Wims working hard to improve his weaknesses

Staley Da Bear

Well-known member
Mar 16, 2019
2,085
0
ndw2mvt3pk3ucdolgeye


Wims was selected by the Bears in the seventh round of the 2018 draft out of Georgia. After catching just four passes for 32 yards as a rookie—all in the season finale against the Vikings—he had 18 receptions for 186 yards and one touchdown last year while appearing in all 16 games with six starts. The Florida native opened four of the Bears' final five contests in place of the injured Taylor Gabriel, catching 11 passes for 105 yards.


In Wims, Furrey sees a more mature player who is making a concerted effort to work on deficiencies in his game.


"He's 6-foot-4, 220 [pounds], and a lot of those guys just feel like they can just start running around people and [be] bigger than people, and it just doesn't work like that," Furrey said. "So for Javon, in order to get to where he needs to get to, he needs to stay down low, and he needs to take off and stay down like that—we call it body deception—through the whole route. What he's done in the past is he stands up and he gives away all his routes. So he's really worked on staying down low in and out of his routes and he looks really, really good right now.


"The other one is he can be a little too cute at the line of scrimmage versus press man-to-man. He's a basketball player and we even talk a lot of times about acting like you're getting ready to go to the basket, making your crossover move at the line of scrimmage, things like that. He probably takes that to a little bit of a too extreme in regards to doing too much at the line of scrimmage, trying to be too cute, instead of just being really violent, really compact and getting through people and using his big body to get down the field.


"He's added that to his game, and that's been something that he's been really stubborn about over the last couple years, because [he believes] 'I'm bigger than everybody, I can just out-man them,' and that doesn't work in the NFL. So he's done a great job of those two deficiencies. He's really worked hard on them and you can tell in practice."
 
Top