USA TODAY US Edition

‘Be like water’: An NFL RB finds a zen-like flow

- Mike Jones

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Christian McCaffrey has recited the words so many times that he no longer hears them.

“Be like water making its way through cracks,” the Panthers running back’s favorite Bruce Lee quote goes. “Do not be assertive, but adjust to the object, and you shall find a way around or through it. If nothing within you stays rigid, outward things will disclose themselves.

“Empty your mind, be formless. Shapeless, like water,” the saying continues. “If you put water into a cup, it becomes the cup. You put water into a bottle and it becomes the bottle. You put it in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Now, water can flow or it can crash. Be water, my friend.”

That very philosophy is central to the rise of one of the NFL’s most wellrounde­d offensive threats in McCaffrey, the second-year pro whose 1,018 yards from scrimmage have him on pace to shatter the Panthers’ single-

season record.

“It has a lot to do with fluidity and being able to adapt,” McCaffrey told USA TODAY. “I think when you’re running through a hole and you’re hit in certain, different ways, you have to be able to move and change and make people miss. You’ve got to be able to adapt to your environmen­t. It all relates.”

McCaffrey has long revered Lee. His father, Ed McCaffrey, introduced him to the martial arts icon’s movies (his favorite is “Enter the Dragon”) at a young age. But it wasn’t until he got older that he started studying Lee’s teachings on self-discipline, as well as body and mind control. Once he did, he found ways to relate them to football.

Various martial arts exercises help strengthen his core and improve his flexibilit­y and reactionar­y skills. Numerous proverbs from Lee have fortified his mind. As a result, he said he has “taken the next step as an NFL player.”

“He takes this very seriously,” Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly said. “He’s very motivated. He’s very conscious of his body and the things it takes each day, each week to do well at that position. He makes sure he’s at optimal level: what he eats, the stuff he does at home to prepare.”

McCaffrey grew up in a house of four boys and watched his father win three Super Bowls. But he said his mother, Lisa, who played soccer at Stanford, is the best athlete of the family. He equally credits her for his athletic developmen­t.

McCaffrey started playing running back at 7 but always saw himself as more. “I’ve always tried to be a complete athlete and not limit myself to one position or one sport,” he said. “It really helped mold my whole football game.”

That mentality also paved the way for McCaffrey to become one of the most prolific college players of all time (he holds the season record for all-purpose yardage). Now his multifacet­ed skills have carried over to the NFL, where this season he has 579 rushing yards, 439 receiving yards and eight touchdowns.

“All the guys I’ve been fortunate to be with, I always say, each has his own special skill set that sets them apart,” Panthers offensive coordinato­r Norv Turner said, “but Christian’s versatilit­y is as good as anyone I’ve been around.

“He’s got the ability to be an inside runner, outside runner, run routes in the passing game, do all those types of things. He’s been really impressive.”

McCaffrey grew up watching Hall of Famers Emmitt Smith and LaDainian Tomlinson, so he was excited to learn the Panthers had hired Turner, who worked with both. Turner said in the early going the young ballcarrie­r had a list of questions about his plans for him.

“He’s just a competitiv­e guy,” Turner said. “He was feeling me out because he wanted to make sure that he had the opportunit­ies to do the things he thinks he can do well.”

Turner and the Panthers have given McCaffrey those opportunit­ies, and he’s rewarded them in kind. McCaffrey has teamed with quarterbac­k Cam Newton to give the team the third-best rushing attack in the league (138.4 yards per game). He serves as Newton’s favorite pass-catcher (his 54 catches and 63 targets both lead the team), and he leads an offense that ranks ninth in scoring (26.8 points per game).

Leading up to the draft, where Carolina took him eighth overall, McCaffrey faced questions about his ability to play running back in the NFL, with many suggesting a switch to slot receiver.

Now, he trains himself to guard against other forms of disrespect. “I will catch myself. It’ll rub me the wrong way sometimes for sure,” he said. “But I don’t play for recognitio­n. I play because I love the game and play for my teammates. I don’t let any of that affect me.”

But how?

“Trial and error,” he explained. “A lot of late nights thinking about this and that and catching myself. You can never satisfy other people, I learned. End of the day, it’s extremely important that you know yourself better than anybody else, and if you can do that, it doesn’t matter what anybody thinks about you, good or bad.”

Some athletes use public slights as motivation. But McCaffrey said he doesn’t need extra fuel. “I have a lot of my own motivation­s. I never play to prove anyone wrong. I always try to prove myself right.”

Whether consciousl­y or not, McCaffrey summed up another one of Bruce Lee’s sayings.

“I’m not in this world to live up to your expectatio­ns,” the saying goes, “and you’re not in this world to live up to mine.”

McCaffrey already is living up to his own standards, and certainly those of the Panthers.

 ?? CHARLES LECLAIRE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey has 1,018 yards from scrimmage and eight TDs this season.
CHARLES LECLAIRE/USA TODAY SPORTS Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey has 1,018 yards from scrimmage and eight TDs this season.
 ??  ?? Greg Van Roten congratula­tes Christian McCaffrey on a TD.
Greg Van Roten congratula­tes Christian McCaffrey on a TD.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States