Orlando Sentinel

Luck, RG3 following different paths Stung by injuries, the 2 QBs are friends cheering each other on to come back

- By Michael Marot

WESTFIELD, Ind. — Andrew Luck and Robert Griffin III spent most of their football careers going head to head.

The two high-profile Texas prep stars both were recruited by Stanford, finished one-two in the 2011 Heisman Trophy race, went first and second in the 2012 NFL Draft and were the top two vote-getters in the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year balloting.

Now, the 28-year-old quarterbac­ks — Luck with the Colts and Griffin with the Ravens — find themselves in an odd place: rooting for each another’s comebacks.

“You know it seems like the combine was just yesterday,” Griffin said after the first of two joint practices on the final weekend of training camp.

“He’s always going to be the geeky guy and I’m always going to be the guy who wears the goofy socks.”

Maybe those sentiments sound strange coming from two guys who were supposed to join the long list of memorable rivals.

But fate, as it sometimes does, changed everything.

Instead of becoming fierce foes, Griffin and Luck developed a mutual admiration for each other’s work. They respect one another so much that Luck even took a moment during a brief stoppage at practice to jog over and give Griffin a hug.

“He’s a really good guy. He’s a Texas guy, so we have some links there,” Luck said earlier this week. “I got to know him at the Heisman and then the combine and draft. I’ve always been a big fan. Our families got to know each other a fair bit. I’m excited to see him.”

Much has changed since these two last threw passes on the same field, six years ago in one of the few highly anticipate­d preseason games, pitting the seemingly can’t-miss prospects.

Luck was considered the polished establishm­ent guy who learned the game from his NFL-playing father, who was groomed in Stanford’s pro-style offense had a résumé that resembled Peyton Manning’s.

Griffin was the flashy new guy with plenty of upside, legs that were supposed to be as difficult to stop as his arm, who could make any offense high octane and who took home four of college football’s most prized trophies in 2011. Both began with a bang. Luck led the Colts to the playoffs each of his first three seasons, made the Pro Bowl each year and helped lead the Colts one step deeper in the playoffs each successive year, culminatin­g with an AFC championsh­ip-game appearance following the 2014 season.

Griffin countered by leading the Redskins to their first playoff appearance in five years, drawing praise from President Barack Obama and making the Pro Bowl as a rookie.

Then things suddenly went awry.

Griffin sprained a ligament in his right knee in December 2012 but was cleared by doctors in time to return for the final two regular-season games and the playoff game against Seattle. During the fourth quarter of the loss to the Seahawks, Griffin’s knee gave out and he wound up needing surgery for two torn ligaments and a torn meniscus.

“I don’t think about the past because otherwise I can’t stay in the present,” Griffin said. “I’m a football player. If they tell me I can go, I’m going to go.”

He was never the same. Since starting 9-7, he is just 6-19 as a starter.

Griffin lost the starting spot in Washington three times over the next three seasons and finally signed with Cleveland in 2016, where he spent most of the season on injured reserve with a fractured bone in his left shoulder. He still holds the distinctio­n as the most recent starting quarterbac­k to lead the Browns to a victory on Dec. 24, 2016.

The Browns released Griffin in March 2017 — before he collected a $750,000 roster bonus — and he was out of football all of last season.

“It was hard, very hard,” Griffin said. “But the Ravens gave me an opportunit­y and I’m here to make the most of this opportunit­y.”

Luck, meanwhile, with other obstacles.

He injured his right shoulder in the third game of the 2015 season, ending a starting streak of 57 consecutiv­e games.

Luck finished his fourth pro season on injured reserve with a lacerated kidney, played through the continual pain in his right shoulder in 2016 and then opted for surgery on a partially torn labrum in January 2017. The recovery cost him all of last season.

The Colts missed the playoffs all three of those years and now he’s finally back, looking to find his pre-surgery form.

“I know he was just hurting,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. “When you miss that much football, you start questionin­g everything. For him to be back out here has to be a joy for him.”

Luck continued lining up behind center for the second joint practice Saturday and will likely do so for more than a quarter in Monday night’s game.

Griffin, meanwhile, is trying to restart his career by winning a job behind Super Bowl-winning quarterbac­k Joe Flacco and firstround draft pick and Heisman winner Lamar Jackson, meaning Griffin and Luck could be watching each other’s comebacks.

“I’m always rooting for quarterbac­ks,” Griffin said. “I really hope he [Luck] comes back and not just to the level he was before but to the level the Colts expect.” dealt

 ?? SLAVEN VLASIC/GETTY IMAGES ?? Back in 2012, Robert Griffin III, second from left, and Andrew Luck, second from right, were top NFL Draft prospects, along with Trent Richardson, far left, and Justin Blackmon, far right. Both of their careers have taken different paths.
SLAVEN VLASIC/GETTY IMAGES Back in 2012, Robert Griffin III, second from left, and Andrew Luck, second from right, were top NFL Draft prospects, along with Trent Richardson, far left, and Justin Blackmon, far right. Both of their careers have taken different paths.

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