Sunday, November 12
Williams hopes for playoff return



CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- New Orleans says it's not a one-man team. The Saints will get a chance to prove it during their surprising playoff run.

Ricky Williams, for whom the Saints traded their entire 1999 draft, broke his left ankle in a 20-10 victory over the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.

Coach Jim Haslett said his star running back will probably be lost for 6-8 weeks. If that timetable holds true, Williams will miss the rest of the regular season.

Williams said it was too early to tell if he would be back for possible playoff games.

"Who knows how I'm going to heal," Williams said. "I'm not a doctor."

The injury occurred on what looked like a harmless 2-yard run up the middle with about six minutes left as the hottest team in the NFL was cruising to its sixth straight victory.

That run put the former Heisman Trophy winner from Texas right at 1,000 yards for the season. Williams limped to the sideline and didn't return.

X-rays showed Williams' ankle was broken in two places, Haslett said.

"I am not going to skip a beat. If I have to throw the ball 50 times, so be it," quarterback Jeff Blake said. "I don't think we'll have to worry about that because we have one of the best offensive lines in the league. I have said this over and over again, I can run through some of those holes."

One of the best assets of the 236-pound Williams was his ability to punish teams in the fourth quarter, helping the Saints (7-3) close out close games by eating up the clock.

That aspect of the team is now gone. Chad Morton, a rookie from Southern Cal, is the probable fill-in for Williams. Morton is 5-foot-8, 186 pounds.

"We're not going to change anything," Saints offensive coordinator Mike McCarthy said. "The standard of play Ricky set is the standard the rest of these guys will be held to."

Some of the Saints were unaware of the seriousness of the injury until interviewed by reporters. Many just shook their heads in disbelief as Williams hobbled to the showers on crutches.

"It's devastating to me," Morton said. "I feel sick about it right now. I can't even enjoy this win. He's our offense."

Williams became the first Saints runner to hit the 1,000-yard mark since Dalton Hilliard did it in 1989.

"I am still kind of shaking right now knowing that he's hurt," Morton said. "Maybe he'll be back for the playoffs. Maybe a miracle will happen."

Williams, on crutches for the first time since he was 10, greeted the media with a smile.

"I was talking to coach Haslett and he said you can't control things like that," Williams said when asked how he could be smiling. "What's done is done and I have to keep working hard and hopefully come back for the playoffs."

While Williams remained upbeat about his comeback, the team's offensive line took the news particularly hard.

"Right now, we're pretty upset about it," said Wally Williams, no relation to the running back. "We take pride in protecting our guys, and Ricky is one of our guys. We open holes for him and pick him off the ground when he's down."

The injury will also hurt the second-year pro in the pocketbook. Williams signed a seven-year deal worth $68.4 million. But some of that money is based on incentives, like a $1 million bonus for rushing for more than 1,600 yards. He was on pace to get 1,608 before his injury.




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