Quarterbacks coach J.T. Barrett may have delivered the most telling quote of the Bears’ offseason so far, quietly asking Caleb Williams to “do less.”
It doesn’t sound like typical coaching advice until you hear Barrett explain it. He’s asking him to stop turning every routine down into a scramble drill. This isn’t about playing it safe; it’s about being more direct with how he plays.
Williams becoming more comfortable and decisive within the structure of the offence has been a steady theme in comments from the coaching staff. Barrett’s remarks are in line with that.
It’s about shifting some of that workload to before the snap. Essentially, they want him to be able to read what he’s seeing, stick with the timing, and trust his progressions—rather than feeling like he has to bail them out every time.
This is something Williams has shown an ability to do in college, but not always consistently. Part of that was playing behind a shaky USC offensive line, which often forced him into improvisation mode early in plays.
Barrett also made it clear that this isn’t about trying to dull down one of Williams’ best qualities. It’s simply about better choosing when to unleash it.
That’s a subtle difference from how other young quarterbacks have been coached at times. It doesn’t sound like the Bears want him boxed into a strict system — more guided on when to use his gifts most effectively.
Caleb Williams has made a strong early impression
Bears players have spoken highly of his leadership and presence already during OTAs. D.J. Moore described how quickly Williams had become vocal within the huddle and how he wasn’t shy about taking command.
This was expected, considering everything you heard about him before arriving in Chicago, but having your two best receivers back up only adds fuel. This isn’t about playing it safe. It’s about being more productive with less effort.
Barrett said Williams shouldn’t have to “work as hard for [his] money,” and that gets to the heart of what Chicago is building. The Bears have built a roster that shouldn’t need its quarterback to bail out broken plays as often as his college teams required.
Williams has always been able to turn broken plays into highlights, but he’s also admitted he can drift away from what’s planned.
Caleb Williams understands why J.T. Barrett wants him “to do less”
Bears offensive coordinator Shane Waldron has spoken openly about wanting Williams’ decision-making process to become more decisive and focused on early-down efficiency rather than waiting for big-play moments.
Chicago’s improved depth gives Williams the chance to spread the ball around more naturally. Getting the ball out on time doesn’t just help wide receivers – it brings everyone into play, from tight ends to running backs.
Ben Johnson has made it clear that timing and route precision are priorities, which fits perfectly with an offence designed to give the quarterback quicker options.
Pre-snap motion, heavier personnel packages, all help simplify things for Williams. When defences have to show their hand earlier, it lets him make decisions faster once the play begins. Williams doesn’t need to lose his creativity. He just needs fewer plays where it’s the only choice left on the board.
If the Bears get this right, everyone benefits. More routine completions lead to steadier drives, improved protection rhythm, fewer desperate third downs, and more chances for skill players to make something happen after the catch.
The goal isn’t to make Williams less special. It’s to create a system where he doesn’t have to be special on every play.
Read more: