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  • MERRIMAN to play

    SAN DIEGO -- The surgeon's knife can wait. Shawne Merriman is going to play football, two torn knee ligaments and all.

    A day after visiting a fourth doctor, the San Diego Chargers outside linebacker decided Wednesday to play this season rather than have his damaged left knee repaired now.

    "To be as simple as possible, I just want to play football," Merriman said. "That's what it comes down to. I know what's on the table, I know what's on the line. I put a lot of work in this and I want to play."

    Merriman said late last week that he has tears in both the posterior cruciate and lateral collateral ligaments in his left knee, which he hurt in a game at Tennessee in December. He spent several days seeking outside opinions. He returned Tuesday after seeing a doctor in Miami.

    Merriman said all four doctors he saw said he needed surgery, but there "just wasn't a time frame on that. My knee still looks pretty good. The decision was left up to me to play. If you give a football player a decision to play, you know, I'm going to play."

    When he does have surgery, he'll be looking at a rehab of six to seven months.

    "I'll have the surgery at any point," he said. "Nobody knows. I kind of left it on the table when to have it. Not even doctors can tell me that."

    While denying reports the situation could be career-threatening, he pledged to be "the same old Shawne Merriman. That's what I'm hoping."

    With his nonstop energy and spasmodic sack dance, the player known as "Lights Out" has been the face of the Chargers' defense the past three seasons. He has 39½ sacks in that span, more than any other NFL player. He's played in three straight Pro Bowls.

    Right or wrong, Merriman's decision was big for a team that has Super Bowl expectations.

    Running back LaDainian Tomlinson, knocked out of last season's AFC championship game after aggravating a knee injury, was happy to hear Merriman will play.

    "How do you tell a warrior to sit down? That's what he is, a warrior. He's trained for this. It's hard to tell a guy to sit down," Tomlinson said.

    Scouts Inc. Take

    Shawn Merriman's injury will created challenges for the Chargers, but the 3-4 scheme will help deal with his limitations. Blog.
    "Obviously it was a big relief for a lot of us. We all know what Shawne brings to this team, especially the defense," the running back added. "He's an impact player, a difference-maker. You just kept your fingers crossed that he was going to be able to play. But I think in the back of all our minds, knowing Shawne, we know what was in his heart and that he really wanted to play, and that any cost possible he was going to find a way to get out there on that field."

    As he was seeking medical advice, Merriman said he was also talking with teammates, family members and friends, as well as coaches with the Chargers and from high school and college.

    "But they all know me," he said. "It's not a decision of anything else but me wanting to play football, and whether that's a good decision or not, I'm going to go out and try first to see what I want to do."

    Coach Norv Turner expects Merriman to play in the opener against Carolina at home on Sept. 7.

    "It is something he has put an awful lot of time into and we are going to manage it and hope he can manage it and be ready to play," Turner said. "We are not going to put him on the field if he's not able to go out and perform and he is not going to want to be out there if he doesn't feel like he can perform."

    Merriman said he will continue to wear a brace on the knee, as he did last season after hurting it. He worked out on a side field on Wednesday while his teammates went through a regular practice.

    Merriman had offseason arthroscopic surgery to repair torn cartilage in the knee. He said it didn't become a problem until he started doing more and more work during training camp.

    "The days he practiced out here, was going 100 percent, he looked like Shawne Merriman to me," Turner said. "It is going to be something he has to manage. I see him going out and playing. Playing on first and second downs and playing on third downs and rushing the passer. If managing it means reducing his snaps at different times or picking specific situations where he doesn't need to be on the field, that is what we will do."

    Chargers GM A.J. Smith talked about the history of the injury on Wednesday.

    The knee problem, Smith said, dates back to the end of the 2007 season. According to Smith, doctors advised Merriman and his agent, Tom Condon, that Smiht needed surgery on his two torn knee ligaments.

    "At the end of the 2007 season, we had a lot of surgeries," Smith said Wednesday. "Shawne was on our list of players we had to discuss about surgeries. We recommended to Shawne with his knee that he have corrective surgery so he would be fine for the future. It needed to be addressed. One of the other options was to continue to play with a designed, protective knee brace."

    Merriman decided to have arthroscopic surgery that wasn't necessarily related to his problems with the PCL and LCL. Merriman elected at that time to wear a brace and play. After spending time again with the Charger doctor and visiting four other specialists, Merriman picked football over the operation.

    "My reaction is that he's our starter and he's a great player," Smith said. "He's a major part of our defense. I hope he has a healthy, productive year. And I am very happy that he is back."

    Merriman and the Chargers will now have to hope the knee holds up through the season.

    "I worry about his knee and about the health of all of the players on our team," Smith said. "You can not control injuries. Injuries are the biggest torment I have as a general manager. All I hope for is the best. It's a physical, violent game."

    Information from ESPN.com senior writer John Clayton and The Associated Press was used in this report.



    hugeeeeeeeeeeeee gamble here
    I AM A NITWIT

  • #2
    Obviously I'm not a doctor, but I really have no clue what this guy is thinking. If 4 doctors tell you to get the surgery, get the f'ing surgery.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by LVJimmy
      Obviously I'm not a doctor, but I really have no clue what this guy is thinking. If 4 doctors tell you to get the surgery, get the f'ing surgery.


      i agree with you 100% jimmy,...one bad cut or something like that and its over
      I AM A NITWIT

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      • #4
        Originally posted by LVJimmy
        Obviously I'm not a doctor, but I really have no clue what this guy is thinking. If 4 doctors tell you to get the surgery, get the f'ing surgery.
        i agree with you 100%. he probably will hurt his team more than help it with his knee like that. and what if he injures it further in like the 5th game of the season, hell waste this season anyways and ruin his career....i dont understand it
        twitter: @JumpouttheJim

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        • #5
          The worst part is supposedly is ACL is more prone to injury now...yep, makes sense to me.

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          • #6
            so stupid....he is...

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            • #7
              I'm guessing no-one ever accused this guy of being too smart.
              It's always noon somewhere!

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              • #8
                He is a roid head.
                NBA is a joke

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by flarendep1
                  He is a roid head.


                  you think ?

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                  • #10
                    the roids are the reason for the injury. he knows his career is basically over anyways. football is brutal, your time goes fast

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                    • #11
                      since when has he been on roids ? I understand he wants to play, and the team wants him to play, but its a dumb decision. He should've had the surgery in the offseason, meaning as soon as possible! I hate when players wait until the regular season to have their surgery.

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                      • #12
                        Major meat head decision...I admire his heart but you've gotta respect the body.
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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by DDP713
                          since when has he been on roids ? I understand he wants to play, and the team wants him to play, but its a dumb decision. He should've had the surgery in the offseason, meaning as soon as possible! I hate when players wait until the regular season to have their surgery.

                          He was suspended for Roid use in his first or second Season for like 4 games. He tried too use the taking tainted supplements excuse. He played his College ball at U of MD and was drafted 12th overall in 2005.
                          NBA is a joke

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                          • #14
                            Yea he was suspend for one quarter for taking roids for 10 years, football was taking a hard stance. He pulled a Andy Pettitte and said he slipped and fell on a roid needle.

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                            • #15
                              how dare merriman take roids, seeing how no other nfl athletes juice. shame on him!

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