loading . . . Bears Training Camp Notes: Caleb Clicking, Burden Back (But Behind), More Chicago Bears training camp turned a week old today. Head Coach Ben Johnson celebrated the occasion by ratcheting the intensity, telling reporters this morning before practice that they would hear the pads cracking more today. Multiple people in attendance today confirmed that the cracking of pads was indeed heard, including Greg Braggs Jr., who tweeted that rookie wide receiver Luther Burden III took a big hit from linebacker Noah Sewell early in team drillsâwhich Burden finally participated in today. But football noises werenât the story of the day in Lake Forest; it was the quarterback, who, by many accounts, had his best day of practice thus far. Caleb Williams Shines as Growth Continues to Become Evident With video recording not permitted at training camp practices, we donât have many video highlights that werenât shot by the teamâs social media team and edited for their social media accounts. Here and there, youâll get a video from a rogue fan on X, and this video that surfaced from todayâs practice is so good. https://twitter.com/PolesIsHim/status/1950204499705974885 From under center, and in play action, Williams uncorks a beautiful deep ball that would have gone for a catch if not for Kyler Gordonâs blatant pass interference. All those things are on the shortlist of focal points for Williams this season, and all three were executed to perfection by the rookie quarterback on that play. Also impressive on the play, was the Cole Kmet and Colston Loveland deployment, which featured both tight ends lined up next to each other on the left side, and them double-teaming edge rusher Austin Booker before Loveland leaks out into a designed route on the other side of the defensive line, a clear safety valve for Williams if the deep look isnât there. Weâre seeing more and more of Ben Johnsonâs offense taking shape, and thatâs a design I enjoyed watching this morning. Speaking of designs, hereâs a play that appears to have DâAndre Swift and Loveland running a pick route, which created some confusion for the coverage and allowed Loveland to get open on the other side of the chains in a third-down situation, which Williams connected with him on to move the chains. Also of note in this play is Ozzy Trapilo winning against a good swim on the edge, with a great second effort to give Williams the time to get to Loveland in the read and convert. https://twitter.com/PolesIsHim/status/1950212139525751053 If youâre not impressed yet, perhaps I can interest you in some fabulous pocket presence and a cross-body completion to Rome Odunze? https://twitter.com/PolesIsHim/status/1950203644160229676 Alright, last one I promise: https://twitter.com/PolesIsHim/status/1950198832773452261 In that clip, weâre under center, again using play action and pre-snap motion to create a route package that features DâAndre Swift and DJ Moore running routes to the sideline open at two separate levels. Williams is clean and on time and delivers a good ball to Moore for a completion. I donât know what was more impressive today: Williamsâs work on recently installed concepts, Johnsonâs concepts and designs, or X user Samâs work in getting us these looks. Between the commentary from those in attendance and the video evidence, which was aplenty today, Iâm feeling real good about giving Williams the nod in that one. With the second-year quarterback looking as good as he has during camp and perhaps as good as weâve ever seen, Iâll end the Williams portion of this story with some comments from Ben Johnson this morning, said before Williams went out and had his best day yet. âI probably just see growth. He is so much more comfortable right now. Even yesterday, the walk-through, in terms of moving around. We go from gun to under to the tight ends are moving, the receivers are moving, weâre adding more every day. I told him this on the playerâs day off: His process is really clean right now. Iâm talking about how heâs preparing. Iâm really pleased with it. He is doing the work behind the scenes that no one else is seeing and weâre starting to see the dividends being paid from it.â MORE: BEN JOHNSON SPEAKS â JULY 29, 2025 More on the Offense (Including Colston Loveland, Rome Odunze, and Luther Burden III): Letâs start with Burden, who made his first appearance in team drills today and confirmed Johnsonâs concern with the time heâs missed. He appeared noticeably behind the offense before eventually being bounced from a series during team drills due to not being lined up correctly. Burdenâs pre-snap/alignment issues werenât exclusive to today either, according to Johnson, who said before practice this morning that the rookie wideout had problems on Monday during the walk-through portion of practice: âIt shows up already. I mean, we were in the walk-through yesterday afternoon, and the misalignments â we have to re-huddle, we have to start it all over again. Heâs a little bit behind right now,â Johnson said. May 9, 2025; Lake Forest, IL, USA; Chicago Bears wide receiver Luther Burden III warms up during the Rookie Minicamp at Halas Hall. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images To be clear, I donât see any reason to think Burden wonât iron out these issues, but Johnson cautioned all of us that the rookie wide receiverâs time missed during OTAs and the start of camp would lead to this learning curve, and (my read, not Johnsonâs words) that might affect his role in the offense in the early weeks of the season. On the opposite end of the spectrum is rookie tight end Colston Loveland, whom Johnson praised this morning before practice. âItâs shown up from the get-go,â Johnson said of Lovelandâs football instincts. The Bearsâ head coach highlighted a play from practice that featured Loveland winning a blocking rep at the line of scrimmage by anticipating a spin move from the rusher. Loveland has looked good in the passing and blocking game thus far, and from the snippets weâve seen, will have a significant role carved out for him in Johnsonâs offense this season. Speaking of Johnsonâs design, he offered this interesting tidbit this morning regarding second-year wide receiver Rome Odunze: âTo me, he fits that prototypical X receiver where you can line him up outside the numbers, and provided he gets that one-on-one with a corner, heâs going to win most of his matchups.â Jul 24, 2025; Lake Forest, IL, USA; Chicago Bears wide receiver Rome Odunze (15) runs with the ball during training camp at Halas Hall. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images Other Bears Training Camp News and Notes Thereâs no doubt it was the best day yet for the Bearsâ first-team offense, but it wasnât lopsided to the point of concern for the defense. Most described the day as a competitive back-and-forth, the ideal balance between the two sides during training camp. Rookie offensive lineman Ozzy Trapilo took many of the first-team snaps in team drills today and was very impressive, by all accounts. We saw some of that in one of the videos we discussed above, and Greg Braggs Jr. also reported that Trapilo won a rep where he âstonewalledâ Day Odeyingbo. There will be plenty more ups and downs as more layers are added to the offense, but today was an incredibly promising day for Caleb Williams and the first-team offense. Still, the defense ended the day with a win, forcing the offense off the field on four downs. Montez Sweat yelled, âGet your aâoff the field,â as they stopped the offense to close practice. Jun 5, 2024; Lake Forest, IL, USA; Chicago Bears defensive end Montez Sweat (98) looks on during the teamâs minicamp at Halas Hall. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports https://www.bleachernation.com/bears/2025/07/29/bears-training-camp-072925/