06-03-2007, 01:00 PM
I'm so emotional right now. Palmer had a hell of a year last year, but it wasn't great, and, like I've said earlier, he didn't follow through on a lot of his throws and pulled off right away. He's fixed all that, and he's back to the form where he looks like a man among boys. I bet he could part the Ohio River...........
Here's the story:
Not only is there no knee brace. There is no need to brace.
Wide receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh noticed it this weekend at the Bengalsâ mandatory minicamp, where life is good as Carson Palmer gets those 55-60 snaps a day that he didnât get last spring.
Palmer, the perfectionist Pro Bowl quarterback, has noticed it, too, these past few weeks. Heâs no longer using those other body parts to make up his reconstructed left knee.
âWhen you lose a limb, have to redevelop it and you do it by compensating,â said Palmer, his camp beard tinged with sweat between Saturdayâs practices. âI just feel better. Iâm not overcompensating. Iâm not limping. I feel better in everything Iâm doing.â
Fact is, Palmer may have stats that conjure up the musical score of The Natural with a throwing motion straight from the pages of Ken Andersonâs textbook on the art of quarterbacking. But the theme to one of his favorite shows, 24 is more like it because heâs a perpetual grinder trying to get better every day.
Palmer began to feel the difference this offseason. A few weeks ago, he began to feel the knee returning to its normal position in the throwing motion. The left shoulder is staying where it should. His hips are staying put. Order is restored in Bengaldom.
He says he feels more comfortable than he did in December. Better than in the final two games of last season, when his last-series drives looked for all the world like he had put the Bengals in the playoffs.
âOh yeah. I overcompensated all last year. I just stopped doing it this offseason,â Palmer said. âI was using too much shoulder. Using the right leg too much. Driving through the left hip too much. All thatâs affected.â
Even when healthy, the cranky world of passer mechanics is an everyday battle.
âYou fix one thing and something else pops up,â said quarterbacks coach Ken Zampese. âIt matters when youâre going to have more of them because you havenât been doing things for a long time, which is last yearâs situation. At least now we can address them as soon as they come up and minimize them and fix things faster.â
He may not be The Natural, but perfectionism comes naturally.
âI donât know what a grinder is,â Palmer said. âI do know Iâm a perfectionist. Iâm a guy that has always needed reps. I was never one of those guys who could just draw Xs and Os up on the board and then go out and do it. I need to do it on the field. I love it. I love practicing.â
The guy who puts it best is offensive coordinator Bob Bratkowski.
âYou can be a natural throwing it, but there are so many other things that go into it,â Bratkowski said. âThereâs footwork and progressions and knowing what pass protection to call. I donât think the position is a natural for anybody. You can tell heâs better than a year ago. Heâs made the complete recovery.â
When Houshmandzadeh talks Natural, heâs talking Brett Favre or Dan Marino. Guys that just flat out sling it. He puts Palmer, Tom Brady, and Peyton Manning in another category.
âIf people see Carson like that, like a natural, itâs good for him because it shows how hard heâs worked at it. Heâs been doing it his whole life,â Houshmandzadeh said. âI donât think his mechanics were as bad people say. He may have felt that way because heâs the one that can feel it. But I didnât think there was much difference.â
One difference Houshmandzadeh sees now that he didnât see last year is Palmer showing more confidence in the knee while sitting in the pocket.
âWhen guys were around his knee in the pocket, he would have a tendency to throw and pull and step back,â Houshmandzadeh said. âIn training camp last year, if it was close, he would pull it back, lift it up and he would say, âIâm not even thinking about it. Iâm just doing it.â It might have a tendency to sail. I havenât noticed that this year. Thatâs probably the only difference.â
Palmer, of course, is offering no excuses or promises. âIâve been doing it so long, having a lack of reps shouldnât be an excuse,â he said, but he was also looking forward to the next 60 snaps.
Here's the story:
Not only is there no knee brace. There is no need to brace.
Wide receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh noticed it this weekend at the Bengalsâ mandatory minicamp, where life is good as Carson Palmer gets those 55-60 snaps a day that he didnât get last spring.
Palmer, the perfectionist Pro Bowl quarterback, has noticed it, too, these past few weeks. Heâs no longer using those other body parts to make up his reconstructed left knee.
