Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Patrick Finley

Facing 30, Bears linebacker Danny Trevathan slims down, speeds up for contract year

AP Photos

For young players, Danny Trevathan said, a day off is just that. They go home, lounge on the couch and wonder why they’re stiff the next day.

At 29, Trevathan is not a young player.

“Now an off day means off to my own time, taking care of myself,” he said.

The Bears’ inside linebacker stretches, does yoga, works out, plays with his kids and cooks. It’s all part of preserving his body as he gets older — especially the cooking.

Trevathan changed his diet in the offseason, ditching bread and combining elements of offseason eating that had worked for him in the past. He doesn’t eat anything with more than two legs.

“It’s all about being strict on it and being sound with it,” he said. “It’s just like practicing every day to be better at football.”

He focused on explosive workouts this offseason, often jumping off one leg. He ate chicken, turkey and fish for dinner. His favorite dish to cook is curry chicken — heavy on the spice — though he backs down on the fire during the season. He grills chicken and makes turkey with rice. Then there’s the fish — he eats salmon, trout, grouper, snapper and walleye. He started eating halibut at his grandma’s suggestion.

The result: he’s down from around 13 percent body fat to 8 percent.

“Health is wealth,” he said.

It’s never been more true than this season. Entering the last year of a four-year, $28 million contract, Trevathan will be a free agent in March. He’ll turn 30 the same month. That age is a scary number in the NFL, particularly when you play on a team that will give out contracts to its young, dynamic players in the next year.

“People look at sacrifice as a bad thing,” Trevathan said. “It’s a great thing — because it’s about your future. Sacrifice now to reap the benefits later. When you sacrifice stuff, you do with a full heart.”

It’s not easy. It’s been forever since he’s had a steak.

“Anything worth it is going to be hard,” he said. “You have to be professional. You have to know when to say no about that stuff. But I don’t play — not when I’m talking about my body.”

Trevathan — who played all 16 games last year for the first time since 2013 — feels faster.

“They haven’t seen my open it up yet,” he said. “But I’m telling you, I have some wheels.”

Inside linebackers coach Mark DeLeone said he’s seen Trevathan take care of his body every single day, while head coach Matt Nagy has noticed the linebacker’s quickness when he covers the Bears’ running backs in practice.

“These guys, as they get older, their knees start getting beat up — sometimes you can get overweight,” Nagy said. “He’s done the exact opposite. He’s flashing on tape, and that’s a great thing.”

A Super Bowl champion, Trevathan knows how precious a promising team can be. After winning only a quarter of his games in his first two years with the Bears, Trevathan relishes the potential of a team that went 12-4 last year.

“It’s the most important year,” he said, “because it’s all we have.“

It’s another chance, too, to make a statement about his own career.

“I want to be the best person I can be,” he said. “I want to be the best linebacker in the league. I want to leave no doubts in people’s minds. …

“I’ve been doing it for a while and I’m still one of the best at it. And I want to be the best when I retire or when I’m done playing football. I want to put a staple in it and have some fun this year and stay healthy the whole time, fly around and make some plays in this defense.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.