QUINIX Sport News: Caleb Williams addresses being catfished by person pretending to be Ben Johnson: ‘It was a classic prank’

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A video of Williams being tricked by a young kid pretending to be the Lions offensive coordinator (and Bears head coach candidate) went viral last week.

A few days after being catfished, Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams is sharing his side of the story.

A video of Williams being pranked by someone pretending to be Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson went viral last Friday. On Wednesday, Williams spoke about the prank in an episode of the St. Brown podcast, telling brothers Amon-Ra St. Brown and Equanimeous St. Brown about what led to the incident.

The Bears rookie laughed off the prank, where a “little-ass kid” had tricked him into thinking that Johnson, who is a potential candidate for Chicago’s head-coaching vacancy, was reaching out to their QB1.

“The text was so, like, official,” Williams said on Wednesday, comparing the message to texts he would get from coaches prior to the NFL Draft. “It looked mad professional.”

Amon-Ra St. Brown, who plays under Johnson on the Lions, accusatorially asked Williams if he really thought that Johnson would be reaching out to him when the team was still in the playoffs. Williams said that he had gotten turned around, thinking that Johnson’s interview with the Bears had already happened, but it wasn’t until the next day. (Johnson completed his interview with Chicago on Jan. 11.)

Williams said that he tried to message St. Brown, his former USC teammate, to confirm whether it was really him and whether the number matched the one that St. Brown had.

“I wasn’t gonna save his number, ’cause he’s not our coach,” Williams clarified, before accusing St. Brown of not responding: “Amon-Ra does Amon-Ra things, and doesn’t text back.”

St. Brown and Williams sparred on the specifics, with St. Brown saying that he did initially respond but thought it was a joke. “I go, ‘F*** out of here. Ben ain’t coming to Chicago,'” St. Brown said.

By the time St. Brown might’ve realized Williams was serious, it was too late: St. Brown said that he was eating dinner and didn’t see the text until 20 minutes later. By then, Williams had called the number.

An hour later, Williams’ exchange had gone viral on social media.

 

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