skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Training camp report, 7/31/15
RamView, July 31, 2015
Training Camp Report from
Rams Park
So far, so
good for the opening day of training camp 2015 for the Rams. The
rookie class is off to a pretty good start and practice looked pretty
mistake-free. Aaron Donald still cannot be blocked by human beings
and RamView is still long-winded. Are you ready for some football?
* QB: The
offense was about as exciting and risk-taking the first day out as a
Hillary Clinton stump speech, so no one really hurt their stock. Nick
Foles got a lot of reps and worked with backups more than I remember
Sam Bradford ever doing. He hit Jared Cook for one long TD 7-on-7.
That was about all of 7-on-7 I watched, because they do it the same
time as 1-on-1 line drills, so almost all the passing I saw was
pretty short. I do like the arm Foles shows on short out routes. I
never thought that throw was a strength of Bradford's, and it sure
wasn't for Shaun Hill or Kellen Clemens. Foles has got better zip on
that throw than I've seen in a while. Most deep balls 11-on-11 were
bailout throws because, in reality, Foles would have gotten drilled
by somebody. I'll only see this practice and next Friday's, so I
doubt I'll see enough to decide if Foles' deep ball will be a
concern. Austin Davis came out first at QB2 but that really looks
like a timeshare with Case Keenum. Sean Mannion had a couple of
hiccups in the final 7-on-7 drills mostly for rookies but didn't have
a bad day. His release looks a little weird but he throws a
good-looking ball. Sure, a lot of passes only traveled a few yards in
the air, but everyone's timing looked good. I'll take it for
starters.
* RB: Todd
Gurley participated in position drills but not team drills. He didn't
show any sign of his knee injury to me, but I think the Rams are very
smart to play it safe with him so far. Tre Mason showed a little
power running through some arm tackling, as did Trey Watts. I think
that's a good development for Mason because he didn't have a lot of
success up the middle last year and needs to improve there. Sweeps or
leak-out routes for him were usually blown up, making the RB star of
the day... … … oh man should I go here?... … oh, ok, Isaiah
Pead. He also shows no sign of his knee injury from last year. Every
rep I saw him take was good. He hit the hole quickly, used his blocks
well, made himself small in the hole – he didn't get touched
without making a nice gain. At a minimum, it looks like Pead will put
up a good fight for a roster spot. More power to him.
* Fullbacks: Yes!
A fullbacks section! Pretty disappointing blocking today in the
backfield, though. Lots of blitzers got there, or would have, in
11-on-11. Bennie Cunningham, who is usually quite good at it, didn't
look good in blitz pickup drills and wasn't getting his hands placed
properly. Corey Harkey was disappointing, which I hate to say when
he's one of my faves. Got beaten in 1-on-1 drills and had a false
start 11-on-11. Justice Cunningham didn't look like he had much
business doing any of this and UDFA Zach Laskey looked completely
outclassed. There's a lot of work to be done here, but Bennie and
Harkey stayed after practice to do some extra work, so hopefully
this'll turn around quickly.
* Receivers: Jared
Cook scored a long TD down the seam in 7-on-7, one of the few
standout receiving plays. There were some drops, though I'd blame two
of them on the QB. Kenny Britt (now wearing #18, or I'm dyslexic)
couldn't come up with the ball on a deep corner route that was well
underthrown. Tavon Austin (wearing #1, I don't know if that is a
permanent move) couldn't make a tough semi-diving catch over the
middle that I think Foles led too much. Austin made a nice gain early
on off a quick screen with a shake-and-bake. The disappointing drop
was Brian Quick's, who had a very nice throw go off his hands to deny
a nice gain. Quick oddly played much of this practice with a special
teams beanie over his helmet, maybe that's like the red jersey for
QBs. He stayed and worked with Foles after practice, so again,
there's hope for a quick turnaround. Farther down the depth chart, a
WR who “popped” a bit was Damian Williams. He always seemed like
the fastest guy downfield on special teams drills and he made a nice
overhead grab in traffic in 11-on-11. Alex Bayer made a nifty
intentional one-handed grab of a fastball from Mannion (I think) in
7-on-7. Again, there's a lot unseen to be making many judgments on
the receiving corps. No deep game and not a lot of attempts to get it
to Tavon.
* O-line: Good and bad here, which is something of
an improvement because the o-line has been getting completely
outclassed early in recent camps. Several of the youngsters are
holding their own. I wanted to draft Jamon Brown, so I'm biased, but
he looked strong in 1-on-1s against Nick Fairley and Michael
Brockers. Good footwork, didn't get beaten around his shoulder and
showed excellent anchor. Rob Havenstein did not fare poorly against
William Hayes 1-on-1. The rookies were not the raw meat I feared
they'd be for Sack City. Having said that, there were a lot of
protection issues on that side 11-on-11, but enough of that was
blitz-related that I'd still say both rookies had good enough first
days. Robert Quinn embarrassed Greg Robinson on their first 1-on-1
rep, with just a rip and a speed move around him for an easy sack,
but Robinson won the second rep just as clearly, stoning Quinn on an
attempted spin move. Tim Barnes appears to be the first-string center
in what's probably a three-way timeshare. I just find it so
disappointing that someone besides Barnes isn't already a clear
leader here. Barnes did actually hold up well one rep, but not the
other, I believe against Brockers, and that's what Barnes is. He
doesn't have the anchor or power to hold up at center. These guys are
all lucky right now I cannot remember who Doug Worthington pancaked.
