WEBVTT - Drive Time: August 1 Dolphins Camp Report

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<v Speaker 1>To remove Dallan Deep Speed, wys Peace do hell.

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<v Speaker 2>From the Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex.

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<v Speaker 3>This is Drivetime with Travis Wingfield.

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<v Speaker 4>He's got my advands in the playoffs.

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<v Speaker 2>What is up, Dolphans And welcome to the Draft Time Podcast.

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<v Speaker 2>I am your host, Travis Wingfield. And on today's show,

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<v Speaker 2>one of the funnest that's not a word, more fun

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<v Speaker 2>practices of the new campaign. Here big plays Wow Throwers

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<v Speaker 2>from QB one the Star wide receivers catching a lot

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<v Speaker 2>of those balls. Iron sharpening Iron a rookie UDFA continues

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<v Speaker 2>to pop. Commentary from Tyreek Butcher Barry, Darryl Bevill, John

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<v Speaker 2>Embry plus will take you inside the thinking in terms

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<v Speaker 2>of the evaluation and progression of camp and how it's

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<v Speaker 2>viewed from a coach's perspective. All of that in a

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<v Speaker 2>heck of a lot. More from the Baptist Health Studios

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<v Speaker 2>inside the Baptist Health Training Complex.

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<v Speaker 4>This is.

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<v Speaker 3>The Drive Time Podcast. Maye take number two.

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<v Speaker 2>Here's my recorder died earlier, so I hope I can

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<v Speaker 2>give the exact same energy on this second rendition of

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<v Speaker 2>this edition of the Draft Time Podcast. And I want

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<v Speaker 2>to start here today with Butch Barry, because look, the

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<v Speaker 2>whole point of this podcast is to be informative with

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<v Speaker 2>a health the helping of mirth, jokes, silly goose time.

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<v Speaker 2>And we got a great insight today into how coach

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<v Speaker 2>views the progression of training camp. And we heard from

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<v Speaker 2>McDaniel the other day about how early in his career

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<v Speaker 2>snap and exchange issues might have bothered him a little

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<v Speaker 2>bit more. And just real quick, there was not a

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<v Speaker 2>single snap on the ground today.

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<v Speaker 3>Go figure.

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<v Speaker 2>But now coach has a has more of an understanding

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<v Speaker 2>of the progression of incorporating new players in the pivot

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<v Speaker 2>at guard, working with a quarterback you've never worked with before,

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<v Speaker 2>especially in a system that prioritizes screaming off the football

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<v Speaker 2>for offensive linemen. And I'll go ahead to explain this

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<v Speaker 2>again in case you're new to the podcast and you've

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<v Speaker 2>die hard. I have heard of this million times by now,

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<v Speaker 2>But that's the entire construction and philosophy of this Dolphins offense.

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<v Speaker 2>Fire off the ball in the run and pass game.

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<v Speaker 3>Let's go ahead.

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<v Speaker 2>And by the way, this is a benefit to us

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<v Speaker 2>to employ a quarterback who sees the field better than

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<v Speaker 2>anybody else in the National Football League and gets the

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<v Speaker 2>ball out faster than anybody else in the National Football League.

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<v Speaker 2>To help mitigate the number of true pass sets we

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<v Speaker 2>have to incorporate to block these elite edge rushers that

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<v Speaker 2>quite frankly, are going to be a mismatch every single

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<v Speaker 2>week because they are six foot five, two hundred and

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<v Speaker 2>sixty pound guys that run four five forties going up

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<v Speaker 2>against three hundred and twenty pound offensive linemen that clocks

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<v Speaker 2>six six two forties. And it's not really six to two,

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<v Speaker 2>it's more like five flat. But it's a big difference.

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<v Speaker 2>And we've also seen the college game kind of, you know,

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<v Speaker 2>denigrate offensive line development with this. Get to the line

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<v Speaker 2>of scrimmage, let's go ahead and snap the football. Don't

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<v Speaker 2>even finish your block. Let's get into a vertical set.

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<v Speaker 2>There's no real nuance to your pass sets. Just get

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<v Speaker 2>in that vertical set, get your hands up, and let's

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<v Speaker 2>go to the next play.

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<v Speaker 3>So it's a big difference, right you.

