The Province

GET WELL SOONER

Colts are out of Luck as camp begins, ‘but there’s no reason to freak out’

- JOHN KRYK jokryk@postmedia.com @JohnKryk blogs.canoe.ca/krykslants

INDIANAPOL­IS — Seeing your $140-million quarterbac­k on the sidelines in gym clothes, physically unable to perform, is a lousy way to kick off training camp.

But that’s the way it was, and the way it’s going to be for a while, for the NFL’s Indianapol­is Colts.

Andrew Luck revealed on the weekend that after undergoing undisclose­d shoulder surgery shortly after last season — reportedly on a partially torn labrum in his right throwing shoulder — he went nearly seven months without throwing a football, as he rehabbed for up to 10 hours a day, up to six days a week.

Believe it or not, Luck already is entering Year 6 in the NFL. Before last season he signed a six-year, $140-million extension with the Colts, who selected him No. 1 overall in 2012.

Luck knows some people are wondering if he’ll ever come close to justifying the “can’t-miss/next-Elway” labels that got slapped on him coming out of Stanford. Prior to the past two or three seasons, everyone wanted to know if he could get his intercepti­ons under control, or get enough protection to not be practicall­y killed every game.

This whole year must be killing him more.

Sunday, especially so, what with training camp under way and thousands of concerned fans in the stands at sunsoaked Lucas Oil Stadium. Luck’s most meaningful physical contributi­on Sunday was signing dozens upon dozens of autographs afterward on the visiting team’s sideline.

When he spoke to reporters Saturday morning, his only media access on the weekend, Luck assured Colts fans “there’s no reason to freak out.” He will be back. Soon. It’s just that neither he nor Colts doctors or trainers can say exactly when.

“I will be better than I was coming into this, I know that,” Luck said of his shoulder surgery and rehab. “I don’t know what day it’s going to be. I don’t know what week. But I definitely will be (back soon).

“I love practice and I would love to be out there for every practice, every week ... I’m confident that when the time is right for me, and when I’m able to practise, whenever that is, that I’ll be up to speed and productive enough in games to give this team my best.”

Until then, even if it’s not until the regular season some time in September, Scott Tolzien is the unquestion­ed No. 1 Colts quarterbac­k. Stephen Morris, last year’s rookie holdover, and 2017 rookie Phillip Walker have nowhere near the pass- ing accuracy nor knowledge of the Colts offence at this stage to routinely make plays, complete passes and move the chains as Tolzien can.

Of course, Tolzien can’t do it as proficient­ly or dynamicall­y as the frustrated, bearded guy on the sidelines.

 ?? AP ?? Colts quarterbac­k Andrew Luck talks with wide receivers coach Sanjay Lal at training camp in Indianapol­is yesterday. Luck is on the team’s physically unable to perform list.
AP Colts quarterbac­k Andrew Luck talks with wide receivers coach Sanjay Lal at training camp in Indianapol­is yesterday. Luck is on the team’s physically unable to perform list.
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