Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Regardless of our crappy 0-Line..What's up with Ryan Grant?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Originally posted by Patler
    In answer to a question, at his press conference MM said Grant graded out very high in his decision making against Seattle. I'm sure it wasn't 100%, but MM implied that he went where he should have on most plays.

    In a radio interview, Wells said they really didn't block many plays cleanly. He said in spite of how many plays they ran, a lineman missed or didn't finish on just about every play, so Grant never had a clean hole.
    I believe what MM and Wells say about the running game. If the O line can play better, the best is ahead for Grant.
    To much of a good thing is an awesome thing

    Comment


    • #17
      Originally posted by Patler
      Originally posted by GBRulz
      My thought is that if you're going to pay a player the money, don't want until the end of training camp to do it. Had he been in camp and OTA's taking the reps, I think he would be in better football shape.

      I think Grant is on the verge of turning it around and I'm not too worried.
      You do realize that he was signed shortly after camp started, even before "Family Night", a week before the first preseason game, don't you?

      His problem wasn't a "holdout", it was that he happened to get hurt early in camp, with a lingering injury that has affected him the better part of two months.
      Ok, I stand corrected. He only missed one week of training camp. He also missed all of the off-season OTA's & minicamps. Anyhow, my point remains being that I can't help thinking that missing so many practices hindered him from a faster start this year.

      Comment


      • #18
        Ryan Grant ='s the 2007 verison of Samkon Gado....

        Bring back SAMKON! :P

        Comment


        • #19
          Originally posted by GBRulz
          Ok, I stand corrected. He only missed one week of training camp. He also missed all of the off-season OTA's & minicamps. Anyhow, my point remains being that I can't help thinking that missing so many practices hindered him from a faster start this year.
          He didn't miss those either. He attended all of them, attended all the meetings and he attended, but didn't participate in the on-field stuff. Of course those amount to little more than walk-throughs because hitting is not allowed anyway. He wasn't the only player who didn't do those. For years veterans have skipped those things entirely, as they are not mandatory, and anyone rehabbing an injury skips the on-field stuff. Grant even attended the voluntary weight lifting and conditioning program that wasn't mandatory.

          Grant suffered an untimely injury that screwed up his training camp and the start of his season. The guy didn't practice through much of training camp and was limited the first month of the season not because of his contract but because of an injury. The same thing happened to him at Notre Dame, also because of a hamstring as I recall. The contract situation was not responsible.

          There has been an unusually large number of hamstring injuries, that seem to be very slow to heal. Bigby was injured jumping to defend a pass. At first they said it wasn't serious, but he has been out a month. Grant was affected for six weeks or more. Peprah was out a month. Clifton, Hunter, Lumpkin all had hamstring problems too. Not sure if there were others.

          The Packers released a story about a new type of squat/leg press equipment they installed this off season, which the players competed on for max performance. New leg workout equipment followed by a rash of severe hamstring problems. Are they related????? MM said they didn't think so, but they were looking into the possibility that their training program has something to do with all the hamstring problems.

          Comment


          • #20
            He is a player who had a nice run behind a good line and a great QB. Lotta guys with some vision and speed do that. He is not and will not be a top 5 back...if he was he woulda won the starting job at notre dame and actually...you know...got drafted.

            RB's with decent vision are a dime a dozen....any given season there are about 5 exceptional ones...guys like LT, peterson, stephen jackson, portis come to mind. I said it then....no way we should have paid him until he put in 8 good games this year....and this is once case I wish I had been wrong.
            The only time success comes before work is in the dictionary -- Vince Lombardi

            Comment


            • #21
              Originally posted by bobblehead
              He is a player who had a nice run behind a good line and a great QB. Lotta guys with some vision and speed do that. He is not and will not be a top 5 back...if he was he woulda won the starting job at notre dame and actually...you know...got drafted..
              He was the starter at ND, lost it due to injuries, then couldn't get re-established against those who stepped up while he was out, like Jones and Walker. He was injured off and on his final two seasons at ND, but played well when he was available.

              Grant-injuries, sounds familiar familiar doesn't it?

