Jamaica Gleaner

Seattle’s Wilson looking to be the QB star

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JERSEY CITY, New Jersey (AP): THE CAPTAIN was a few minutes late, though no one seemed to mind.

Russell Wilson is usually worth the wait, and no more than on this day, his final one speaking about the game before he actually plays The Game.

Peyton Manning is supposed to be the star of this Super Bowl, but a minor league second baseman who refused to listen to those who said he was too small to play quarterbac­k in the NFL may have something to say about that. Proving people wrong is almost as fun for Wilson as winning football games, and he’s done both with great regularity since being drafted with the 75th overall pick two years ago by the Seattle Seahawks.

“For all the kids that have been told no, that they can’t do it, or all the kids that will be told no,” Wilson said. “That’s one of the reasons that I left playing baseball, to be honest with you. I had this urge to play the game of football, because so many people – I shouldn’t say so many, a handful of people – said I couldn’t do it.”

Richard Sherman will be the player most remembered from the win that got Seattle here. But if not for a gutsy play on an equally gutsy call, the Seahawks would not be in position to win their first Super Bowl title. Wilson found Jermaine Kearse in the end zone for the touchdown on a fourth down against San Francisco in the NFC championsh­ip game, giving the Seahawks the lead for the first time.

SUPER BOWL-WINNING PLAY

It was the kind of play a veteran star like Manning might make when it counts most. The kind of play Wilson has prepared for meticulous­ly every day for the past two years.

The kind of play that can win a Super Bowl.

“I don’t think I’ve seen too many people have the knack to want be great. He wants to be a great quarterbac­k,” receiver Percy Harvin said. “He just doesn’t want to be average or All-Pro. He wants to be talked about as a great quarterbac­k and I don’t think he’s going to stop until he does.”

By now, Wilson’s story is fairly well known. The son of the late Harrison Wilson III – a star athlete at Dartmouth who became a lawyer after briefly thinking of trying out for the NFL in 1977 – he lost a job as starting quarterbac­k at North Carolina State while playing second base in the Colorado Rockies organisati­on.

Wilson would give up baseball to star as a graduate student at Wisconsin, leading the Badgers to the Big 10 title and a spot in the Rose Bowl. But he was undersized at 5foot- 11 and languished in the NFL draft before Pete Carroll and the Seahawks took a chance on him for what was expected to be a back-up quarterbac­k position.

Instead, Carroll called him to the basketball court at the team’s complex prior to his rookie season, where Wilson watched him shoot jumpers.

“I go outside and he said, ‘You want to shoot?’” Wilson said. “Then he said, ‘We want you to know you’re going to be the starting quarterbac­k for the Seattle Seahawks, hopefully for a long time.’”

 ?? AP ?? Seattle Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson adjusts his helmet at the start of NFL football practice on Thursday in New Jersey.
AP Seattle Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson adjusts his helmet at the start of NFL football practice on Thursday in New Jersey.
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