According to Deion Sanders on the NFL Network's "Total Access," Bears KR/WR Devin Hester is unhappy with his contract and wants to be paid among the league's best. Add him to the list of Bears including Brian Urlacher and Tommie Harris who are looking for new deals. Hester has two years remaining on his rookie contract and won't be an easy problem to solve, but the team is $16 million under the cap and would like to extend both Hester and Harris. Source: Chicago Sun Times http://www.rotoworld.com/content/home_NFL.aspx
Wasn't he like a 6th round pick? He can't be getting paid much and is a game changer. I can't say I blame him!
Sure, he may deserve a raise... but as one of the leagues best... what? receiver? kick returner? It's hard to give him a raise because you cant really compare him to anyone. Until he proves he can do more than return kicks and punts, Id give him a decent contract, but nowhere near among the leagues best for anything just yet. When he proves that he can improve the offense by playing at WR, or the defense by playing CB (he was drafted as a CB wasnt he?) Then maybe... Bottom line is he deserves a raise, but probly nowhere near as much as he thinks he's worth
UPDATE HESTER IS CAUGHT IN A FIVE-YEAR DEAL Posted by Mike Florio on April 17, 2008, 8:32 a.m. With Deion Sanders of NFL Network trying to get Bears kick returner/receiver/only decent skill-position player Devin Hester a new contract with two years remaining on his rookie deal, Hester might think that, absent an extension, he’ll finish out his current contract in 2009 and become an unrestricted free agent in 2010, which is on track to be the year without a salary cap. Even if the Bears were to use the franchise tag on Hester in 2010, he’d be in line for a significant one-year salary, which by 2010 could be more than $10 million for a wideout. But here’s the problem, and it’s something that few players realize. Though the prospect of a season without a salary cap causes many a player’s eyes to be replaced by dollar signs, the reality is that, in the uncapped year, the threshold for achieving unrestricted free agency moves from four years to six. So Hester won’t be an unrestricted free agent. He’ll be a restricted free agent, and he’ll be in line for a salary in the neighborhood of $3 million for the 2010 season, assuming that the Bears use the high tender. Of course, the Bears might still opt to use the franchise tag, since there very well could be a team out there that’s willing to give up a first-round pick and a third-round pick for one of the most dynamic players in the league. Then again, dynamic players can lose their mojo pretty quickly (see Hall, Dante); coughing up big money and two high draft picks might ultimately be viewed as a risk not worth taking. Regardless, the point here is that Hester essentially is caught in a five-year deal with the Bears, given realities of the uncapped year about which many players are oblivious. And if the CBA is extended and the current free agency/salary cap system is still used as of 2011, the Bears will then be able to slap the franchise tag on him, meaning that they can force him to play for six years before he gets a realistic shot at the open market. http://www.profootballtalk.com/2008/04/17/hester-is-caught-in-a-five-year-deal/