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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Patrick Finley

Draft deadline looms for USC’s Caleb Williams

USC quarterback Caleb WIlliams walks off the field after losing to rival UCLA. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

The presumptive first pick in this year’s draft still hasn’t said whether he’ll be a part of it.

USC quarterback Caleb Williams has a Monday deadline to apply for special eligibility to enter the draft as an underclassman. The full list of players approved for entry will be sent to NFL teams on Friday.

Williams hasn’t said whether he’ll join the draft, even as he’s considered the likely No. 1 overall pick. He did not participate in USC’s bowl game, presumably to protect his health for the pros.

There’s little left for him to prove in college. In three seasons — two with the Trojans and one at Oklahoma — Williams threw for 10,082 yards and 93 touchdowns and had only 14 interceptions.

Williams’ participation is nothing short of gigantic for the Bears, who own the No. 1 pick in the draft and have vowed to scrutinize college quarterbacks in the coming months. Even if the Bears decide to keep quarterback Justin Fields, the trade value of the No. 1 pick would plummet if Williams wasn’t in the draft.

Williams doesn’t have an agent. He can’t demand anything outside of the standard rookie contract from NFL teams. The

No. 1 pick in this year’s draft will make about $38 million over four years, with about two-thirds of the total paid in a signing bonus. Williams reportedly made about $3 million in NIL earnings at USC last year.

His father, Carl, told GQ in September that “if there’s not a good situation, the truth is, he can come back to school.” He could apply for the supplemental draft, too, but there’s little financial benefit for him to do so — and the NFL might not allow it.

Williams wouldn’t be the first quarterback to wait until the final day to submit his name for the draft — Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud did so last year, as did Fields two years before that. Michigan quarterback J.J. McCarthy declared for the draft on Sunday, six days after he led the Wolverines to the national title. He’s expected to be picked late in Round 1 or early in Round 2.

Ohio State wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr., considered the best player in the draft who doesn’t play quarterback, declared Thursday.

Bryce Young, last year’s No. 1 overall pick, announced his intentions two weeks before last year’s deadline. North Carolina’s Drake Maye and LSU’s Jayden Daniels, considered the second- and third-best quarterback prospects in this year’s draft, declared when they announced they were skipping their bowl games.

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