âWhen you lose a limb, have to redevelop it and you do it by compensating,â said Palmer, his camp beard tinged with sweat between Saturdayâs practices. âI just feel better. Iâm not overcompensating. Iâm not limping. I feel better in everything Iâm doing.â
Fact is, Palmer may have stats that conjure up the musical score of The Natural with a throwing motion straight from the pages of Ken Andersonâs textbook on the art of quarterbacking. But the theme to one of his favorite shows, 24 is more like it because heâs a perpetual grinder trying to get better every day.
Palmer began to feel the difference this offseason. A few weeks ago, he began to feel the knee returning to its normal position in the throwing motion. The left shoulder is staying where it should. His hips are staying put. Order is restored in Bengaldom.
He says he feels more comfortable than he did in December. Better than in the final two games of last season, when his last-series drives looked for all the world like he had put the Bengals in the playoffs.
âOh yeah. I overcompensated all last year. I just stopped doing it this offseason,â Palmer said. âI was using too much shoulder. Using the right leg too much. Driving through the left hip too much. All thatâs affected.â
Even when healthy, the cranky world of passer mechanics is an everyday battle.
âYou fix one thing and something else pops up,â said quarterbacks coach Ken Zampese. âIt matters when youâre going to have more of them because you havenât been doing things for a long time, which is last yearâs situation. At least now we can address them as soon as they come up and minimize them and fix things faster.â
He may not be The Natural, but perfectionism comes naturally.
âI donât know what a grinder is,â Palmer said. âI do know Iâm a perfectionist. Iâm a guy that has always needed reps. I was never one of those guys who could just draw Xs and Os up on the board and then go out and do it. I need to do it on the field. I love it. I love practicing.â
The guy who puts it best is offensive coordinator Bob Bratkowski.
âYou can be a natural throwing it, but there are so many other things that go into it,â Bratkowski said. âThereâs footwork and progressions and knowing what pass protection to call. I donât think the position is a natural for anybody. You can tell heâs better than a year ago. Heâs made the complete recovery.â
When Houshmandzadeh talks Natural, heâs talking Brett Favre or Dan Marino. Guys that just flat out sling it. He puts Palmer, Tom Brady, and Peyton Manning in another category.
âIf people see Carson like that, like a natural, itâs good for him because it shows how hard heâs worked at it. Heâs been doing it his whole life,â Houshmandzadeh said. âI donât think his mechanics were as bad people say. He may have felt that way because heâs the one that can feel it. But I didnât think there was much difference.â
One difference Houshmandzadeh sees now that he didnât see last year is Palmer showing more confidence in the knee while sitting in the pocket.
âWhen guys were around his knee in the pocket, he would have a tendency to throw and pull and step back,â Houshmandzadeh said. âIn training camp last year, if it was close, he would pull it back, lift it up and he would say, âIâm not even thinking about it. Iâm just doing it.â It might have a tendency to sail. I havenât noticed that this year. Thatâs probably the only difference.â
Palmer, of course, is offering no excuses or promises. âIâve been doing it so long, having a lack of reps shouldnât be an excuse,â he said, but he was also looking forward to the next 60 snaps.
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Messages In This Thread
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by BFritz - 06-03-2007, 01:00 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by Bengal Cat - 06-03-2007, 02:14 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by BFritz - 06-03-2007, 04:34 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by gold_glove - 06-04-2007, 10:51 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by Bengal Cat - 06-05-2007, 12:15 AM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by bizmark - 06-05-2007, 10:36 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by BFritz - 06-05-2007, 10:57 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by rallo316 - 06-06-2007, 10:39 AM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by bizmark - 06-08-2007, 11:25 AM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by rallo316 - 06-08-2007, 11:42 AM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by BFritz - 06-08-2007, 02:58 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by t-cat50 - 06-08-2007, 06:57 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by BFritz - 06-08-2007, 08:25 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by GB1 - 06-09-2007, 09:23 AM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by BFritz - 06-09-2007, 12:26 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by bizmark - 06-10-2007, 08:18 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by BFritz - 06-11-2007, 04:04 PM
Perfectionist Palmer in a Groove - by Midee1 - 06-11-2007, 05:37 PM
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