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Tranining camp report, 7/29
RamObstructedView, July 29, 2014
Report from Rams
Park
So, did anybody
manage to go to Rams Park and actually see anything today? The Rams
took the View away from RamView by doing everything interesting on
the far field, leaving me no good angle to see what was going on very
well, and leaving a frustratingly-short report for this training
camp's first practice in pads...
All observations are
very much subject to error. I'm saying that here so I don't have to
say “I think it was” in every sentence. I spent way too much of
the day trying to look over players' shoulders to see the field.
* Passing: Sam
Bradford led the first-string offense to a TD in the two-minute
drill, spearing Jared Cook with a pass at the goal line from a few
yards out. Whistled it between a couple of defenders. Shaun Hill also
scored a 2:00 TD, with a 25-30 yard pass into the left corner of the
end zone I understand was caught by Kenny Britt. Bradford got the
defense again with the hard count. Hill and Garrett Gilbert made some
convincing play-fakes. Cory Harkey was one of the stars of the 2:00
drills, with three catches, including one long catch-and-run I'm
assuming was against a busted defense. Brian Quick's train continues
to gain steam; he may have been the star of the day, with two big
plays in 11-on-11, beating Rodney McLeod deep 11-on-11 and beating
Brandon McGee pretty badly and making an excellent overhead pluck on
a deep corner route. Britt, the last guy I would have picked coming
in to be a worthwhile mentor, got fired up with Quick after both of
those big plays. Tavon Austin and Justin Veltung made difficult
catches in the corner of the end zone in 7-on-7 red zone drills. Big
Mason Brodine finished things off with a short TD catch-and-run of
his own with the threes, to the enthusiasm of everyone on the field.
Jordan Harris got his first action at WR. Nice size. I saw very
little at RB other than more quickness from Trey Watts and Isaiah
Pead sitting the day out. If HE makes the club from the tub, I am
writing someone a very stern e-mail. Watts is a much more instinctive
runner than Chase Reynolds, so Chase better make sure he makes his
mark on special teams. Lamarcus Joyner had ANOTHER interception;
Rodney McLeod blew one off a deflection off one of the Rams' small
WRs. T.J. McDonald had another pass breakup, and I believe Ray Ray
Armstrong batted one down at the line. I don't doubt that Ray Ray has
the athleticism to give Jo-Lonn Dunbar a challenge as the starter,
but I still need a decent look at him in team drills. I'm pretty sure
I heard Maurice Alexander calling out audibles. If I'm right, a very
good sign that he's catching on.
* Line play: Barrett
Jones worked with the ones at center, Tim Barnes with the twos, as
Scott Wells remains out for reasons I have never heard. The hill
drill appears to be a daily fixture, though today, it was one lineman
getting pushed up the hill by two other linemen. Auburn and Alabama
went at it again for the last rep, and this time it was War Eagle,
with Greg Robinson pushing his man up the hill a bit faster than
Jones. Jones got powered into the backfield on one rep by a blitzing
Alec Ogletree. Robinson worked at left guard, with Rodger Saffold at
left tackle. There wasn't a lot of one-on-one work; when the two
lines got together, it was to let the o-line practice switching off
against crossing d-linemen. There was some interesting one-on-one
work very late in practice. Off on the side, Jake Long and William
Hayes worked against each other. It wasn't all-out by any means, but
Hayes looked like he's about full-go in his first action in camp.
Long passed him off to Joseph Barksdale, so, though he didn't look
impeded by his knee to me, they're still on a cautious schedule with
him. The main one-on-one work was for the bottom of the depth chart
players. Demetrius Rhaney still has a lot of work to do. Michael Sam
also did not thrive today. He did not have anything approaching the
success he had Saturday, though it looked to me like he was lined up
as a traditional 4-3 DE, when on Saturday he had done more out of a
wide-9. It was easy for his blocker, I think R.J. Dill, (the roster
handout hasn't been updated since the day before camp) to get his
hands on him and completely control him. That's not a good situation
for Sam, who also looked like the least powerful of the d-linemen
hitting the sleds. They're getting a lot of reps for Aaron Donald,
who's all-but toying with the backup o-line, especially with his
instant get-off. A blocker has a chance when they get their hands on
him, but Donald also showed more than enough strength at times to
take care of that. In 11-on-11 I believe I even saw Donald taking
reps at end. Alex Carrington might be getting overlooked in all the
d-line excitement. He has got some nice quickness and pass-rushing
moves himself. He looked very difficult to block on switches.
Deantre “The Bacone-ater” Harlan even flashed in the third-string
1-on-1s. He hit one spin move so well, he stopped with a clear path
to the QB, like he didn't expect the move to work THAT well, and then
made a late charge. Who ya gonna double-team?
* Special teams: Work today was on punt coverage,
with live punting and Veltung doing all of the catching. My guess is
Veltung will be the one keeping Stedman Bailey's roster spot warm in
September. There's no actual competition, obviously, but the
difference between Johnny Hekker's punts and Bobby Cowan's isn't even
funny. It's a cannon vs. that rubber-band slingshot Fredbird uses to
hurl t-shirts into the crowd at Cardinal games. Since I haven't
mentioned Aaron Donald in about 15 seconds, could I propose that he
play on the punt coverage unit? Aaron Donald vs. your typical special
teams blocker: what's the league record for blocked punts in a
season?
* Strategery: Gregg Williams and Mike Waufle
bantered with the crowd a bit while waiting for the d-linemen to come
over and hit the sleds. Williams said he's been trying his whole
career to get on Waufle's team. I expect that pairing to work
together very well. A little more blitzing today, I think, and a lot
of it looked like it would have been successful. About the only
offensive wrinkle (I could see) was a 90-flip to Austin that got
blown up badly. I think they tried to run it at Ogletree.
* Cheers: Why even have an open practice when
almost nothing is going to be done on the near field? I'm guessing
around 1,200 fans in attendance – great crowd for a Tuesday, but
I'm also guessing very few of us saw much of anything. Especially the
half that stayed on the hill the whole time hoping the Rams would
come back into view. At least we had a beautiful day for it, I guess.
* What's next?: I shouldn't have any problem
seeing the next, and likely last, practice I attend this summer, the
open session at the Dome on Saturday.
-- Mike
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