The Chicago Bears are facing major stadium uncertainty, but franchise quarterback Caleb Williams remains unfazed.A relocation from Illinois to Indiana is on the cards for one of the NFL’s most historic franchises, after they ‘exhausted every opportunity’ to stay in the Windy City.The Bears are set to leave historic Soldier Field, and Illinois altogetherGettyThe Bears want to build a $4 billion, state-of-the-art stadium in the suburbs, with dreams of one day hosting a Super Bowl.Soldier Field, their historic home that was built 1924, is simply no longer up to the standard of many modern NFL buildings.A site in Arlington Heights, Illinois, was initially preferred for the new facility, but the team now looks more likely to move across the board to Hammond, Indiana.While team ownership is focused on building a stadium capable of hosting the Super Bowl, quarterback Williams simply has his sights set on winning one.The former No. 1 overall pick exploded into life in his Sophomore season with Chicago, and certainly isn’t interested in letting future franchise decisions derail his preparation for Year 3.Caleb Williams opens up on Bears stadium drama“I’m going to play wherever there’s 120 by 53 and ⅓, and it’s marked up with white lines and two end zones,” he emphatically said Thursday, via ESPN’s Courtney Cronin.“I’m OK with whatever. Whatever decision they make is whatever decision they make.“I just want some green and my teammates and coaches and another team out there and fans.”While Williams has said he’s happy to play anywhere the Bears decide to build, he’s previously spoken very highly of the atmosphere created by fans at Soldier Field in Chicago.Back in February, weeks after he led the team to their first playoff win since 2010, the young QB revealed he couldn’t wait to get back to work.Williams had a breakout season in 2025 and is excited to return to actionGetty“I’m fighting myself right now because I do know that rest and getting away is extremely important. So I’m fighting the urge right now. Fire’s burning,” he told Maxx Crosby.“The atmosphere of that (Soldier Field playoff) national anthem — it was like a band of people coming together during that.“And it was it’s one of the best atmospheres I’ve ever been in, if not the best.“So I’m excited to get back to that and bring that juice back to Chicago.”Caleb Williams sends NFL warning over Bears offenseWilliams will soon return to Soldier Field, and the expectation will be to build on an impressive outing in 2025.While the season ended with a Divisional Round loss to the Los Angeles Rams, the QB showed out in his first year in head coach Ben Johnson’s offense.Williams is focused on delivering Super Bowl glory for the BearsGettyHe broke the franchise single-season passing record with a total of 3,942 yards, while his 30 total touchdowns powered the Bears to an 11-6 record that topped a competitive NFC North.Williams managed all that having been thrown in at the deep end of Johnson’s scheme, and admitted he felt like he was ‘drowning’ at times last year.The feeling is different heading into 2026 — and that could be bad news for the rest of the NFL.“It’s a hell of a lot more fun for me than it was last year,” Williams said of offseason practice.NFL Stadium StatusOn the Move – Why is Roger Goodell allowing three of NFL’s most famous teams to build $8.8bn new homes and ditch diehard fans?Chicago Bears – NFL’s second-oldest team admits defeat as $5bn relocation from 102-year-old stadium confirmed in statementKansas City Chiefs – Chiefs owner issues response as Kansas City’s $4bn cross-state relocation plan hits roadblockJacksonville Jaguars – $5.6bn NFL team’s 150-mile relocation triggers unique rule exemption amid CBA conflictCleveland Browns – $2.6bn NFL stadium fraught with drama finally makes breakthrough as Super Bowl dream teasedTennessee Titans – Super Bowl 2030 host is unopened $2.2bn ‘cookie-cutter’ stadium that will be NFL’s smallest“I was saying it to Coach Studes (Eric Studesville), ‘Dude, I feel like I was drowning, trying to breathe or stay alive and wait for a boat to come around last year.’“Now this year, it’s being able to start what we finished last year: Play calls and words and verbiage, and speak the same language.“It’s being able to grow more from an earlier stage than maybe doing it a little bit earlier in the season or halfway through the season, speaking on things that really helps throughout the year, and later in the year.“That’s the advantage.”With Williams comfortable in Johnson’s offense, Bears fans could be in for a treat in 2026 and beyond, regardless of where they will one day call home.Stay up to date on all things NFL across our talkSPORT platforms – subscribe to our YouTube channel for the latest news, opinion, exclusive interviews and our daily unfiltered, unscripted show ‘The S* Word, from 8am ET.