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Haugh: Tillman’s high school coach planted ball-punch seed

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From that moment, dark days loomed for wide receivers who dared to carry the ball loosely against the cornerback who committed his career to popping it loose. By now, Tillman intuitively reacts to a tucked football as the voice in his head provides a sense of Southern comfort. Just punch it.

Given the upcoming schedule, no team will command more national attention in the next two weeks than the 7-1 Bears. At the center of it all will be a midseason NFL defensive player of the year candidate who struggles to grasp people’s fascination over how he makes it so hard for ball carriers to keep their grip.

“I don’t think it is difficult,” Tillman said of what T-shirts call the “Peanut Punch.” “It is always on my mind. I am very conscious of it. I speak it. I believe it. I practice it. It happens.”

Every student goes to college hoping to hone a skill. Tillman, who won only nine games in four seasons at Louisiana-Lafayette, had plenty of practice on bad teams perfecting the act of punching the football out of a player’s arms — though patent rights still trace back to Copperas Cove.

“Every defensive coach preaches it, but we really coached it when Charles was there,” said Southern, coaching in his 27th year. “He had long arms and was athletic with big hands. I remember a playoff game where one of Charles’ ball punches swung the momentum.”

It seems each week Tillman produces a similar memory for the Bears, who emphasize the takeaway under Lovie Smith even more than Tillman’s prep defensive coordinator. Since 2003, Tillman’s 36 forced fumbles rank second behind Robert Mathis of the Colts. Of the top eight players in the category, only Tillman plays defensive back — why teammates speak with reverence and in a historical context.

“I’m like everyone else,” Smith said Monday. “I’m amazed too.”

From a fundamental standpoint, the most amazing aspect of Tillman’s unique talent might be it seldom compromises his tackling ability. Securing tackles appears as instinctive as stripping the ball, something reinforced from the first time Tillman poked a football out of an enemy’s arms.

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