Vontaze Burfict, thought to be the youngest captain Bengals head - TopicsExpress



          

Vontaze Burfict, thought to be the youngest captain Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis has ever had, is also one of the most ready even though he’s three weeks shy of his 24th birthday. In fact, you have to get up pretty early in the morning to get one up on Burfict since he usually shows up to work at Paul Brown Stadium by 6 a.m. “I don’t have to change the way I am, but I do want to make sure I’m crisp on what I do in practice,” Burfict said. “There are guys who have been in the league nine, 10 years that are looking up to me. I have to be on my A game.” He certainly deserves the title of captain since his teammates voted on it earlier this week. Really, no surprises. De facto captains Andrew Whitworth on offense and Domata Peko on defense joined the four quarterbacks, Burfict on defense, Andy Dalton on offense and Cedric Peerman and Vincent Rey on special teams. “Hard work pays off. I lead by example. I just have to watch what I do because everyone’s watching me,” Burfict said. “It’s not surprising because I felt like I am the captain of the defense. I feel like I’ve earned it and I feel like I’ve to be a role model for the young guys and lead by example.” Young guys? Burfict may be just 23, but he’s got enough skins on the wall to cover the study of an accomplished veteran at the top of his profession. He’s already got 30 NFL starts, two more in the postseason, nearly 400 tackles, an NFL tackling title, a Pro Bowl berth and he calls the signals for the NFL’s No. 3 defense that solved four Super Bowl championship quarterbacks last season. Carson Palmer, another young captain, didn’t make his first NFL start until he was 24. “(Burfict has) played a lot of football since he’s been here,” Lewis said. “He’s one of the guys that we have. They grow up very fast when they’re young. I guess, as they say, as more is given, more is asked, or however that goes. He’s been given the responsibility and we ask a lot of him.” Burfict has a daily routine at the office that is certainly worthy of following if anyone can stand it. On the days the Bengals work, he’s in his car by 5:45 a.m. and at PBS by 6 a.m. He works out, gets in the cold tub and basically gets his mind right by about 7:30, 7:45. Then he runs back home, gets a home-cooked breakfast, and is back for morning meetings. Call it Tez Time. As the only guy in the locker room at that ungodly hour of the morning, he’s listening to gospel. While getting his ducks in a row, he’s listening to his music and not everyone else’s and he says whatever it is, it’s slow. Much of the time its gospel and often Kirk Franklin. “I get to think before everybody else thinks,” Burfict said. “I wake up, pray, listen to my Bible verses, get in the cold tub, work out. I get my stuff done.” The kids are watching.
Posted on: Fri, 05 Sep 2014 21:16:54 +0000

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