<p>Last offseason, Ben Johnson had to stop practice to bark at quarterback <a class="Link" href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/bears/2026/05/22/bears-coaches-have-a-simple-message-to-qb-caleb-williams-this-offseason-do-less" target="_blank" >Caleb Williams</a> and the rest of the <a class="Link" href="https://chicago.suntimes.com/bears" target="_blank" >Bears</a> offense before they even broke the huddle. The way the Bears operated before the snap disturbed the head coach as much as what happened after it.</p><p>Not so much this year.</p><p>When the Bears held their first practice of their two-week-long OTA Wednesday, Williams knew what Johnson wanted: a quick play call, a huddle broken with urgency and confidence under center.</p><p>“The communication in the huddle, what it looks like to break the huddle, the urgency to the line of scrimmage, the tempo that we want to stress the defense with, the quarterback plays a huge part in that,” Johnson said Thursday before the Bears' second practice. “He orchestrates the whole operation.
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