Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Pat Leonard

Joe Judge, Giants hope Nick Gates avoids worst-case scenario as agent vows return to field

NEW YORK — Nick Gates’ extended stay in the hospital led Giants coach Joe Judge to admit on Thursday that there is a fear his injury could be career-threatening.

“I’d be lying from my perspective if I said no,” Judge said before practice.

But Gates’ agent, Jonathan Perzley of Sportstars Inc., vowed that his client will be back on the field despite requiring some follow-up procedures on his fractured left leg.

“Nick is going to make a full recovery,” Perzley told the New York Daily News. “He’s one of the toughest guys in the NFL. He has broken bones. There’s no ligament damage.”

Judge said Gates’ “reconstruction” surgery on his broken left fibula and tibia last Friday morning went “fine.” However, “there are some other things that go with it” that require attention.

The team’s medical staff has advised that it’s not uncommon to require multiple surgeries for this severe of an injury. But with Gates still at Inova Fairfax Hospital (Va.), the Giants obviously are holding their breath for their captain.

“I know he’s getting the best medical care possible, so we’re confident he’s gonna be able to come back,” Judge said. “However my fear for any guy who’s [had this kind of injury] is yes, they could be career ending. So from my perspective it’s [let’s] get them back healthy, keep them focused on being a player when they come back, and in the meantime, do everything you can to help them stay involved with the team and also prepare something beyond this.”

Gates, 25, has stayed positive since his gruesome injury in the first quarter of last Thursday night’s loss at Washington. On Sunday, two days after his surgery, he posted a video of himself walking slowly through the hospital hallways with the help of a walker.

“Up and walking already! One step closer to getting back on the field!” he captioned the video.

The undrafted free agent out of Nebraska has played in 34 games with 21 starts in three years with the Giants. He is under contract through the 2022 season and is clearly eyeing an attempt at a triumphant comeback.

Judge said the team has done everything it can to keep Gates’ spirits up, including bringing an XBox down to the hospital to keep Gates entertained.

“We’ve had some people from the organization go down and check with him,” Judge said. “Players and coaches have been in contact with him. We’re trying to do some things to kinda entertain him a little bit, keep his mind going down there.”

Judge also said when Gates gets back to New Jersey, “we’ll keep this guy as involved as we can with the team.”

“I’ve had guys in the past that had traumatic injuries where you can look down the road and know these guys are gonna be somewhere involved in coaching,” Judge said. “Sometimes we get them involved in the weight room, get their feet wet, get them into some projects, get them start thinking like a coach, ease that transition. Hopefully, Nick’s about a decade away from that.”

On the flip side, Judge wouldn’t rule out left guard Shane Lemieux for the entire season, though that would seem to be a stretch.

Judge said Lemieux’s Wednesday surgery to repair his left patellar tendon “was a little less invasive than a complete reconstruction, so we’ll see what this turnaround looks like.”

“There’s a chance with this procedure that it may not absolutely be season-ending,” Judge said.

The coach said the Giants didn’t regret letting Lemieux try to play through the injury he had sustained on the second day of training camp.

“No,” he said. “Because everything we had information-wise would have led us to do nothing differently.”

Lemieux’s absence prompted Judge to move Gates from center to left guard in Week 2, and that’s when Gates broke his leg.

He was twisted down to the ground by Washington’s Jonathan Allen, and simultaneously, Washington’s Daron Payne rolled up on Gates’ leg.

Now the Giants are crossing their fingers, fearing the worst but hoping for the best.

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
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.