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"Bears’
Hester gets reported $40 million
extension"
BOURBONNAIS, Ill. (AP)—A
half hour into his first practice
of training camp Sunday, Devin
Hester got behind cornerback
Charles Tillman and hauled in
a 40-yard pass from quarterback
Rex Grossman.
It’s the type of thing
the Chicago Bears are hoping
to see a lot during the regular
season after signing Hester
to a four-year contract extension,
reportedly worth up to $40 million. |
“I think the Bears have a
lot of faith in me, and they feel
that I do a lot of things on the offensive
side of the ball, so they rewarded
me,” said Hester, who in two
seasons is two touchdown returns short
of Brian Mitchell’s record of
13 kick or punt returns touchdowns—a
mark that took 14 years to set.
After a standoff between Hester’s
agent, Eugene Parker, and the team
ended Sunday morning, Bears coach
Lovie Smith wore a huge smile.
“I’m smiling most of the
time I’m talking about Devin
Hester; now I can … a little
bit more,” Smith said after
practice.
At issue for the Bears was whether
to pay Hester like a return man or
like a top wide receiver when they
made him the 22nd player on the current
roster to receive a contract extension.
They converted Hester to wide receiver
last year when he made 20 catches,
and this year expect him to start
in place of lost free agent wide receiver
Bernard Berrian.
“This one was probably the most
difficult one we’ve had to do
and probably ever will do because
we’re not only rewarding a special
player,” Bears general manager
Jerry Angelo said. “If you look
at it as a returner, we blew that
(money total) out of the water. It
was now looking at him as what he
might be or could be as a receiver.
That’s where the real difficulties
were and a real challenge.”
It was a challenge that led Hester
to hold out for two days before reporting
Friday and watching from the sidelines
for two days with what the Bears called
a hamstring injury. After signing
Sunday, he showed no signs of a hamstring
pull.
“It’s feeling great,”
Hester said of the hamstring. “It’s
a little tight, but I was able to
push through it and just try to work
it out and stretch it a lot. Right
now I feel great. I wouldn’t
say it’s a major issue.”
The deal adds four years to the two
years already remaining on Hester’s
contract. The Chicago Sun-Times reported
Hester received in excess of $15 million
in guaranteed bonuses, with $10 million
possible in 2013, the final year of
the deal.
The Bears this past year also negotiated
contract extensions for kicker Robbie
Gould, linebacker Brian Urlacher,
defensive tackle Tommie Harris, tight
end Desmond Clark, defensive end Alex
Brown, and signed linebacker Lance
Briggs and quarterbacks Rex Grossman
and Kyle Orton to new deals.
“I don’t think I’ve
ever been this busy in an offseason,
and I don’t think I ever will
again,” Angelo said. “We
did a lot, hopefully we accomplished
a lot.”
Angelo said it should be obvious now
he wasn’t just paying lip service
to the notion that the Bears try to
reward their own.
“Talk is cheap,” Angelo
said. “We put teeth into it.
The good news is the players we have
here want to be Bears. Certainly they
want their money, we’re all
understanding of that, but they also
make the commitment to me, to (coach)
Lovie (Smith) and to our fans that
they want to be Bears.”
Now comes the task of turning Hester
into a premier wide receiver. He struggled
learning the offense at times last
year.
“Last year he was a guy who
was a return specialist, obviously,
that was going to be a part-time player
at receiver, play a little bit and
have a small package in the offense
for him,” offensive coordinator
Ron Turner said. “This year
he’s committed to being a full-time
receiver and to learn the entire offense.
We didn’t hold anything back
in the minicamp and (off-season workouts)
so he’s way ahead of where he
was last year at this time. He’s
made that commitment and he’s
learned it and done a good job and
we’re excited to get him back
out there.”
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