1990-2017 Devin-Time Hesters: Kick Returners

The Devin Hester: Devin Hester (2006-2013) – Whenever there’s a football player who’s super-fast and/or super-quick, you always hear the phrase “he’s a threat to score any time he touches the ball,” and it’s usually an exaggeration. Sure, Johnny Punt Return is good – hence the name – but if he gets pinned deep and the blocking isn’t there, he’s usually screwed. But for at least two years, Devin Hester really was that guy. Hell, his college nickname was Devin “Anytime” Hester. (Until Bears fans came up with that “Windy City Flyer” nickname that was some straight-up leather helmet nonsense.) Every time there was a kickoff, every time there was a punt, and that one time when there was a really long field goal, you’d lean a little closer to the TV, because the man was unstoppable. A kick return for a touchdown changed from a pleasant surprise to something you expected. Opposing teams started just giving the ball to the Bears with incredibly good field position, because it was a better strategy to punt the ball out of bounds as soon as possible at the 35 yard line than to risk Hester getting his hands on the ball at the 15. Hell, after a while, people started just taking the illegal procedure penalty and kicking out of bounds on kickoffs. It was unrealistic, to the point where your first instinct is to compare it to watching Michael Jordan in his prime, but then you realize that’s an insufficient comparison, and you have to move up to video games. 2006-07 Devin Hester was Tecmo Super Bowl Bo Jackson in real life. That’s it. That’s the only valid comparison to what was happening, like if he had been a less humble man, he would’ve just run to the one yard line, then reversed field and done a full lap around the field before actually scoring, but he didn’t, because he felt sorry for us, and an ill-timed Rex Grossman interception had us down by ten. The opening kickoff of Super Bowl XLI will probably always be my favorite Bears memory, (Look, I watched Super Bowl XX, but I was 5, so I had no idea what was going on beyond “FRIDGE GOOD” or whatever) because for one brief moment, it felt like holy shit, they’re actually going to do this. Of course, the rest of the game could best be described as a wroth Old Testament Jehova saying “lol no,” but at least we had that one play. In the end, nothing gold can stay, so he came back down to human levels eventually, but prime Devin Hester was a phenomenon, like an unbelievable tall tale unfolding in front of our eyes, roping a tornado and carving out the Grand Canyon, and then doing the Deion Sanders Primetime dance into legend. We didn’t watch Devin Hester, we bore witness to him, like Robert Oppenheimer watching the first nuclear bomb test, except Devin’s cool, he never hurt nobody.

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1990-2017 All-Time Team: Tight End

The Good: Martellus Bennett (2013-2015) – In the intensely unlikely event of this blog ever making it past the tight circle of *maybe* three people who follow me on Twitter and into the Greater Bears Internet, this will probably get me in trouble. Bears fans hate this guy. They hate him with the intense passion of a thousand supernovas, and at any point during his time with the Bears, you could go to Chicago, and on a night when the moon was full and the wind was still, you could close your eyes, clear your mind, and hear a thousand voices of a thousand mustachioed chuds screaming “stiiiiick to spooooooorts.” Let’s put it this way: Rob Gronkowski would spend his entire off-season on Gronk’s Cocaine Cruise, tag-teaming porn stars with Mojo Rawley, followed by staying injured for half the regular season, and he became a beloved folk hero, just good ol’ Fun-Lovin’ Gronk. Meanwhile, the Black Unicorn would take a weekend off to write a children’s book and record a mixtape, and some dickhead in a tshirt with a desert camo Bears logo would run to the Windy City Gridiron comments section to call him – you guessed it – a “locker room cancer.” Meanwhile, the typical racist NFL fan was too busy Making America Great Again to notice, but he was pretty much the best tight end this bullshit team had since Ditka, and helped form a Bears offensive Legion of Doom, where every skill position starter except Jay Cutler made the Pro Bowl and fooled us into thinking that the Marc Trestman era wasn’t going to be a screaming spiral into Incredible Hell.  Of course, nothing good can last, and that team fell apart quickly, and Marty was shipped off to the Patriots after three years, and it was kind of openly acknowledged that it was purely because John Fox just didn’t like him.  Fuck John Fox. Continue reading 1990-2017 All-Time Team: Tight End