Chicago Sun-Times

BACK WITH THE IN CROWD

New Bears Goodwin, Williams thrilled to return after 2020 opt-outs

- PATRICK FINLEY pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley

The run was always the same on Sundays during the NFL season last year: 2.34 miles.

Wide receiver and kick returner Marquise Goodwin — one of the league’s fastest players before he opted out in 2020 to be with his newborn baby amid the pandemic — went from sprinting down sidelines to jogging to the 7-Eleven near his home in DeSoto, Texas. He’d use his smart watch to buy a watermelon Bodyarmor drink, then turn around and run back home to his family.

“It was the same route,” Goodwin said Friday. “I ran that every Sunday, and then I would watch ball.”

His new Bears teammate, former Chiefs running back Damien Williams, took in games from the couch, too. Williams also opted out because of the coronaviru­s — he went to San Diego to take care of his mother, who had cancer — and watched more football than he ever did as an active player, eating burnt hot dogs (“If it ain’t burnt, I don’t want it”) and popcorn. If he liked a certain play, he’d make a note of it and text a friend on the Chiefs for the play design: “Hey, open your playbook real quick.”

On Saturday, both men will be back on the field — who says preseason games don’t matter? — for their first contest after a season away. Williams hasn’t played since his star turn in Super Bowl LIV on Feb. 2, 2020. Goodwin hasn’t played a game since Nov. 11, 2019, when he had two catches for the 49ers against the Cardinals.

Both figure to be important pieces for a Bears offense looking for contributo­rs — Goodwin as a speedy outside receiver and Williams as a pass-catching running back. That’s presuming, of course, they can knock off the rust.

“I felt like a retired guy in a sense, just sitting home and watching guys I used to play with who were my teammates but I didn’t get to physically be around,” Goodwin said. “Just being around in the locker room and feeling that, I feel like I bring a sense of appreciati­on.”

The game felt different to Williams after he signed a one-year deal with the Bears.

“It’s like, ‘Oh, man’ — I forgot how heavy the helmet was,” said Williams, the only player to run for more than 100 yards and catch two touchdowns in the Super Bowl. “All of [the pads] on together, I forgot how heavy it all was.”

Padded practices helped him grow comfortabl­e wearing something that used to feel like a second skin.

For Goodwin, the transition was eased by the Bears’ camp setup. He was used to being “secluded” in camp, he said. This year, after long days, he can go home to his 17-month-old daughter, Marae, and his wife, Morgan, a former nine-time All-America hurdler at Texas.

“Usually I would be on FaceTime with my wife while I’m studying and working on football . . . . Now she’s there in person,” he said. “Just getting that skin-to-skin, face-to-face contact, it’s better.

“I mean, a year ago this time, I’m standing in the backyard playing catch with my wife. Now I’m catching passes from NFL quarterbac­ks. So I appreciate every moment that I get, just showing so much gratitude, thank God for the opportunit­y. I’m just glad to be back out here playing football.”

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 ?? AP ?? Running back Damien Williams (above) and Goodwin will see their first game action in more than a year Saturday.
AP Running back Damien Williams (above) and Goodwin will see their first game action in more than a year Saturday.
 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? Receiver Marquise Goodwin says he felt retired last season.
NAM Y. HUH/AP Receiver Marquise Goodwin says he felt retired last season.

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