2025 Chicago Bears

Freethinker

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No offense to the small contingency of decent people who live in Chicago, but the Bears roster almost always gives this city of blacks, mestizos and hopelessly liberal White people what they deserve. First year under the most recent golden-boy offensive coordinator turned head coach, Ben Johnson, but don't expect this team to resemble the Lion's who gave him the career bump. Let's take a deeper dive into this year's slop, which will leave you sicker than a street meat Chicago Dog.

Total White Athletes on Roster (Starters in bold)
14 Whites total, with 3 starters. Grade: F

QB - Tyson Bagent, Case Keenum
TE - Colston Loveland, Cole Kmet, Durham Smythe
T - Theo Benedet, Ozzy Trapilo
G - Joe Thuney, Luke Newman
C - Drew Dalman, Ryan Bates

Defense - None

K - Cairo Santos
P - Tory Taylor
LS - Scott Daly

IR -
PS - JP Richardson (WR), Stephen Carlson (TE), Nikola Kalinic (TE), Ricky Stromberg (OL)

First thought. A small improvement of total Whites on the roster with an increase in starters thanks to an extra offensive lineman. They probably still deserve an F-, but progress is progress, so I removed the minus. Next thought as I'm combing through the roster is that this team is a cookie-cutter copy of the Baltimore Ravens, who's preview by Don I recently read. All of the Whites allowed are strictly on offense and they are slotted into the appropriate places. Offensive line, tight end and backup quarterback. Light skinned black GM Ryan Poles sure took good notes studying the Caste NFL handbook for a DEI roster composition. The Bears have a 15-36 record under the Poles regime.

We enter year 2 for Totally-not-Gay Caleb Williams at quarterback. As we will recall, Williams was the undisputed #1 pick of the 2024 draft. There was no critical analysis of him during the draft process. If you were to point out any of his red flags or short comings on film, you would have been labeled a heretic and most likely a racist super Nazi. Well so far people like us have been right but the Caleb jock-sniffers will cite his "great" rookie stats. I shared the real stats in the Bears general thread that showed that 55% of his statistical production came when the team was down by a touchdown and a staggering 35% came in "garbage time" (after halftime down by 2 scores or more). Simply put, early in the game or when the score was competitive, Williams was bad. Ben Johnson will have his "offensive guru" labeled tested by Williams. Tyson Bagent is back again as QB2. He once again looked more impressive in preseason and one could argue the Bears were no worse off with him as a starter when they went 2-2 in 2023 when Bagent stepped in as an UDFA rookie. The team is keeping a veteran 3rd string QB this year in well traveled Case Keenum. Maybe Johnson is concerned with the QB depth that he inherited? The most interesting player on the entire Bears' roster will be rookie TE Colston Loveland. Drafted #10 overall, the Idaho native Loveland brings an impressive resume as a 2 year starter at Michigan, winning a National Championship in the process. I hope he has a great career, but after seeing how fellow 1st round pick tight end Cole Kmet's career has floundered in Chicago, I'm not going to hold my breath. And speaking of Kmet, he now gets bumped to backup TE. He signed a big contract extension recently and will carry a 11.6 million cap hit for this year and the next 2 seasons. Lot of money there, so maybe Johnson will wise up and run more double TE sets to maximize the team's offensive potential? We'll see but so far it appears 3 WRs is the base offense. Free Cole Kmet!! On the offensive line, the Bears did a major shakeup to what was one of the worst (and dark) units in the league. Dalman and Thuney are new starters for our guys and there were also some decent money spent on black guard Jackson. The consensus seems to be that this unit will be much improved but honestly I'm not really too impressed and predict this line will struggle once more. Rookie backup tackle Ozzy Trapilo out of Boston College was a good pick and could be a future starter.

On defense, its total Wakanda. As Don noted in the general thread, the first act by new DC Dennis Allen was to purge talented linebacker Jack Sanborn because he didn't have enough speed to fit his defense. What a crock, but ultimately good news for Jack because at best he would be a jerked around backup here. He now has a chance to be an every down linebacker for the Cowboys. Dennis Allen and the Chicago brain(dead) trust then proceeded to bring in zero White defenders via the draft or free agency. You could argue Allen should be near the top of the very long list of anti-White buffoons in professional sports.

