Shockey plans to partake in rest of Saints workouts

METAIRIE, La. (AP) -- New Orleans tight end Jeremy Shockey said he plans to participate in the Saints final eight voluntary workouts and wants to turn the focus on him back to football.

Shockey, talking to reporters between practices at New Orlean's mandatory minicamp, has made more headlines off the field than on it since joining the Saints nearly a year ago.

He missed much of last season because of a hernia injury and failed to score a touchdown in the NFL's top-rated offense.

He did not attend the first four of the team's voluntary offseason practices and was back in the news two weeks ago when he was treated at a hospital for dehydration after being found unconscious at a pool party at a Las Vegas resort.

He offered few specifics about the Vegas incident, but seemed to confirm that excessive consumption of alcohol mixed with the desert heat led to the dehydration.

"If you're halfway intelligent you can read what everybody wrote," Shockey said. "You know what they say, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. That's in the past. I'm looking forward to the future."

Shockey said he has not participated in voluntary practices in his previous seven NFL seasons, but plans to do so this year to get better acquainted with quarterback Drew Brees and coach Sean Payton's offense.

"I still haven't been here a year so I can mature a long way and tune up my game," he said. "The most important thing is to know Drew and know what we're trying to get accomplished and knowing each other's game. It's still a new offense for me. I'm going to treat it as a rookie like anyone else in this locker room that just got here."

The Saints traded for Shockey last summer and he suffered a hernia injury during training camp. He said that he made a mistake playing through the injury and eventually needed in-season surgery. Though he was third on the team with 50 receptions, Shockey didn't have the kind of impact New Orleans envisioned even as Brees passed for the second-most yards ever in an NFL season.

Shockey said he doesn't care if people question his commitment as long as his coaches and teammates don't.

"I know my heart and my desire are in this, so people can question it all they want," he said. "It's always good practicing, leading up to the season. But the No.1 thing to keep in mind is it's during the game when it counts, not when it's out here with pillows on your shoulders. It's when you have the pads on and you're going against a real opponent.

"I think everyone knows I'm here to try to help this team win," Shockey added. "I'm not here to sell jerseys or anything like that. I'll have the time this year to show people I'm healthy and different from last year."

Shockey committed a false start early in team drills, but moments later made a sliding catch and was the first receiver in line to catch extra passes from a JUGS machine after practice.

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(cnnsi.com)