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Showing posts with label backs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label backs. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2011

No Glory in Blocking for Backs, but Much to Gain

“Watch the tape,” Giants General Manager Jerry Reese said recently. “Look at what Brandon Jacobs did.”

That seems an incongruous statement. Jacobs, a running back, does not take a handoff from Manning, and he ends up nowhere near the corner of the end zone where Burress gathers in his 13-yard reception. In fact, Jacobs barely makes contact with another player during the sequence.

But a closer look shows Jacobs, who began the play to Manning’s left, sliding in front of him and directly into the path of the blitzing New England safety Rodney Harrison, who leaps in a futile attempt to deflect the pass thrown in the opposite direction.

Even when the play is viewed in real time, the ramifications of Jacobs’s move are obvious: without his block, Manning goes down, the pass is never thrown and the celebration belongs to the Patriots instead of the Giants.

“What makes it even more interesting is that he had two responsibilities on that play, two players coming from two different directions,” Jerald Ingram, the Giants’ running backs coach, said of Jacobs. “If he makes the wrong choice, we lose.”

Not all blocking responsibilities are as important as they were in that situation, but Jacobs made a larger point.

“It’s supposed to be a passing league now, right?” Jacobs said. “Well, part of our job is to keep the quarterback clean.”

Blocking has always been the blue-collar part of a running back’s job — falling somewhere behind “run for touchdowns” and “get all the glory” in any aspiring back’s list of duties. But now, perhaps more than ever, blocking has become crucial. With defenses using more exotic blitz packages and N.F.L. teams passing in record numbers, every rookie running back hears the same lecture.

“It goes something like, ‘Son, if you can’t block, you can’t play,’ ” Ingram said.

He added that learning to block was the “single biggest challenge” for any N.F.L. back because most top college offensive game plans require little beyond typical ball-handling duties.

Ingram estimated that a college back might have to know only three or four pass-protection plans. In the N.F.L., that number might be 25 to 30. Although it may seem as if the running back’s job is simply to block any player who gets through the line, the reality is that “there are rules,” Manning said.

“Every play, it’s different,” running back Ahmad Bradshaw added. “You have assignments, depending on the call. You may have the linebacker or the safety. Or you may have both.”

Ingram, who was a fullback at Michigan and has coached backs for 25 years, said blocking had always been a focal point of his work, though identifying the best blocking backs statistically can be a murkier process. The Web site ProFootballFocus.com, however, created a Pass Blocking Efficiency statistic.

By that measure, Bradshaw ranked second in 2010 among N.F.L. backs with a minimum of 50 pass-blocking snaps. Fred Jackson of the Buffalo Bills, whom the Giants will face Sunday, was fourth.

From 2008 through 2010, Bradshaw also ranked second — to Clinton Portis, then with Washington — among those with a minimum of 150 pass-blocking snaps. Jacobs, who said he “didn’t block for nothing” when he was at Southern Illinois, placed eighth during that time.

Bradshaw’s three-year ranking, in particular, puts him in heady company. Portis was almost universally cited by players and coaches as the gold standard among “every-down” backs, or backs whose blocking ability allows them to remain in the game during passing situations.

“Guys would talk about trying anything to get past Portis,” Giants safety Antrel Rolle said.

“He just wanted to run you over,” safety Deon Grant added.

Joe Gibbs, who coached Portis with the Redskins, said that attitude — which is what separates all good blocking backs from the rest — set Portis apart. Any back can learn the protections, Gibbs said, but what happens when a 250-pound linebacker comes racing through the middle with a 10-step head of steam?

“You’ve got to be a tough guy, and Clinton wouldn’t wait — he’d try to go hunt the linebacker down,” Gibbs said. “We sold it to our team. In highlight packages, we’d show Clinton blocking instead of his runs. And sometimes we’d name him Tough Guy of the Week. How do you think the big guys on the team felt when a running back was named Tough Guy of the Week?”

Bradshaw’s success comes from a similar approach. A top cornerback prospect in high school, he said: “I love to hit. Most running backs I’ve talked to don’t like it, but I love the contact. Those are the times when we get to give the hit instead of get it.”

The technique of blocking is not so simple. Jacobs, who will not play Sunday because of a knee injury, summarized it as “either you cut the guy or you hit him in the mouth.” But there is nuance: on a rollout play, for example, when the quarterback is running behind the line of scrimmage, a back cannot use a cut block (in which he takes out a blitzer’s legs) because the opposing player may just get back up and chase the quarterback. On the other hand, on a pass play in the pocket, the back must push the rusher to the outside to free the quarterback to throw.

“During the week, blocking is mostly what I work on more than anything,” Bradshaw said. “There is so much to know.”

