PDA

View Full Version : Refreshed, Cutler ready to tackle disease, football, life


Kaylore
05-28-2008, 11:53 PM
This is actually not half bad - especially for Bill

http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/story?columnist=williamson_bill&id=3416163

http://assets.espn.go.com/photo/2008/0528/nfl_g_jcutler_580.jpg

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. -- Darrell Jackson had arrived in Denver just as his quarterback was beginning to deal with the staggering news that he is a Type 1 diabetic.

Jackson never knew.

"I was here for two weeks, and I had no clue," Jackson said this week at the Denver Broncos' training facility. "I didn't know about it until I read it in the newspaper. I couldn't tell anything was wrong."

Now, a month after news of Jay Cutler's condition broke, Jackson still can't detect any problems.

"Jay talks with a swagger, he walks with a swagger, he throws with a swagger -- he seems cool to me," said Jackson, a nine-season veteran. "I try to stay away from all of the medical parts of it, but Jay seems fine to me."

And Cutler feels fine, Darrell.

"I feel like I did last year at camp and before," Cutler said Wednesday. "I'm not really worried about games. My levels are pretty steady right now. Everything is fine. I feel fine in practice. I don't get high or low. It's been a good dry run. I don't anticipate any problems in the future."

In his first news conference since working in the Broncos' organized team activities, the newly diagnosed diabetic pronounced himself fit and ready for the rest of his NFL career and the rest of his life. Cutler, who turned 25 on April 29, disclosed May 2 that he was diagnosed with the most serious form of diabetes on April 16.

Cutler first felt the effects of the disease this past October. He dropped from 235 pounds to 203 at the end of the regular season. His sluggishness extended into the offseason. He had no energy and couldn't put on weight, despite continuously eating and drinking to try to stave off insatiable hunger and thirst.

Now that he has been diagnosed, Cutler tests his blood sugar and takes insulin four times a day. He sometimes wears an insulin pump during practice but won't during games. He said he feels refreshed and is eating a diet with much less fat, adding that he now weighs in the high 220-pound range.

Headed into his second full season as an NFL starting quarterback, the No. 11 overall pick in the 2006 draft has gotten a boost from this Denver camp. In the second half of 2007's 7-9 season, Cutler was weak. He had no zip on his passes.

Now, the kid who came out of Vanderbilt and was known for his velocity has his old fastball back. And more, apparently.

"I've got everything back," Cutler said.

His teammates who were with him last season agree. Denver receiver Brandon Stokley said he sees a much more vibrant quarterback than he did toward the end of last season, on and off the field.

"He's just stronger; he has more energy," Stokley said. "I see a lot more energy with him. He seems a lot stronger. A lot more confident. He's already had a strong enough arm. Now it's going to be even stronger. I'll have to wear a couple of pair of gloves."

Denver coach Mike Shanahan said Cutler has gotten back to his old self because he has taken control of his disease.

"Jay has met this thing head on," Shanahan said. "I'm really not surprised. I mean, he was diagnosed with a very serious disease, and he has just gone after it and is treating it. He's done a great job of dealing with it. Jay has great discipline. To be a successful quarterback in the National Football League, you have to have discipline, and Jay has plenty of it. It is really helping him deal with it."

Shanahan also said he believes Cutler will be an even better quarterback now that he is treating his disease.

"He is healthier than he ever has been in his life," Shanahan said. "Jay is eating well and is in great shape. He is very aware of health, and that will pay off for him."

Cutler is not taking his health for granted. He said he has received countless letters and e-mails, mostly from children with Type I diabetes, and he said the support has helped him get to this point.

"It just feels good to be back to my old self, and I'm happy to be out here," Cutler said. "I'm enjoying it."

Still, Cutler is a realist. He realizes he has the most difficult job in the state of Colorado, in the never-diminishing shadow of John Elway. Disease or no disease, Cutler knows he must deliver in Denver.

"If we start 0-4, I'll be blamed," Cutler said. "Diabetes or not."

Kaylore
05-28-2008, 11:54 PM
Some of the quotes from the other players have me really excited. If how he played last year was him suffering from an untreated debilitating disease, then I can only imagine how he'll look this year. :haw!:

Pseudofool
05-29-2008, 12:18 AM
Good find. Leaders need clout, and Jay's seriously got some that he didn't have last year (or he had but we didn't know it).

Hulamau
05-29-2008, 04:26 AM
Some of the quotes from the other players have me really excited. If how he played last year was him suffering from an untreated debilitating disease, then I can only imagine how he'll look this year. :haw!:

Amen Khan! double the passing yardage and TDs with half the ints this year. :sunshine:

BMarsh615
05-29-2008, 04:52 AM
Amen Khan! double the passing yardage and TDs with half the ints this year. :sunshine:

Wow that would be a year to remember .

6994 Passing Yards
40 TD's
7 Picks

LOL insulin is anabolic:strong:

Pseudofool
05-29-2008, 05:08 AM
One wonders what they could mask with insulin....

ssgtwc1
05-29-2008, 06:47 AM
One wonders what they could mask with insulin....

