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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Patrick Finley

How Bears kicker Cairo Santos made changes to right a rollercoaster career

Bears teammates congratulate kicker Cairo Santos after an extra point. | Leon Halip/Getty Images

As a 15-year-old exchange student at St. Joseph Academy in St. Augustine, Florida, Cairo Santos didn’t know how to throw a football. Why would he? He grew up in Brasilia, Brazil, and came to the United States to chase his soccer dream.

After his friends saw the sophomore Santos wobble the ball toward a basketball hoop outside their home in 2008, they suggested he kick it instead.

The ball landed four houses away.

“I said, ‘Is that good? ” he said.

Santos’ friends told the St. Joseph football coaches, who brought him to practice the next day. He made a 50-yard field goal.

“They said, ‘You’re on the team — you’re playing Friday,’” he said.

Santos didn’t know the rules, so he bought “Madden NFL 07” for Xbox to study. For the first couple games, a coach stood near him on the sideline to explain what was happening and when he’d be needed. Two years later, he got a full scholarship to Tulane — and two after that, he won the Lou Groza Award, given to college football’s best kicker.

When the Bears kicker talks about his long journey, then, it’s about more than navigating injuries and struggles the past few years. It makes him enjoy success more. Wednesday, for the first time in his career, he was named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week after making three field goals, including a career-long 55-yarder, in Sunday’s win against the Panthers.

“With everything that’s happening this year in an area of my career that I’ve had a lot of success, it’s given me a lot of appreciation for those times that I had,” Santos said. “It feels like it was just so long ago because of all the changes that have happened in my career.”

Santos was a Chiefs stalwart from 2014-16, making 86-of-102 kicks. After the Chiefs waived him injured in 2017, he became an itinerant kicker, playing for, in order, the Bears, Buccaneers, Rams, Titans and, this year, the Bears again. With Eddy Pineiro on injured reserve with his own groin injury, Santos has found a home, making 10-of-12 kicks.

Santos came upon his new groove by watching film of his Chiefs years and mimicking his steps and routine from those seasons. He’s become a better ball-striker as a result, which he said matters in Chicago weather. The approach sacrifices some distance — Santos admitted the 55-yarder was wind-aided — but he’s proven he’s dangerous from deep.

Santos doesn’t think as much about his form as he does the rhythm of his steps. His follow-through is straighter now — the way he thinks about it, “the ball gets in the way of my foot” when he kicks.

“We all have techniques that we change or that we try to focus on,” he said. “But when it’s time to perform, I think feelings are greater than technique.”

He’ll need both to get through the changing Chicago weather. Santos doesn’t seem intimidated. While he’s driven to Soldier Field to practice the week of home games, he’s faced even stiffer winds at Halas Hall.

A few weeks ago, the crosswind was so severe, he said, the goalposts titled sideways during practice. A staffer had to throw a rope over the crossbar and pull downward to make it parallel to the field again.

Santos went 8-for-8.

“It just feels like when we get to these conditions — even in Carolina, there’s a minor wind where you just didn’t see the ball moving — it’s like nothing compared to what I deal with every day,” he said. “But it also requires me to be so much more focused on every kick. Because you have to just play it and hit the ball so perfect to make kicks in these conditions.

“I think when you approach every kick with that much focus, your level of performance, it makes you a better kicker, too. It’s been helping me attack it that way.”

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