Devin Hester hasn't changed.
The problem is with us, the media and fans who
await his every return as though it carries the
fulfillment of a messianic prophecy.
Hester is a flesh-and-blood return man, not a
paranormal phenomenon. He's without peer at his craft,
but he's human nonetheless. That is little solace as he
suffers through his longest drought without a return
for a touchdown in a short career of unparalleled
brilliance.
''I am getting frustrated,'' Hester said. ''It is
frustrating because we set a high expectation for
ourselves as a return game, and when we're not doing
it, then ... I feel like it's all on me. Maybe I'm not
getting the job done. You never know. It is frustrating
when you don't get the big returns you got last year
and the year before.''
Repeat that quote to Bears special-teams coordinator
Dave Toub and prepare for a steam burst from his ears.
The doctor in Toub diagnoses anxiety about Hester as a
form of lunacy.
''You guys are crazy,'' Toub said. ''The media is
berserk with this kid. The pressure ... you shouldn't
put pressure on the kid like that. He's getting better
and better. This kid is improving. Have you seen what
he's done as a receiver?''
Hester certainly has made a big jump in that area,
catching a combined 11 passes the last two weeks, nine
of which have gone for first downs. Only Andre Johnson
(11), Reggie Wayne (11), Larry Fitzgerald (10), Roddy
White (10) and Steve Smith (10) have more first-down
catches during that span. That's some exclusive
company.
Hester caught 20 passes all of last season but already
has 16 catches for 193 yards and two touchdowns in five
games this season. (He missed a game because of a rib
injury.)
But as sure as he's catching on with the offense, his
numbers have diminished in the return game. As unfair
as any comparison might be, given Hester's
unprecedented success in his first two seasons, the
simple fact is that he's getting fewer opportunities
and doing less with those chances.
Hester has returned 14 kickoffs for an average of 22.6
yards and 11 punts (with four fair catches) for an
average of 5.4 yards this season. He has no return
touchdowns. A year ago at this point in the season, he
had returned 19 kickoffs for a 23.6-yard average and
one touchdown and 20 punts (with four fair catches) for
a 19.4-yard average and two touchdowns.
Hester has had punt returns of 17 and 28 yards called
back because of penalties this season. If you add those
numbers to his total, he still is averaging only eight
yards per punt return. Is the rib injury still
bothering him?
''Do I look like it when I am out there on offense?''
Hester said. ''I feel pretty good.''
Again, it's absurd to think Hester can continue at the
pace at which he started his career. What he has
accomplished is extraordinary. Hester has 13 return
touchdowns, counting a 108-yard return of a missed
field goal and the fastest-ever score off the opening
kickoff in the Super Bowl. Officially, he has 11
touchdown returns, which puts him only two off the
career record of 13 set by Brian Mitchell from 1990 to
2003.
Hester's reputation precedes him, and teams seem better
prepared than ever when they face the Bears.
''It's tough,'' Hester said. ''Teams know they're
playing against one of the best special-teams [units]
in the league. We won [the special-teams rankings] two
straight years. The return game was a key factor in
that success. ... But now when teams go against us, I
feel like they are really preparing themselves and
spending a little more time.''
In addition, the Bears -- like every special-teams unit
in the NFL -- have to fit new players into new roles.
Nobody wants to admit it, but the team misses Brendon
Ayanbadejo, who made two Pro Bowls with the Bears
before bolting to the Baltimore Ravens as a free agent.
The combination of new players, fewer opportunities
because of pooch punts and squib kicks and better
preparation by opponents has taken a toll, but the
challenge of facing Hester is also a motivating factor.
The Minnesota Vikings figure to be ready Sunday, given
that they were burned for punt-return touchdown by
Hester last season and yielded two return touchdowns to
the New Orleans Saints' Reggie Bush this season.
Hester laughs at the idea that his new contract, which
includes incentives for him as a receiver, somehow has
motivated him more for that position than for his
special-teams role. He can increase his base pay by
$3.5 million in 2012 and by $4.5 million in 2013 and
has a chance to earn a de-escalating roster bonus of
$10 million in 2013 based on a four-tiered structure
tied to number of receptions, receiving yards,
receiving touchdowns and combined touchdowns produced
to that point.
''In the two years I have worked with coach Dave, you
have to work on blocking schemes and figuring out new
return schemes,'' Hester said. ''But as far as just
returning the ball, that is just natural to the return
guy. Either you've got it or you don't.''
The sorcery hasn't been as obvious this season, but
Hester's still got it.
(suntimes.com)