Berrian staying patient, believes better days are ahead
MINNEAPOLIS - Bernard Berrian is making the most money among Minnesota's receivers. Yet he's the one Vikings pass catcher for whom Brett Favre's arrival hasn't paid off.
When Favre signed in August, Berrian was hurt and missed valuable time to forge a connection with the new quarterback. Last month, Berrian aggravated that left hamstring strain and has continued to play, but his production has been minimal. In three November games, Berrian has scored 2 touchdowns but has only 8 receptions for 80 yards.
The injury has been a hindrance, but Sidney Rice's emergence as Favre's favorite target and go-to deep guy has also redefined Berrian's role.
Signed to a huge contract before last season worth as much as $42 million over six years to give the Vikings the long threat they were lacking, Berrian has been getting mostly slants and short stuff this season.
"I'll be the first to admit that I need to spread it out to those guys even more. Bernard, I know he wants to catch some deep ones, but who doesn't?" Favre said. "But he's been great to work with."
After leading the NFL with a 20.1-yard average last year, Berrian is averaging just 10.4 yards on his 32 receptions.
"It's really just not getting the looks for it and him not coming there," Berrian said, referring to the deep routes he's more accustomed to running. "Sidney's been doing such an exceptional job this year, so why not keep throwing it up to him?"
Berrian, the former Bear who will take on his old team Sunday, chuckled after that last line, trying to shrug off any frustration, but it's clear it's been a difficult season for him.
"There's still some room to grow, and there's still a lot more plays out there to be made, but each week we're getting better and better at it," Berrian said, assessing his chemistry with Favre. "We haven't peaked yet, and that's the good thing."
Favre said he hasn't heard any complaints from his receivers, though with Adrian Peterson in the backfield and Rice, Berrian, Percy Harvin and Visanthe Shiancoe trying to get open it isn't easy to consistently get everyone the ball. When the offense is thriving, that's a good problem to have; only the New Orleans Saints have scored more points than the Vikings.
"I know those guys, receivers, are kind of delicate in how you have to talk to them and how you have to approach them," Favre said. "You see that across the league, year in and year out. They all want the ball. They're all open. I could just go down the list."
Almost exactly a year ago, Berrian's 99-yard touchdown reception after a goal-line stand by the defense sent the Vikings to a pivotal win over the Bears on their way to their first division title since 2000.
"I know what it's like to go through injuries like that and not be yourself," Rice said. "But I feel like he'll pull through and do a good job for us."
Berrian left the Bears after the 2007 season, their first of three drop-offs following the Super Bowl year. They're 20-22 since that appearance on the sport's grandest stage. They're struggling to revive their swagger and rejuvenate their health on defense while Cutler's rocky beginning as the quarterback and a sharp decrease in running production has the offense in redefinition mode.
"I think they're trying to re-establish their identity right now," Berrian said. "They're missing a couple key players right now, Brian Urlacher being one of them, so it's kind of hard for that defense. Because everything starts with that defense on that team."