holy schnikes.
Rivers contemplates future with Chargers | UTSanDiego.com
Philip Rivers isn’t contemplating retirement anymore.
But he also isn’t thinking about a contract extension with the Chargers. Not the San Diego Chargers, and almost certainly not the Los Angeles Chargers.
Asked on Tuesday if he thinks he will play his current contract out rather than agreeing to extend the deal that ends after the upcoming season, Rivers said, “Yes.”
Asked if he envisioned any circumstance causing him to reconsider, he said, “Honestly, nothing.”
He remains interested in seeing how the roster is built and has an eye on the stadium issue.
“What I can control and all I know as of today, I am signed up for one more year,” he said. “I guess things could change, but with all the uncertainty in many aspects, I don’t see it changing before camp gets here, and when camp gets here I’m even more certain to play it out.”
Rivers doesn’t rule out playing in Los Angeles should the Chargers move there, but there are more appealing cities to a family that has never strayed from its Southern roots.
“What we’ve established here with my growing family is hard to recreate,” he said. “It’s hard to up and recreate that. I know that moves are part of life. But that certainly is fair to say that (not being sold on moving to Los Angeles) is part of it. The good thing is I’m not under contract in a year where we’d potentially be in Los Angeles.”
Rivers is as frank and unencumbered by agenda as perhaps any star athlete in modern times. He isn’t playing games. This is in no way for leverage. He is just being honest.
Still, he repeatedly turned Tuesday's conversation toward the now.
Almost three months into the offseason, improved health has improved his frame of mind.
“The last time we talked was so close to the end of last season, and I was pretty banged up,” Rivers said. “It was more of the notion of I don’t know how much longer I want to do this. That was one of the scenarios. That has left, and I’m excited. I feel like I have a lot of good years left.”
Rivers, who turned 33 in December, played through rib and back injuries in 2014 that he greatly downplayed during the season. Even now, he says the rib injuries were nothing more than he dealt with in previous seasons.
“Late in the year the back thing flared up,” he acknowledged. “It was a little rough, to say the least, for a couple games. But anything I had going on health-wise ... did not hinder performance in any way. It really didn’t.”
Rivers finished the season with 4,286 yards, extending his team record to six 4,000-yard seasons. It was also his fourth season with at least 30 touchdown passes (31) and his second straight season with a completion percentage above 66 percent.
In nine seasons as the Chargers quarterback, he has led them to the playoffs five times. His career total of 36,665 yards is 20th-most in NFL history. His streak of 144 consecutive starts is currently the league's second-longest run, and that does not count the 2007 AFC Championship game he played after tearing his ACL the previous Sunday.
Rivers has of late spent time nearly every day at Chargers Park, though not quite working out to the level he would normally at this time of year.
“I’m getting there,” he said. “I couldn’t say I’m 100 percent.”
Without hesitation, he declared he will be full-go by the time the Chargers begin offseason workouts.
This is the first offseason in which his long-term status is unresolved. His current deal was initiated in 2009, prior to the final year of his rookie contract.
General Manager Tom Telesco said on Dec. 31 that, “We are committed to making sure Philip retires as a Charger, and we will address that at the appropriate time.”
However, there have been no talks between the team and Rivers. The team could conceivably place a franchise tag on Rivers next offseason.
Meanwhile, there are questions and brewing speculation that the team might be preparing for a future without Rivers. Numerous people in and around the league have speculated that the team could be serious about acquiring Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota, whom they are scheduled to work out next month. While there are plausible explanations for investigating a first-round QB to that extent without intending to acquire him, Mariota is expected to be gone well before the Chargers pick at No. 17.
Telesco was asked Tuesday, via text, to quash any possibility Rivers would be traded. Even when pressed, he declined.
“I don’t like Philip as our QB, I love him,” Telesco wrote. “And I’ll go to war with him.”
Rivers is aware of all that looms.
“Rumors,” he said. “You can find rumors on anything on the Internet. I think I could even find rumors on the Internet that I get too worked up in games.”
So, he’s obviously maintaining some levity. And, while acknowledging he and his wife have spent time talking and praying about their future beyond 2015, he is working to keep his situation in perspective and remain in the present.
“I’m trying to not get too caught up in what I can’t control,” he said. “What I can control is, what I’m doing in March is what I’ve done every March – working out, looking for little tweaks, getting ready to fight like crazy to help us win.”
That’s the Philip we can count on. For now, at least.