MIAMI — How much does Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Marvin Harrison detest talking to the media?
When teammate Tim Jennings, temporarily representing an Indianapolis TV station, asked Harrison a question during Tuesday’s Super Bowl XLI Media Day activities at Dolphin Stadium, Harrison brushed him off.
That’s a bit unfair to Harrison, as Jennings was clearly teasing the All-Pro wide receiver, but it’s a massive understatement to say that Media Day was a requirement the media-shy Harrison looked upon with all the anticipatory glee of a kick in the groin.
“I don’t mind doing interviews, especially when there’s something good to talk about. I think this week is definitely worth the while to talk about,” said Harrison, who wasn’t speaking from a prepared text, but whose tone indicated that he might as well have been.
One had to feel for Harrison. He is the valedictorian of sorts among NFL receivers, yet he’d be the last person to actually deliver the speech. Not only did he have to wax poetic about himself Tuesday, but he had to sit there while the peanut gallery made an hour of it at his expense.
You had “American Idol” rejects Jonathan Jayne and Kenneth Swale ask Harrison if he’d like to hear them sing “The Star-Spangled Banner.” A stupefied Harrison was taken aback, explained there was no game that day, and brushed them off.
Sadly, they sang anyway.
Later, Harrison made a point to field a question from a model who caught his eye. To his annoyance, he was asked to flash his touchdown dance. He explained that he had no touchdown dance – everyone knows he doesn’t dance after touchdowns, he awkwardly made pains to point out – leaving the model hanging as she persisted to get Harrison to show his admittedly nonexistent moves.
Speaking for an hour to whomever wanted to talk to him was enough song and dance to last Harrison a lifetime. He doesn’t totally shut out the media during the regular season, but Harrison speaks rarely, perhaps once a month tops.
A shame, because when Harrison spoke his mind — forced or not — he had interesting insights into the Colts and his career. Intrinsically linked with quarterback Peyton Manning, Colts fans comparatively hear from the Manning side of the most prolific quarterback-wide receiver touchdown combination (106 and counting) all of the time. It was interesting to hear from Harrison’s side of the ledger.
“Peyton and I will talk a lot about the game plan and what we need to get done,” said Harrison on their preparatory routine. “Peyton and I may talk on the field, but off the field, we don’t talk as much as we have in the past. Jim Sorgi kind of plays middle man. I always ask Sorgi what defense they are playing or what I can do to get open on another route.”
Sorgi?
“Jim can see what’s happening on the field from the sideline better than Peyton or I can during the game. He sees all the pictures and when we come off, he knows all the defenses,” Harrison said.
Harrison brushed off criticism of his postseason production. In 13 postseason games, Harrison has only two touchdown catches and averages 4.2 catches and 59.8 yards per game.
“If I get first downs and move the ball, that’s all that matters. Like I said, teams don’t want us to get big plays, so we are going to do whatever it takes to put points on the board,” Harrison said. “Being that it’s one-and-done, they’re not going to let me go out there and have big games and big plays.”
Harrison parried questions about himself throughout the Media Day hour, winning his battle to say little about a career that is destined to end in Canton.
“I don’t need to be more famous. At the end of the day, I just want my teammates to know that I was a great player that did a lot to help us win football games,” Harrison said. “I have a lot of years left to play and when that time comes, I’ll sit back and think about all the things I’ve accomplished.”
That’s about all Harrison was going to say about himself. He was asked at what age he developed his sense of deflecting attention from himself and shying away from the media.
“I’ve never thought about that,” Harrison said. “I’ve always just played.”
And much to Harrison’s delight once Media Day ended, playing is all he needs to concentrate on from now until Sunday.
From the Press Box
From The Press Box: Marvin Harrison grins and bears a day in media spotlight
- From the Press Box
-
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: ISU baseball has pluses, minuses for tourney bid
Last Thursday, when Indiana State’s baseball jumped around in a celebratory dogpile after clinching the Missouri Valley Conference regular season championship at Bob Warn Field, no one thought that a little over a week later, the dreaded NCAA Tournament bubble would fly over Terre Haute. -
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Subtle switch has fostered MVC baseball parity
When Indiana State was crowned as the regular season baseball champion of the Missouri Valley Conference last Thursday, it marked the fifth different regular season champion the league has had since 2005.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: ISU has done enough to be in NCAAs
When you get older, you’re supposed to get wiser. I don’t know if I qualify, but I’m trying.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: TH’s Murans back in the Derby … this time with favorite
When Terre Haute native Paul Murans experienced his first Triple Crown horse racing run as part-owner of Mucho Macho Man in 2011, the experience was — to borrow a phrase from one-time Marquette coach Al McGuire — seashells and balloons.
