vince
12-11-2007, 08:13 AM
Some posters have been down on some members of the secondary, particularly coming out of the Dallas fiasco without Woodson. The article below caused me to make some assessments of the secondary, and speculate on what the future could hold in this area.
Safety
Contrary to some, I think the Packers are solid at the safety position with the combination of Rouse, Collins and Bigby.
I think Rouse has the highest upside of the three. He appears to be able to play the ball well, and while he has a lot to learn fundamentally in run support, his reputation is one that indicates he has the mindset to be a stout run supporter. If he can take the next step through experience, take better angles and wrap up, he could be very good.
Bigby has demonstrated inexperience against the pass, but has been stout in run support. He is an athletic guy, albeit on the short side, who I believe will get better breaking up passes and making plays on the ball. His limitation is that I think he's strictly a strong safety. With this defense, it is good to have someone like Collins (and possibly Rouse) who can play both positions interchangeably. That said, I think Bigby has the ability and will gain the experience in pass defense to be part of the solution as a starting-calibre guy. His unique ability to fill the box and provide a strong line of defense against the run is an asset, IMO.
Collins has demonstrated that he can make plays and seems to be the one that the coaches are most comfortable with running the show checking in and out of coverages in the backfield. He's not as punishing a tackler as Bigby, but is probably better in pass defense. He doesn't have as much upside as Rouse making plays on the ball, but is probably better against the run, at this point anyway. In the end, I think his ability to put the secondary in the best situation combined with his athleticism and adequacy in defending both the run and the pass make him a starter.
I think Peprah also has skills to fill depth in the roster, contribute on special teams, and play as an emergency safety, but if the opportunity comes to acquire a player who can compete with the top three, that's great.
Corner
At corner, obviously, you've got the aging starters who noone would argue against as the top two guys, but three of the other four provide interesting potential - for different reasons.
The keepers, IMO are Tramon Williams, Will Blackmon, and Jaret Bush. To get one guy out of the way, replace Walker as soon as possible, IMO. He's shown little in his years in the league, accept the propensity to give space and completions.
I think Jaret Bush has the athleticism and attitude to be an adequate last guy on the roster at corner, even though he's been largely a liability this year. His particular value is his aggressive play and effectiveness on special teams, which are important, so IMO, you keep him.
Williams is a small-built speedster who also has special teams value, but I think his ultimate value is at the nickel spot. His lack of build may preclude him from being a starting bump-and-run guy who can wear out receivers over the course of a game - in fact he's probably the one that gets worn out trying to push around some of the big receivers in today's game - but this is a guy with superior speed who can provide spot nickel play and run with slot receivers with the best of them.
Blackmon is the guy that I hope has the potential to be an every down corner in the future. We haven't seen much of him outside of his strong burst and elusiveness returning punts and kicks, combined with aggressive special teams play, but those skills would seem to translate well to corner. If he can demonstrate the ball skills in the neighborhood of Woodson, I think we've got ourselves a corner.
That leaves, IMO, a strong need for another starting corner for the future. This next offseason should be the year to draft who TT thinks could be that guy. We've still got a year or so with Harris/Woodson, so now's the time to get a young bump-and-runner and try to develop him.
http://www.packersnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/PKR01/712110440/1989
McCarthy goes 10 deep in secondary
By Rob Demovsky
rdemovsk@greenbaypressgazette.com
Activating all 10 defensive backs on the roster might become the norm for the Green Bay Packers the rest of the regular season.
Coach Mike McCarthy said on Monday he liked the rotation in the secondary during Sunday's 38-7 win over the Oakland Raiders, which was the first time in two seasons he kept that many defensive backs on the 45-man game-day roster.
Defensive coordinator Bob Sanders used four cornerbacks — Jarrett Bush, Tramon Williams, Will Blackmon and Frank Walker — in the nickel defensive back role against the Raiders, and it was more due to a planned rotation than because of the strained calf Bush sustained in the game. Bush finished the game, even playing in the base defense after starter Charles Woodson was pulled in the fourth quarter. Bush's status for Sunday's game at St. Louis remained up in the air on Monday, with McCarthy saying he probably won't practice until Friday.
That means it could be another week of rotating cornerbacks in the nickel defense. Sanders also gave safety Aaron Rouse a few snaps in place of Nick Collins against the Raiders and could again this week.
It's unusual for a team with an 11-2 record to be rotating players this late in the year.
"There's not a great deal of separation there," secondary coach Kurt Schottenheimer said. "Those kids all have shown at different points that they have the potential to go out and play winning football for us. Clearly, (Bush) won the third corner position coming out of training camp. We know who the top two corners are (Woodson and Al Harris), but we realize these are very skilled athletes that we'd like to get on the field as much as we possibly can. The more you get them out there against quality receivers, you get a chance to work on their development."
Come the postseason, it's hard to imagine McCarthy doing anything but going with his best player at each position, but for the remaining three regular-season games, the plan the coaches used against Oakland could continue.
"These last three games, probably the most important statistic is going to be the health of our football team," McCarthy said. "That is my focus, to make sure we enter the playoffs as healthy as possible."
McCarthy will have to find a balance between keeping key players healthy and playing to win, considering playoff seeding is on the line.
"You have to play to win; you start the game with that approach," McCarthy said. "We've come to the point where we feel comfortable putting our young players in, regardless of their experience level. Those are good problems to have. It's a great question: how do you balance it? It's something we talk about week to week in game planning."
