Burress takes field in pads

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Burress, who has been bothered by a troublesome right ankle, jogged a few pass routes during individual drills and lined up with the starters as they walked through a couple of plays in the evening workout. He did not run any patterns full speed, but he did catch a couple of passes from Eli Manning.

"It's like riding a bicycle - it's like I never left," Burress said.

Burress did not participate in either 7-on-7 or 11-on-11 drills. Both are run at full speed. He took his helmet off during those drills, put on a visor and watched roughly the final hour of practice.

"I just wanted to go out and gauge how I feel," Burress said. "I felt OK. I just got some new stuff (orthotics) in my shoes and this is the first day I ran in them. My feet are a little sore right now, so it's something I have to get used to. Once I get used to it and get the soreness out, I'll be back out here."

The Giants will take Wednesday off. Burress hopes to practice on Thursday.

Burress led the Giants in receptions last season, including the game-winning catch in the Super Bowl win over New England. He caught a career-high 12 touchdown passes.

Burress' right ankle is the same one that prevented him from practicing almost all of last season, but this injury is different. The team is trying to fix the problem with the orthotics.

Burress had said on Sunday that he would not practice until the ankle was 100 percent. While he was on the field on Tuesday night, it was evident that he could not go full speed.

"I talked with him before practice," Drew Rosenhaus, Burress' agent, said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "He felt better and decided to do a few things."

The ankle is not the only issue for Burress, who turned 31 on Tuesday. He refused to participate in team minicamp in June because the Giants refused to renegotiate his contract. He has three years left on a deal that will pay him $3.25 million this season.

Some had speculated that Burress was not going to practice until he got a new deal.

"There is no correlation between Plax's negotiations and practicing," Rosenhaus said Tuesday.

Giants general manager Jerry Reese said this week that the team wants to get Burress a new deal before the season starts.

After practice ended, Burress walked to the sideline, picked up his son and walked back to a group of receivers as they stretched. He left the field with his son in his arms.

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