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vince
09-04-2007, 12:13 PM
http://www.packersnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070904/PKR01/709040495/1989


Defensive tackle Jolly makes giant strides
After subpar rookie year, he's pushing for starting job

By Rob Demovsky
rdemovsk@greenbaypressgazette.com


It turns out the Green Bay Packers weren't just pumping up Johnny Jolly during training camp in an effort to drum up interest on the trading market because of their surplus at defensive tackle.


No, the Packers came away so impressed with the second-year pro's preseason performance that he's been thrust into the mix of potential starters alongside Ryan Pickett on the interior of the defensive line.


When it comes time to select a starter this week for Sunday's regular-season opener against the Philadelphia Eagles, defensive coordinator Bob Sanders and coach Mike McCarthy just might go with Jolly. If that becomes a reality, it would cap one of the greatest about-faces in recent team history.


A year ago, Jolly was something of a long shot to stick on the Packers' 53-man roster when they broke camp. As a rookie sixth-round draft pick, Jolly was slowed by the ankle injury that dogged him during his final season at Texas A&M and subsequently led to him being available to the Packers with the 183rd overall pick in the 2006 draft.


Jolly didn't see the field in the regular season until the sixth game, and two weeks later, was inactive for another five-game stretch. He finally found a regular spot in the rotation late in the season and played the final four games as a backup.


A year later, he appears to have beaten out Corey Williams (an 11-game starter last season) and Colin Cole (who has made eight starts over the last three seasons) for that second defensive tackle spot. All three are likely to play ahead of rookie first-round draft pick Justin Harrell — who, along with the sixth defensive tackle on the roster, rookie free agent Daniel Muir, are likely to be Week 1 inactives.


No starting spot is safe at the Packers' deepest position, but for reasons that include his preseason performance and how he matches up against the Eagles' offensive line, the 6-foot-3, 320-pound Jolly could be the opening-day starter.


"He came in last year and had the ankle, but he kept flashing things, so we knew it was coming," said Packers defensive tackles coach Robert Nunn, who on Monday would not reveal whether Jolly will start this week. "We just had to get him healthy."


Jolly spent all offseason in Green Bay but showed up for training camp out of shape.


He couldn't pass the running test administered the day before practice began, but coaches chalked that up to the time he spent away from the gym this summer while dealing with the death of a close family friend.


When Jolly was cleared to practice three days into camp, his offseason work showed up. He added about 5 pounds, mostly in the muscles of his lower body. That helped him play with better anchor and made it nearly impossible for offensive linemen to move him around. He also worked on his pass-rush moves and though he's probably not the pass rusher that Williams is from the inside, he stood out during the one-on-one drills this summer.


"He had a very good camp," Sanders said of Jolly. "He's matured into his role. It's still a work in progress, but he's becoming a professional."


Jolly's role — and that of the rest of the defensive tackles — is far from set in stone. Sanders and Nunn said on Monday that a guy could be a starter one week and a backup the next. Nunn said he considers four of the tackles to be legitimate starters. Though he didn't name names, he was presumably speaking of Cole, Jolly, Pickett and Williams. He wouldn't say for sure that Harrell would be inactive this week, but it's unlikely he would be on the 45-man game-day roster considering last year the Packers almost always dressed four defensive tackles.


"We've got six defensive tackles that could go out there and start," Jolly said. "So you never know from game to game."


That's nothing new for this group, however, considering that last year Cole opened the season as a starter and by Week 3 he was a healthy inactive. In all likelihood, Nunn and Sanders will try to play to each tackle's strengths. For example, Jolly might see more work on early downs because he's more adept at stopping the run, while Williams (who had a career-high seven sacks last season) probably will see more action on third downs and in obvious passing situations because he's a better pass rusher.


"That's tough, man, because you really don't know," Williams said. "It's kind of irritating, but we're all good guys and not selfish. If it's me starting, then fine. If it's Jolly starting or Cole starting, then fine. Whoever it might be, we're all going to be prepared to play regardless.


