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 Friday, August 11
Ryan's revival gives Chargers hope
 
 By John Clayton
ESPN.com

LA JOLLA, Calif. -- After two years of wishing he would vanish, the San Diego Chargers are turning over a new Ryan Leaf.

Players who despised him are starting to embrace him. Others are willing to forgive his past transgressions and receive his passes. Given up for dead on the Chargers depth chart months ago, Leaf is resurrecting his career from its self-inflicted ashes and is challenging Jim Harbaugh and Moses Moreno for the starting quarterback job.

Ryan Leaf
Ryan Leaf is endearing himself to fans in Chargers camp again.

"Three months ago, I didn't think I was going to be at this point," Leaf said. "I was thinking about what I was going to do if I didn't play. I was looking at the fall schedule of Washington State."

His right shoulder ached so much that Leaf said he couldn't tuck in his shirt into the back of his pants. His teammates, tired of his lack of concern for the team and horrible attitude, wanted him out. In the past two weeks, Leaf started showing his teammates that his powerful right arm could make a football soar like they've rarely seen.

The Chargers may not love him, but they accept that his arm can carry their offense.

"The best thing about Ryan now is that he's able to come to the football field and perform as a player and not fight outside venues that went on in his past," Pro Bowl linebacker Junior Seau said. "We are now talking about football instead of trying to justify what Ryan has done."

Arguably, Leaf has reemerged as the backup quarterback midway through camp, and it's not outlandish to say he could begin the season as the starter. Much depends on the next two exhibition games. Moses Moreno has yet to dislodge Jim Harbaugh as the starter, but Leaf's laser beam-like throws have Chargers brass staring in disbelief.

On Wednesday, Leaf was second in the quarterback rotation, which coach Mike Riley said doesn't really mean anything. Harbaugh, Leaf and Moreno each receive an equal number of snaps. In team drills and skeleton, nine-on-seven drills, Leaf was so efficient it was scary.

He hit the long passes. He rifled slant passes to receivers in stride. When an Arizona Cardinals cornerback established a close position on his receiver, Leaf would find a small area to complete the pass and drill a completion.

"I think the way that Ryan has handled himself in the offseason as well as now has us thinking he's made dramatic improvement," strong safety Rodney Harrison said. "I think a lot of people on this team are regaining respect for Ryan. He lost most everybody in the locker room last year because he was so immature. We have a lot of guys in this locker room who sacrifice time away from their families for this team. So we don't have time for a crybaby. We don't have time to pamper this guy."

Leaf vs. other 1998 draftees
Name G Pct. Yds TD Rat.
Leaf 10 45.3 1289 2 39.0
Manning 32 59.3 7874 54 80.6
Griese 15 57.6 3034 14 75.0
Batch 23 57.6 4135 24 83.9

Harrison, who claims to be a friend of Leaf, told Leaf that he owed it to the Chargers who paid him a lot of money and the fans to repay them with production. Harrison didn't mince words. "He listens to me," Harrison said. "I told him, 'Grow up and stop acting like a baby.' "

First, though, Leaf had to stop "babying" his shoulder injury. That wasn't easy. He realized his right arm was his meal ticket. Everytime it twinged, Leaf worried. One surgery didn't seem to make the shoulder feel better. The possibility of a second operation lingered with him through the offseason.

"I had always been a quick healer," Leaf said. "I had a shoulder problem before and a knee injury. They healed just like that. I was down about it."

Leaf let his weight spiral out of control to around 260 pounds. He further distanced himself from his teammates. A couple of weeks in Birmingham, Ala., working with a rehab specialist recommended by Dr. James Andrews changed Leaf's attitude. A fire returned in Leaf.

Suddenly, he wanted to show something to critics who buried him professionally.

"Maybe the thing that hurt the most was that they would question my heart," Leaf said. "No one ever questioned that before in my life. That was probalby the tough part. Lots of time people have the assumption that I'm making so much money that I don't care."

Don't be mistaken. Leaf still is a quarterback in development. As efficient as he was in the team drills, he was ineffective in a red zone drill, throwing a couple of interceptions. The day before against the Cardinals, he was sharp in the red zone.

Call it a preview of coming attractions. Should Leaf earn a starting job, his inexperience may cost the Chargers a couple of games. They may win with either Harbaugh or Moreno at the helm.

"I'd say he has about 75 percent of the offense down as far as his knowledge," Riley said. "He's probably had 1,000 less reps in the offense than Jim or Moses because he missed all the summer schools and minicamps. But he knows a lot."

Riley calls Leaf's surprising comeback a "quiet reentry." In the three-way quarterback derby, Leaf is categorized by Riley as the X-factor. For two years, though, he was a mystery in the "X Files."

As the season draws nearer, Riley will be pulled into a decision that will define his reign as coach. A players' coach who makes being a Charger a pleasant experience, Riley must decide whether to go with the heady experience of Harbaugh, the strong but inexperienced arm of Moreno or the gamble of rolling the dice with Leaf.

I'm the kind of competitor where if I'm able to play, I've got to play. I can't get back there and just pick up a paycheck every week. If that's the case, I'll go get a job that is fun.
Ryan Leaf, Chargers quarterback

"There is a lot of interest by the media and by the fans in Ryan," Riley said. "I think our players are accepting him. If they see him make progress and work along with them -- which he is doing -- I think the guys will continue to accept him. If they think a guy can help him win, they will pull for him."

Each day, Leaf is showing signs of life. He joked with receiver Jeff Graham about a high pass that would have exposed Graham to a dangerous hit by a defensive back if this were a game. Leaf called it his "Excedrin" pass. Graham laughed as did Leaf. During one drill on Tuesday, Leaf tossed his helmet in frustration, only to be chided by Cardinals defensive line coach Joe Greene to keep his composure.

There was a touching scene after Wednesday's practice. His fiancée, Niki, visited him on the field. Leaf showed his sensitive side, hugging her and being romantic. He then proceeded to give one of his first one-on-one interviews and had a mass interview session with other reporters and camera crews.

"I'm the kind of competitor where if I'm able to play, I've got to play," Leaf said. "I can't get back there and just pick up a paycheck every week. If that's the case, I'll go get a job that is fun. As a rookie, I was given a job. It would have been better to play the second half of the year instead of starting and getting benched."

The Chargers may be keeping Leaf at arm's length, but it's his right arm that is making them slowly forget about the past.

"It's kind of funny because everywhere I go, everyone asks, 'So what about Ryan Leaf?' " Harrison said. "There is a lot more to the San Diego Chargers than Ryan Leaf getting in trouble."

John Clayton is the senior NFL writer for ESPN.com.
 



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