ST. LOUIS — Marshall Faulk spotted the rest of the league two games and still won the NFL's Most Valuable Player award easily.
"He's the greatest player in the NFL, and that's something that's obvious to us," St. Louis Rams tight end Roland Williams said. "We're glad everybody else can see it."
Faulk was a last-minute scratch for the Panthers game in Week 9 when loose cartilage locked up in his right knee, and he underwent arthroscopic surgery the following day.
He missed the next game, and the Rams used him sparingly the two games after that, which didn't keep him from setting an NFL record with 26 touchdowns. He also topped 2,000 yards rushing and receiving for the second straight season.
The first half of the season, Faulk was probably the MVP favorite.
"I think once I got injured, the talk went away," Faulk said. "Just deciding to get it done when I did was probably the best thing I did. I guess it was just good timing on our part."
Last season, teammate Kurt Warner was the MVP.
"The guy, I felt, deserved it as much as anybody last year and definitely deserves it this year," Warner said.
Faulk, 27, received 24 votes from a nationwide panel of 50 sports writers and broadcasters. Philadelphia quarterback Donovan McNabb (11) was second, followed by Tennessee running back Eddie George (8), Oakland quarterback Rich Gannon (5), Indianapolis quarterback Peyton Manning (1) and Baltimore linebacker Ray Lewis (1).
Faulk set the NFL record with 2,429 yards last year. This year, he set a record with three four-TD games and totaled 2,189 yards, second behind Edgerrin James' 2,303.
In the past three games, Faulk scored 11 touchdowns and had 572 yards rushing and receiving. He saved the best for last, rushing for 220 yards and catching seven passes for 41 yards in a victory over the Saints that, combined with Chicago's upset of Detroit, put the Rams in the postseason.
"I think these last three weeks I found myself back to where I was before I got hurt," Faulk said. "I could feel the difference, I could see the difference. As that happened, my workload increased."
His game isn't just statistics. Coach Mike Martz has often complimented Faulk for his on-field awareness and leadership off the field, and he doesn't mind doing the little things. "He does everything so well," general manager Charley Armey said. "He had three or four really big blocks in the Saints game, he picks up the blitz real well and lead blocks when he has to.
"I don't know if anybody has ever had a ballplayer that could do everything as well as he can do it."
"A player of his stature, invariably in professional sports, has this certain amount of selfishness, and that lower lip starts to hang," Martz said. "That's not Marshall at all. He's the most unselfish professional athlete I think I've ever been around."