Cajun standout Charles Tillman must now impress new coach.
LOUISIANA La. — Charles Tillman spent the 2003 season impressing Chicago Bears teammates and coaches — and opponents, for that matter — as a rookie cornerback in the NFL.
Now, he may have to do it all over again.
The Bears fired coach Jauron after a 7-9 finish and named Rams defensive coordinator Lovie Smith to lead them back to the top of the NFC North division, so things are back to Square One.
“I’m sure I’ll have to prove myself,” Tillman said. “It’s kind of like being a rookie all over again. I still have a lot to do.
“I’m sure he’ll have his own defensive scheme. He had the No. 1 defense in the league in creating turnovers when he was in St. Louis, and I’m pretty sure he’ll want to stick with that.
“A new head coach wants to see who can ball. He doesn’t have favorites. He wants to see what a player can do with his own eyes.”
What Smith will see is a big (6-foot-2, 210-pound), physical cornerback who started the last 12 games of the season at left corner on a Chicago team that was combative on defense and lacking offensively.
Tillman, the University of Louisiana’s highest-ever NFL draft choice as a second-rounder last spring, was second on the team only to All-Pro linebacker Brian Urlacher in tackles (116 to 83) for the season.
He also had a quarterback sack, two forced fumbles, eight passes broken up and four interceptions to tie Jerry Azumah for the team lead in that department.
One of those pickoffs was immediately famous, as Tillman outfought Minnesota’s Randy Moss for the ball in the end zone to preserve a 13-10 victory on Dec. 14, a win that wound up costing the Vikings a spot in the playoffs.
“That was probably the biggest play of my career,” said Tillman, who is in town for Saturday’s Ragin’ Cajun football banquet at the Cajundome Convention Center. “Whether it’s high school, college or the NFL, football is football and you have to make plays.
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Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
Peanut is in town to support UL football, and accept the Marine award.