Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Comeback award would be ‘great honor,’ Nelson says

- RYAN WOOD USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN

Green Bay — Even after the cameras leave and the crowd around his locker disperses, Jordy Nelson is hesitant to reflect.

He won’t say what this 1,000yard season means to him. The NFL’s touchdown leader? That’s not why he plays.

Nelson couldn’t care less whether he’s a Pro Bowl starter or first alternate. The Green Bay Packers receiver didn’t even know Tuesday was when Pro Bowl rosters would be unveiled.

“I haven’t thought about it,” said Nelson, who was chosen as an alternate.

Others do the stump speeches for him. Aaron Rodgers didn’t just make a case for Nelson to be in the Pro Bowl one season after the receiver tore his ACL.

To Rodgers, Nelson’s return deserves singular recognitio­n.

“Should be Comeback Player of the Year for sure,” Rodgers said, “the way that he’s bounced back from that ACL and been extremely productive.”

Nelson’s long road back didn’t really begin with knee surgery, but an operation to clean up hip impingemen­t after the 2014 season.

He spent 20 months away from the field. Before the Packers’ opener at Jacksonvil­le, Nelson’s last catch had come in the 2014 NFC Championsh­ip Game at Seattle. His last touchdown was a month before that.

He won’t reflect on the journey. Not in the middle of a playoff chase. Ask him after the season, he said.

The closest Nelson comes, after the crowd around his locker scatters, is when his quarterbac­k’s Comeback Player of the Year recommenda­tion is mentioned.

“It’d be a great honor,” Nelson said. “It’s an award you don’t want to win, but you do want to win. And the reason why I think it’d be great is to honor all the people who put the work in the last year and a half. From all the surgeries I’ve had from 2014, or whatever, to just honor them.

“The trainers, the weight staff, our nutritioni­st, our coaches — everyone that put in the extra time, has been in this building a year and a half straight, rehabbing and everything. That’s what I wanted. I wanted to honor them and kind of reward them.”

In any year, Nelson makes a compelling case as the league’s top comeback player.

He immediatel­y reestablis­hed himself as the Packers’ top receiver. Nelson had a touchdown in his first game back. A touchdown in his second game. Two touchdowns in his third. Another touchdown in his fourth.

He leads the NFL with 12 touchdown catches this season, within reach of his career-high of 15 in 2011. He ranks eighth with 1,037 yards. Nelson is one of four receivers with 1,000 yards and double-digit touchdowns.

The other three: Pittsburgh’s Antonio Brown, New York’s Odell Beckham Jr. and Tampa Bay’s Mike Evans.

Even the narrative fits. Nelson entered Sunday’s game needing 87 yards — matching his No. 87 — to reach 1,000. Before his 60-yard catch from Rodgers that set up Mason Crosby’s game-winning field goal, he had 977 on the season.

Talk about a perfect time to cross the millennial mark.

“I knew I needed 87, ironically, with my number,” Nelson said. “I honestly didn’t know how deep that (final pass) was, but obviously that’s the thing. If you get a big ball like that, most likely you get over 100. I knew I’d be really close if not over it.

“I actually saw it when I was doing the postgame interview with Fox. The Bears had their stats running on their sideboard of leading receivers.”

The competitio­n for comeback player is tough. Nelson just happened to make this comeback in the same season Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell is making history. Bell has 1,146 rushing yards and six touchdowns on the ground, along with 72 catches for 601 yards and a touchdown, despite playing just 11 games.

Bell had the second-most yards from scrimmage (1,616) through his first 10 games this season in NFL history. Only Hall of Fame tailback Jim Brown had more (1,704 in 1963).

A Pro Bowler, Bell ranks third in the league in rushing despite missing three games. It could be argued Bell is having the better season, but Nelson is coming back from the more severe injury. Bell played six games last season before tearing his medial collateral ligament and posterior cruciate ligament. He also missed three games this season for violating the NFL’s substance-abuse policy.

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Packers wide receiver Jordy Nelson beats Bears cornerback Cre’von LeBlanc and reels in 60-yard pass, which put him over 1,000 receiving yards this year.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Packers wide receiver Jordy Nelson beats Bears cornerback Cre’von LeBlanc and reels in 60-yard pass, which put him over 1,000 receiving yards this year.

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