"Johnny worked a lot with the first group (on Monday), so that's what I'm saying. You just never know."


Green Bay Packers defensive tackle Johnny Jolly runs through drills during practice on Clarke Hinkle Field on Monday. The former sixth-round draft pick has blossomed into a possible starter in his second year as a pro.

H. Marc Larson/Press-Gazette

vince
09-04-2007, 12:22 PM
http://www.packers.com/news/stories/2007/09/03/1/


On And Off Field, Jolly Grows Up In A Hurry
by Mike Spofford, Packers.com
posted 09/03/2007

When defensive tackle Johnny Jolly showed up for his second NFL training camp on July 27 unable to complete his conditioning test, which forced him to miss the first few practices, it would have been easy to lump him in with all the other young players who don't quite understand what it takes to make it in professional football.

But immature is no label to affix to Johnny Jolly. Not even close.

While overcoming that early absence in camp to land a Week 1 starting spot at defensive tackle speaks to his growth as an up-and-coming player, the strength and grace with which he's dealt with a personal offseason tragedy, and the responsibility he assumed in the wake of it, more accurately depicts his maturity as a 24-year-old man.

Back on May 19, the Packers were in the middle of their full-squad mini-camp and Jolly was spending that Saturday night with teammates, shooting pool at fellow defensive tackle Corey Williams' house.

Nearing midnight, Jolly got a phone call from his mother in Houston, telling him his 34-year-old god-sister, Keisha Beechum, was dead, but she didn't know any details. Unsure whether Keisha's death was related to the stress or grief over her own father's passing earlier that month, Jolly called his niece, only to learn that Keisha, on a trip to Shreveport, La., with her husband, had been shot by a group of gunmen while being robbed.

"I couldn't believe it," Jolly said. "I was like, 'This can't be happening.' I had just talked to her on the phone maybe a couple days before."

Jolly spoke to her often because he considered Keisha a "blood sister." The daughter of a family friend, Keisha lived with the Jollys for a few years when Johnny was young, and Jolly was extremely close to Keisha's twin seven-year-old boys, whom he calls his nephews.

A devastated Jolly left Green Bay and flew to Houston the next morning. He was asked by family members to break the news to the twins, nicknamed Itty and Turk, who were turning eight that week. He had to explain to them that their mother wouldn't be back for their birthday party, or any more birthday parties.

He could tell his nephews didn't understand, and it was just as difficult for Jolly to watch them try to come to grips with it as it was to cope with it himself. He decided to have the boys stay with him for a while, and other than a trip back to Green Bay in June for a portion of the team's organized team activities (OTAs), Jolly took care of the young boys until he left at the end of July to report for training camp.

"I'd take them to the mall, take them anywhere, just to let them relax and not have it on their mind so much," Jolly said. "As far as training camp, the hard part was they wanted to come and go to school here. But after the season I knew I'd be leaving and going back to Houston, and I didn't want to transfer them back in the middle of the year.

"So I had to let them know I had to come here to take care of business, and I made sure everyone would be all right."

Back to football
The boys have gone back and forth between staying with Jolly's mother and their father, and Jolly certainly took care of business in training camp.

After missing those first few practices, which defensive tackles coach Robert Nunn said "burned him up, ate him up inside," Jolly has been a force on the field and battled with a deep group of defensive tackles to get the opening day starting nod. Nunn said it didn't take Jolly long to get back in shape because he had been so dedicated to his conditioning during the team's offseason program.

Nunn recalled that when Jolly was entering the draft out of Texas A&M, he caught the Packers' eye because when they watched tapes of his college games, he showed up the most against the Big 12 Conference's toughest teams - Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas.

He struggled to show that last year, however, because of a lingering ankle injury that had probably contributed to his draft stock falling to the sixth round. It wasn't until the season wound down that he was fully healthy, and he was making an impact when he got playing time, taking up multiple blockers and wreaking havoc at the point of attack.