Another year of a black roster and pre-season hype from the enemy media over the Bears. Let's see if @wile gets his annual wish and the Bears and their drunken contingent of fans once again crash out.
 
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I'm long gone from that area and even the thought of crossing the river into Illinois makes me a bit queasy. But yeah about me wishing bad upon the fans. FTR that hate is basically a white on white crime the coloreds generally don't care in big numbers for them the best I can tell. I'm with Bucky in that the Packers and Bears split the wins, the Bears drubbing the Drunk White Man Boobed fans in GB and the Packers drubbing their doppelgängers in Chicago.
 
Again we observe a black QB getting not one but two very good White TEs. I think Ben Johnson is a good coach, it's a shame he decided to coach Caleb Williams. It will be interesting to see if Johnson puts up with Williams "improvisational skills" running his offense.
 
I look forward to hearing the excuses all year for Caleb from the nuthuggers - just like we got for Justin Fields. "He needs more weapons". "He needs better coaching". "It's the O-Line's fault". "He only has 2 seconds to hold the ball! It's not his fault!" "He's not used to playing in the cold!" "He has to scramble because nobody's open!" "they've changed coaches on him too many times!"

I hope Loveland doesn't wind up like Greg Olson, who was never good enough for the bears and 'didnt' fit their scheme', but then became a star for Carolina.

And what a big slap in the face to Kmet.

The Bears are so poorly run, it's comical.
 
Chicago Bears TE Cole Kmet is no longer a captain

Last season, the Bears had DJ Moore, Cole Kmet, Marcedes Lewis, Tremaine Edmunds, T.J. Edwards, Johnson, and Byard as captains.

The absence of Kmet as a captain this season is noticeable. He’s a known leader in the locker room and an ambassador to the media. He’s also the Bears’ player representative for the NFLPA.

 
So this Williams is not even good enough to run a one read done and run O?
 
“That early, coaches could sense that he’d struggle with basic huddle calls and forget to motion players,” Dunne wrote. “And it wasn’t until later — right around that second-to-last game of the season — that coaches say they learned their quarterback had a learning disability. Multiple Bears sources tell Go Long they’ve seen evidence that Williams has dyslexia. They also believe that the GM, who has access to everything, was well aware of this condition before the Bears made the quarterback their first overall pick.”
 
“That early, coaches could sense that he’d struggle with basic huddle calls and forget to motion players,” Dunne wrote. “And it wasn’t until later — right around that second-to-last game of the season — that coaches say they learned their quarterback had a learning disability. Multiple Bears sources tell Go Long they’ve seen evidence that Williams has dyslexia. They also believe that the GM, who has access to everything, was well aware of this condition before the Bears made the quarterback their first overall pick.”
now the excuse for caleb is 'learning disability', conveniently timed right before the season starts.

One would think, with the offensive weapons they've surrounded him with, there would be no excuses, but there will be.
 
now the excuse for caleb is 'learning disability', conveniently timed right before the season starts.

One would think, with the offensive weapons they've surrounded him with, there would be no excuses, but there will be.
If you look at IQ averages, you could say the majority of blacks have a learning disability or mental deficiencies.
 
Report: Bears QB Caleb Williams was incredibly disrespectful to coaching staff

"...Interim head coach Thomas Brown tried to explain something to his starting quarterback and… no," Dunne writes. "Williams was not having it. An auto-response kicked in. As he had done many times to many coaches all season, Williams turned his head and walked away. Shane Waldron, before getting fired as offensive coordinator, used to stay quiet. Not Brown. Not a stern, blunt, old-school coach who believed this 22-year-old crossed a line of disrespect. The typically calm coach lost it. On the headset, another Bears assistant coach recalls Brown pressing the mic to finish his conversation: 'Get your ass back here right now! Don’t f—ing walk away when I’m talking to you!' Unfazed, Williams sashayed away. Right back to the huddle. The Bears lost, 6-3."


 
This glitzy gazelle in the open field was universally extolled as the charismatic, electric, dare we say Mahomesian playmaker these Bears have lacked since inception in 1919. OTAs arrived, coaches unwrapped this gift from the football gods who’ve cursed this organization for so long and… yikes.

Williams struggled to execute elementary tasks. Every day was a new disaster.