              Comment


              • #22
                Originally posted by Patler
                Originally posted by bobblehead
                He is a player who had a nice run behind a good line and a great QB. Lotta guys with some vision and speed do that. He is not and will not be a top 5 back...if he was he woulda won the starting job at notre dame and actually...you know...got drafted..
                He was the starter at ND, lost it due to injuries, then couldn't get re-established against those who stepped up while he was out, like Jones and Walker. He was injured off and on his final two seasons at ND, but played well when he was available.

                Grant-injuries, sounds familiar familiar doesn't it?
                Right..he couldn't WIN the starting job...guys with big time talent actually get the job back when they are healthy and even get drafted when they were hurt in college. You're right about the injuries being an ongoing theme, but that only counts to dis TT when its Justin Harrell...when its an unheard of back who put together 8 good games injuries don't matter....TT needs to pay him and get him into camp.
                The only time success comes before work is in the dictionary -- Vince Lombardi

                Comment


                • #23
                  Originally posted by bobblehead

                  Right..he couldn't WIN the starting job...guys with big time talent actually get the job back when they are healthy and even get drafted when they were hurt in college. You're right about the injuries being an ongoing theme, but that only counts to dis TT when its Justin Harrell...when its an unheard of back who put together 8 good games injuries don't matter....TT needs to pay him and get him into camp.
                  OK, I'm not going to keep going in circles on this. He DID win the starting job at ND, except when he was injured. When he wasn't injured he was the starter, but he ended up splitting time with, respectively, Julius Jones and Darius Walker as a Junior and Senior. Grant had a good, solid career at Notre Dame, and yes, was the starter when not injured. Started ahead of Jones and Walker when he was healthy.

                  Again, Grant did not miss significant time due to his contract. Just a few days. He was signed a week before the first pre-season game.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by GoPackGo
                    Originally posted by Patler
                    In answer to a question, at his press conference MM said Grant graded out very high in his decision making against Seattle. I'm sure it wasn't 100%, but MM implied that he went where he should have on most plays.

                    In a radio interview, Wells said they really didn't block many plays cleanly. He said in spite of how many plays they ran, a lineman missed or didn't finish on just about every play, so Grant never had a clean hole.
                    I believe what MM and Wells say about the running game. If the O line can play better, the best is ahead for Grant.

                    I tend to think he's only just started too and put him in the 1000 yd. category although potentially he has the capacity to run up a lot more. I think we're all just antsy to see the guy really turn it on like he did last year.
                    I do not think he's going to straggle out this injury any longer than necessary, so let's sit back and relax, the best is ahead !!
                    Is it really a halo or
                    just a swelled head ?

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Patler

                      The Packers released a story about a new type of squat/leg press equipment they installed this off season, which the players competed on for max performance. New leg workout equipment followed by a rash of severe hamstring problems. Are they related????? MM said they didn't think so, but they were looking into the possibility that their training program has something to do with all the hamstring problems.
                      This was one of my first thoughts too. McCarthy seemed to be burying his head in the sand a little with his statement that there is nothing they are doing with their training that could be related.

                      Maybe they got a machine for chest too because Hawk had a somewhat severe strain. Wells has one now and Jenkins went out for the year with one. Machines are very good for building up one muscle, but not building all of the support muscles. Then, when put to the real test in a game when it's not a set restricted motion, like a machine, injury is more likely.

                      When McCarthy came they went to strict free weights. Magically we were one of the healthiest teams in the league. Now we went back to some machines and again, magically, we're oft injured. Huh? But it's not related, Mike? Yeah right.
                      Formerly known as JustinHarrell.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        I didn't know about the new weight equipment, but was thinking the same as what JH just posted while I was reading about it. I knew they'd gone back to pretty much strictly free weights with Rock G. as the strength coach, didn't they? This is the first I've heard that they've added some new machines in.

                        Machines that work the quads very heavily and directly, causing the two antogonistic muscles to become unbalanced...leading to hamstring injuries.

                        I voted 1000 - I think he benefited from a system and QB, and should be able to do that again, although not quite that spectacularly.
                        --
                        Imagine for a moment a world without hypothetical situations...