Safety
Contrary to some, I think the Packers are solid at the safety position with the combination of Rouse, Collins and Bigby.
I think Rouse has the highest upside of the three. He appears to be able to play the ball well, and while he has a lot to learn fundamentally in run support, his reputation is one that indicates he has the mindset to be a stout run supporter. If he can take the next step through experience, take better angles and wrap up, he could be very good.
Bigby has demonstrated inexperience against the pass, but has been stout in run support. He is an athletic guy, albeit on the short side, who I believe will get better breaking up passes and making plays on the ball. His limitation is that I think he's strictly a strong safety. With this defense, it is good to have someone like Collins (and possibly Rouse) who can play both positions interchangeably. That said, I think Bigby has the ability and will gain the experience in pass defense to be part of the solution as a starting-calibre guy. His unique ability to fill the box and provide a strong line of defense against the run is an asset, IMO.
Collins has demonstrated that he can make plays and seems to be the one that the coaches are most comfortable with running the show checking in and out of coverages in the backfield. He's not as punishing a tackler as Bigby, but is probably better in pass defense. He doesn't have as much upside as Rouse making plays on the ball, but is probably better against the run, at this point anyway. In the end, I think his ability to put the secondary in the best situation combined with his athleticism and adequacy in defending both the run and the pass make him a starter.
I think Peprah also has skills to fill depth in the roster, contribute on special teams, and play as an emergency safety, but if the opportunity comes to acquire a player who can compete with the top three, that's great.
Corner
At corner, obviously, you've got the aging starters who noone would argue against as the top two guys, but three of the other four provide interesting potential - for different reasons.
The keepers, IMO are Tramon Williams, Will Blackmon, and Jaret Bush. To get one guy out of the way, replace Walker as soon as possible, IMO. He's shown little in his years in the league, accept the propensity to give space and completions.
I think Jaret Bush has the athleticism and attitude to be an adequate last guy on the roster at corner, even though he's been largely a liability this year. His particular value is his aggressive play and effectiveness on special teams, which are important, so IMO, you keep him.
Williams is a small-built speedster who also has special teams value, but I think his ultimate value is at the nickel spot. His lack of build may preclude him from being a starting bump-and-run guy who can wear out receivers over the course of a game - in fact he's probably the one that gets worn out trying to push around some of the big receivers in today's game - but this is a guy with superior speed who can provide spot nickel play and run with slot receivers with the best of them.
Blackmon is the guy that I hope has the potential to be an every down corner in the future. We haven't seen much of him outside of his strong burst and elusiveness returning punts and kicks, combined with aggressive special teams play, but those skills would seem to translate well to corner. If he can demonstrate the ball skills in the neighborhood of Woodson, I think we've got ourselves a corner.
That leaves, IMO, a strong need for another starting corner for the future. This next offseason should be the year to draft who TT thinks could be that guy. We've still got a year or so with Harris/Woodson, so now's the time to get a young bump-and-runner and try to develop him.
http://www.packersnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/PKR01/712110440/1989
McCarthy goes 10 deep in secondary
By Rob Demovsky
rdemovsk@greenbaypressgazette.com
Activating all 10 defensive backs on the roster might become the norm for the Green Bay Packers the rest of the regular season.
Coach Mike McCarthy said on Monday he liked the rotation in the secondary during Sunday's 38-7 win over the Oakland Raiders, which was the first time in two seasons he kept that many defensive backs on the 45-man game-day roster.
Defensive coordinator Bob Sanders used four cornerbacks — Jarrett Bush, Tramon Williams, Will Blackmon and Frank Walker — in the nickel defensive back role against the Raiders, and it was more due to a planned rotation than because of the strained calf Bush sustained in the game. Bush finished the game, even playing in the base defense after starter Charles Woodson was pulled in the fourth quarter. Bush's status for Sunday's game at St. Louis remained up in the air on Monday, with McCarthy saying he probably won't practice until Friday.
That means it could be another week of rotating cornerbacks in the nickel defense. Sanders also gave safety Aaron Rouse a few snaps in place of Nick Collins against the Raiders and could again this week.
It's unusual for a team with an 11-2 record to be rotating players this late in the year.
"There's not a great deal of separation there," secondary coach Kurt Schottenheimer said. "Those kids all have shown at different points that they have the potential to go out and play winning football for us. Clearly, (Bush) won the third corner position coming out of training camp. We know who the top two corners are (Woodson and Al Harris), but we realize these are very skilled athletes that we'd like to get on the field as much as we possibly can. The more you get them out there against quality receivers, you get a chance to work on their development."
Come the postseason, it's hard to imagine McCarthy doing anything but going with his best player at each position, but for the remaining three regular-season games, the plan the coaches used against Oakland could continue.
"These last three games, probably the most important statistic is going to be the health of our football team," McCarthy said. "That is my focus, to make sure we enter the playoffs as healthy as possible."
McCarthy will have to find a balance between keeping key players healthy and playing to win, considering playoff seeding is on the line.
"You have to play to win; you start the game with that approach," McCarthy said. "We've come to the point where we feel comfortable putting our young players in, regardless of their experience level. Those are good problems to have. It's a great question: how do you balance it? It's something we talk about week to week in game planning."