METAIRIE (AP) — Marques Colston never goes out of his way to be noticed.
He became the New Orleans Saints' all-time
leader in touchdowns scored this season with 56, yet does not have a
touchdown
dance. He seldom appears in commercials, and is often hard to find
when the locker room at team headquarters is open to reporters.
At Dallas last Sunday, Colston's 10 catches for 153 yards put him over the 1,000-yard mark for the sixth time in his seven
seasons. Yet he has never been to a Pro Bowl, which disappoints teammates such as quarterback Drew Brees.
"He is Mr. Dependable, Mr. Steady. When you need a play, I know I can always count on him," Brees said Wednesday. "He's a
quiet guy, but when he comes to work, he's ready to work."
Brees said he loves Colston the way he is
and would not want him to change, but figures the slender, 6-foot-4
receiver's introverted
nature probably works against him when it comes to getting the
recognition he deserves.
"How do guys get noticed for the (Pro
Bowl's) fan vote and for everything else?" Brees asked rhetorically. "If
you're not
saying something that's getting you on TV or what have you, then a
lot of times people don't notice you if you keep the helmet
on and just work. You don't have a touchdown dance, but there's no
guy that's been steadier than him at the receiver position."
The only season in which Colston compiled fewer than 1,000 yards receiving was 2008, when a hand injury limited him to 11
games and he finished with 760.
Since Colston entered the league as a
seventh-round draft choice out of Hofstra in 2006, only three players in
the NFL have
caught more touchdown passes. Arizona's Larry Fitzgerald has the
most at 59, just three more than Colston, while San Francisco's
Randy Moss has 58 and San Diego's Antonio Gates has 57.
In addition to Colston's numbers, the Saints
talk about his toughness — the way he makes difficult catches in
traffic over
the middle, routinely absorbing big hits. Colston owns an
oxygen-rich hyperbaric chamber, and often sleeps in it during the
season in hopes of hastening his recovery from injuries or the
general pounding he takes.
"No matter how battered or bruised he is, he's in practice," Saints assistant head coach Joe Vitt said. "He doesn't take time
off. He doesn't miss games. All he does is he takes it to heart the accountability he has to his teammates and he takes it
to heart the accountability he has to this game, and he's special."
Colston was not available for comment Wednesday when Pro Bowl rosters were released.
When he did speak to reporters after last
Sunday's victory at Dallas, he talked not about his pivotal role in the
win, but
berated himself for a dropped pass and a fumble in overtime, even
though the play on which he lost the ball still set up the
Saints' winning field goal after tight end Jimmy Graham recovered
it.
"Even with the win, it's personally going to leave a sour taste in my mouth because I can't do that," Colston said. "It's
one of those things where I know that can't happen. It's been an issue where I've had a couple this year. It just doesn't
sit well with me."
Such a reaction was classic Colston, Brees said.
"That's what I love about him. He had 10 (catches) for (more than) 150 (yards) and he's mad about one drop and a fumble,"
Brees said. "That's where his head's at. He's such a prideful guy. He wants people to be able to count on him.
"You love having guys like that because you don't have to police them. They police themselves."
Colston has never been one to complain about
not getting the ball enough or not getting paid enough. In fact, he
could have
tested the open market last winter, but instead chose to sign a
five-year extension worth about $36 million before free agency
even started.
That should keep Colston around long enough
to break Eric Martin's all-time Saints marks for catches and yards
receiving.
Colston is second all-time with 527 receptions and 7,342 yards,
putting him five catches and 512 yards behind Martin in both
categories.
Carolina coach Ron Rivera, whose team visits New Orleans this Sunday, said players of Colston's caliber deserve better than
to have their legacies defined by Pro Bowl appearances.
"The thing about the Pro Bowl is ... it's
not necessarily about who the best player is," Rivera said. "We're
talking about
a guy that was on a Super Bowl championship team, too, now. So
you'd like to think that somewhere along the line he'd be recognized
for what he does."
Notes: Two Saints were selected for the Pro
Bowl: RG Jahri Evans and P Thomas Morstead. ... FB Jed Collins, DT Akiem
Hicks
and RB Pierre Thomas missed Wednesday's practice with various knee
injuries, while CB Jabari Greer sat out because of his
concussion from Sunday's game at Dallas. ... Chris Ivory
(hamstring) and TE Jimmy Graham (left wrist, right ring finger) were
limited in practice.