Please elaborate this quoted statement. I'm having a hard time understanding this.

Dr. Broncenstein
05-29-2008, 06:57 AM
One wonders what they could mask with insulin....

Hyperglycemia
Hyperkalemia
Ketoacidosis

Wonder no more...

no-pseudo-fan
05-29-2008, 08:05 AM
very happy that Jay is doing so well. Jay is hardcore, he is taking this news and dealing with it like a true professional.

Sassy
05-29-2008, 04:43 PM
Jay giving diabetes the stiff-arm
The Broncos' third-year quarterback knows he'll be judged by performance, as always.
By Mike Klis
The Denver Post
Article Last Updated: 05/29/2008 01:31:37 AM MDT


Back to his normal playing weight of almost 240 pounds, Jay Cutler wants to play the heavy to the Broncos' opponents. (John Leyba, The Denver Post )For Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler, Type 1 diabetes has become as much panacea against criticism as incurable nuisance.

With the potency of the insulin shot it demands, the disease has positively altered perceptions about Cutler. Before it was learned he had been diagnosed a diabetic, the reviews on Cutler's 2007 season were mixed. Some called it splendid, as his 20 touchdown throws against 14 interceptions compared favorably to other notable quarterbacks in their first full seasons as starters.

Others said Cutler was inconsistent, largely holding the Broncos' 7-9 record against him.

But since Cutler's condition was revealed last month, it seems his faults have been universally excused, his feats lauded in hindsight as

awe-inspiring. To wit: Cutler lost 35 pounds during the 2007 season and still did what he did?
Cutler well understands, however, the fickle nature of fan sympathy. Soon enough, Cutler will be viewed not as the quarterback with Type 1 diabetes but only as a quarterback.

"If we go out and go 0-4, I'm going to get blamed for it whether I have diabetes or not," he said Wednesday after the Broncos' passing camp session. "It's part of the position."

Thing is, now that Cutler and the Broncos' medical staff understand what he has, and how to treat it, the feeling at Dove Valley is there are going to be more wins than losses in 2008.

To many of his teammates, Cutler today versus the Cutler at the end of the 2007 season is as different as rest and work.

"I've noticed a difference in just everyday things," receiver Brandon Stokley said. "Just talking with him, just being around him, just out at practice. He's just a different person. More energy.

"You could tell he was really tired last year and something just wasn't right. To be able to find out what was happening and know what it is and to be able to help him, this year I think you're going to see a whole different Jay. He feels a whole lot better, and better about himself. He feels better about waking up in the morning. I don't know how he did it last year."

During the Broncos' passing camp, in which quarterbacks are not to be touched, Cutler has been playing with an insulin pump attached to his abdominal area. He will not wear the device on game days.

"You probably could, (but) I wouldn't advise it," he said. "You take a lot of hits around that area. I doubt it's been tested for a football game. I mean, just running and stuff it gets loose, so I wouldn't think about doing it."

He said he sometimes checks his blood- sugar levels once a practice, sometimes not at all. On game days, the Broncos' medical staff will have energy bars on the sideline, extra insulin and sugar tablets, maybe even a Glucagon shot used when a diabetic passes out.

Cutler can't imagine such a dramatic scenario.

"My blood level has been steady right now," he said. "Everything's fine. I feel fine at practice. I don't get very high or low. I don't think it's going to be any problem."

Nor should anyone believe diabetes treatments by themselves will enhance Cutler's performance. Insulin isn't a steroid. Besides, Cutler wasn't all that bad last year. In what may be the stat of the 2007 season, Cutler had dropped from 238 to 203 pounds from the start of training camp to regular season's end, yet in the final game completed 26-of-37 passes for 246 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions while leading the Broncos past the Minnesota Vikings.

Insulin or no insulin, a 106.4 passer rating is tough to beat.

As for improving his game, Cutler will have to get there not through diabetes treatments, but through the developmental techniques common among all quarterbacks: film study, experience, practice.

"I think his awareness is a lot better," Broncos cornerback Champ Bailey said. "He's on top of every single thing he does wrong. He doesn't get too far up or too far down. He keeps an even keel about everything. I love that about him. Some people rise to adversity. He's definitely done that."

Mike Klis: 303-954-1055 or mklis@denverpost.com

Sassy
05-29-2008, 04:53 PM
http://media.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/content/img/photos/2008/05/29/436529984_t335.jpg

Cool pic!

Killericon
05-30-2008, 02:17 AM
"If we start 0-4, I'll be blamed," Cutler said. "Diabetes or not."

I like it.

Rausch 2.0
05-30-2008, 02:41 AM
Refreshed, Cutler ready to tackle disease, football, li

Jay "Lo Han Guo" Mexico...

DeusExManning
05-30-2008, 03:08 AM
I keep on reading rumors on other sites that HGH can cause type 1 diabetes. Does anyone have anymore info?