Chicago Sun-Times

Rodgers’ knee feels great after surgery

Packers quarterbac­k’s busy offseason includes pro-am, Super Bowl

- Garrett Johnston @JohnstonGa­rrett Special for USA TODAY Sports

Less than a month after having arthroscop­ic surgery on his left knee, Green Bay Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers is playing golf and says the knee feels “great.”

Rodgers has been as a celebrity participan­t in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, playing withWiscon­sin pro Jerry Kelly.

Rodgers said he had a “scope” performed on his knee soon after the Packers’ 26-20 overtime loss Jan. 16 at Arizona in the NFC divisional playoffs.

Asked if the knee was injured on any particular play during the Packers’ 10-6 regular season and two-game postseason run, Rodgers said, “No, it wasn’t amoment. It was for a clean-up of an old injury.”

Rodgers had reconstruc­tive surgery on his left knee while at the University of California but hasn’t missed any time in his profession­al career because of knee injuries.

Rodgers, 32, said the knee was holding up just fine after he played his first full 18 holes of golf since July during Thursday’s first round.

“It was just good to be out there walking normally,” Rodgers said. “It feels great. It’s nice to not have any clunking around or anything, so it was good.”

Rodgers’ week in California began at Super Bowl 50 last weekend in Santa Clara. Rodgers was introduced before the game at Levi’s Stadium along with the other Super Bowl MVPs and also picked up Play of the Year honors for his 61-yard Hail Mary pass to tight end Richard Rodgers with no time remaining that beat the Detroit Lions 2723 on Dec. 3.

Rodgers said Super Bowl 50, in which the Denver Broncos beat the Carolina Panthers 24-10, was “a good game,” adding that the Broncos have “a great defense. I thought both defenses played pretty well, but Denver’s defense scored.”

Rodgers said he’s been having fun at Pebble Beach. One highlight came

Wednesday during the inauguralM­illion DollarHole-in- One for Charity present- ed by Facebook. Rodgers and 31 other celebritie­s — including Clint Eastwood, Wayne Gretzky, Bill Murray and Justin Timberlake — had two shots on Pebble Beach’s iconic 100-yard, par-3 seventh hole for a chance to make the top-three final round and earn a shot at winning $1 million for a hole-in-one.

After his first shot failed to get him into the top three, Rodgers was unintentio­nally “iced” by CBS Sports broadcaste­r Jim Nantz. As Rodgers prepared for his second shot, Nantz regaled the crowd with a descriptio­n of the Hail Mary play, calling it one of the all-time greatest sports moments he ever has called. Then he told Rodgers to go for golf’s version of a HailMary and make a hole-in-one.

As you might expect after such a build-up, Rodgers flubbed his next shot, hitting it about 30 yards.

“He froze me out. I was nervous as it is and I’m 23rd to hit out of 32 (play- ers),” Rodgers said. “But it was fun. Being inside the ropes with Bill Murray telling jokes, that’s whatmakes this tournament special.”

Rodgers’ jovial interactio­ns extended to his celebrity playing partner, actor Chris O’Donnell.

The two didn’t shy away from goodnature­d ribbing.

“Aaron, unfortunat­ely, he’s a great guy,” O’Donnell said. “And as a Bears fan, it irritates me.”

 ?? KYLE TERADA, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Aaron Rodgers said his knee held up just fine after playing 18 holes of golf.
KYLE TERADA, USA TODAY SPORTS Aaron Rodgers said his knee held up just fine after playing 18 holes of golf.

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