The Harrington Family Foundation



Lions QB and his mother are ready for his return to Northwest
Thursday, November 13, 2003
Associated Press
By Tim Korte
As a kid growing up in Oregon, Detroit Lions quarterback Joey Harrington always had a Steve Largent poster hanging on his bedroom wall.

"He was jumping over a guy. He had that ugly old face mask on," Harrington said during a conference call Wednesday.

Harrington gets a chance to try to beat the Seahawks (6-3) this weekend when the Lions (3-6) visit, seeking a third straight win.

Harrington followed the Seahawks and Largent, their Hall of Fame receiver, because their games were on Portland television stations every Sunday. Other options usually included the San Francisco 49ers, Oakland Raiders or Denver Broncos.

"Those were the games we got to watch," he said. "Honestly, I never felt a connection to any of those teams because of my city. But I still followed them."

Harrington expects to have a big following in the crowd at Seahawks Stadium. His mother has organized a group of about 500 fans who will board buses to make the 165-mile drive to cheer for the Lions.

"And I've heard numbers in the thousands," he said. "Not the big thousands, but maybe 1,000 or 2,000 people coming up. This is as close as the Lions come to playing in Portland, and it's been on people's calendars for a couple of years now."

The routine is a carry-over from his college days as Oregon's quarterback, when his mother organized bus trips from Portland to Eugene. As was done back then, the family arranged tickets for anyone who joined them.

"What they've done is gotten more buses," Harrington said.

There won't be time to visit relatives. He plans to return for that after the Thanksgiving Day game against Green Bay.

"This is a business trip," Harrington said. "We'll go in early on Friday, so there will be a little time to relax and maybe see a friend of two. For the most part, I'm there to play a football game."

Harrington is in his second NFL season after the Lions selected him with the third overall pick of the 2002 draft. He went 25-3 as Oregon's starter, cementing a place as one of the state's most successful and popular homegrown athletes.

One of his biggest fans will be working the opposing sideline.

"I really like Joey Harrington," Seattle coach Mike Holmgren said. "He got off to a tough start this year. The normal stuff happens, but I think he has a chance to be a very, very fine quarterback in this league if he can stay healthy."

In victories over the Raiders and Chicago Bears over the past two weeks, Harrington completed 63 percent of his passes, throwing for 355 yards with one touchdown and one interception.

Injuries, though, have slowed the Lions -- especially their running game. And the team's top draft pick, receiver Charles Rogers, is out indefinitely with a shoulder injury.

"We have a brand new tailback, a young quarterback and our No. 1 receiver is a rookie and then got injured," Harrington said. "It was tough to get things going. I think we're still building what we're trying to get going here."