CHICAGO — less than 24 hours after his season ended in stunning overtime fashion, Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams was back in the public eye—but this time, as a fan. The second-year signal-caller was spotted courtside (or rather, rink-side) at the United Center on Monday night, taking in the Chicago Blackhawks’ clash against the Winnipeg Jets.
Williams didn’t just show up; he fully embraced the city’s sports culture. Viral clips showed the QB rocking a No. 98 Connor Bedard jersey, giving a nod to the Blackhawks’ young phenom. He wasn’t rolling solo, either. Williams was joined by Chicago Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong, creating a star-studded crossover of the city’s next generation of athletes.
The appearance comes as a bit of a reset for Williams, who just wrapped up a rollercoaster sophomore campaign under new head coach Ben Johnson. While the wounds from Sunday’s loss are fresh, seeing the QB out and about suggests he’s already turning the page.
Critics expected a regression after Williams’ rocky rookie year (5-12 record, 68 sacks). Instead, under Johnson’s tutelage, Williams exploded. He threw for 3,942 yards and 27 touchdowns, cutting his sack total down to 24 and leading the Bears to their first division title since 2018.
The postseason brought high drama. Williams orchestrated a clutch 31-27 Wild Card win over the rival Green Bay Packers, sealing it with a 25-yard touchdown strike with 1:43 remaining. It was the kind of moment Chicago has waited decades for.
However, the magic ran out in the Divisional Round. Facing the Los Angeles Rams, Williams fought through a three-interception day to tie the game at 17-17 in the fourth quarter, forcing overtime. But the comeback fell short. Rams kicker Harrison Mevis drilled a 42-yard game-winning field goal in OT, sending Los Angeles to the NFC Championship and sending Chicago home.
Despite the bitter ending (23-of-42, 257 yards, 2 TDs, 3 INTs), Williams proved he belongs. And if Monday night at the United Center is any indication, he’s not hiding from the spotlight.
The Bears head into the offseason with their franchise quarterback question finally answered. The focus now shifts to GM Ryan Poles surrounding Williams with even more protection to avoid a repeat of the 68-sack rookie disaster. For the Rams, the “Mevis Dagger” propels them into a heavy-weight bout for the NFC crown next Sunday.

