Indianapolis (AP) - The boot is off and Rob Gronkowski's ankle is feeling much better.
New England's All-Pro tight end shed his walking boot in time for media
day Tuesday, and sounded optimistic he'd be lining up against the New
York Giants in the Super Bowl on Sunday."I'm improving every
day," Gronkowski said. "The only reason it's getting so blown up is
because it's the Super Bowl. It's just like any other injury during any
other week."
Gronkowski, who suffered a high left ankle sprain in
the AFC title game Jan. 22, said he could be anywhere from in perfect
health to "2 percent" for the game, adding that it's still six days
away.
The outgoing Gronkowski smiled frequently from the podium
during his hour-long appearance that opened with a question, of course,
about how he was feeling.
"Good. How are you feeling?" he replied.
At
one point, Gronkowski even put on a red tri-cornered hat, reminiscent
of those worn by the original patriots during the era of the American
Revolution.
"He's obviously making progress," quarterback Tom
Brady said of his key pass-catcher. "He's out of his boot today, which
makes me feel a lot better. I told him he should write like 'Mom I love
you' on his sock or something because I'm sure there'll be a lot of
pictures of his sock.
"If anybody wants to be out there, it's him. No one's as tough as him."
Gronkowski
was careful not to convey an overly optimistic attitude about his
chances of playing, repeatedly saying he was working with the Patriots
training staff and approaching the situation on a day-to-day basis.
He also was non-committal when asked if he could play if he had the injury during the regular season.
"I
couldn't answer that," he said. "It's not a regular-season game. It's
the Super Bowl this week and (we're) just preparing like it's a big game
and it's the biggest game. It ain't no regular-season game. So you've
got to treat it a lot differently."
Gronkowski set an NFL record
for his position this season with 17 touchdown catches and had 90
receptions overall for 1,327 yards. He's made a team-high 15 catches for
a 15.5-yard average and three touchdowns in the postseason. He also
developed into a powerful blocker.
He missed the Patriots last three practices on Thursday, Friday and Monday. They didn't practice on Tuesday.
But many of his teammates are confident that he'll be ready to play.
"Rob's
a big boy. He's tough and everything else, so I'm not too worried about
him," wide receiver Wes Welker said. "I know he's going to give his
best out there and do whatever he can do to help us win the game."
"We're
trying to get everybody to play," linebacker Tracy White said. "We're
not too worried about Gronkowski. He'll be out there."
Gronkowski has started every game this season and was healthy for nearly every practice before the ankle injury.
"I
think he'll be fine, but it would obviously change the game a lot" if
he's not, tight end Aaron Hernandez said. "It would basically be like
playing without our main player."