Oct/11/08 12:42 PM Filed in:
Roscoe
Parrish
Buffalo Bills receiver Roscoe
Parrish is busy this week carrying a Nerf
football.
The Bills hope it won’t be too long before
he’s grabbing a real pigskin.
Parrish said he is recovering well from the torn
ligaments in his thumb, which he suffered in the
Bills’ win over the Oakland Raiders on Sept. 21.
“Everything went pretty good with the
surgery,” Parrish said after Bills practice this
week. “The surgery was only 20 minutes, so it
wasn’t a long process. We have everything going
pretty good right now, and I’m just taking it
day-by- day.”
After his surgery, it was estimated he would be out of
the lineup for four to six weeks. So he is expected to
miss the Bills’ next game, against San Diego, on
Oct. 19. The four-week mark is Oct. 21. So
there’s a chance he could be ready for the game
in his hometown of Miami on Oct. 26. If Parrish were to
miss six weeks and have no setbacks, he would return
for the game at New England on Nov. 9.
“I don’t want to say I’m going to be
back on this day, I’m just taking everything
day-by-day and I’m going with my rehab every
day,” Parrish said. “This bye week is
helping me out a lot.”
Parrish was watching practice inside Ralph Wilson
Stadium this week. He suggested he might try to do some
sort of limited practice work in the coming week.
He was walking around the locker room this week
squeezing an orange Nerf football to build up strength
in his left thumb.
“Each day I’m feeling better about
it,” Parrish said. “I’m squeezing the
Nerf ball to get the strength back. As far as the
movement of it goes, I have that back.”
Parrish adds an explosive element to the Bills’
offense and special teams. He had seven catches for 60
yards and a touchdown in the first three games. The TD
came on a 14-yard pass in the fourth quarter of the
Oakland game. Parrish actually had injured the thumb
before the touchdown play. But it wasn’t too
painful so he went back in the game.
On punt returns Parrish is averaging 15.2 yards on 11
returns, with a 63- yard score, which came in the
season-opener against Seattle.
Parrish broke his left wrist during training camp of
the 2005 season. He came back and played with a cast on
his wrist over the final 10 weeks of the regular
season. Parrish said he’s expecting an easier
adjustment this time.
“It’s a much different process than the
wrist injury,” Parrish said. “If you look
at it, I still finished the game with the injury
against Oakland and caught a touchdown pass. It’s
not as difficult this time. With the wrist injury, I
was in pain when it happened and wasn’t able to
do anything.”
(buffalonews.com)