NFL 2024 Season - Week 16
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Week 16
Vintage 2018
Penix Debut
Dog Day
Playoff Position
Rest of the Story
Different Sundays
Run Some Tests
Without and With
Week 15
Two Tonight
Playoff Chances
Wild Card Challenge
Best of the Best
Next
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And It's Good
Bloated Lines
Week 14
Running up the Score
Challenge Me
Finding Reasons to Win
Crab Feed
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Buyers Regret
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Week 13
Mile High Hopes
Top and Bottom
Fourth Time the Charm
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Out in the Cold
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Week 12
Second Best
Heavyweight Bout
QB's Ins and Outs
Everybody In
Too Easy
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Try, Try, Try, Try, Try Again
Week 11
Mouse Trap
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Easy Does It
Old Foes
Falcons Fly into Mile High
Matter of Time
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Week 10
Odd Man Out
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When 8-0 is 4-4
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Week 9
Not Enough, Too Much
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Week 8
No and No
Old Glory
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Unload and Reload
No Surprise
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It Hurts
Week 7
Harbaugh Monday
Kids Camp
Barkley Back
Bird Battle
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Too Many?
Gone Shopping
Not Bad
40 for 3
Week 6
Try New
Night Vision
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Unexpected
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Week 5
Yes & Yes
Old Rivals
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So Close
Lunch in Seattle
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No Respect
Too Sweet
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Week 4
Landmine
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Winners and Losers
Call Me
Short Line
Reality Bites
Like Tonight
Uptick
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Week 3
Two Times
Reduced Value
Stars Down
The Other 21
Opportunity Knocks
Lots of Questions
Move Along People
Times Up
Week 2
Confidence Game
First and Second Picked QB's
Avoiding the Donut
Do or Die
One for the Road
Likewise
Adjustment Bureau
Down ... Not Out
Week 1
Time Marches On
Cashing the Trade
Start Here
Say What
Quick Up, Quick Down
Brazil Play Date
Top Two Open
Super Bowl Pick
Season Win Totals
Moving on Up
Breakout to Breakdown
Preseason 4
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Preseason 3
Short Memory
Two In, One Up
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Preseason 2
Quarterback Shuffle
One Two, or Two One
Starters Sit
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Money be Damned
Preseason 1
One Season to the Next
Public Shift
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Offseason
Mahomes Chasing History
All's Well that Ends Well
Ups and Downs
     
 
Quick Up, Quick Down
by Dennis Ranahan

It can be argued that Caleb Williams became the Chicago Bears starting quarterback last December when the Carolina Panthers lost to the Jacksonville Jaguars to clinch the first pick in the 2024 National Football League draft.

What? How does that work?

Well, even though the Panthers had the worst record in football last season, and that fact was clinched with their shutout loss to the Jaguars on New Year’s Eve, they didn’t have the first pick in the draft. They had sent that pick, and others, to the Chicago Bears for the right to select Bryce Young with the first pick in the 2023 draft.

That hasn’t worked out so well, at least not yet. Young was a bust in his rookie season while the second player taken in last year’s draft, C.J. Stroud, had a fantastic rookie season and led the Houston Texans to the playoffs.

This year, with the first pick, the Bears chose Caleb Williams out of Southern Cal and named him their starting quarterback before ESPN was done running his stats on draft day. To remove any doubt, the Bears shipped their starting quarterback, Justin Fields, a first-round draft choice in 2021, to the Pittsburgh Steelers at a bargain basement price.

See, the Bears knew who they wanted long before they drafted Williams, and named him their starter before he even entered Chicago’s locker room.

Good choice?

The next Patrick Mahomes?

Well, not so fast Maxwell. The Bears success in picking and developing quarterbacks is akin to the success a screen door has to shield wind. Sid Luckman was a pretty good Chicago quarterback, but he played in the 1940’s. Jim McMahon was great in 1985 when he led the Bears to a Super Bowl win over the New England Patriots. But his career was short, and his effectiveness shorter still.

The list of Chicago starting quarterbacks reads like a who’s who of nots. Vince Evans, Steve Walsh, Erik Kramer, Cade McNown, Rex Grossman, Kyle Orton and Mitch Trubisky to name just a handful of their woeful list of signal callers.

Now they hope Williams is the next Mahomes?

Do they know Mahomes spent all but the last game of his rookie season on the bench while Alex Smith guided the Chiefs offense? And when Mahomes was offered advertising deals during that rookie season he turned them all down because he didn’t want to take the focus off the Chiefs starter.

Now that’s character. That’s the stuff an organization can be proud to hoist as their team leader.

Williams?

I’m not wishing bad for the kid, and he certainly is athletically gifted. But to think Williams is ready to step in and lead the Bears to a winning season is a stretch.

Right now, his personal expectations far, far exceed his true potential for his rookie season. And few things are more debilitating for a rookie quarterback than lofty hopes based on thin air.

Consider this, rookie quarterbacks do not fare well when thrown into the mix as an opening day starter. Both Young and the eventual phenom Stroud, lost when they opened for their teams last September … and they were both underdogs in that role.

Fifteen times a rookie quarterback has been favored on opening day, and fourteen of those favorites lost against the point spread.

Williams is favored tomorrow and will be playing in front of his hometown fans who are expecting greatness out of the box. When in fact, history shows favored rookie signal callers are duds to start.

Qoxhi Picks: Tennessee Titans (+4) over Chicago Bears