-
TODD GOLDEN: IHSAA debate interrupts more pressing issues
State Senator Mike Delph has sowed a 15-year-old wind and put the emotional class basketball debate back on the public’s mind.
-
TODD GOLDEN: ISU eyes prize one game at a time
Most baseball fans know that the baseball season — even a college baseball season — is a marathon, not a sprint.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Grass is green enough for Indiana State in Missouri Valley
Take a look around the Missouri Valley Conference landscape and it would be easy to assume that a significant portion of the league membership is searching for perceived greener pastures.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Sycamores are Odum’s team now
Soooo … who wants to talk about the 2012 Indiana State men’s basketball season?
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: ISU will face uphill climb in MVC in 2013
The Missouri Valley Conference Tournament semifinals are always scintillating. No more so than Saturday when Illinois State upset 15th-ranked Wichita State 65-64 and when No. 25 Creighton took care of business with a 99-71 victory over Evansville.
Arch Madness indeed. -
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Effort, heart, concentration are fleeting for ISU
Every time Indiana State’s men’s basketball wins a game, you think to yourself, OK, now is when these Sycamores live up to their potential.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Peyton’s place belongs to Eli
The good people of Indianapolis justifiably puffed out their chests throughout Super Bowl week as the city received deserved rave reviews for the job it did as hosts of Super Bowl XLVI.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Teammates, colleagues express their loyalty to Weatherford
Sometimes you worry whether someone is stopping to smell the roses when they smell rosiest.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Does melted ice reveal Belichick's heart of gold?
If you’re into Youtube — and who isn’t these days? — there’s a vintage television profile of then-Cleveland Browns coach Bill Belichick posted on the popular site.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Indiana State men caught between expectation, reality
The Missouri Valley Conference is hush-hush on how it puts together its matchups for the annual conference schedule.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Accentuating the positive with ISU's Odum
There’s something to be said for being your own worst critic, especially when it comes to sports.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Loss hurts, but national exposure is ... priceless
Trying to advance the philosophy that any publicity is good publicity is probably an effort wasted on a losing team less than 10 minutes removed from a disappointing defeat where victory had been oh so close to fruition.
-
TODD GOLDEN: The great playoff race is on for Indiana State football
The great race is on.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Fans owe ISU seniors 10,000
I have covered Indiana State football since the 2004 season.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Indiana State has used up its playoff mulligan
It’s been a glass half-full kind of season for the Indiana State football team, so it was easy — and exciting — to get caught up in looking ahead to scenarios that placed ISU in the FCS playoffs, even if ISU didn’t win out.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Not a coulda, shoulda for Sycamores
Indiana State's football team is getting tired of being graded on the curve of its own past futility.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Supernatural Shakir was a sight to behold
I’ve often heard it said when a player has a big statistical day that he’s racking up “video game numbers.”
-
TODD GOLDEN: Sycamore defense absorbs lesson
A win is a win, they say. And for Indiana State, none of the Sycamores are going to take back or put an asterisk next to their 48-34 victory over Butler on Saturday.
-
TODD GOLDEN: And now on to the normal part of the schedule
The Steve Miller Band would’ve appreciated Indiana State’s trip to Penn State.
-
TODD GOLDEN: Sabermetrics has changed love of baseball
I turned 40 this summer. No problem.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: No debate about quality of Vigo baseball
It’s standard practice for losing high school coaches — especially coaches who led teams on a deep postseason run — to heap praise on their seniors one last time. It’s even more so when one of those seniors was the rock of a given team for a four-year period.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Season dies down, but ISU’s plate not empty
With coaching changes having mostly sorted themselves out and with recruiting having just entered its quiet period today, college basketball has settled into its more relaxed offseason mode.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Winning spring more important than winning the spring game
Indiana State football coach Trent Miles has been involved in collegiate coaching since 1987. He knows better than anyone that there’s no one-size-fits-all way to approach the annual spring football game.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Friday wait was worth it for Indiana State
Many have seen the famous Salvador Dali painting, “Persistence of Memory.” The most memorable images in the surreal painting are unquestionably the pocket watches that are drooped over a ledge, a tree branch, etc.
-
Many Sycamores, past and present, to remember
The minute it became apparent Indiana State had punched its ticket to the NCAA Tournament with a 60-56 victory over Missouri State on Sunday, I reflected on all of the moments in the previous seven years of covering the Sycamores that led to this.
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: Sycamore AD Ron Prettyman explains Cal Poly interest
Editor’s note: Indiana State Director of Athletics Ron Prettyman interviewed and participated in a public open forum for the same position at Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo last week.
- More From the Press Box Headlines
-
FROM THE PRESS BOX: ISU baseball has pluses, minuses for tourney bid




