BUCS ROOKIES
Namath,
Montana, Marino ... Gradkowski?
By KATHERINE SMITH ksmith@tampatrib.com
Published:
May 8, 2006
TAMPA - Bruce
Gradkowski was a third-grader playing on the fourth-grade basketball
team when his ego got the best of him.
"I got
a little cocky," Gradkowski said.
A "whooping"
by Dad took care of that, teaching Gradkowski a valuable lesson
- don't believe the hype, or more specifically, your own hype.
Lesson learned
apparently, because as the Pittsburgh native grew up in the shadow
of Pennsylvania greats such as Joe Namath, Joe Montana and Dan
Marino, and eventually overshadowed them, in high school statistics
anyway, Gradkowski grew more humbled.
"Coming
out, I never worried about the stats or who to compare myself
to," said Gradkowski, who threw for 2,978 yards at Seton-LaSalle
High School, more than Namath, Montana and Marino. "They
always [drew comparisons to] Dan Marino, Joe Montana and Joe Namath,
but those guys are on a whole new level. Just to be mentioned
with them is an honor, but I know personally, I'm not near where
I need to be in respect to them."
Despite those
gaudy numbers, Gradkowski didn't catch the eye of college recruiters.
He put up
big numbers everywhere, except for size.
At barely
6-foot-1, Gradkowski doesn't stand as tall as the prototypical
quarterback.
He believes
that's the main reason Toledo was the only Division I-A school
to offer him a scholarship and why he lasted until the sixth round
of the draft before the Bucs took him with the 194th pick.
"I think
I've always been underestimated growing up," he said. "When
the draft came and I went in the sixth round, I said, 'Hey, I've
been here before, it's nothing new.' All I ask for is that chance,
that opportunity and Coach [Jon] Gruden has given it to me."
The Bucs wrapped
up their three-day rookie minicamp Sunday. Having called most
of the plays at Toledo from the line of scrimmage, Gradkowski
had to get used to calling them from the huddle, but what he showed
in the short time left quite an impression on Gruden.
"I've
got a lot of confidence he's going to be a player," Gruden
said. "We've just got to temper our enthusiasm and bring
him along, but he really shows a quick, accurate arm. He's got
really good mobility. And he's got a charisma about him that quarterbacks
I think have to have.
"He did
well for himself these first three days."
Gruden admits
he and the coaching staff were "harsh" on Gradkowski,
but the rookie welcomes the tough love. It's how he was raised
and why he believes he thrives under pressure.
"My dad
pushed me hard as a kid," Gradkowski said. "He was always
on me, on me, on me, so it pushed me to do better and to work
harder and try to be the best. When I come to [work with] coaches
like Coach Gruden, that's who I feel I learn the best under, when
coaches are hard and they demand so much out of you."
Gradkowski's
father, Bruce Sr., coached him until he reached high school. He
was the one responsible for sticking his son at the quarterback
position.
"I grew
to love it and I love it to this day," Gradkowski said. "I
come out here and I love having command of the offense."
For now, it's
not Gradkowski's offense to command. He's deep on the Bucs depth
chart behind starter Chris Simms and backups Luke McCown and Tim
Rattay.
"I'm
humble to be a part of this right now," Gradkowski said.
"Growing up, this was my dream, to play in the NFL. I watched
Dan Marino, he was my idol and I've watched some great quarterbacks
come through Western Pennsylvania. It's a dream and as you get
older, it becomes a goal and now it's a reality.
"I'm
just happy to be a part of it and have my opportunity."