ASHBURN, Va. (AP) —
Clinton Portis is known for his fun-loving
personality, not his love of workouts.
This season, the Washington Redskins' running back
thinks first-year coach Jim Zorn's offensive system is
going to give him more chances to have fun on the
field. And he'll be ready to take advantage after
spending the offseason working out in the Redskins'
facilities.
Portis gained 1,262 yards last season and set the
Redskins' top single-season rushing mark with 1,516
yards in 2005. However, under former coach Joe Gibbs,
Portis was often called on to fight for yardage in a
power-oriented game. Zorn is installing a more
wide-open West Coast system, and the new coach thinks
the passing threat will create open lanes for Portis.
"We're going to use him, and he knows it," Zorn said.
Portis' eyes light up when he thinks about Zorn's
offense.
"I think over the past five years, playing tough-man
football probably knocked six years off my career,"
Portis said. "But that was in the back end. I planned
to play for 19 years, but now I'm down to 13, so I've
got six left."
If that's true, he's certain to make the most of them.
In years past, Portis has addressed the media costumed
as characters he created with gleefully ridiculous
names like "Reverend Gonna Change," "Bro Sweets" and
"Coach Janky Spanky."
In the opening days of this training camp, he said his
role in the locker room is to keep things from getting
too serious.
"He's a jokester," said fellow running back Ladell
Betts.
Portis expects to have fun on the field as well this
season. He acknowledged he missed some opportunities
for big plays the past few seasons, but thinks he'll
have far more chances to break out for long runs under
Zorn.
"When you look across, you don't have to account for
everybody," Portis said. "You know if you get through
this hole, there's one person you've got to beat. You
know I'm looking forward to that."
Portis may not have been looking forward to this
offseason, which he largely spent working out at the
Redskins' facilities in Virginia. In years past, Portis
has headed home to South Florida for the offseason and
has made no secret of his dislike for training camp
practices and preseason games.
This year Portis focused on training, although it might
not have been his first choice.
"I think he had a financial motivation to stay here in
the offseason," Zorn said. "I think that worked into
his contract."
The way Portis tells it, it was just easier to stay and
work out than to justify leaving to Redskins
management.
"They asked me to, and I was tired of fighting," Portis
said. "Guys walked in and were shocked to see me here
time after time, and I think we had fun with it."
For his coach, the fun comes in seeing how the workouts
have translated to the field.
"It really not only worked well for him, it worked very
well for us because we're going to benefit from all the
things he did here in this weight room this offseason,"
Zorn said. "It was a forced issue for him, because I'm
sure he'd have loved to have been in Miami, but he made
some sacrifices. Partly it was extrinsic motivations he
made sacrifices, but he did it."
Now that training camp has started, Portis appears to
like the results of his stepped-up offseason. He looks
at the well-respected, older players and sees players
who dedicate themselves in workouts. He says he wants
to be looked at as that type of player.
That's not to say he's going to stop being a jokester.
"He'll push the envelope and kind of say what guys are
thinking but we won't say," Betts said. "But he means
it all in good fun."
That sort of thing can rub coaches the wrong way. So
far, Zorn seems to be taking Portis' personality in
stride.
"He kids around a lot," Zorn said. "He tries to get a
rise out of you, if you didn't notice that. But what
happens is, when he gets on the field he's
concentrating and he really understands the concepts
that are out there."
Portis - who describes Zorn as "a fun coach" - is ready
to get on the field and put Zorn's concepts into
practice.
"It's hard to win if you're not having fun," Portis
said. "Let's have fun and see where it takes us."
(usatoday.com)