
10-13-2009, 08:05 PM
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Head Coach
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Quote:
Bills S Whitner thumbs nose at his injury
JOHN WAWROW
Published: October 13, 2009
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) ? Bills safety Donte Whitner is so eager to get back playing that he looked down at the ice pack wrapped around his surgically repaired right thumb and wondered what all the fuss was about.
"Thumb?" Whitner said. "I don't really need this thumb for the rest of my life, you know."
Though Whitner probably was kidding, it's clear what his intentions are on Sunday, when the stumbling Bills (1-4) travel to face AFC East rival New York Jets (3-2). Whitner's already missed two weeks since he tore ligaments in his thumb in a loss to New Orleans, and he's not prepared to miss another.
"My initial thought going into surgery was I wanted to play that week. But they thought that was dangerous," Whitner said, referring to team doctors. "But it's a couple of weeks down the road, and I feel like I'm pretty close."
The Bills could use some good news. They've lost three straight, including consecutive games to winless teams following an ugly 6-3 loss to Cleveland on Sunday. Their offense is anemic and their defense riddled with injuries after starting linebacker Kawika Mitchell and his backup, Marcus Buggs, sustained season-ending knee injuries against the Browns.
The defensive backfield is banged up as well. Aside from Whitner, starting strong safety Bryan Scott (high ankle sprain) has missed two games and is listed week to week, and starting cornerback Leodis McKelvin was placed on injured reserve, ending his season, after breaking his leg two weeks ago.
Scott will know more about his playing status after testing his ankle on Tuesday.
Whitner is regarded as the defense's emotional leader. Drafted eighth overall in 2006 out of Ohio State, he is a four-year starter who has proven to be a physical tackler and also is versatile enough to play safety or cornerback. Entering this season, his 256 tackles ranked him fourth among NFL defensive backs over the previous three years.
Whitner's concerned about the Bills slow start, but refused to use injuries as an excuse.
"We have to understand that this is the National Football League and nobody's going to feel sorry for you," he said. "We understand that there's going to have to be some changes. I don't know where those changes are going to have to be, but there's going to have to be some."
Whitner stressed he wasn't referring to coach Dick Jauron, who's on the hot seat and being criticized for the team's troubles.
"I'm not saying like a coaching change, I'm saying maybe personnel, maybe," he said. "We're going to have to do some things to get going."
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