Loading more responsibilities (and stress) on Devin Hester’s back can only take away from his productivity in other areas. Having him on the field as an every-down-receiver dramatically increases the likelihood that he’ll be injured or at the very least knicked up from general wear and tear.
Having Devin on the field every single play is like driving your Ferrari to Wal-Mart to pick up groceries. Some jackass wearing crocs is going to ram his shopping cart full of Cheeze-Its into Devin’s door and put a dent in it.
Half of the NFL season is now over, and not only does Devin Hester have zero return touchdowns… he’s been battling a rib injury since week 2 and injured his quad in week 7.
The man is a return specialist, sit his ass on the bench for 57 minutes of each game and let him do what he does best. Keep it simple.
From now on I want to be referred to as “Chuckstradamus”.
In November of last year, I wrote a post explaining why Devin Hester should hold out of 2008’s training camp for more money. He’s already one of the best NFL return men in history if you look at his numbers, yet he’s only making a $500,000 salary.
Devin Hester and his agent apparently see things the way I do, because he was a no-show at the first day of training camp. Devin wants his cot damn money and he wants it now.
Brian Urlacher recently got a new contract from the Bears because he successfully argued that he “outplayed the value of his last contract’. If thats the case, Devin Hester should have had a new contract six months ago. He’s already earned his money two times over, PAY THE KID.
For the past two years, Devin Hester has been one of the most (if not the most) electrifying return men the NFL has ever seen. Although he’s served spot duty as a cornerback and receiver from time to time, he’s been able to dedicate his full attention to kick/punt returns and it’s yielded great results.
But now the Chicago Bears want to turn Devin into the #1 receiving option for Rex Grossman (or whoever wins the starting job). Devin’s full attention this offseason has been focused on learning the intricacies of playing wide receiver and getting in sync with the quarterback.
I for one think this is a huge mistake, let me tell you why…
Have you ever heard of the acronym K.I.S.S? … Keep It Simple, Stupid.
Loading more responsibilities (and stress) on Devin’s back can only take away from his productivity in other areas. Having him on the field as an every-down-receiver dramatically increases the likelihood that he’ll be injured or at the very least knicked up from general wear and tear.
Having Devin on the field every single play is like driving your Ferrari to Wal-Mart to pick up groceries. Some jackass wearing crocs is going to ram his shopping cart full of Cheeze-Its into Devin’s door and put a dent in it.
I wouldn’t want to risk having Devin go over the middle and getting horse collar’ed to hell by Roy Williams, or cheap shotted by Rodney Harrison.