Fitzgerald's hands elevate his status
Posted on January 30, 2009 | 51 Views
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- Larry Fitzgerald doesn't have the whole world in his hands. It just seems like it.
The way he pulls footballs out of the sky is becoming legendary. It could be immortalized Sunday in Super Bowl XLIII if the Cardinals receiver continues his postseason pattern with another clutch performance.
Already having surpassed Jerry Rice's NFL record for most receiving yards (419) in the playoffs (in the same number of games, three, that Rice needed), Fitzgerald's transformation from great player to megastar in a month is among the faster climbs by an athlete in pro sports history.
And it's all because of the hands. They're so big you lose sight of your own hand when he reaches out to shake it. Footballs don't stand a chance, either. Fitzgerald doesn't just catch them; he devours them.
Multiply that with his vision and incredible timing to catch the ball at the high point of his leap, and it's almost not fair to defensive backs.
"When you have a guy like Larry Fitzgerald who can outjump two guys to get to the football, there is nothing you can do about that," Steelers safety Troy Polamalu said. "You just have to realize that he is a great player."
Peers applaud
Former NFL receiver Cris Collinsworth was even more complimentary in his review.
"He's off the charts with his ability to make plays on the ball in the air," he said. "I don't know what his vertical leap is, but he looks like Michael Jordan playing out there to me.
"If it's a tie, you just throw it up in the air, and Larry Fitzgerald comes down with it. He just has remarkable hands."
Fitzgerald, 25, said it isn't all by accident. Yes, he was blessed with some amazing natural talent. But it has taken constant extra effort to get the maximum potential out of his catching ability.
"I wasn't born with the greatest speed," he said, "so things I did have, I had to hone those other skills and make them better. To catch the ball better, I had to make my hands better. I had to do something that was going to separate me from everybody else."
He has done that so well, they ought to use him as the new pitchman for Allstate. "Are you in good hands?" The Cardinals are, thanks to Fitzgerald.
He made them stronger, he said, simply by catching extra balls every day, from the time he was a kid.
"I'll catch a ton of balls before, during and after practice," he says. "And from every different angle, too, so when I get in the game, no matter where the ball is, how it's placed or where the defensive back is, I'm confident I'll be making plays because I've done it in practice. When I get into the game, I want it to be just natural." source>>>
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