Also, it's a good thing Aaron Donald is a Ram, because Rodger Saffold
can not handle him. Saffold might have been the most disappointing
lineman of the day. Then again, Brandon Washington looked really bad
twice 1-on-1 against Louis Trinca-Pasat, who I believe scored a
pancake. Time's running out on that project, and the Jamaican,
Darrell Williams, who looks completely outclassed, but the Isaiah
Battle Project actually didn't get off to a bad start. At backup LT,
he was stacking some people up in the running game. Youth was served
pretty well the first day, and Saffold only has to face Donald in
practice.
* Defensive line: Some
unexpected absences. Chris Long did not appear to participate in
anything. I also don't remember seeing Eugene Sims. That's probably
on me. The other unexplained absence is the #94 jersey, because
Robert Quinn was wearing #2, and if not for his distinctive profile,
I could have mistaken him for a big wideout. He looks skinny, though
still lethally effective without having to expend a lot of energy.
Aaron Donald picked up from his impressive rookie season, just
blipping past linemen before they could get to him. Ethan Westbrooks
impressed me. Hard not to when he's killing Justice Cunningham every
rep 1-on-1, but I thought he was getting there 11-on-11 as well. I
would have lost a lot of money in the defensive lineman pancake pool,
because it wasn't Michael Brockers or Nick Fairley getting them, it
was Doug Worthington and Louis Trinca-Pasat. Worthington ran over
somebody whose number I couldn't get, and vice versa, I'm sure.
Washington was not ready for LTP's quickness off the snap. Wonder how
that matchup'll go tomorrow. Way down the depth chart, I don't
remember Matt Longacre winning 1-on-1, but his number seemed to pop
into view a lot 11-on-11.
* Linebackers: Sorry,
I still suck at linebacking. I thought Daren Bates stood out with the
2's. He did a good job sealing the edge on some runs. I like how he's
developing into a more and more complete player. Bryce Hager had a
number of successful blitzes. Akeem Ayers was the victim of Cook's
long 7-on-7 TD, but I can't believe having Ayers cover a TE deep down
the seam is the ideal role for him. That was a scheme win for the
offense.
* Secondary: Another
disappointment for me is that E.J. Gaines was at best sharing the CB1
opposite Janoris Jenkins with Trumaine Johnson. Gaines should be
getting all those reps over TruJo as far as I'm concerned. I really
can't explain what went on today other than a lot of mixing and
matching. It looked like Lamarcus Joyner and Marcus Roberson were the
2s; I wasn't even sure what Gaines' unit was for a while. And it was
Gaines who made the best play I saw, perfectly shutting down Chris
Givens on a rare deep route. Hearing now that Mark Barron was a no-go
today, I believe Maurice Alexander got that role with the 1s. The
secondary wasn't tested much, and I didn't learn much. Down the depth
chart, Jacob Hagen had the only pick I saw all day, in rookie 7-on-7,
and recalling the positive ball-hawking comments I saw in his
scouting reports, I doubt that will be the last we hear from him. I
liked Montell Garner in that session, too; he jumped a couple of
slant routes well and wasn't afraid to get physical. Oh yeah, this is
a Jeff Fisher team. Feisty.
* Special teams: The
Isaiah Pead conspiracy started on special teams. The team opened
practice with kick coverage the first twenty minutes, and the unit
with Chase Reynolds, Daren Bates, Bennie Cunningham, Corey Harkey and
Stedman Bailey on it would be the #1 unit, right? Pead was on that
unit, along with a couple of other names I wasn't expecting, Korey
Toomer and Marshall McFadden, though both were on teams last season.
Well, be more aware than I was that those guys have legitimate shots
at roster spots. Alexander was also on that unit, which very much
pleases me. Interesting names on the #2 unit included Tre Mason and
Jo-Lonn Dunbar. I even saw Alec Ogletree doing some teams work, if my
brain wasn't too baked. Greg Zuerlein closed out practice going
4-for-4 from 30, 35, 40, and 45 (pfft, chip shots). I believe backup
kicker Michael Palardy also ran the table.
* Strategery: This was the least tricky practice
I've ever seen, though THANKFULLY, no inside handoffs to 170-pound
RBs. Lots of play action, pretty even run distribution (end vs.
middle), lots and lots of short passes. Based on today, the plan
again this year is for a lot of 16-play scoring drives. Other than
the one designed screen for Austin, I didn't notice much meant to get
him the ball in space, though that one effort worked well. Many
release-valve throws to the backs, but I get fooled every year into
thinking that's going to be an offensive wrinkle. It's the first day;
I'm sure they're saving the
fumblerooski-triple-flea-flicker-flanker-throwback for tomorrow.
* Cheers: Well, I'd prefer not to go there from
the very first report, but the name I heard mentioned the most in the
crowd today, not favorably, was “Kroenke”. The Rams Park staff
didn't seem to mind the several keep-the-Rams-in-St.-Louis signs,
though. It looked like a good crowd for a Friday afternoon; I
wouldn't be surprised to hear attendance in the 1,500 range. There
are some downgrades. Last year, the rail went all the way around the
near fields and afforded some access to the back fields; this year,
it cuts off where it used to, just past the season ticket holders'
section. There wasn't a concession stand on the hill like last year,
just one beer guy going around, and he ran out of water before the
end of the day. Might want to make sure to bring enough along if
you're attending a practice this year.
* What's next?: RamView's only other planned
training camp report will be from the scrimmage at Lindenwood
University next Friday night. I want to thank everyone who's been
reading these over the years. We all know it's very easy to make too
much out of what goes on during one day of training camp, or my Hall
of Fame bust of Quinton Culberson wouldn't have quite so much dust on
it. I think I've gotten more right than wrong over the years (if just
barely); thanks for putting up with these brain dumps.
-- Mike
No comments:
Post a Comment