LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) -If Chris Williams had his way, he would have been on the field a week after back surgery.
So yes, he feels ready to play. Whether he’ll get that opportunity when the Chicago Bears host Detroit following this week’s bye is another issue.
For now, the first-round pick from Vanderbilt is in a holding pattern.
“I could play,” Williams said. “I’ve been practicing, so I’m sure I could play. I’ve been doing full practices, so I’m not really worried about that part of it. I’m just trying to get my reps.”
the past few weeks, working mainly with the second team.
“He’s healthy,” offensive coordinator Ron Turner said. “He’s cleared (to practice). He’s ready to go. It’s just a matter of getting him comfortable with the offense and continuing to work on his techniques and fundamentals.”
Will he get a chance against Detroit?
“(We’ll) see where we are next week,” Turner said.
At the moment, the Bears are 4-3 and tied with Green Bay for the NFC North lead, and they’re winning in a very un-Chicago-like way – behind the offense. More surprising, the yards are coming through the air and not on the ground. Even though the running game is struggling, the Bears will take this: a league-leading 196 points.
Kyle Orton ranks sixth with 1,669 yards passing, and the offensive line is holding its ground after playing a big role as the Bears fell to 7-9 last season.
After allowing 44 sacks and averaging a league-low 3.1 yards per carry, the Bears clearly needed help on the line, so they grabbed Williams with the 14th pick even though he reportedly slipped on some teams’ charts because of questions about his back. He caused a stir in late August when he said the Bears knew of a pre-existing herniated disk in his lower back when they drafted him, but the team said the operation was for a different injury.
ams is ready to make his debut – or is at least close.
The Bears might be reluctant to tinker with the line, since John St. Clair is playing well enough at left tackle. They could give Williams a series here and there rather than simply throw him in once he’s activated, but that poses some challenges.
“I’m not saying it wouldn’t happen, but it’s tough to do on the offensive line,” Turner said. “So much of it is those guys working together and the chemistry they have.”
Williams said he’s not sure if he would be better off jumping in.
“It’s hard to say,” he said. “I’ve never played in a pro football game – no preseason, no regular season. It’s hard to say if I could jump in so that’s where coaching comes in. They’ll know when I’m ready.”
For Williams, it’s been a long wait after a blur of activity.
He got drafted and married in April. He bought a house near the Bears’ practice facility, and he got a big contract, all within a few months. Then, he got some time off he didn’t want.
Watching from the sidelines was something new. The back problem he had at Vanderbilt was a minor one and didn’t prevent him from starting all 24 games as a junior and senior.
His most serious injury?
een fairly clean. … Nothing newsworthy.”
The time off gave Williams “an opportunity to watch a lot of film” and observe the veterans.
“They see everything,” he said. “They see stuff you never even thought about looking at. Just being with that group and just being able to hear the conversations and the questions they ask about certain things, you learn a lot.”
Now, he just needs to show what he learned.
“The offensive line – and the whole offense in general – is playing great,” Williams said. “I want to be a part of it really bad, but at the same time, I have to earn it.”
Add A Comment