CHICAGO — Caleb Williams took off his helmet and put on his recruiter hat Tuesday afternoon. The Chicago Bears franchise quarterback sat down for a face-to-face hour on the Caleb Williams Maxx Crosby podcast episode of The Rush, delivering an absolute gold mine for football fans starving for offseason drama. From breaking down their brutal Week 4 collision to dissecting head coach Ben Johnson’s ruthless playbook, the interview felt less like a media obligation and more like a pitch meeting between two future teammates.
Game Recognizes Game
Iron sharpens iron. You could practically feel the mutual respect bleeding through the microphones. Williams immediately gave flowers to Crosby for single-handedly wrecking Chicago’s offensive flow back in Week 4 of the 2025 season. Fans remember the sequence vividly: Crosby tipped a pass to himself for a ridiculous interception. But instead of backing down, the rookie quarterback kept climbing off the turf, eventually willing Chicago to a victory.
Crosby returned the love, validating what every soul in Soldier Field already knows.
“You’re one of those guys for sure and you’re just getting started. I don’t even know you understand yet how good you can be and that’s the scariest part.”
— Maxx Crosby, Las Vegas Raiders
The two superstars operate on the exact same freakish wavelength. Both hold themselves to psychotic standards, with Crosby casually mentioning teammates bailing on his workouts because they literally cannot keep the pace. Williams matched that energy, admitting he is already crawling up the walls to get back on the practice field just one month removed from the Bears’ heart-wrenching overtime loss to the Los Angeles Rams in the Divisional Round.
The Mad Scientist on the Sidelines
If anyone thought Ben Johnson was just a clipboard-holding tactician, Williams shattered that illusion. Chicago’s head coach operates like a cold-blooded assassin. Johnson doesn’t just want to win; he wants to drop 50 points on your head and step on your throat.
Williams painted a vivid picture of the 2025 AP Coach of the Year finalist. He described Johnson as a “mad scientist that doesn’t speak what he’s thinking.” The coach apparently deadpans jokes with such a straight face that players freeze, terrified to laugh until he gives them permission. That intense, business-first approach dragged the Bears to an 11-6 record and an NFC North title, completely rewiring the franchise’s DNA from the ground up.
Joe Thuney: Entering GOAT Territory
The conversation inevitably shifted to the trenches. Williams didn’t mince words when discussing left guard Joe Thuney. In the young quarterback’s eyes, the 33-year-old veteran has securely entered the Greatest Of All Time conversation for interior linemen.
Look at the resume. Thuney owns four Super Bowl rings. He just snagged the NFL’s inaugural Protector of the Year award. He anchors the line, elevates everyone in the huddle, and stonewalls defensive tackles in the postseason. If Thuney helps bring the Lombardi Trophy back to the Windy City, his bust in Canton is basically pre-sculpted. Oh, and the two share a November 18 birthday. Some things are just written in the stars.
Ice in the Veins: The Cole Kmet Lob
The absolute peak of the sit-down arrived when Williams broke down the film of his season-defining throw. Fast forward to the Divisional Round against the Rams. The pocket collapses. Los Angeles locks down the secondary. The play is dead on arrival. On the sideline, Ben Johnson literally drops his head in disgust.
Then, the Iceman took over.
Williams recognized the glaring physical mismatch: 6-foot-6 tight end Cole Kmet isolated on 5-foot-11 defensive back Cobie Durant. He didn’t panic. He simply bought a fraction of a second and lofted a flawless back-corner fade. The ball left his hand, and he immediately knew it was a touchdown, forcing overtime and sending Soldier Field into absolute hysterics.
The craziest part? He explained the throw like he was ordering a cup of coffee. No arrogance, just cold calculation.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
This podcast appearance pours gasoline on the hottest rumor of the 2026 offseason: Maxx Crosby to Chicago. The Raiders edge rusher has reportedly grown frustrated in Vegas, and the Bears possess a glaring need for an elite pass-rusher opposite Montez Sweat. General Manager Ryan Poles has some salary cap gymnastics to perform, currently sitting roughly $5 million over the limit, but restructuring contracts or cutting a veteran to land a top-five defensive player is a no-brainer.
Williams and Crosby already sound like teammates. If Poles can orchestrate a blockbuster trade in the coming weeks, the Bears instantly morph from a feel-good playoff story into the undisputed heavyweights of the NFC.

