Say what you will about
Sinorice Moss. And I know you have. I've heard
you.
But never say that he's not a team player, a humble
human being or selfless. The fact is he is all of those
things.
When asked today about the Giants' drafting Mario
Manningham in the third round, Moss went right past
sulking, feeling bad for himself, ripping his new
teammate or anything else that might reflect a selfish
attitude. Instead, he genuinely (and I mean that)
expressed excitement about adding another potential
weapon to the team's receiving corps - even if that
weapon might soon knock him off the roster.
"It's good for us to have a guy like that - a great
talent, good hands," Moss said. "I didn't expect him to
be there that late, but it was a big plus for us to
have another young guy coming in. You talk about
looking toward the future with this organization, I
think that's a big plus for us."
Moss was supposed to be a big plus for the Giants when
the team picked him in the second round two years ago.
Check that: When the team traded up to pick him. But so
far, the 5-8, 185-pound younger brother of Redskins
receiver Santana Moss hasn't quite had the impact the
team thought he would. He missed most of his rookie
season with a quad injury that just wouldn't heal then
bounced back a bit last season to catch 21 passes in
the regular season.
But Moss got hurt late in the season and was inactive
for all four postseason games. In his place,
then-rookie Steve Smith recorded 14 catches in the
playoffs and vaulted ahead of Moss on the depth chart
after struggling with his own injury issues.
On Sunday, after the selection of Manningham, Giants GM
Jerry Reese said the team still has confidence in Moss
and looks at this past season as his rookie year
because of all the missed time in 2006.
"If they want to look at it as my rookie year, they
can, but I'm not looking at it as my rookie year, just
another year in this league for me," Moss said. "I'm
going into my third year and I'm trying to come out
here and help this team the best I can - whether it's
returning punts or catching footballs and catching
touchdowns for this team."
Moss thinks he'll get a chance to do all of that, even
though Manningham's arrival threatens his playing time.
"They didn't even mention anything to me about this guy
since they drafted him. That's not a concern to me,"
Moss said. "I know what I bring to this team and I know
what I can do for this organization. I'm not worried
about them drafting another guy. I'm happy they drafted
another guy because it's good toward our future. You
never know what can happen, so drafting this guy is
good for us."
He honestly believes that. Instead of viewing
Manningham as competition, he is choosing to see him as
the third member of a young corps of receivers that
will be catching balls from Eli Manning for years to
come.
"I mean, I'm thinking so far ahead, but I just think
it's a big plus for this organization to draft that guy
there, have Steve last year and myself the year before
that," Moss said. "It's just big for this organization.
I'm not taking anything away from Plax and Amani
because these guys are great athletes and they showed
us the ropes. I just think it's big."
Of course, Moss is the eldest of this young crew. That
would make him the grandfather, right?
"No I'm the uncle," he said with a smile. "Steve's the
nephew and (Manningham's) the cousin."
We'll see if this family can stay together.
(blog.nj.com)