Sicilian
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Slater isn't a wide receiver. His first couple of years in the league, he was listed as a safety, and he wasn't a safety either. When the WR depth went to hell, he started taking some training camp snaps there, and has been nominally considered a WR ever since.
In reality, he's neither a safety nor a wide receiver. If his lack of development somewhere is going to bother you, safety has always seemed like the position that he was better suited for, and he didn't catch on there either.
A lot of fans seem to think that special teams is the unit that you make a pit stop on so that you can stick on the roster long enough to become a contributor on one of the 'real' units (offense or defense). That is how it works for a lot of guys, but there is such a thing as career special-teamers. Apples to apples, they're less valuable than offensive and defensive players of a similar caliber, but if you're talking about one of the best special teamers in the NFL, then that's absolutely more valuable than a third stringer on another unit.
At this point, he's in his late 20s: he is what he is. And what he is is the best gunner in the NFL, a special teams captain, and an All Pro. As long as you believe that that's worth a roster spot, then he's doing just fine.
I think some confusion comes up too when people see him taking WR reps in training camp drills. But what else is he going to do in between ST work? Run wind sprints while the rest of the team does drills? Might as well give him reps at WR for the worst of the worst case scenarios, even knowing he's never going to play there.











