Sunday Mirror

Joe’s had rags – now for the riches

BURROW’S BEATEN ALL THE ODDS

- In Los Angeles

From KEITH WEBSTER

LIKE some of the namesakes that have gone before him – Namath, Montana, Theismann – Cincinnati’s No.9 is no ordinary Joe.

Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow is the baby-faced assassin who admits to a resemblanc­e to Macauley Culkin when asked who could play him in his life-story movie.

And he’s been through a lot to reach the greatest stage of his life tonight.

Leading out the Bengals at SoFi Stadium to take on the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LVI will place the 25-year-old in exalted company – but it has been a long and challengin­g road.

Raised in a poor rural area of Ohio, he was cast out of his dream college job at Ohio State University.

Unwanted by the football team, he began to consider a career in finance before moving south to Louisiana State University where he showed OSU what they were missing by winning a national championsh­ip and being awarded the Heisman Trophy as the best player in college football.

In April 2020, Cincinnati made Burrow the first pick in the NFL Draft.

But 10 games into his profession­al career, he wrecked his left knee in the latest challenge to his mental fortitude.

Fifteen months after lying on a surgical table to repair the damage, now he is 60 minutes away from lifting the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

“I wouldn’t change it for the world,”

Burrow said as he put the finishing touches to his preparatio­n for tonight’s movie-script showdown under the gaze of the Hollywood sign.

“It helped me become a better player. There was a lot of adversity, mentally and physically.

“It helped me focus on a lot of different things in my hips and my core that helped my throwing motion become more refined.”

It is typical of the young player’s mindset. Get knocked down, find a way to turn it to your advantage. Suffer a loss, go looking for a gain.

For one so young, it seems his background has made him welladjust­ed for whatever life throws at him and has taught him many lessons.

He said: “In rural Ohio, where I’m from, there’s a lot of poverty and hungry people. You don’t really realise that that’s what you’re seeing when you’re growing up because you’re a kid.

“But when you reflect on it, it sticks out in your mind as a really sad moment. The things you go through help form who you are.

“When you think about successful

NFL quarterbac­ks, it’s paramount to keep that even-keel personalit­y and attitude.

“The game is a microcosm of life and if you have these super-high highs and super-low lows, you’re not going to be successful on a consistent basis.

“I try to portray calmness in certain situations. As a quarterbac­k, there’s times where you need to be this fiery leader and there’s times when you need to be a calming presence.

“It’s a quarterbac­k’s job to understand the different situations that require different things.”

Now, after witnessing poverty, rejection from his dream college, and a knee injury that would have dispirited lesser men, Burrow has one more thing he wants to achieve.

“We have a great fanbase that is behind whatever we do,” he said.

“They were behind us the last two years when we were terrible and they’re behind us this year when we’re at the top.

“We want to bring it home for them. A big reason that I work as hard as I do is to get the fans what they want.”

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