Here's Sean Spence talking about his similar injury, took 6 months for nerve, Jaylon is at 4 months right now:
NFL linebacker Sean Spence knows exactly where Smith is coming from.
The recent free agent acquisition of the Tennessee Titans suffered an almost identical injury to Smith’s in the final game of the preseason his rookie year (2012) with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Torn ACL. Torn LCL. Nerve Damage. The difference for the third-round draft choice out of Miami (Fla.) was that the nerve specialist he spoke with told him there was a good chance he’d never play football again. And that’s he’d have to wear a special boot just to walk.
“Tell him to keep the faith,” Spence said of Smith. “Tell him to continue to trust God, because that’s the only person who can fix it for him. Man can’t do nothing for him. Put his trust in God, and everything will work out.
“Work hard. Do what he can do. Control what he can control, which is getting up and rehabbing every day. Making sure the knee is completely fine. Once his nerve comes back, he’s not going to notice it anymore.”
Spence cried. Many times, in the six months that it took before there was any sign that specialist was wrong.
It started with him being able to wiggle a toe. Then the next day he could wiggle another. Within a week the whole foot had sensation in it.
“Before that happened, I used to constantly try to pull my foot up,” Spence said, “even though I knew it wouldn’t move. I constantly tried to pull it every second of the day. Any time, any chance I made sure I pull my foot up.
“I used to slap the side of my leg, do anything to try to wake that nerve up. Eventually it worked out for me.”
And today, Spence says he’s physically as well off as he ever was. He missed only the 2012 rookie season because of the knee, but he sat out the 2013 season because of a broken finger, before putting together impressive seasons on the field in 2014 and 2015.
Spence said he has watched video of Smith’s injury many times. And he planned to watch the draft until Smith’s wait ended.
“I was in his shoes, and it was a bad place to be,” he said. “I just want to encourage him.”
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