HOUSTON -- Now that the outside world has realized a person named Jake Delhomme is starting at quarterback for a team playing in Sunday's Super Bowl, everyone wants to know The Secret.
What is it about this guy? How come he's playing so well all of a sudden? Will he be troubled by all the attention this week?
Carolina offensive coordinator Dan Henning might have put it best Thursday at the Panthers' final interview session.
"He does have something not everyone has," Henning said, "and it is the kind of thing that you sometimes don't find in a first-round draft choice or a lot of other big-name players.
"The No. 1 thing Jake Delhomme has is something you see in a great golfer, or in football, in a great cornerback," he said. "A great golfer can miss a shot, leave a putt short or maybe hit too hard and mess up a hole; a great cornerback will get beat every now and then, it happens to all of them. The difference is that the great ones, whether a golfer or a cornerback, will put it out of their minds, they have the ability to compartmentalize each shot on the golf course or each play on the football field, and when a bad one happens, they don't let it bother them.
"The great ones have an ability to move on to the next one," Henning said, "and no, I am not saying Jake Delhomme is a great quarterback. I'm saying he understands enough about the game to be able to move on after a bad play."
Henning went one step further.
"We think quarterbacks can be found more easily than you can find, say, a Julius Peppers (defensive end)," Henning said. "Quarterbacks are out there, and by that I mean the kind we're looking for. We are not an organization that wants to draft a quarterback in the first round and say, 'It's all on you.' We think quarterbacks at this level have a certain physical ability that is almost a given. If you can find a guy who is intelligent, can engage that brain and assimilate the kind of teaching we require, you have a guy who can help you win."
Those sentiments ring true to any number of quarterbacks in the league, including the one in New England who backs up starter Tom Brady.
"I completely relate to what's happened with Jake," said Patriots' backup Damon Huard, a 30 year-old, seventh-year player from the University of Washington. "We played against each other in (NFL) Europe in '98. I was at Frankfurt and the next year he was at Frankfurt when they won.
"Jake has been a source of encouragement for a lot of us because a lot of us are sort in a similar situation with him," Huard said. "I was at Miami, backing up a guy named Dan Marino and when he got hurt, I got a chance to play and I played pretty well. It was because of that opportunity that I'm still in the league."
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By BART WRIGHT, Gannett News Service