EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -
Finding Jeff Feagles and John Carney in the New
York Giants' locker room isn't hard.
The first hint might be the contents of their lockers.
Look for the ones with the bottles of Geritol, the
packages of Depend undergarments and the occasional
AARP memberships offers, all courtesy of their young
teammates.
If that isn't enough, ask linebacker and long snapper
Zak DeOssie where to find them.
"You mean 'Pops' and 'Grandpa?'" DeOssie said.
And if that doesn't lead to Carney and Feagles, just
look for the two bald guys who look more like assistant
coaches than football players.
President Bush mistook Feagles for a coach when the
Giants were honored for their Super Bowl championship
at the White House in April.
If it sounds like Feagles and Carney are a little out
of place, in a sense they are. They are defying Mother
Nature as the oldest active players in the NFL,
according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
Carney, 44, is the place-kicker. The 42-year-old
Feagles is the punter and the holder on extra points
and field goals
Don't feel sorry for the old guys. They are special
special teams guys.
Carney, signed before the start of the season when
Lawrence Tynes injured a knee, is leading the NFL with
90 points. He has hit all 27 of his extra points and 21
of 22 field goal attempts. The only one he missed was
blocked.
Feagles is seventh in the league in punting with a net
average of 39.8 yards.
"I am more afraid to fail than anything and that is
what has kept me working hard and taking each game one
by one and concentrating on the offseason to see what I
can do to get better," Feagles said. "That's what has
kept me around so long."
There are at least six Giants coaches that are younger
than Feagles and Carney, including special teams coach
Tom Quinn, their boss.
Jay Alford, who snaps on the field goal and extra point
attempts, laughs about both players being old enough to
be his father.
"Both of them make my job so easy," Alford said. "They
may be old, but they work out hard. John is 44 and when
we are practicing there are times you'll see him
running the escalators in the stadium. It's weird. He
doesn't have to do that, but he does."
Feagles is the same way, and remarkably he might be in
the best shape of his career, thanks to his son, C.J.,
who recently agreed to attend North Carolina as a
punter. He will play for Butch Davis, one of Feagles
coaches when he attended Miami in the 1980s.
"By working with his technique for the last year and a
half it has forced me to do things I have to do,"
Feagles said. "It's a refresher course. Usually I put
the balls away at the end of the season and doesn't
touch them until May. This year I was in unbelievable
shape."
Feagles and Carney are both are in their 21st NFL
season, tying them for fourth overall for longest
tenure in the league with three others. They admit
special teams have changed over the past two decades.
Where either a tight end or lineman was the snapper
when they started in 1988, now every team has at least
one snapper, along with kick returners and coverage
people.
"If you look at the best special teams units, those
coaches will have a handful of playmakers that the
coach and management allow him to keep," Carney said.
"They may never get in the mix to be a starter, but
they are special teams aces who make special plays
throughout the year."
One thing that hasn't changed is that the kickers work
on their own. They get about 10 minutes with the team
and then do their own thing, watching videotapes,
lifting, stretching and kicking.
"If somebody said we had to do as much as the other
guys we probably would not know what to do with
ourselves," Feagles said. "... Out of sight, out of
mind is our motto."
These old guys do fit in, though.
Rookie safety Kenny Phillips, the youngest player on
the team at 21, said the old-timers "carry themselves
like they are young men. They have a good time, but it
is definitely weird seeing them on the team." "I just
try to act more immature so I can fit in," Carney
quipped. "The guys are great. You expect the razzing
and the hazing because some of them are young enough to
almost be your son, but it's fun. I have had an
opportunity to play with a couple of different
generations and it's been exciting to see young guys
come in, enter the league and watch them mature into
veterans."
Neither Carney nor Feagles seems concerned about the
future.
"Once you get to a certain age, you take it year by
year," Feagles said. "If you have an organization like
the Giants that believes I can do things at my age,
that makes it a lot easier."
Added Carney: "I just feel fortunate and blessed and I
thank God for the ability, perseverance and the
opportunities. It has been a great ride and as long as
I feel physically capable, I will try to push the
limits."
(phillyburbs.com)