Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Receiver Adams’ health looking positive

- MICHAEL COHEN,

GREEN BAY - If the early stages prove to be an accurate portrayal of his recovery, Green Bay Packers wide receiver

Davante Adams appears to have escaped the collision with Chicago Bears inside linebacker Danny

Trevathan relatively unscathed.

While Adams remains in the concussion protocol — meaning he is off limits to reporters in the locker room — he was on the field Wednesday and went through various drills with his teammates as a limited participan­t. He was seen catching passes from the JUGS machine and running routes without defenders during the portion of practice open to the media.

“That’s part of his protocol,” coach Mike McCarthy said during his prepractic­e news conference. “So, he’ll probably be in a limited category, which is the goal for all these guys that are injured, to get ‘em down there, go through the rehab, prehab group and get into the limited fashion so we can evaluate.”

That Adams was on the field at all is relatively surprising given the vicious hit he absorbed, and his presence alone indicates swift progress through the protocol. A key factor in his recovery will be how Adams responds to the on-field movement from Wednesday. An independen­t neurologis­t must clear Adams before he can play in another game.

“It was great,” wide receiver Randall Cobb said of seeing Adams at practice. “I’m just glad to see him walking again, more importantl­y. When I went to the hospital and saw him the other night he was back to his normal self, joking around, trying to break out of the hospital. I’m just glad to see him in good health.”

Cobb and Trevathan were college teammates at Kentucky, where the latter was known for making plenty of tackles and always being around the ball. He was not known as a dirty player, according to Cobb, and Trevathan sent a text message to be passed along to Adams.

As with former Packers receiver Malachi

Dupre, who was hospitaliz­ed after a brutal hit during the exhibition season, Adams had plenty of visitors last week, including quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers.

“I was encouraged seeing Davante at the hospital – whatever time we were there, 1 or 2 in the morning – and he was in good spirits,” Rodgers said. “I was there with Jermichael (Finley) and Malachi, and those were tough to see because they weren’t doing as well as Davante was. It is tough to refocus in those situations.

“There were a number of us there at the hospital checking in on him the next day and he just sounded like he was in a good mood. You hoped, obviously, for the tests to be clean, first of all, and then for him to be discharged and then take it from there. We all came back (to Lambeau Field) on

Tuesday and he was in good spirits and feeling good. His neck felt good, so that’s really encouragin­g.”

The Packers are back to a normal practice schedule after the minibye over the weekend. Adams will continue working through the protocol in hopes of returning to the field Sunday against the Dallas Cowboys.

Said McCarthy: “He feels great and he just wants to get back to playing football.”

Quarter masters: The Packers have put themselves in position to contend for a solid playoff seed in January, but McCarthy knows the next four games are important if his team is to benefit from its solid start.

A treacherou­s second quarter of the season opens Sunday when the Packers (3-1) travel to the Dallas Cowboys (2-2). They will be on the road the following Sunday at division rival Minnesota (2-2), where they lost last season. The Packers will host one of the game’s top quarterbac­ks in Drew

Brees and the New Orleans Saints (2-2) on Oct. 22 before closing October on a bye. They will return to host the Detroit Lions (3-1), likely their primary competitio­n for the NFC North title.

McCarthy said he’ll address the next four games’ importance to his players Thursday.

“If you look at the history of the second quarter of the season,” McCarthy said, “it hasn’t been our best quarter of the season. I’ll go through the specifics of that with the team.”

As a whole, the Packers have been no different in a season’s second quarter than the first four games. Through last season, the Packers have identical 2915 records in the first and second quarters of the season since they hired McCarthy in 2006.

In recent years, that trend has changed.

The Packers’ 3-1 start this season is in line with their 4-0 start in 2015 and 3-1 start last fall. In the past two years, they’ve gone 4-4 in the season’s second quarter. Their .500 record has been a departure of the four years before it. The Packers were 14-2 in the season’s second quarter from 2011-14.

With a strong October, the Packers could find themselves in position for a premier playoff seed when the season’s second half begins.

“You get into Week 5 now,” McCarthy said, “you have data, you have comparable­s that you look at, and it’s just all about pushing it forward and trying to grow. That’s what we’re focused on.”

Elliott alert: McCarthy said the Packers are preparing to face Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott on Sunday, regardless of the potential that Elliott’s six-game suspension could take effect before then.

Elliott was suspended six games for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy after a former girlfriend accused him of domestic violence. He played the season’s first four games while challengin­g his suspension in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

The court said its ruling would come quickly after the NFL filed its response to Elliott, which happened Tuesday morning. As of late afternoon Wednesday, there was no ruling.

Elliott’s suspension would take effect immediatel­y if the court ruled for the NFL.

“I don’t know where it’s at, frankly,” McCarthy said Wednesday morning. “I haven’t watched it. It doesn’t factor in. Whatever’s on video, that’s what we’re preparing for.”

What’s on video is Elliott’s 277 yards on 76 carries in four games, a slight dip from his remarkable rookie season. Elliott had 1,631 yards and 15 touchdowns in 2016. He twice rushed for at least 125 yards against the Packers, though he didn’t score a touchdown in either game.

Elliott said Wednesday it has been difficult to stay focused with his off-field situation looming over him.

“Just keep my eyes on what’s important,” Elliott said. “That’s just being the best running back I can for this team, and just not letting it spill over into my work. And just making sure I’m focused, and these guys, these teammates I have, have been great just helping me be focused on this game and being focused on being a running back I need to be for this team.” ‘Heartbroke­n’ reaction: Rodgers said Sunday night’s mass shooting in Las Vegas was “very scary” to wake up to Monday.

Rodgers said he saw the news on social media shortly after awakening at 6 a.m. Monday. His initial reaction, Rodgers said, was being “heartbroke­n” for the victims and families.

For Rodgers, the event became more personal than he could have expected.

“I have some ties and connection­s to Vegas,” he said, “and I had some friends who were at the venue. It’s unthinkabl­e that this would continue to happen in our country. You obviously send your prayers and thoughts to the people who are affected.

“A friend of mine lost their best friend of 20 years.”

Rodgers did not specify which friend he was referencin­g, or the victim.

The Packers quarterbac­k called for safeguards to make mass shootings less frequent.

“We’re going to have to make some changes in society,” Rodgers said, “hopefully quickly because there’s too many situations like this where we send our thoughts and prayers to these victims, and unfortunat­ely it keeps happening.”

 ?? TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN JIM MATTHEWS/USA ?? Green Bay Packers wide receiver Jordy Nelson (left) gets a helmet bump from wide receiver Davante Adams after a long reception Thursday against the Chicago Bears at Lambeau Field. Adams returned to practice Wednesday after being hospitaliz­ed from a hit...
TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN JIM MATTHEWS/USA Green Bay Packers wide receiver Jordy Nelson (left) gets a helmet bump from wide receiver Davante Adams after a long reception Thursday against the Chicago Bears at Lambeau Field. Adams returned to practice Wednesday after being hospitaliz­ed from a hit...

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