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          I'm really surprised how sour people seem to have turned on Grant. Only 8 people think he is a 1250 yard back - with all the troubles on the O-line? Shocking!
                          "Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Originally posted by Patler
                            Originally posted by bobblehead

                            Right..he couldn't WIN the starting job...guys with big time talent actually get the job back when they are healthy and even get drafted when they were hurt in college. You're right about the injuries being an ongoing theme, but that only counts to dis TT when its Justin Harrell...when its an unheard of back who put together 8 good games injuries don't matter....TT needs to pay him and get him into camp.
                            OK, I'm not going to keep going in circles on this. He DID win the starting job at ND, except when he was injured. When he wasn't injured he was the starter, but he ended up splitting time with, respectively, Julius Jones and Darius Walker as a Junior and Senior. Grant had a good, solid career at Notre Dame, and yes, was the starter when not injured. Started ahead of Jones and Walker when he was healthy.

                            Again, Grant did not miss significant time due to his contract. Just a few days. He was signed a week before the first pre-season game.
                            I understand what you're saying and I don't discount it...all I'm saying is there are a lot of RB's with enough talent to put together 8 good games on a team that is playing well. No matter what we argue back and forth about his career at ND you can't deny not one GM would waste a 7th on him. He strung together a nice run and held out instead of proving it through another training camp and part of another season. I didn't like giving him 5 million then and I like it even less now. People can say its hindsight, but I can bump 4 threads from may/june/july where I was against caving to him then.

                            If you follow my posts I ALWAYS say you can't judge a guy on half a season..read the jennings thread. I hope grant turns it around and is the guy we thought he was, but right now every time he runs into a lineman and doesn't notice a huge cutback lane I get more pissed. At this point I would be much more in favor of giving jennings a big deal because even though he hasn't put 1k in a season, he has shown brilliance over 3 seperate seasons.
                            The only time success comes before work is in the dictionary -- Vince Lombardi

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              I voted above average too. Last week against Seattle he looked like he was about ready to break a big run at any moment. Yes, Seattle is pretty horrid at stopping the run but supposedly so is Indy so I'm hoping he has a decent game tomorrow. With all of the O line problems we've had all year it is no wonder our backs are having problems running the ball. Only the elite backs (about 20% of them) in this league can make something out of nothing = no blocking. If Grant can run the ball just enough to keep the chains moving and Peyton on the bench we have a decent shot at winning tomorrow.

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Good discussion.

                                I'm not concerned about Grant's ability. I believe I saw every game he played at ND, and the ability we saw last year was demonstrated at ND, too. I do have concerns about his chances of missing games due to injury. I saw that also at ND.

                                The fact he went undrafted doesn't mean much to me, probably because I saw him so much in college. Undrafted free agents come to the surface every now and then. Atari Bigby and Tramon Williams were also undrafted free agents who also went through camps of other teams before finding homes in GB.

                                To be honest, I haven't seen Grant missing holes or making bad decisions very often this year. A couple times? Sure, every back does now and then, sometimes due to timing of when he makes his decision and when the lane really opens for him. I have seen Grant not be able to make a tackler miss and not having the explosion he had last year, most likely because of the effects of his injury and lack of practice time. Earlier, MM said some of the problem was timing between Grant and the O-line. Some of that may be from Grant missing practice time, some also from the O-line changing by 40% every time Clifton or Wells misses a practice. I don't mind Grant running up the backside of a lineman when nothing is available. I prefer him getting the yard or two available off a lineman's hip to him hesitating or dancing and losing a yard or two. MM was very clear in saying Grant made very good decisions in the Seattle game, in spite of getting little yardage with a ton of carries.

                                Grant's contract? I think it was a great contract. I may not have liked it if it had been structured differently, but the way it was done I think is great. No long term effect on the cap, and a substantial amount of the money tied to performance. If Grant isn't the guy in 2009, 2010 or beyond, his contract will not impact the Packers then current cap situation much at all. He got some money this year, but not an outrageous amount in view of their cap situation, his performance last year, and his potential.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X