Bears DL Akiem Hicks still a man on a mission

After finally getting recognition — a Pro Bowl and the No. 39 ranking in NFL Network’s Top 100 — he’s not resting on his laurels. “You’ve still got to say, ‘I’m going to get up and still kick ass today.’ ’’

SHARE Bears DL Akiem Hicks still a man on a mission
Eagles_Bears_Football.jpg

Bears defensive end Akiem Hicks (96, vs. the Eagles in the wild-card playoff game last season) made the Pro Bowl for the first time in his seven-year NFL career last season.

AP Photos

BOURBONNAIS — Akiem Hicks has an exceptional skill set, a healthy ego, an innate drive to succeed and a great memory. So it’s no surprise that some biting commentary from Saints linebackers coach Joe Vitt in Hicks’ early years in the NFL stuck with him.

“He said, ‘I’ve never seen [any] player get paid more and play better,’ ” said Hicks, whom the Saints drafted in the third round in 2012. “And I remembered that. I remember sitting in the meeting that day — my first or second year [in the NFL] — and he said that, and I was like, ‘Man, that makes sense.’ So when I got to the point where I was getting extended, I told myself and I told [Bears general manager Ryan] Pace, ‘I’m going to prove him wrong.’ ”

Hicks’ ability to do that has become his defining trait; he’s a talented player in the right place at the right time with powers of self-motivation to keep raising his own bar. After an impressive debut season with the Bears in 2016, he signed a four-year, $48 million extension the following year and was even better, with 8½ sacks and 15 tackles for loss. Miffed at being overlooked for Pro Bowl status that year, he was even better again last season, with numbers — 7½ sacks, 12 tackles for loss, three forced fumbles, five pass breakups — that still don’t illustrate how he influences every play he’s a part of.

So here he is again, battling human nature and finding the motivation within to take his game to another level after finally gaining the recognition he has craved. Hicks was named to the Pro Bowl after last season. On Sunday, he was ranked the 39th best player in the NFL in NFL Network’s ranking of the top 100.

“It’s huge to me, and it’s special,” Hicks said. “I care about it. It means something to me. I read my articles. But what I’ll say is this: You can’t let that nature change the person. You’ve got to still say, ‘Man, I’m going to get up and I’m going to still kick ass again today.’ ”

Even Hicks knows that is easier said than done.

“You have to fight your nature — the nature that says, ‘Oh, man I’ve achieved this, I’ve achieved that — now I can sit still,’ ” he said.

But he finds a way.

“You’ve got to keep telling yourself,” he said. “Like, [Sunday] night, I sat down for 10 to 15 minutes and I was like, ‘Thank God for being so blessed and being in the position I’m in and the things I dreamed about as a young man coming to fruition’ — and still saying to myself, ‘Man, it would be a disservice to myself if I did not continue to keep reaching.’ ”

Much of Hicks’ motivation comes from within.

“If you don’t love yourself, nobody else will,” he said with a smile.

But at the same time, Hicks has one of the more healthy egos on the team. Where wide receiver Brandon Marshall seemed to bristle at being one-upped by Alshon Jeffery, and tight end Martellus Bennett lost his charm as Zach Miller emerged, Hicks thrived in Khalil Mack’s shadow last year. Hicks acknowledges that being in the right spot in former Bears coordinator Vic Fangio’s defense has played a key role in his success. And he knows he’s not doing it alone.

“I look at it this way sometimes,” he said. “I just rode in on the cart [to a post-practice interview] with Mack and Eddie [Jackson] and Danny [Trevathan] and I’m thinking to myself, ‘Man, I’ve got nothing but [guts] around me.’ So it’s easy to look good, right? If you play to your potential and you’ve got guys who are playing so well next to you, you can really take over.”

The Latest
Mandisa, whose full name is Mandisa Lynn Hundley, was born near Sacramento, California, and grew up singing in church.
“He’s going to be huge for us, and he’s huge for our team morale and locker room in general,” second baseman Nico Hoerner said.
Williams also said he hopes to play for the team for 20 seasons and eclipse Tom Brady’s seven championships.
Hoyer commended the team for persevering through a long road trip, blown leads, an overworked bullpen and injuries.
The Oak Park folk musician and former National Youth Poet Laureate who sings of love and loss is “Someone to Watch in 2024.”