It was only Week 1, but the Bears offense looked so inept that the strategy to beat them came down to making third-year quarterback Mitch Trubisky… play quarterback?

That was the message relayed by Packers veteran cornerback Tramon Williams after his team stifled the Bears in a 10-3 win on opening night Thursday at Soldier Field.

“We wanted to make Mitch play quarterback,” Williams said, according to The Athletic. “We knew they had a lot of weapons, we knew they were dangerous, we knew all of those things. But we knew if we could make Mitch play quarterback, that we’d have a chance.”

With Trubisky at the helm, the Bears went 12-4 last season and won the NFC North before losing in the wild-card game to the Eagles. They were a team predicated on defense, but the hope was that the offense would help them take the next step this season.

Instead, Trubisky was seemingly hesitant to throw it down the field and went 26-of-45 for 228 yards, plus an interception in the end zone. The one drive they did have late in the second half gained 59 yards and got them into position for a tying touchdown at the two-minute warning. But that’s when Trubisky was intercepted by safety and ex-Bear Adrian Amos — who apparently knew what was coming.

“They ran the play earlier on the drive also; same thing. Adrian said they ran a ‘7 route,’” Williams said, via NFL Network. “[Amos] said they were going to come back to it. I said, ‘OK, I’ll be there.’ None the less, they came back to it, I saw them running the ‘7 route,’ I turned right into him. Obviously, I couldn’t see Amos because he was behind me, but he made a heck of a play.”

Bears coach Matt Nagy decided to run the ball just 12 times in a game they never trailed by more than a touchdown, and he also shouldered some of the blame.

“Three points is ridiculous,” Nagy said. “Obviously unacceptable. Starts with me. I just told the guys in there, this is not who we are. I was proud of our defense. I thought they played their ass off tonight. Offensively, not good enough.”