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woodbuck27
07-21-2006, 09:07 PM
THU., JUL 20, 2006 - 12:35 AM

Packers: Comfort zone needed at running back

JASON WILDE 608-252-6176
jwilde@madison.com

GREEN BAY - When Green Bay Packers general manager Ted Thompson arrived at the running backs as he went through the position-by-position portion of his football report during Wednesday's annual shareholders meeting at Lambeau Field, he used the term "trial and error" to describe it.

Given the team went through six running backs - Ahman Green, Najeh Davenport, Tony Fisher, ReShard Lee, Samkon Gado and Noah Herron - during last year's 4-12 season, that's about as generous a description as Thompson could have used.

And yet, even with his top two backs coming back from serious injuries (Green ruptured the quadriceps tendon in his right leg Oct. 23; Davenport broke his right ankle Oct. 9), Fisher having signed with St. Louis as a free agent and Gado struggling to learn the team's new lead-zone blocking scheme, Thompson said Wednesday he likes what he sees.

"I'm pretty comfortable with the group," he said during a session with reporters. "Like any other position that I talked about today, I don't have any idea how it's going to turn out. But I think we have some fairly talented people."

Thompson, whose team ranked 30th in the NFL in rushing yards per game last season and 31st in yards per attempt, even said there was an upside to last year's injury plague, and offensive coordinator Jeff Jagodzinski agreed.

"There are some unknowns, but you really have four guys that could do it - Green, Davenport, Gado and Herron," Jagodzinski said.

http://www.madison.com/images/articles/wsj/2006/07/19/30333_thumb.jpg

Ahman Green, who played only five games last season, has yet to practice in the recently implemented lead-zone blocking scheme

But there are some major ifs with Green, who struggled even before his injury (77 carries for 255 yards - a 3.3-yard average - and no touchdowns in five games), and Davenport, who has never played a full 16-game season.

There's also the issue of both backs being behind learning the new blocking scheme, having missed all the offseason minicamp and organized team activity practices. Because neither player will be cleared to practice when training camp opens July 28, they'll be playing catch-up.

Thompson acknowledged "those other guys are going to probably have to take most of the reps starting out in training camp," while coach Mike McCarthy admitted Green and Davenport cannot learn the new scheme simply by watching it.

"I'll say this, the lead-zone scheme, I think, definitely plays to Ahman and Najeh's strength. You're looking for that one-cut guy," McCarthy said. "But I don't disagree with you. They definitely need reps."

Jagodzinski, who learned the scheme from Alex Gibbs in Atlanta, said it took Falcons halfback Warrick Dunn time to adjust to the change, and Dunn didn't miss as much practice time as Green and Davenport.

"They have seen it, but until you do it full-speed, you don't know," Jagodzinski said. "I know Warrick Dunn, his first year, he did (just) OK - and he's a really good running back. His next year he was in it, he turned in a Pro Bowl performance."

Until then, Gado and Herron will carry the load. During the offseason, Herron clearly was more comfortable with the zone blocking than Gado, who was the feel-good story of last season after rushing for 582 yards in eight games as an undrafted rookie. Jagodzinski and McCarthy hinted they may have to use Gado with more of the power-gap runs the team used last season.

"You can tell (the zone scheme) is very foreign to him. It's not natural to him right now, whereas Noah seems very comfortable," McCarthy said. "But it's not that Sam doesn't fit. It's nothing like that."

OS PA
07-21-2006, 11:51 PM
http://www.nfl.com/teams/story/TEN/9565795


Chris Brown wants out of Tennessee Click here to find out more!
NFL.com wire reports

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (July 21, 2006) -- Titans running back Chris Brown is heading into the final year of his contract and believes being traded away from a crowded backfield is his best career move, his agent said.

Brown's agents, Ryan Morgan and Wynn Silberman, officially requested a trade in a letter sent July 17. Brown has been the Titans' starter the past two years and tops the depth chart this season.

"To us, it's not anything against the organization," Morgan said. "We feel there are a number of other places that would provide a significantly better fit as Chris heads into this contract year."

The Titans, who report for training camp July 27, declined to comment on the trade request. General manager Floyd Reese has been working to sign the team's 10 draft picks, and was scheduled to meet July 21 with the agent for Vince Young.

But the Titans have plenty of running backs to choose from this season after drafting LenDale White out of Southern California in the second round. They traded for Travis Henry before last season, and he spent the offseason working himself into shape after recovering from an old ankle injury.

Also on the roster for training camp are Jarrett Payton, son of the late Walter Payton, Damien Bush and seventh-round draft pick Quinton Ganther.

The 6-foot-3, 220-pound Brown, a third-round pick out of Colorado in 2003, ran for 851 yards in 15 games in 2005, well ahead of Henry's 335 yards rushing while suspended for four games. Brown had 224 rushing attempts, only four more than he had in 2004 when he played four fewer games.

Brown ran for 1,067 yards, a 4.9-yard average, in 11 games as a starter in 2004. He put on some extra muscle this offseason to help his endurance.

"We think he clearly has the ability to be a top back in the league, and we are concerned. The roster composition is a concern for us. We understand that the NFL is very competitive, and Chris is up to that task," Morgan said.

"When you actually dig in and look at the facts as they are in Tennessee, the facts kind of speak for themselves as far as the future of the organization is headed."

The Titans didn't get a chance to run the ball much last season with only 397 rushes, the lowest total in coach Jeff Fisher's first 11 full seasons with the team. Trailing by double digits in each of their losses, throwing instead of running was their lone option most of the season.


Wouldn't mind picking him up. He had a 1,000 yard season in 2004 when the Titans still had a team.

Anybody know if the titans are looking for a mammoth guard and a washed up punter? (lol)