19 pressures in two hundred and whatever snaps. He flashed as a rookie.
His rookie camp he was regularly rag dolling the backups.
In his second year one of the reporters was asked the difference between camp 1 and camp 2. The response was camp 2 he did the same things vs the starters.
Pettine said he was really happy to see Gary came back having improved in all of the areas they asked him to improve. Said during a time when maybe there was an excuse to not make gains with all of the change, Gary clearly did everything possible
Gary’s workout videos on twitter were awesome last year. This year even better. Biggest difference is his agility and he’s lower to the ground with his movements. You can see a more agile, flexible, leverage advantaged player in year 2.
Mike Smith said he thinks Gary, a 22 year old 2nd year player might be the best edge setter in his really talented OLB room. Not the worst thing when facing a team like SF.
Gary said the smiths have taught him a lot about tells the offense gives and that he’s so much more comfortable in his assignments so he can just have fun and play fast. Insists he’s going to be in the backfield.
No guarantees, but work ethic and rare physical talent are pointing to Gary being a violent, impactful player in his sophomore campaign. Z learned from Suggs. Gary is learning from Z. Gary has his ideal matchups and situations. He should play a ton against a team like SF. He should also be put against tackles who struggle with power or guards who struggle with speed. He’s a clear advantage in several situations in 2020.
If put in the right spots, Gary should be an extremely impactful player in 2020. He’s still probably a year or two away from every down savvy vet status, but luckily, we’ve got two of those guys already on the roster.
Look for 2020 to be a highlight reel riddled season for Rashan Gary, playing probably 60% of defensive snaps!
45 pressures
7 sacks
Huge upgraded run defense with Gary locking down edges on early downs
Perfect progress for a young, high upside draft pick and an especially valuable run piece for a team that plays a lot of nickel and dime.
His rookie camp he was regularly rag dolling the backups.
In his second year one of the reporters was asked the difference between camp 1 and camp 2. The response was camp 2 he did the same things vs the starters.
Pettine said he was really happy to see Gary came back having improved in all of the areas they asked him to improve. Said during a time when maybe there was an excuse to not make gains with all of the change, Gary clearly did everything possible
Gary’s workout videos on twitter were awesome last year. This year even better. Biggest difference is his agility and he’s lower to the ground with his movements. You can see a more agile, flexible, leverage advantaged player in year 2.
Mike Smith said he thinks Gary, a 22 year old 2nd year player might be the best edge setter in his really talented OLB room. Not the worst thing when facing a team like SF.
Gary said the smiths have taught him a lot about tells the offense gives and that he’s so much more comfortable in his assignments so he can just have fun and play fast. Insists he’s going to be in the backfield.
No guarantees, but work ethic and rare physical talent are pointing to Gary being a violent, impactful player in his sophomore campaign. Z learned from Suggs. Gary is learning from Z. Gary has his ideal matchups and situations. He should play a ton against a team like SF. He should also be put against tackles who struggle with power or guards who struggle with speed. He’s a clear advantage in several situations in 2020.
If put in the right spots, Gary should be an extremely impactful player in 2020. He’s still probably a year or two away from every down savvy vet status, but luckily, we’ve got two of those guys already on the roster.
Look for 2020 to be a highlight reel riddled season for Rashan Gary, playing probably 60% of defensive snaps!
45 pressures
7 sacks
Huge upgraded run defense with Gary locking down edges on early downs
Perfect progress for a young, high upside draft pick and an especially valuable run piece for a team that plays a lot of nickel and dime.

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