McCoy: Injured arm will be 100 percent in 2 weeks

Colt McCoy says his injured right arm is healing and should be 100
percent in about two weeks, giving him plenty of time to prepare
for the NFL combine.
The former Texas quarterback was knocked out of the BCS
championship game early in the 37-21 loss to Alabama. A hard tackle
pinched a nerve and caused his throwing arm to go numb.
On Thursday, McCoy was announced as the winner of the Manning
Award as the nation's best college quarterback. In a conference
call with reporters, McCoy said he met with sports doctor James
Andrews in Birmingham, Ala., on Monday and was told he'll have a
full recovery without surgery.
"He basically told me I would be fine with two weeks of
rehab," McCoy said.
"I certainly expect to go and do things at the combine" in
February, McCoy said. "I'm doing much better now."
NFL teams will be interested in how quickly he recovers. When
he was a freshman in 2006, a pinched nerve in his throwing shoulder
knocked him out of a loss at Kansas State and affected him two
weeks later in a loss to Texas A&M.
McCoy said Andrews assured him the latest injury does not
make him a higher risk of having it happen again, but he did not
want to speculate on where he might be taken in the April draft.
McCoy has signed with an agent David Dunn and was in
California to start his rehabilitation. He said his right arm is
getting stronger every day.
McCoy, whose 45 career wins as a starting quarterback are an
NCAA record, said he was hurt by some suggestions that he should
have tried to return to the game. Freshman Garrett Gilbert played
the rest of the game and led a second-half comeback that fell short
late in the fourth quarter.
"That's bad for somebody to say. That frustrates me," McCoy
said. "That's just people talking. If the rest of my body was numb
and my right arm was healthy, I would have been out there playing.
It took away what I do, and that's throwing the ball."
McCoy also talked about his engagement Monday night to
girlfriend Rachel Glandorf. McCoy proposed on the 50-yard line at
Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium.
McCoy said he designed the engagement ring. He bought it
before the bowl game and kept it secret from everyone except his
mother. He didn't say the carat weight of the diamonds.
After getting a good medical report and signing with his
agent, McCoy said, the time was right to propose. He had "Will You
Marry Me" written on the stadium's giant high-definition scoreboard
screen for the big moment and dropped to his knee to ask her.
"Rachel and I have been dating for a long time," McCoy said.
"As I was going off to get ready for the next phase of my life, I
wanted her to be a part of it."