INDIANAPOLIS - Reggie Wayne
stands among those who want Marvin Harrison back
to full health, making stunning catches rather
than dealing with surgeries and suspicions.
Wayne had his best year as an Indianapolis Colt, in
terms of numbers, in 2007, when Harrison missed most of
the season.
But the ending was unsatisfying.
“We feed off each other; I would much rather have
him out there healthy,” Wayne said during the
Colts three-day mini-camp, which ended Sunday.
“As an example: He was healthy, I was healthy and
we went to the Super Bowl. Our offense was - what do
they say? - potent. As close as he can be to 100
percent, the better I'll be.”
Wayne makes it a point to try to drive his production
up each season, a goal that turns tougher as he gets
better. He set career bests in 2007 in catches (104)
and yards (1,510) and had his second-best touchdown
total (10, two short of 12 in Peyton Manning's
record-setting 2004 season).
Driving him are his critics, real or perceived.
“There was always talk about, ‘Could I do
it?' ” Wayne said. “A lot of times I would
hear I'm good because of Marvin, which I am because
he's helped me get better. But at the same time, I know
what I can do, and I was able to prove it last
year.”
Wayne, 29, enters his eighth season in the NFL, and
he's added the role of elder statesman and role model
to his resume. He's now the one who'll have to mentor
the younger receivers, such as Anthony Gonzalez and Roy
Hall. With Wayne's outgoing, vocal personality, he's
better suited for the task in many ways than Harrison.
He credits Harrison with teaching him the finer points
of pro football work ethic, including never missing a
repetition during practice unless sidelined by injury.
“When I got here, I looked at Marv and he was
taking every rep,” Wayne said. “I said, if
that's what I have to do to be great, I'm going to take
every snap, too. So whenever Peyton's out there, I'm
out there. Hopefully, (Harrison) can come back. I think
he'll be back and ready to go and I'm looking forward
to it.”
Wayne said he has not talked to Harrison about the
shooting in Philadelphia that remains unresolved.
Police questioned Harrison and it has been reported
that Harrison's gun was used in an incident in which a
man was injured by a bullet, and a broken window from
the same incident injured a child. Harrison assured
Colts officials he was not involved in the incident.
Harrison attended the Colts mini-camp, the Colts said,
but did not participate because of offseason knee
surgery. Several other Colts, including Dwight Freeney,
Bob Sanders, Gary Brackett and Ryan Lilja, did not
participate for health reasons.
“Knowing Marv for eight years, I can tell you
he's definitely hurting not being able to be out
there,” Wayne said. “The only thing I've
talked to Marv about is his health. That's the only
thing that concerns me. I just want him to be
healthy.”
Wayne, meanwhile, is the picture of perfect health.
Between now and training camp in July, he'll be staying
in shape and figuring out how to raise his receiving
standards once again.
(news-sentinel.com)