LAKE FOREST, Ill. –
Devin Hester has blossomed on offense in recent
weeks, catching 17 passes for 250 yards in his
last four games—the most productive stretch
in his two seasons as a Bears wide receiver.
“He’s improved a lot really throughout the
year,” said offensive coordinator Ron Turner.
“But the last few weeks you can really see
he’s playing a lot faster, he’s playing
with a lot more confidence and he’s not thinking
as much. He’s just playing and reacting, which is
a natural transition for someone learning to play the
position.”
After he entered the NFL as a cornerback in 2006,
Hester was switched to receiver and responded with 20
receptions for 299 yards and 2 touchdowns last season.
A year later, the dynamic playmaker has 43 catches for
568 yards and 3 TDs with two games remaining.
The familiarity that comes with playing the same
position for a second straight season has benefited
Hester, who played cornerback, receiver and running
back at the University of Miami.
“It’s got to be tough when you go through
college being flip-flopped around and then you get to
the NFL and get flip-flopped around,” said tight
end Desmond Clark.
“But from last year to this year, it’s a
huge difference. He knows the playbook for one.
He’s not out there thinking about what he has to
do. He’s out there just playing. He can go out
and just let his athletic ability take over instead of
thinking about what he’s got to do.”
A record-breaking return specialist in his first two
seasons with the Bears, Hester has flashed the same
big-play ability on offense in recent weeks. Four of
his six longest receptions this year have come in the
last four games, highlighted by a 65-yard touchdown at
Minnesota.
“He’s improved quite a bit in all phases as
far as being a receiver,” said coach Lovie Smith.
“It’s hard to just move over there in a
year and expect a guy to have everything down, but he
has made improvement each week. He’s becoming the
threat we thought he would become.”
“This being his second year in the offense, it
usually takes about that long before you get
comfortable with any offense because you’ve got
to think about learning an offense like learning a
foreign language because of all the different
terminology you’ve got to know,” Clark
said.
In last Thursday night’s 27-24 overtime win over
the Saints, Hester caught four passes for 46 yards
while also setting up a touchdown and the winning field
goal by drawing pass interference penalties of 38 and
39 yards.
The Bears (8-6) hope that Hester will build off
that outing Monday night when they host the
Packers (5-9).
“He has been making [steady] improvement, but the
last three or four games he’s really come on and
made plays down the field,” said quarterback Kyle
Orton. “He has a confidence in his route running,
and it’s helped. He’s made big plays and we
need him to make some this week.”
Hester’s productivity on offense increased as
soon as he was replaced by Danieal Manning on kickoff
returns, but Turner doesn’t believe there’s
a connection.
“Not at all,” he said. “I just see it
as having to do with getting more reps. He’s
still a very young receiver, and it’s just
getting reps. At some point for those guys playing that
position it starts to click, and it started to click a
few weeks ago.”
Whether or not Hester’s recent performance on
offense is related to his removal from kick returns,
many feel that the 11 kicks he returned for touchdowns
in his first two seasons created unrealistic
expectations for him as a receiver.
“When you saw what he could do on special teams
and then when people thought about him as a receiver,
they just automatically thought it was going to
transfer over to receiver,” Clark said.
“But there are a lot more things that go into
playing receiver than meets the eye.
First of all, you’ve got to know the offense and
it takes a while to get that. The first year that Ron
had this offense here [in 2005], we were terrible
because we didn’t know the offense as well. It
takes a little while and it’s unfair to expect
him to do what he did as a returner at receiver.”
“I think what weighed on Devin was probably just
the type of success he had the first two years as much
as anything,” Smith said. “He’s
spoiled all of us where if he’s not scoring every
time he touches the ball, it’s
‘What’s wrong with Devin?’
“I see a guy that’s developing his entire
game. Returns haven’t been exactly the way we
would like, but as a receiver we’re getting
1-type receiver play, which is good. Hopefully
we’ll see him take another step this week.”
(chicagobears.com)