Oct/23/08 08:01 AM Filed in:
Devin Hester
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I
n the win-at-all-costs world of professional
football, conformity and uniformity tend to crush the
will of the individual. The weekly grind of a season
offers little time for the simple joys of life. Rarely
does the thrill of creativity seize a team.
Which brings us to the bye week and the chance to
reflect and tinker and maybe even have a little bit of
fun. Things are going so well for the Bears -- well,
for their offense, anyway -- that it might be a good
time to dust off the old playbook and unleash some fun.
Will the Bears work on the Wildcat offense during their
bye week?
'We have played around with some of it,'' offensive
coordinator Ron Turner said. ''We actually did some
things last year in practice and in training camp this
year that we haven't gotten to yet. You have to find
ways to get your playmakers the ball. It's something
we'll explore as our offense evolves.''
The Wildcat formation has taken the NFL by storm since
the Dolphins unleashed it against the Patriots this
season and produced four of their touchdowns in a
surprise victory. If you haven't seen it yet, it's
unique. The quarterback splits out wide and the ball is
directly snapped to a running back, who either runs
with the ball himself, hands off to another running
back or begins some kind of gimmick play designed to
stop a defense cold. Since the Dolphins used the
formation to beat the Patriots and then the Chargers,
it has found its way to Jacksonville, Cleveland,
Atlanta, Oakland and most points in between. The Bucs
unveiled a Wildcat play Sunday.
Ask any of the Bears' assorted playmakers about the
possibility of taking a direct snap from center, and
you will see their face light up.
''I would love to do that,'' said Devin Hester, the man
most likely to get a direct snap in the Bears' offense.
''Oh, yeah. It's a great scheme. It seems like it is
working for a lot of teams. ... I hope we get it in a
game.''
Said running back Kevin Jones: ''It brings a little fun
back to the game. That's some old-school stuff.''
Indeed, long before the Bears thrilled the nation with
their T-formation, teams were running single-wing
formations like the one the Dolphins have unveiled. The
Dolphins adopted the strategy thanks to some wrangling
and arm-twisting from quarterbacks coach David Lee, who
came to the team from Arkansas, where Darren McFadden
ran the Wildcat to much success last year. The Dolphins
had Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams and figured it
couldn't hurt to supercharge a moribund offense.
(chicagosuntimes.com)