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TimesDispatch: Thrash is happy in return

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 6:40 am
by ANT7088
Back with Redskins, receiver continues to work toward role

James Thrash is not a person who sees a glass as half empty or half full.

Thrash sees every glass as completely full.

Thrash spent the past three seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles, a team that lost the past three NFC championship games.

The Philadelphia story, Thrash said, was, "Great. There's no doubt it was frustrating to be one game away from the Super Bowl and not get there three years in a row. But we [Thrash and his wife] grew so much spiritually."


Having the Eagles trade him to Washington, after leading the team in receptions for two of the past three seasons was, Thrash said, "A great opportunity."

On Saturday, Thrash felt a pall come over that opportunity. His daughter Abriel, born on April 26, was spitting up blood. Thrash left the Redskins minicamp practice to take his wife and daughter to the hospi- tal.

"She's OK," Thrash said of Abriel. "We have to take her back [to the doctor], but for now everything appears to be OK. Thanks for asking."

Thrash is unfailingly polite and respectful. He is devoutly religious. He is an upstanding member of the community.

The Redskins like those things about him, but those are not the primary reasons they were willing to give up a fifth-round draft choice to re-acquire him from the Eagles.

Thrash, 29, is one of the hardest-working players in the NFL. He never complains. He never refuses a coach's request. He comes as close to giving everything he has in every workout, off-season, preseason, regular season, as any player in Redskins history.

"Those are the kind of guys we want," Redskins coach Joe Gibbs said.

Thrash, 6-0 200, will have a hard time supplanting either Laveranues Coles or Rod Gardner in the starting lineup. Darnerien McCants is going to get a long look as either the No. 3 receiver and might push Gardner for a starting job.

None of that appears to bother Thrash.

"I'm not one of those guys that needs something given to me," Thrash said. "I'm willing to work for everything I get, whether it's playing a role on offense or special teams. As long as I can help the team win, I'm happy."

The difference between Thrash and many other players is that he means that when he says it. With Gibbs as the Redskins coach, such players tend to stick around for a while.

That will be fine with Thrash. Even when he was with the Eagles, he and his family spent their off-season at their home just a few miles from Redskin Park.

He also likes the idea of finishing his career where it began. And unlike many players, he wasn't offended by the idea of being traded.

"I figured it was going to happen," Thrash said. "I was their leading receiver, but I knew they wanted to get another receiver and go in another direction."

Thrash led the Eagles in receptions last year with 49 for 558 yards. The direction the Eagles took was to replace the steady, uncomplaining Thrash with the sometimes spectacular, often high-maintenance Terrell Owens.

Thrash never could afford to be high maintenance. When he finished his career at Missouri Southern State, the Eagles signed him as a college free agent. They released him before training camp even began and the Redskins signed him.

Thrash, a national class sprinter, was making a favorable impression during his first training camp, under Norv Turner, and the Redskins hoped to sneak him through the preseason and place him on the practice squad.

Thrash scuttled that plan by returning two kickoffs for touchdowns in preseason games. The Redskins knew if they cut him, which has to be done before placing a player on the practice squad, another team would sign him.

Now, Thrash is entering his eighth season, has made a huge amount of money, has two children and gushes at his good fortune and spiritual growth.

"I try not to reminisce too much because once you do that you get stuck in the past," Thrash said. "But to look back at where I started, it's awesome to see where God has put me."



http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Sa ... 5855935462

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 10:19 am
by jDub
ahhh....thrashie. i always liked this guy. i remember the so called "trapped" ball that he caught on the giants 32 yard line in 2000 (right? that was the year we got jeff george, sanders, smith,etc.). brad johnson was throwing garbage up and down that field. norv put in george in the later part of the third quarter. and he does a good job of moving the ball. i think it was 7 - 6 (giants). if the refs would have ruled the reception a reception (it looked like one to me...but hey, i'm a 'skins fan) we could have won it on a field goal. man...that was a frustrating season. i guess they've all been that way. this season's got to different. pleeeeeeeeeeaaasssseee!

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 11:36 am
by skins#1fan
thrash does a lot of little stuff for a team. He has leadership capabilities and does well on the special teams. He also come in and makes those third down conversions

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 11:41 am
by CHAZZ777
Thrash is a beast on third downs

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 8:38 pm
by RedskinsRule56
Thrash blows! He was terrible as WR on the Redskins as eevn worse as one of the Eagles! Talk about butter fingers! He will be lucky to be our #4 wideout! All he is a speedster so he will be a return man! That is it!

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 8:44 pm
by 1niksder
RedskinsRule56 wrote:Thrash blows! He was terrible as WR on the Redskins as eevn worse as one of the Eagles! Talk about butter fingers! He will be lucky to be our #4 wideout! All he is a speedster so he will be a return man! That is it!


:lol: and :D he was the best the Eagles had :lol:

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 8:52 pm
by Redskins Rule
Thrash is good as a slot reciever. The Eagles used him as a #1 reciever. He's not a #1 reciever. He knows he'll be number 3 or 4 this year. And that is what he's good at.

And he can back up Chad Morton. We don't need something happening that happened two years ago when we had NOONE returning the kicks.

Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 9:13 pm
by SkiNoVA
remember in the not too distant past when every other punt (sometimes even more than that) was MUFFED myyyyyy god that was annoying, im just glad we have some people who can catch a punt nowadays, that had to be the most frustrating thing every, i believe it was our man mr bailey who did most of that dropping :evil:

Posted: Tue May 04, 2004 12:00 pm
by General Failure
1niksder wrote:
RedskinsRule56 wrote:Thrash blows! He was terrible as WR on the Redskins as eevn worse as one of the Eagles! Talk about butter fingers! He will be lucky to be our #4 wideout! All he is a speedster so he will be a return man! That is it!


:lol: and :D he was the best the Eagles had :lol:


Had. Past tense. :wink:

Posted: Tue May 04, 2004 12:40 pm
by Irn-Bru
Wow, too much Thrash-bashing. Thrash and Skaags (don't know if I'm spelling the last name right) have been my two favorite underdog players of all time. Skaags I believe recently suffered a broken leg playig in Europe, which was really too bad. But I was crushed to see Thrash leave a few years back. He was the utility man--returning punts/ko's, taking hits over the middle, working hard on every play. It's so good to see him back with us.

Posted: Tue May 04, 2004 2:27 pm
by redskinz4ever
thrash a serious wideout???will be good as #2 return guy on kickoffs,hope he proves me wrong.i do think he works very hard and he does hussle.will sruggle to get in the offense with coles,mccants,and gardner as our 1st- 2nd- 3rd wideouts.wish thrash the best.REDSKINZ4EVER!!!!

Posted: Tue May 04, 2004 2:59 pm
by posse
Just as Gibbs said, "he's a guy you want on your team."

Will he start at WR? Hell no. But having a player like him around every practice sets an extremely high standard of effort and work.

He will be our special teams leader (every team needs one), and catch maybe 15 balls. But the intagibles he brings to the table is why he's here, not because of his receiving ability (or lackthereof).

Posted: Tue May 04, 2004 5:07 pm
by Texas Hog
I was sad to see him go and always respected his work ethic and his first class attitude and personality. I'm glad coach Gibbs saw that as well and brought him back.