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Buffalo Bills tackle Cordy Glenn gets second opinion on injured foot

By The Sports Xchange
At left tackle for the Buffalo Bills, there has been some concern over the health of Cordy Glenn (pictured), but he has been able to practice fully the last two days. Photo courtesy of Buffalo Bills/Twitter
At left tackle for the Buffalo Bills, there has been some concern over the health of Cordy Glenn (pictured), but he has been able to practice fully the last two days. Photo courtesy of Buffalo Bills/Twitter

ROCHESTER, N.Y. -- At left tackle for the Buffalo Bills, there has been some concern over the health of Cordy Glenn, but he has been able to practice fully the last two days, a positive sign for him and the team. Glenn missed much of the offseason program with a foot injury, and part of the time he was in a walking boot.

Until the last couple days, Glenn had been only a limited participant in practice at St. John Fisher College, and late last week he went down to Charlotte to get a second opinion to hopefully find out what may be ailing him, something he did on his own and not because the team told him to do so

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"We're always concerned," head coach Sean McDermott said. "You want to look and see what's going on there. Dr. (Robert) Anderson got a good look at things. Cordy's going to practice today and we'll see how it goes."

Glenn said Sunday, "I'm feeling good. I just had ongoing soreness. I was just basically trying to see what was going on with it, and I think we've got a good plan to just practice and see how everything goes."

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Wide receiver Sammy Watkins said he's feeling fine, even after Sunday's workout which he had to leave briefly when he rolled his left ankle.

"I'll be out here tomorrow catching passes," Watkins said, and he was right. He was practicing in full on Monday. "I just had a scare, I kind of rolled it a little bit, and then I came back out here and was running routes and I was fine."

Watkins said he tried to practice without the elaborate tape job he had been working with which was providing his surgically-repaired foot a little more stability and the cost of some flexibility, and that proved be a mistake. When he left the field, he had a trainer wrap his ankle the way it had been during the first week of camp.

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