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Bakhtiari: ‘My Knee Feels Normal’

“Everyone loves timelines. When I'm ready, I'll be out there,” he said after Practice 1 of Packers training camp.
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GREEN BAY, Wis. – Ultimately words are words. In the case of Green Bay Packers left tackle David Bakhtiari’s long and arduous comeback from a torn ACL, words aren’t practice reps and they’re not games.

Nonetheless, Bakhtiari on Wednesday discussed the “nightmare” that has been the past 19 months and the optimism that the light at the end of the tunnel isn’t another freight train.

“Concern level: low,” Bakhtiari said after the first practice of training camp. “I really like where I'm at, especially compared to where I was just overall last year.”

Bakhtiari wouldn’t put a timeline on his path back to the practice field. And for good reason, considering how many detours his comeback took last year, ranging from a couple of abbreviated returns, a second surgery, a 27-snap performance against a Detroit and a seat on the sideline for the playoff loss.

On Wednesday, he opened this training camp like last training camp – on the physically unable to perform list, rehabbing an injury that was sustained almost 575 days ago.

“Everyone loves timelines. When I'm ready, I'll be out there,” he said. “What I can say is I do feel really good. I really like – I feel normal. My knee feels normal, and that's the biggest plus. Now it's just getting that normal feeling again when I play football. So, that's what it is: the load, stress, strength, but we're not really in an ACL issue. That's actually been a long time ago that we put that chapter to bed. It's just there's other issues.”

“Normal” is a good thing. Even while he played in Week 18 at Detroit, he said the knee never felt normal last year. It didn’t feel normal at the start of offseason workouts this year, either. That brought about a second follow-up procedure on his right knee.

“I would say I really enjoy how my knee functions, operates and moves,” he said. “It’s not like I would say how I was dealing with it last year. It’s hard to describe. I think only people who have gone through it maybe will have an idea, especially when it’s not cooperating with you. It was just stuff, it almost felt like blockage. It was really weird.”

With a wife and a child on the way, Bakhtiari’s at least had some positives to help him through down times. He’s leaned on his close friends, such as former Packers offensive tackle Bryan Bulaga, who successfully returned from a torn ACL, quarterback Aaron Rodgers and Dr. Chris Carr, the team’s director of performance psychology.

“I think this year’s going to be really special for him both on and off the field, and we look forward to him getting back whenever that time is,” Rodgers said. “I’m not concerned about him not coming back, I’m really not. I’m more concerned about the mental side, as a friend, just loving on him and taking care of him, spending time with him and making sure that first and foremost is him taking care of himself, and when he gets back, he’ll be back.

“We’d obviously love him to be back as soon as possible, but this is a knee on a 315-pound man that would love to play, four, five, six more years. We’ll be excited for whenever he comes back, but right now I’m just worried about the friend and taking care of him the best I can.”

The word “special” stands out. While Bakhtiari wouldn’t commit 100 percent that he’d ever play again – “I’m not a fortune teller” – there’s a challenge that’s exciting now that the knee finally feels like it should.

“I remember when I was playing sometimes, it sucks I have to say that, but I remember thinking like, ‘This is getting pretty easy’ and it was fun,” he said. “And I kind of (thought), ‘Let’s make it a little bit challenging.’ By God, I got that answer. This is definitely the most challenging thing I’ve had to go through. I recently talked with my wife and thought about how I started my career. Not even just here, but just putting on pads. No one really thought I would be where I was, so it’s kind of cool to feel that again. You can say or not say, but I know those questions are out there. This is cool because it’s like I get to relive that same story again. I made the choice back then. I can make the choice again.”

Ranking the Packers Roster

Here are the top 39 players in our annual 90-to-1 ranking of the Green Bay Packers roster. Hopefully, you learn a little something about everyone. Click here for the full 90-to-1 rundown.

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