INDIANAPOLIS – Andrew Luck couldnt wait to start his new job, and the Colts couldnt wait to get him back on the field.
On Tuesday, both sides finally got their wish.
After a 5 1/2 -week absence from the Colts offseason workouts, the No. 1 overall draft pick showed up in a red No. 12 jersey and started showing everyone what hed learned while attending his final classes at Stanford.
Im just trying to soak everything in, and Im starting to have a good understanding of whats going on here, Luck said after Tuesday mornings light one-hour workout.
Admittedly, hes still trying to master the playbook, get on the same page with his new teammates and figure out how to get around Indianapolis. But none of that mattered Tuesday as dozens of reporters, photographers and television cameras monitored each pass Luck threw.
Vice president and general counsel Dan Emerson, who has been negotiating Lucks contract, watched the first half of a two-hour afternoon practice. Team owner Jim Irsay watched the second half of the afternoon session from a golf cart.
What everyone saw was a nearly flawless performance.
Luck connected on his first 12 throws in the morning team drill and only one of 16 passes hit the ground.
Coach Chuck Pagano noted that Luck didnt make a single mental mistake. Griff Whalen and Coby Fleener, who worked out with fellow alumnus Luck at Stanford over the past month, said Luck seemed as calm and in control as he was in college.
Hes one of the greatest learners Ive ever met and hes already up to speed, said Fleener, Indianapolis second-round draft pick.
League rules prohibit rookies from attending team mini-camps until they finish classes with the exception of one three-day rookie camp, which ended May 6.
Indianapolis promised to do anything it could to help Luck – video conferences, conference calls, even using Irsays private jet to ferry players around the country for individual workouts. The NFL nixed all of it until Luck finished his final two architectural design courses Thursday.
The resourceful Luck came up with a solution: Using his free time in the morning to hone his football skills, while blocking out the afternoons for classwork.
It wasnt the way Luck wanted to start his pro career.
Id wake up and have a serious lack of motivation to go to class, so Id work out in the mornings, then eat lunch and go to class in the afternoon, Luck said. I think I managed to learn the playbook a bit.
What he needs now is repetition.
In morning team drills, Luck hooked up repeatedly with veteran receiver Austin Collie and threw his final couple of passes to receiver Reggie Wayne.
The afternoon session focused primarily on individual work, and Luck overthrew both veterans three times, all on deep patterns.
Indianapolis is scheduled to hold another workout this afternoon in front of fans at Lucas Oil Stadium before wrapping up the mini-camp Thursday.
Its already clear to Pagano and others around the team complex that Luck is everything they expected.
The guys off the charts for football IQ, Pagano said. He came in over the weekend, and we had a little session Monday with the rookies, which league rules allow, and he hasnt missed a beat.
Luck was dubbed the most NFL-ready quarterback since Manning before the 2011 draft. But he went back for one more season at Stanford.
