
Imago
NFL, American Football Herren, USA Seattle Seahawks at Chicago Bears Dec 26, 2024 Chicago, Illinois, USA Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams 18 warms up before the game against the Seattle Seahawks at Soldier Field. Chicago Soldier Field Illinois USA, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xDanielxBartelx 20241226_mcd_bd7_1

Imago
NFL, American Football Herren, USA Seattle Seahawks at Chicago Bears Dec 26, 2024 Chicago, Illinois, USA Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams 18 warms up before the game against the Seattle Seahawks at Soldier Field. Chicago Soldier Field Illinois USA, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xDanielxBartelx 20241226_mcd_bd7_1
Essentials Inside The Story
- Caleb Williams talked about creating legacy and history before their wild-card game, he has another message before the Rams matchup
- Williams has held himself accountable throughout his Chicago journey
- The Rams already have a plan in place to take down Caleb Williams
One night before facing the Green Bay Packers in the wild-card showdown, quarterback Caleb Williams had one message for his locker room: You earn money in the regular season, you create a legacy in the playoffs. Lo and behold, the Chicago Bears edged the Packers 25–6 in the final quarter for a comeback win. Now, as they prepare to face the Los Angeles Rams in the divisional round, he has another message for his team.
Watch What’s Trending Now!
“Just the belief and trust I have in them to be able to do their job is paramount for us. And sometimes you have to hold everybody accountable,” Williams said ahead of Sunday’s matchup. “I get held accountable every day, and I want to win these games and be in these big moments. So, we have to be accountable to each other, and that’s one of the most important things in these big playoff games. It’s the fundamentals, the details, that win you games.”
Chicago holds an elemental advantage over the LA Rams in Sunday’s matchup with temperatures expected to drop below 10 degrees. Moreover, despite their 23rd-ranked defense, according to PFF, they led the NFL with 23 interceptions and recovered 10 fumbles. However, accountability has kept them alive so far. Just take the example of their matchup against their oldest rivals, the Packers.
ADVERTISEMENT
In Chicago’s dramatic Wild Card win, they trailed 21–3 at halftime and 21–6 entering the fourth quarter. But everything flipped in the final period, and the Bears sealed their first playoff win in 15 years. It was their seventh fourth-quarter comeback of the season. Two of them came against the Green Bay Packers alone.
The competition against the Rams would be a different challenge, though. They have the league’s best defense. The fact that Williams was sacked 24 times this season, losing 165 yards. But the QB believes in his squad.
A year ago, that level of confidence would have sounded like a fictional tale. The Bears’ offensive line struggled badly, and Williams was sacked a franchise-high 68 times, the third-most in NFL history. Fast forward to his sophomore season, and the contrast is striking. Williams has command of the offense, and the results support it. As Williams walked off Soldier Field, his postgame message echoed what he just addressed.
ADVERTISEMENT
“True belief,” he said. “Belief. That’s all you need. You got to believe in the coaches that they’re gonna call the right play at the right time. You got belief in the players on the field that you’re gonna make the right play at the right time.”
That belief has translated into production. Under head coach Ben Johnson, the Bears have finished as a top-10 offense in nearly every major category. But trust and belief aren’t the whole story. Accountability has been just as central to Chicago’s turnaround. After his 5-12 rookie season, Williams wanted to be coached hard.
ADVERTISEMENT
That mindset played a role when the Bears began their head-coaching search. And when Johnson arrived, he made one thing clear: Williams would be critiqued the same way as everyone else. Johnson set a standard that applied to the entire roster, from fringe players to the franchise quarterback. That was before the 2025 season even started.
Now, the Bears are deep into the postseason, and the themes Williams keeps returning to (trust, belief, accountability) no longer sound theoretical. They look like habits built months ago, finally showing up when it matters most.
The challenge ahead, though, is real. This is the Rams. And even with Williams playing the best football of his young career, Los Angeles is already preparing to disrupt everything Chicago has built heading into Sunday.
ADVERTISEMENT
Jared Verse shared the Rams’ plans against Caleb Williams
Jared Verse knows exactly what stands between the Rams and an NFC Championship appearance: slowing down Caleb Williams. According to the second-year linebacker and former Defensive Rookie of the Year, that doesn’t necessarily mean putting the quarterback on the ground. Instead, Verse explained that the priority is disrupting Williams’ throwing motion.
“You’ve got to keep rushing, you’ve got to keep running, and once you get your hands around him, you can’t fully grab him, aim for his arm,” Verse said. “You have to aim for his arm, try to mess his throw up a little bit. It can’t just be like getting him off the spot. Running quarterbacks, even if they’re off the spot, they’re still liable to make any type of play.”
ADVERTISEMENT
That approach makes sense when you look at what Williams and the Bears have become under Ben Johnson. Chicago averaged 25.9 points and over 369 yards per game this season, ranking ninth and sixth in the league, respectively. They were especially balanced, ranking third in rushing over 144 yards per game. Simply forcing Williams to move isn’t enough when the offense can still function at full speed. And the Rams clearly aren’t ignoring Williams’ efficiency either.
Top Stories
Andy Reid Announces Double Firing Decision as Patrick Mahomes Outlines Ideal Chiefs OC

Eagles Issue Statement on Lane Johnson’s Retirement Decision After Announcing Update on $96M Star’s Future

Russell Wilson Announces New Citizenship Plans Away From America as Giants QB Makes Career Decision

Baltimore Ravens Make Mike McDaniel Announcement as Fired John Harbaugh Accepts Giants Job

During the regular season, he completed 330 of 568 passes for 3,942 yards, averaging 6.9 yards per attempt, with a 27-to-7 touchdown-to-interception ratio. Add seven fourth-quarter comeback wins to the résumé, and it’s easy to see why Verse is focused less on sacks and more on timing and disruption. But we have to wait till Sunday to see if their strategy is going to pay off.
The Bears will host the Rams on Sunday, with kickoff from Soldier Field scheduled for 5:30 p.m. CT.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

