The biggest local surprise of the NFL draft turned out to be Washington running back Chris Polk.
It was assumed if Polk became a surprise during the leagues selection extravaganza, it would be because he went sooner than the expected third- or fourth-round range.
Instead, Polks name never was called. Several reports say he signed a free agent deal with the Philadelphia Eagles following the drafts disappointment.
Saturday morning started with hints that a physical problem for Polk had scared teams off of Washingtons second all-time leading rusher. Rumors of Polks injury swirled on Twitter. NFL Network analyst Mike Mayock said Polk has a degenerative shoulder problem. Another alleged a hip issue.
“I will just have to go out there and show them I have a lot of great football left in me,” Polk told Rob Rang of NFLDraftScout.com after agreeing to a deal with the Eagles. “I know teams are concerned about my shoulder, but I also heard somebody say something about a degenerative hip and there is just no truth to that. I had labrum surgery on the shoulder a year ago and it didn’t slow me down last season.”
Polk had surgery twice on his left shoulder. He dislocated it in 2008 during the second game of the season against BYU. That surgery ended his freshman season.
He also suffered a torn labrum in 2009, which led to another off-season surgery that caused him to miss 2010 spring practice. In addition, he had arthroscopic knee surgery prior to last season, his most successful, but did not miss any games.
“Some of the reports that have come out are news to me,” Washington head coach Steve Sarkisian said after Washingtons spring game Saturday. “I’ve never heard that stuff.
Polk, 5 foot 11 and 222 pounds, left Washington following his redshirt junior season. The Redlands, Calif., native finished second in career rushing yards at Washington. His 4,049 yards trails only Napoleon Kaufmans 4,401 yards.
He earned many of those yards after the initial hit. After coming out of high school with a label of being soft, Polk left college recognized as a driving, hard-nosed runner.
Polks 1,488 rushing yards in 2011 were the second-most in Washington history. His 293 carries rank second and his 12 rushing TDs were tied for seventh. Polks 16 total touchdowns last season are tied for fifth most in UW single-season history.
He was able to expand his game in 2011, too. Polk made 31 catches for 332 yards and four touchdowns, including a 70-yard touchdown versus Cal.
There were questions about his speed and durability prior to the draft. Running backs who seek contact often have short careers in the NFL, let alone ones who use Polks relentless style.
Well, hes got to go prove it, Sarkisian said prior to the draft. The NFL, these guys, they are the experts, right? They do this for a reason, they study every film, they look at every play. And thats the perception they have, and if thats a guy’s perception of Chris, it is what it is. And until you go out and prove to change that perception, thats who you are.
For Chris its ultimately when training camp rolls around, hes got to go prove what he wants to prove about himself.
The NFLDraftScout.com report said when Polk began hearing that teams were concerned about his shoulder, he had it checked by well-known orthopedic surgeon James Andrews. According to team sources, Andrews wrote a letter stating that Polk had some scarring from the surgery, but there was nothing that should prevent him from playing football. However, some team medical staffs labeled the shoulder problem as either “chronic” or “degenerative.”
Andrews disagreed, telling one source close to Polk, “if I thought Chris had a problem that needed fixing, I would have operated, but there was not a problem.”
“Of course I would have preferred to be drafted and drafted high,” Polk said. “But the main thing now is that I am with a great offensive team and I will get my opportunity to show what I can do in the NFL.”
22 Comments
Good Luck Chris, prove them wrong!
Amazing a player could run as hard and well as Polk and be discovered to be too unhealthy to play in the NFL.
Good Luck Chris, prove them wrong!
Amazing a player could run as hard and well as Polk and be discovered to be too unhealthy to play in the NFL.
literally blown away this guy wasn’t drafted. even in this now pass happy league the guy is a great reciever out of the backfield and a great blocker when he needs to be. he’s an easy 2nd round pick on talent and determination alone. great for the eagles and bad that the hawks couldn’t see this value!!!
Apparently NFL docs saw enough damage to say it’s not worth a draft choice, especially after the hard miles he put in at UW.
literally blown away this guy wasn’t drafted. even in this now pass happy league the guy is a great reciever out of the backfield and a great blocker when he needs to be. he’s an easy 2nd round pick on talent and determination alone. great for the eagles and bad that the hawks couldn’t see this value!!!
Apparently NFL docs saw enough damage to say it’s not worth a draft choice, especially after the hard miles he put in at UW.
You’d think someone would draft him, give him a contract laden with various health incentive clauses and stash on on some PUP list if necessary. The trend in the NFL with RB’s is playing the RB by committee approach. Polk could still fill that kind of role easily.
When it comes to draft choices, teams are often more risk-averse than with vets.
You’d think someone would draft him, give him a contract laden with various health incentive clauses and stash on on some PUP list if necessary. The trend in the NFL with RB’s is playing the RB by committee approach. Polk could still fill that kind of role easily.
When it comes to draft choices, teams are often more risk-averse than with vets.
I’m a lifelong Cougars fan, but I wish Chris Polk well and hope he proves he can play (and play well) in the NFL.
Noble of you, Radio. Glad to know some Cougs fans see beyond the colors.
Thanks, Art. I grew up near Seattle when guys like Sonny Sixkiller, Jim Krieg, Bo Cornell and Ernie Janet (who was on my P-I route when he was with the Bears) were playing for them, so I liked them early on…except for one week a year. Mom did a great job of indoctrination.
I’m a lifelong Cougars fan, but I wish Chris Polk well and hope he proves he can play (and play well) in the NFL.
Noble of you, Radio. Glad to know some Cougs fans see beyond the colors.
Thanks, Art. I grew up near Seattle when guys like Sonny Sixkiller, Jim Krieg, Bo Cornell and Ernie Janet (who was on my P-I route when he was with the Bears) were playing for them, so I liked them early on…except for one week a year. Mom did a great job of indoctrination.
I hope Polk continues to shine like he did at UW. I just wish Seattle would have taken Polk at the very least as a FA pickup
I hope Polk continues to shine like he did at UW. I just wish Seattle would have taken Polk at the very least as a FA pickup
Funny how NFL teams will take proven drug users, felons ect. but they wont take a player who might have a problem with his shoulders. I didnt hear teams saying oh Andrew Luck has a knee problem yet he was taken #1
Funny how NFL teams will take proven drug users, felons ect. but they wont take a player who might have a problem with his shoulders. I didnt hear teams saying oh Andrew Luck has a knee problem yet he was taken #1