CINCINNATI — Add captain to the list of Joe Burrow’s titles.
The Cincinnati Bengals rookie quarterback was named one of seven team captains before he makes his NFL debut Sunday against the Los Angeles Chargers.
Wednesday’s announcement is not a surprise considering how teammates have complimented his leadership since the team convened for the 2020 season.
1 Related
“It makes you feel good for sure,” Burrow said in July. “But I’m going to have to continue to do my job. If I don’t play well, that all goes out the window. That’s what I’m focused on right now is playing really, really well and doing my job.”
Three of the team’s seven captains — Burrow, safety ?Vonn Bell and linebacker Josh Bynes — were not on the team last season.
On Monday, Bengals second-year coach Zac Taylor said Burrow has been cemented as the team’s starter for so long that it felt as if it occurred “years ago.” The top pick in the 2020 draft is the lone quarterback taken in the first round to be named his team’s Week 1 starter.
After a preseason scrimmage, Taylor said Burrow’s leadership in the huddle is one of the reasons he felt the recent Heisman Trophy winner was unquestionably the team’s top quarterback. That wasn’t lost on his teammates.
“To be honest, I think what popped off the most about Joe Burrow is his leadership and how he takes the huddle,” Bengals running back
Burrow has also been out front in other matters. The team selected the rookie to deliver half of the team’s recent public statement denouncing racism. “My teammates have done a great job of making me feel comfortable and part of the team, and that’s not always the case as a rookie,” Burrow said Aug. 30. “So it really did make me feel at home.” The Bengals are looking to bounce back from a 2-14 season in 2019, the franchise’s worst record in 17 years. “Any time you play the first game, you want to come out and play really well,” Burrow said Wednesday. “Win the game and kinda jump-start your season. At the same time, it’s a long season. I’m obviously focused on Game 1, but we got 16, 17 other games. … I’m not out there to win, go .500, squeak into the playoffs. I’m here to win games and win championships.”
Lionel Messi said Friday that Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu broke a promise to the superstar that he would be allowed to leave the club at the end of the season.
“I told the president and, well, the president always said that at the end of the season I could decide if I wanted to go or if I wanted to stay, and in the end, he did not keep his word,” Messi told Goal.
Messi added: “Throughout the year I had been telling the president that I wanted to leave, that the time had come to seek new goals and new directions in my career. He told me all the time, ‘We’ll talk, not now, this and that,’ but nothing. The president did not give me a clue (as to) what he was really saying.”
The 33-year-old tried to engineer a move away from Barcelona – where he’s spent his entire professional career – but ultimately reversed course when the club denied his attempt to terminate his contract.
Bartomeu reportedly told Messi’s father during a meeting Wednesday that he could leave only if a team paid his €700-million release clause in full, and that the clause allowing the player to terminate his contract expired in June.
Messi’s camp countered by saying the deadline to activate the termination clause should’ve been extended due to the delay to the season caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
“I thought and was sure that I was free to leave,” Messi said.
“Now they cling to the fact that I did not say it before June 10, when it turns out that on June 10 we were competing for La Liga in the middle of this awful coronavirus, and this disease altered all the season,” Messi added. “And this is the reason why I am going to continue in the club. Now I am going to continue in the club because the president told me that the only way to leave was to pay the €700 million.”
Messi said he made up his mind well before the 8-2 defeat to Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarterfinals on Aug. 14. He officially submitted his notice to Barcelona on Aug. 25.
“I believed that the club needed more young players, new players, and I thought my time in Barcelona was over,” he said. “I felt very sorry because I always said that I wanted to finish my career here.
“It was a difficult year. I suffered a lot in training, in games, and in the dressing room. Everything became very difficult for me, and there came a time when I considered looking for new ambitions.”
Only one NFL player produced a confirmed positive coronavirus test during the league’s most recent testing period, another encouraging report as the league prepares this week to open its 2020 regular season.
According to data released Tuesday, the league tested 2,641 players and 5,708 other personnel between Aug. 30 and Sept. 5. In addition to the one player, seven other staff members also produced a positive result. Since the true start of training camp Aug. 12, a total of 24 people have produced confirmed positive tests.