That early, that spring, the Bears changed the snap count to appease Williams. Instead of using a combination of colors and numbers like every other team in the NFL, the Bears reverted to a “Ready, set, go!” straight out of JV football because that’s what the quarterback requested. Aside from the obvious on-field consequences — defenders could tee off — the Bears were establishing a troubling precedent in allowing a rookie to tell them exactly what to do. Veterans couldn’t believe it. “Are you shitting me?” one receiver asked a coach.

When a play call was sent in, he’d stare at this wristband for a painful length of time. “Like it was in another language,” another coach says. Williams verbalized the call in the huddle, it was wrong half the time, and then players would be lined up wrong all over the field.

The playbook, dumbed down. The Bears offense devolved into an exercise of trial and error to fit whatever the USC rookie demanded.

All of which would’ve been manageable if Williams was willing to work. He was not.

For all the talk about wanting to be great, this new quarterback didn’t seem to have the desire. When he wasn’t storming away from a coach, he was telling veteran wide receivers how to run their routes before taking a game rep himself. In the meeting room, he barely said a word and didn’t pay attention. Coaches often caught Williams on the wrong page of the gameplan completely. He blew off film sessions and lifts.

Chicago made him a captain.

Games began.

Chaos reigned.

 
This glitzy gazelle in the open field was universally extolled as the charismatic, electric, dare we say Mahomesian playmaker these Bears have lacked since inception in 1919. OTAs arrived, coaches unwrapped this gift from the football gods who’ve cursed this organization for so long and… yikes.

Williams struggled to execute elementary tasks. Every day was a new disaster.

That early, that spring, the Bears changed the snap count to appease Williams. Instead of using a combination of colors and numbers like every other team in the NFL, the Bears reverted to a “Ready, set, go!” straight out of JV football because that’s what the quarterback requested. Aside from the obvious on-field consequences — defenders could tee off — the Bears were establishing a troubling precedent in allowing a rookie to tell them exactly what to do. Veterans couldn’t believe it. “Are you shitting me?” one receiver asked a coach.

When a play call was sent in, he’d stare at this wristband for a painful length of time. “Like it was in another language,” another coach says. Williams verbalized the call in the huddle, it was wrong half the time, and then players would be lined up wrong all over the field.

The playbook, dumbed down. The Bears offense devolved into an exercise of trial and error to fit whatever the USC rookie demanded.

All of which would’ve been manageable if Williams was willing to work. He was not.

For all the talk about wanting to be great, this new quarterback didn’t seem to have the desire. When he wasn’t storming away from a coach, he was telling veteran wide receivers how to run their routes before taking a game rep himself. In the meeting room, he barely said a word and didn’t pay attention. Coaches often caught Williams on the wrong page of the gameplan completely. He blew off film sessions and lifts.

Chicago made him a captain.

Games began.

Chaos reigned.


Not a curious case to those of us that called him out for what it was. The media treated as some infallible prospect since his freshman year of college. Have to wonder if the Bears signing Bagent to a 2 year deal is an insurance policy in the event Ben Johnson decides he does not want to deal with the red flags you have mentioned.
 
Not a curious case to those of us that called him out for what it was. The media treated as some infallible prospect since his freshman year of college. Have to wonder if the Bears signing Bagent to a 2 year deal is an insurance policy in the event Ben Johnson decides he does not want to deal with the red flags you have mentioned.
All of this dysfunction aside, from what I saw in preseason games alone Tyler Bagent is twice the QB that Williams is. Even the most inibriated Bears DWFs are starting to realize this.
 
If you don’t believe the eye test, perhaps stats will convince you of Williams’ struggles. Over the last year or so, TruMedia tracked the passes of all quarterbacks in the NFL. The Bears quarterback was the league-leader last season in “overthrown” balls, and he bumped up that total to 52 after Week 1 with five overthrows this game. The next closest player during that same time period? Bo Nix, who had 37, 17 less than Williams.

 
If you don’t believe the eye test, perhaps stats will convince you of Williams’ struggles. Over the last year or so, TruMedia tracked the passes of all quarterbacks in the NFL. The Bears quarterback was the league-leader last season in “overthrown” balls, and he bumped up that total to 52 after Week 1 with five overthrows this game. The next closest player during that same time period? Bo Nix, who had 37, 17 less than Williams.

To see that headline on far-left Yahoo says a lot. Ben Johnson is probably wishing he had stayed in Detroit or taken a different head coaching job.
 
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