Bears had first crack at Welker

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INDIANAPOLIS (MCT) — They ignored Wes Welker on draft day.

They won't ignore him on Super Bowl Sunday.

Welker, the player nobody wanted, led the league in catches this season and has had more receptions than any player in the league since 2007. He has had four 1,000-yard receiving seasons and has been named to the last four Pro Bowls.

You might say the little guy has arrived.

He might have arrived as a Bear instead of a Patriot if fate had been kinder to Jerry Angelo.
It turns out in the spring of 2004, the Bears wanted Welker so much they were the only team to extend a pre-draft visit invitation.

Welker had not been asked to go to the scouting combine, so the Bears wanted to interview him, work him out and get a feel for him.

Welker still can recall the day. There were meetings with coach Lovie Smith and then-offensive coordinator Terry Shea at Halas Hall. Team officials took him out for a nice dinner. His cell phone went off in the middle of a meeting.

The Bears' interest in him was as a punt returner. He had brought back an NCAA record eight punts for touchdowns at Texas Tech. And the thought was the Bears could sign him as a free agent after the draft.

But during the draft, the Bears took a cornerback in the fourth round. Turns out that cornerback, Nathan Vasher, also was a punt returner. So they didn't need Welker anymore.
Undrafted, he signed as a free agent with the Chargers instead and made the opening day roster, only to be cut the following week. Then-Chargers coach Marty Schottenheimer since has called it the biggest roster mistake he ever made.

Welker signed with the Dolphins, where he caught the eye of Patriots coach Bill Belichick by gaining more all-purpose yards in his first three seasons than any player in NFL history other than Gale Sayers. The Patriots coach traded second- and seventh-round draft picks to his division rival for Welker.

With Belichick coaching him and Tom Brady throwing to him, the 5-foot-9 Welker has gotten better and better. At 30, he had a career year in 2011.

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