Apr/20/08 11:52 AM Filed in:
Devin Hester
Brian Urlacher will have to
wait his turn.
While the star linebacker is becoming more vocal about
his contract demands, return specialist and receiver
Devin Hester is next when it comes to talks with the
Bears.
The team will get down to business with Hester's agent,
Eugene Parker, this week and try to reach a long-term
deal.
No agreement is imminent, but with talks stalled on a
deal with defensive tackle Tommie Harris, the Bears are
aggressively moving to accomplish what the offseason
goal has been all along -- rewarding players already at
Halas Hall.
One source said the team will ''look at it more
seriously with a little more urgency.''
The Bears first approached Parker about Hester at the
combine when they put the wraps on a contract for Rex
Grossman, and the sides have had discussions since.
It's a complicated matter because there aren't any
comparable deals to shape money talks. Hester is
unparalleled in NFL history as a returner, and coach
Lovie Smith says he has the skills to develop as a No.
1 receiver.
If Hester develops on offense this season, his value is
only going to increase. He already has meant plenty
when it comes to points. He has scored more touchdowns
the last two seasons than anyone else and is directly
responsible for at least a handful of Bears victories.
Hester will earn a base salary of $445,000 this season
and is on the books for $530,000 in 2009.
The four-year contract he signed as the 57th pick in
2006 is worth a little more than $2.61 million. Doing a
deal halfway through a four-year contract will set a
precedent for the Bears. They balked at efforts by
cornerback Nathan Vasher to do the same two years ago.
But Hester has grossly outperformed his contract.
Parker has successfully brokered shorter deals for
clients to ensure they get back to the bargaining table
soon.
Arizona Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald just signed
a four-year, $40 million contract with $30 million
guaranteed. When it expires, he'll be 28.
Hester is 25 and doesn't have the same leverage as
Fitzgerald, who had the Cardinals over a barrel with
monster salary-cap figures for the next two seasons.
The hurdle will be whether the Bears can talk Hester
into an extension that incorporates the existing
contract. It's one of the hang-ups with Harris.
The Bears want to maintain the integrity of the current
deals and feel they should be compensated for forking
over big bonus money early. The Bears don't want to pay
a free-agency premium when the player isn't in free
agency.
The trick you have is if the Bears offer Hester a
four-year extension with $24 million in new money --
these figures are simply for the purpose of explanation
-- it's going to be a six-year contract worth $24.975
million after incorporating the two remaining years on
the deal. That's less palatable to the player. It's why
Harris isn't keen on his offer that incorporates his
base pay for this season -- less than $1 million.
Players want their old contracts torn up.
Hester's pal, former NFL great Deion Sanders, said last
week on NFL Network that Hester was ''upset'' with his
contract. Unlike with Urlacher, no one invoked the idea
of a trade or retirement, though.
(suntimes.com)