Dayton Daily News

Finally healthy, rookie Hooker ‘a factor’

- COLTS

Indianapol­is INDIANAPOL­IS — Colts safety Malik Hooker had two offseason surgeries and spent seven excruciati­ng months waiting to prove he could excel in the NFL.

After surgeries forced him to skip the league’s annual scouting combine workouts, miss all of Indy’s offseason work and see limited time during training camp — Hooker finally got his first chance to start hitting at full speed.

The Colts had no complaints.

“Malik is a natural. He is as advertised,” coach Chuck Pagano said. “He is going to be a factor, he’s got a ton of range and the ball skills and the instincts are there. We’re really pleased to see him come up and the times that he was down in the box and the plays that he made in the open field, the tackling and physicalit­y that he showed was impressive.”

Aside from injuries, the 6-foot-2, 212-pound rookie out of Ohio State is off to a good start.

Hooker missed practice again Tuesday with a shoulder injury. However, Pagano said he doesn’t expect the injury to keep Hooker out long.

The book on Hooker coming out of college was that he was a playmaker who struggled at times with tackling. Hooker found the critiques to be both confoundin­g and motivating. He promised when he given the all-clear, he would erase all doubts.

“I really don’t pay attention to that stuff because I like to tackle. I put a lot of emphasis on that before I came to the NFL,” he said. “But when I got out there, I knew was going to make the most of my opportunit­y.” He did. In Sunday’s preseason opener against Detroit, Hooker finished with four tackles — the first coming on a smashing hit that knocked Lions running back Dwayne Washington out of bounds. Hooker also made a shoestring, touchdown-saving tackle of Washington later in the drive.

And on the Lions’ first TD pass, the guy who returned three intercepti­ons for scores in 2016, put himself in perfect position for his first pick as a pro — had rookie cornerback Quincy Wilson been able to tip it in Hooker’s direction. Perhaps that’s why Pagano compared Hooker to one of his former pupils, Ravens star Ed Reed, on draft night.

But it’s certainly what firstyear general manager Chris Ballard anticipate­d when he gladly took Hooker after he slid out of the top 10.

“I thought Hooker was the best athlete in the draft, and he’s got a unique skill set,” Ballard said in April. “He’s got size. He’s got speed. He’s got great instincts and ball skills, and guys that can take away the football are hard to find. We think he can do that at this level.”

Still, even Hooker concedes he has a long way to go.

After spending so much time recovering from surgeries in January on his midsection and hip, he hurt his hamstring during rookie conditioni­ng just six days before players reported for training camp. Pagano has been playing it safe with Hooker since then, essentiall­y keeping him on a pitch-count at practice.

On Sunday, Hooker could tell he wasn’t himself.

“The biggest thing with rust was getting out there and playing six or seven plays, I had to come out,” he said.

Given a little more time to practice before Indy’s regular-season opener Sept. 10 against the Rams, Hooker believes he’ll round into shape.

Hooker hopes it will help him pass the test against faster, stronger opponents and demonstrat­e he’s ready to make a big impact on a defense that has traditiona­lly wallowed in the bottom third of the league rankings.

 ?? AJ MAST / AP ?? Colts rookie Malik Hooker missed the combine and Indy’s offseason work with injuries.
AJ MAST / AP Colts rookie Malik Hooker missed the combine and Indy’s offseason work with injuries.

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