That's how he looked in training camp again this year, which was highlighted by a remarkable interception of a screen pass during which the 6-foot-3, 312-pound Jolly showed the athleticism of a linebacker and the hands of a receiver to make the play.

"I think he's gained a lot of confidence," Nunn said. "This guy is a highly competitive kid. He's learned how to handle his toughness. By that I mean sometimes he'd get a little too emotional and it would cost him, not playing good technique, but he's staying more focused with his energy."

Staying connected
Jolly talks to Itty and Turk every day. They've even begun calling him "Daddy."

They want to know everything going on with the football season, an interest that has peaked since Jolly enrolled them in their first football camp this past July. Jolly believes Itty is determined to play his position of defensive tackle, even though he's one of the smallest players on the field.

Next is to get them into a youth football league, but Jolly says he'll wait until next offseason to do that. In the meantime, he looks forward to that daily call.

"They want to know when my latest old-school car is coming out of the paint shop, when the next game is so they can go to my mother's house and watch it," Jolly said.

That conversation is far more enjoyable than when Jolly wakes up in the morning, his sleep disturbed by the reality that the case remains unsolved. There are no definitive answers to Keisha's death, at least not yet.

For now, in order to focus as much as he can on football, he leaves it to his mother to keep up with the police investigation, and she gives him occasional updates.

"I want to know who the killer is myself," he said. "That's something I want to know. I wish I knew, but I don't have a clue right now."

Thankful for support
Jolly won't say the tragedy, and all the family responsibilities that came with it, had anything to do with him cramping up during his running test back on July 27.

He's also not going to correlate his rapid ascension as a player to the raised level of maturity that inevitably develops from dealing with such a difficult loss and its aftermath.

He'd prefer to credit his faith in the Lord, and his teammates, for helping him persevere from May 19 until now. He's quick to mention that Head Coach Mike McCarthy, Nunn, assistant special teams coach Shawn Slocum, defensive linemate Ryan Pickett, and former Packers director of player development George Koonce all came to Keisha's funeral to support him, and he received numerous phone calls from teammates while he was away.

"I consider Green Bay as a family to me too," Jolly said. "When I was going through this, everyone was giving me a family feeling.

"They called my family to let everyone know they were there for us. They kept me in a nice comfort zone because I knew they had my back, and when I came back everything was still rolling, because they were still with me."

The Jolly family also got some wonderful news on July 4, when Jolly's younger sister gave birth to twin girls.

And now, training camp complete, Jolly is ready to run out of the Lambeau Field tunnel as a starting defensive tackle, alongside his buddy Pickett, for the season opener on Sunday against Philadelphia.

May 19 will always be with him. But July 27? Ancient history.

"I knew once I had a chance to get back on the field and show that I had been working out, everything would clear up," Jolly said. "I work hard at playing my position. I want to be the best at my position.

"I know what I'd done in the offseason to get better, and once I came back and got in the pads and got back in the flow, everything kept running like I'd never missed a beat."

BallHawk
09-04-2007, 01:48 PM
It's funny to thing that, just a year ago, he was a 6th round pick with a funny name that we made fun of.

Now he's one of the top DTs on our roster. Go figure. :D

Mazzin
09-04-2007, 05:12 PM
I think the team will benefit even more because of the competition. When each guy is out on the field they will try even harder because they want to stand out to the coaches, and get the start the following week.

I feel so great about our defense! :wow:

RashanGary
09-04-2007, 05:48 PM
There were poeple last year who thought Jolly dropped because of his ankle and thought he could be a 6th round gem because of it. I also heard him on 107.5 here in GB and he came accross as a guy who "got it" as far as working hard and staying focused. I didn't expect him to pass Williams this fast though. He might be our best DT right now.

Joemailman
09-04-2007, 06:18 PM
Beware The Jolly Green Giant!

http://www.thom.org/photos/hohoho.jpg

swede
09-04-2007, 10:02 PM
http://i190.photobucket.com/albums/z236/dsteenswede44/greengiant.jpg