GREEN BAY, Wis. — Vince Young says the Green Bay Packers are getting a more mature, stronger person. What kind of quarterback the team is getting in the 30-year-old Young remains to be seen.
"That's the mystery of it, sort of the intrigue," general manager Ted Thompson said Tuesday after Young completed his first practice in a Packers uniform.
The Packers are hoping that Young, out of football last year after being cut by the Buffalo Bills, can pick up the offense quickly enough to make a serious run at the backup job behind Aaron Rodgers.
After five up-and-down years as the Tennessee Titans' starter and one year as a backup to Michael Vick with the Philadelphia Eagles, Young says the Packers are getting someone who has experienced both success and failure on the field (31-19 career record as a starter, two Pro Bowl selections, a 74.4 career passer rating) and has grown up off the field while getting married and trying to navigate through financial problems.
If the Packers get a more reliable backup than incumbent No. 2 quarterback Graham Harrell or third-stringer B.J. Coleman, signing Young to a one-year deal will prove well worth the risk.
"Back in the day, I was a young Vince. Now, I'm more mature and definitely learned from things that happened in the past," Young said. "I'm married now, a grown man, 30 years old. I've definitely been through the highs and the lows and different things like that. It's the way you come out of it to stay strong. I'm stronger than I've ever been."
Young doesn't have much time to learn the playbook and make an impression, but said he isn't fazed by the odds being against him.
"(It's) no challenge. I've been through pretty much everything you can think of," Young said. "I'm just happy, enjoying this and just happy to be here and being here with some special, special guys. My whole thing is to continue to keep working and get myself better and just staying ready — you never know."