tombonneau
Footballguy
Seems to me that teams would be better off kicking to Hester and actually, you know, working on their special teams coverage and tackling, than sacrificing field position on every single kick.As bad as the Bears O is, you start them at their own 40 every play, they'll probably score more often than not.In fact, both games where teams kicked away from Hester (GB, PHI) the opposing team lost.Found this piece that sort of supports this:
Honestly. You'd rather be averaging 28 yards per punt and kicking the ball out of bounds than risking a Hester return?I saw the stat for Hester, and it's pretty silly, something like 8-9% of returns for TDs.However, I'd wager that a team starting with the ball at the 40 yard line has a higher percentage chance of a TD than that. In fact, I'd wager that a team has a 35-40% chance if not greater of scoring (either FG or TD) from that spot on the field.So teams can keep kicking away from Hester, but it's only going to increase the Bears chances of beating them.1. No returnIf Devin Hester would like to see the football again, he might need to ask a court for visitation rights. Nobody wants to kick it to him anymore.Hester scored six times on returns as a rookie last year, helping power the Chicago Bears to the Super Bowl, where he brought back the opening kickoff for a touchdown. He has three touchdowns (two on punt returns, one on a kickoff) this year, and opposing teams appear no longer willing to tempt fate and risk the big play. They kick away from him, they kick out of bounds, they make a point of not giving up points by allowing the ball to come to him.“That’s something we’re just going to have to live with,” coach Lovie Smith said.It could be worse.A 27-yard punt out of bounds set up a go-ahead field goal for the Bears against the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday, and the Eagles netted an average of 28 yards on their four punts. They also had a kickoff go out of bounds, handing the Bears possession at the 40. Hester didn’t touch the ball on a kick or a punt and was held without a return yard for the first time. Still, the directed (or misdirected) kicking had some benefit.”It gave our offense good field position. I’ll take that any day,” Hester said.There’s nothing the Bears can do to make anyone boot the ball down the middle of the field. But if Hester works less on returns, he can perhaps do more lining up at wide receiver. He had three catches for 41 yards against the Eagles, including two for 30 on the 97-yard drive that won the game with nine seconds left. Entering Sunday, he’d had two receptions as his conversion to receiver continues.The Bears can set immediate and modest goals and then aim higher if warranted. They host the Detroit Lions on Sunday, and a victory would let them go into their bye at 4-4.