Advertisement

Theismann’s Future With Redskins Vague

Share
Washington Post

Although his recovery from a broken leg is about two weeks ahead of schedule, Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann says he does not know what the team “has in store” for him in 1986.

“My biggest challenge has nothing to do with football,” he said in a telephone interview from his home in Leesburg, Va. “It’s related to football, but all it really involves is getting myself in the best physical condition I can.”

Asked if he were planning to be in a Redskins uniform next September, he answered: “I am planning on being able to walk and run on two good legs. What happens after that, who knows?”

Advertisement

Theismann, 36, suffered a compound fracture of his lower right leg when he was sacked during the Redskins game with the New York Giants Nov. 18. He was replaced by second-year player Jay Schroeder.

Uncharacteristically, Theismann did not mention a prospective return to the Redskins. Things were different the last time he spoke publicly about his recovery.

Five days after the injury, at a hospital news conference, he said: “This will probably be the first time in 15 years of football that I’ll be anxious to go to minicamp.”

His comments earlier this week also were more subdued than his advertisement for Health and Tennis Corporation of America that appeared in Sports Illustrated and some newspapers this week.

In the ads, he is pictured in uniform, with an arm resting on his knee. The copy reads, in part: “They’re dead wrong. After 16 years in this game, I know one thing for sure. The critics don’t know anything. Nobody tells me when my career is over. My doctors may mumble. The competition may hope. But I’ll decide. . . . “

He said he was not trying to send a message to anyone in the Redskins organization.

“I’ve been working for them for three or four years,” he said of the health corporation. “It was their idea, not mine. But if you look at the ad, it is a belief of mine that a lot of critics don’t think I’ll be back.”

Advertisement

Last month, after the Redskins finished their 10-6 season, Coach Joe Gibbs said Schroeder, 24, deserved a chance to be the team’s No. 1 quarterback. The Redskins were 5-5 under Theismann and 5-1 under Schroeder.

Gibbs’ comments came as somewhat of a surprise, considering his tremendous loyalty to Theismann during his five years as head coach.

Asked if he would be able to be the team’s No. 2 quarterback behind Schroeder, Theismann--who has started for the Redskins since 1978--said, “My competition is with no one but myself.”

Advertisement