Even the best blockers have lapses. In 2009, Manning and Bradshaw exchanged words on the sideline after Bradshaw, as Ingram said, “totally blanked out” on a blocking assignment against New Orleans.

And in the Giants’ Oct. 2 victory at Arizona, Jacobs — on the same field where he made the right decision to block Harrison in the Super Bowl — made the wrong call and went after a Cardinals linebacker instead of picking up nose tackle David Carter, who sacked Manning and forced a fumble.

Those kinds of plays may result in good-natured fines during the weekly running backs meeting, Ingram said, but the intent is not punitive; it is to continue highlighting a part of the job that is neither grand nor glorious, but is necessary all the same.

“No one becomes a running back because they like blocking,” Ingram said. “But if they want to stay one, they better learn.”


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Friday, October 14, 2011

Witten backs Romo but cites room for improvment

The latest entry in the “Stand by Your Embattled Quarterback” movement comes courtesy of Jason Witten.

With the exception of the two weeks in which he cast doubters aside by playing through fractured ribs and a punctured lung, Cowboys QB Tony Romo has been a human pinata this season, taking the hits from all sides. The latest came from Giants RB Brandon Jacobs, who stood by Eli Manning at Romo’s expense.

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Predictably, Witten has Romo’s back. But, if you read carefully, he’s also not giving Romo a free pass, either, after the fourth-quarter collapse in Week 4.

“He’s our guy. He’s our leader,” Witten told NFL Network’s “Around the League” on Thursday. “He’s won some games for us too, if you go back and look at the San Francisco game and the Washington game.

“I hope we’re not getting too used to what happened two weeks ago (in Detroit). I think that’s not who he is, and that’s not who our offense (is) and what this franchise is about. We feel like we have a really good team, we let some opportunities slip, and we need to play better in those situations, and I think he’s included in that. I think he’s an elite quarterback, I’m sure he’d like to have a couple of those throws back.”

Witten added he doesn’t believe Romo necessarily will change his style. But Witten did allude to the fact he expects changes in the way Romo takes care of the ball.

“There is an understanding of where the situation is in the game, and from that standpoint, yeah, I do think those things will change in the way we play and some of those throws that he made,” Witten added. “It’s just being smarter in those decisions and keeping your team in the best situation you can. I think he’s learned a lot through that, and our team has learned a lot through that.”

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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Broncos Work Out Running Backs Thomas Clayton and Jalen Parmele

The Broncos auditioned former Patriots running back Thomas Clayton and former Ravens running back Jalen Parmele on Monday, this according to a league source.

Clayton originally was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the sixth round of the 2007 draft out of Kansas State. After spending all of 2007 on the San Francisco practice squad, Clayton spent the first 14 weeks of 2008 as part of that unit until being signed to the active roster for the final two games of the season.

Parmele is a former Miami Dolphins and Ravens reserve regarded highly for his special-teams work. He was cut during the Ravens’ final major roster cutdown as they retained seventh-round rookie running back Anthony Allen instead of him.


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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Oklahoma State hires running backs coach

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Bengals’ Lewis backs bus over Ochocinco

Frank TadychPublished: January 20th, 2011 | Tags: Chad Ochocinco, Cincinnati Bengals, Marvin Lewis

Like many divorces, the situation between Bengals coach Marvin Lewis and Chad Ochocinco seems to be getting messy. Perhaps the only thing that’s left is to make it official.

The speculation has been building for weeks that it’s the end of the line in Cincinnati for Ochocinco, who is under contract for $6 million (all in base salary) next season. When Lewis was officially brought back with a two-year extension, Ochocinco said he wasn’t sure he could ever play for Lewis again.

Meanwhile, Ochocinco has been openly flirting via Twitter with the idea of playing for the Patriots … and the Raiders. He suggested a coded Tweet to Ian R. Rapoport of The Boston Herald it would be “epic” to play for Bill Belichick. Jerry McDonald recounts several Tweets in which Ochocinco praises Raiders coach Hue Jackson, who he calls “the greatest coach I ever had.”

Well, if Ochocinco felt that he was thrown under the bus when he was called “mopey,” then Lewis verbally backed up the same bus over him again on Thursday with a second shot.

“Nobody was talking about him. He didn’t stand that,” Lewis said regarding the tweet about the Patriots, per Bengals.com. “You want them to talk about you, win football games.”

Ouch.

We’re patiently awaiting a response on that from @ochocinco.

It stands to reason an exit out of Cincinnati won’t be a quick exit. If the Bengals want to explore a trade for Ochocinco, that can’t happen until an agreement over a new agreement on the CBA is reached. So stay tuned for more of the above.

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