Caleb Williams never shies away from flaunting his fashion game. The 2024 No. 1 pick rolled into the Bears’ Week 13 clash rocking a sleek black jacket, matcha in hand and Apple EarPods clipped in like he was strutting a tunnel runway, not a heavyweight showdown with the Philadelphia Eagles.Chicago’s QB history has been the NFL’s oldest house of horrors. 106 seasons with no 4,000-yard passer or 30-TD season. Fashion, though? That’s a different ballgame as Williams is certainly engaging fans over it. Fans flooded X as soon as the fit dropped.One said, “Fashion Queen never disappoints.”Stuff Working Good @HowItWorksBlipsLINKFashion Queen never disappointsAnother said, "Questionable outfit choice."One fan asked, "Is that a matcha????""He has the matcha it’s over for the Eagles," tweeted another.Trey Earley @TreyEarley32700LINKHe has the matcha it’s over for the EaglesOne more said, "can he just wear jeans and a t shirt for once.""He has on a fancy fit prepare for a shitty performance," commented another.Williams has thrown for 2,568 yards and 16 TDs. To hit 4,000, he needs 1,432 more yards, 238.7 per game over six games. For 30 TDs, he needs 14 more, 2.3 per game. He’s currently averaging 233.5 yards and 1.45 TDs, so he’s not on pace to create history with the franchise.Also read: “Dressed like the manager at call center”;"Send this guy pair of AirPods": NFL fans react to Caleb Williams' pregame outfit for Giants vs. Bears clashAlso read: "She's disgrace to sports media," "Fire her": NFL fans rip CBS reporter Aditi Kinkhabwala for unprofessional Caleb Williams questionCaleb Williams' completion % may not be a toal drawbackCaleb Williams looks like the main event every time he strolls into a stadium. Matcha in hand, wired buds locked in, fashion game on point, but on the field, the Bears QB has drawn heat for a 59.2% completion rate in 2025. It is the second-lowest among 34 qualified NFL QBs.Head coach Ben Johnson aims for a lofty 70%, but the deeper numbers paint a much different picture. Williams owns a 9.2-yard average depth of target, sixth-highest in the NFL. This means that Williams is outright pushing the ball further than most quarterbacks.A greater degree of difficulty equals more misses, and that naturally dings total completions. He’s posted a 101.7 passer rating on deep throws, 5 TDs, and the Bears have a 21.7% receiver drop rate on his deep attempts, one of the highest in the league.The takeaway is that the completion number looks ugly, but when your QB is firing rockets down the field, those “misses” come with intention, not regression.