Patience pays off for Panthers S Sherrod Martin
By MIKE CRANSTON
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -For a speedy guy, football success has come slowly for
Sherrod Martin.
He had to wait a year after high school before enrolling at Troy, then was
hampered by two shoulder surgeries and a broken hand in college. Martin was
buried on the depth chart at cornerback in his first training camp with
Carolina. The Panthers then moved him to safety, only to see him slowed by a
bruised knee.
Two months of waiting ended Sunday, when an injury forced the 25-year-old
rookie into the starting lineup at free safety. Martin responded with two of
Carolina's five interceptions in an upset win over Arizona, a performance that
could earn the second-round pick the permanent starting job.
``When they put him back there at the safety position, just watching him in
practice, you could tell he felt very comfortable playing that position,''
reserve cornerback Dante Wesley said Wednesday. ``To me, it really showed on
Sunday how valuable he is.''
Forced into action because of Charles Godfrey's right ankle injury, Martin
doubled Godfrey's interception total in his 22 games as a starter. Martin raced
across the field to grab Kurt Warner's overthrown pass in the second quarter.
Then after Chris Gamble forced a big hit to pop the ball free early in the
fourth quarter, Martin was there for another pick that set up a field goal for
a 31-14 lead.
``It was just me running to the ball, something we preach about,'' Martin
said. ``It just put me in the right place at the right time.''
It appears the 6-foot-1, 198-pound Martin is now playing the right position,
too, after taking a difficult path to the NFL.
He was in Troy's recruiting class coming out of high school, but didn't
enroll until the following January and spent a year out of football. He then
had surgery on both shoulders that forced him to redshirt as a junior. He
returned the following season only to be slowed by a broken hand.
He then moved from cornerback to safety as a senior and had an NCAA record
three interceptions in one quarter against Alcorn State.
``It just made my work ethic better. Two shoulder surgeries, a broken hand,
I always felt like I was behind,'' Martin said. ``So I really take a lot a
pride in working out in the weight room and things like that, the little
things.''
When Carolina took the Griffin, Ga., native with the 59th pick in April's
draft, the Panthers figured he'd be the No. 3 cornerback. The job was open
after Ken Lucas was released and Richard Marshall was promoted to starter.
``He's kind of a tweener guy. He was in college, both as a corner and as a
safety,'' coach John Fox said. ``It's a good skill set to have.''
But Martin soon became lost in training camp. He plunged down the depth
chart after being outplayed by seventh-round pick Captain Munnerlyn, who earned
the nickel back job.
``Captain, he's really been doing a real good job. We motivate each other.
We talk on and off the field,'' Martin said. ``When you see somebody with you
doing good it only pushes you and forces you to take your game to the next
level, also.''
Injuries led the Panthers to switch Martin to safety, but he bruised his
knee in the third exhibition game and was relegated to special teams once the
regular season started. That changed when Godfrey was hurt in Carolina's loss
to Buffalo on Oct. 25.
The Panthers entered the Arizona game with only three interceptions in six
games. They intercepted Warner five times, with Martin taking two game balls
home with him.
``I couldn't have asked it any other way,'' Martin said of his debut.
Godfrey was no longer in a cast Wednesday, but he didn't practice. Martin
figures to start again Sunday against unbeaten New Orleans and its No. 1 ranked
offense.
Fox was noncommittal when asked if Godfrey would regain his starting job
when he's healthy again. If Martin turns in a repeat performance, it may be
Godfrey's turn to wait.
``When his opportunity came he made the best of it,'' Marshall said of
Martin. ``He made some great plays for the defense and we hope he continues to
do it this week.''
NOTES: QB Jake Delhomme practiced after sitting out the fourth quarter
Sunday with a chest injury. ... FB Brad Hoover (ankle) and backup Tony
Fiammetta (concussion) both missed practice, leaving no healthy player at the
position. ... WR Muhsin Muhammad (knee) remained sidelined, while RB Jonathan
Stewart (Achilles' tendon) took his normal Wednesday off. ... DE Julius Peppers
is the NFC's defensive player of the week after an interception return for a
touchdown and a sack and forced fumble against the Cardinals.
11/04/09 16:57
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