Williams has had a memorable college career at USC, but some critics choose to focus on his relationsh­ip with his parents (including his mother, Dayne Price, whom he greeted after a game against UCLA in November) or his painted fingernail­s.

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