The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

All indication­s Barkley will play in season opener

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Roughly a year after tearing his right ACL, indication­s are Saquon Barkley is going to play for the New York Giants in the season opener against the Denver Broncos on Sunday.

Coach Joe Judge said the 2018 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year had a good week of practice, terming the workouts encouragin­g and promising. The second-year head coach said the running back will need final approval from the team’s medical staff to play.

The Giants listed Barkley as questionab­le.

Barkley said he felt good this week, noting he did not have a setback. That was a problem Judge said could keep fourth-year player out of the game.

“I wouldn’t go out there unless I felt confident that I can protect myself and be able to help the team,” Barkley said.

Barkley, injured in the second game of last season, would not say whether he’ll play. As he has for the past six months, he said the team

will make that decision.

The Giants have a fourday window for their first two games and that could play into how the team decides to use him. The Giants play Washington in a divisional game on Thursday night.

Looking back on the injury against the Bears, Barkley said being held to 6 yards on 15 carries in the season opener against Pittsburgh last season might have influenced how he played against the Bears on Sept. 20.

“The last time I played a game of football, I didn’t play in the right place at heart,“Barkley said. “It wasn’t out of love. It was kind of to show that, this is who I am. I will never let that happen to me again.”

Barkley had reconstruc­tive surgery on his knee in late October and rehabilita­ted his knee for almost nine months. He started training camp on the physically unable to perform list and wasn’t cleared to start practicing in full until late in August.

The former Penn State star said rehab was hard enough that there were times it was a struggle. That was the case when the rehabilita­tion was mostly training.

Things improved after he came off PUP on Aug. 9. He then started practicing on a limited basis.

“When I started to do football specific, something like put a ball in my hand, I felt everything just came so easy,” he said.

Barkley has rushed for 2,344 yards and 17 touchdowns in his first three seasons. He has also caught 149 passes, including six for TDs.

 ?? Adam Hunger / Associated Press ?? New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley warms up before taking on the New England Patriots during a preseason game in August.
Adam Hunger / Associated Press New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley warms up before taking on the New England Patriots during a preseason game in August.

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