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<v Speaker 2>Kind of that's one way to mitigate the imbalance of

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<v Speaker 2>pass rushers versus offensive line talent in the National Football

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<v Speaker 2>League today. And so let's go ahead and get this

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<v Speaker 2>audio from coach and then I have more on the

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<v Speaker 2>concept of camp progression and not being results oriented in

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<v Speaker 2>training camp. It's the same reason I try to not tweet,

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<v Speaker 2>you know, eight chan runs for three because that's just

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<v Speaker 2>not valuable information to you guys. What is valuable is

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<v Speaker 2>an understanding of what's happening and trying to break down

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<v Speaker 2>that stuff because then from there, the three yard gain

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<v Speaker 2>doesn't give you any instruction to what could happen down

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<v Speaker 2>the road. But if you have a better understanding of

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<v Speaker 2>what you're seeing in terms of how the play develops

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<v Speaker 2>in the progression and what guys are trying to do,

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<v Speaker 2>that is going to provide a better look into the future. Look,

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<v Speaker 2>I'm not some purveyor of what's going on at all

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<v Speaker 2>times on the football field. I don't have the benefit

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<v Speaker 2>of rewind watching it live. I try my best, but

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<v Speaker 2>I can't see everything. But that is why I go

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<v Speaker 2>to the sound bites and the guys that do have

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<v Speaker 2>the practice tape, that do rewind this stuff and watch

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<v Speaker 2>it over and over again, and they know every single play,

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<v Speaker 2>the aim for every single player. So first the snaps

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<v Speaker 2>and how the offensive line coach views the progression of

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<v Speaker 2>snaps good or bad in training camp.

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<v Speaker 4>Yeah, I mean, obviously that's that's something that's just a

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<v Speaker 4>process that we have to go through. Obviously I want

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<v Speaker 4>it to be better and cleaner at all times, and

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<v Speaker 4>if it's not perfect, it's not good enough.

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<v Speaker 1>It's how I view it.

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<v Speaker 4>But I also understand that there's a learning curve with

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<v Speaker 4>all of it, and as long as we're making progress

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<v Speaker 4>in the right direction, it's something that it's an ongoing deal.

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<v Speaker 4>And it's one of those things that everyone thinks it's

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<v Speaker 4>as simple as but it's not as simple as when

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<v Speaker 4>you have a guy across from me that's a really

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<v Speaker 4>good athlete, that's three hundred and fifty whatever his weight is,

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<v Speaker 4>and all he's trying to do is mess you up, right,

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<v Speaker 4>And so you're thinking that you have to do the

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<v Speaker 4>same thing back, but you gotta get the snap first.

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<v Speaker 2>He was also asked a follow up coach Barry was

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<v Speaker 2>about when that clicks into place in his experience, and

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<v Speaker 2>while he said there's no timeline to assign it to,

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<v Speaker 2>he said it's a relentless drilling of live speed reps,

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<v Speaker 2>not just in team period, but in individuals, and he

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<v Speaker 2>compared it to you know something that I like a

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<v Speaker 2>lot in here in the golf swing where it's tough

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<v Speaker 2>to explain, but when it gets there, you just kind

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<v Speaker 2>of feel it. And to expand upon that, you know,

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<v Speaker 2>whether it's golf or baseball, any sport where you swing

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<v Speaker 2>a stick, I imagine hockey's the same way. Maybe I'm wrong,

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<v Speaker 2>but when you strike the sweet spot of the club

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<v Speaker 2>or the bat or the stick, you don't really feel

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<v Speaker 2>the contact. Whereas if you toe strike it or he'll

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<v Speaker 2>strike it, or hit the end of the bat or

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<v Speaker 2>get jammed off the handle, you are going to feel

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<v Speaker 2>that vibration in your hands. Whereas we stripe one hundred

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<v Speaker 2>and eighty five yard seven iron down the middle, you

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<v Speaker 2>probably didn't feel it all that much if you hit

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<v Speaker 2>a flush. And that's kind of the same idea with this,

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<v Speaker 2>like once you rep it and rep it rep it,

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<v Speaker 2>you start to figure out the mechanics of how it

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<v Speaker 2>works from an individual perspective and then it just kind

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<v Speaker 2>of clicks into place. And so coach was asked more

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<v Speaker 2>to follow up on that with how he views offensive

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<v Speaker 2>line play, and he was asked this really cool question

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<v Speaker 2>because we see this offensive line group go through these

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<v Speaker 2>different iterations of line combinations and cross training and it's

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<v Speaker 2>so valuable for these guys if you're not going to

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<v Speaker 2>be a starter to have multiple position flexibility. Right, you

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<v Speaker 2>can't just be an exclusive left tackle unless you know

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<v Speaker 2>you're Patrick Paul and you're the long term future there, right,

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<v Speaker 2>Like you need to be able to play guard if

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<v Speaker 2>that's not your role on the team. And so with

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<v Speaker 2>all that cross training, how do you facilitate the timing

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<v Speaker 2>of this offense, which is such an integral part of

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<v Speaker 2>how it works. How do you facilitate that with the

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<v Speaker 2>guy's cross training. Here's coach Butch Berry on how he

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<v Speaker 2>views what his job is and the progression of training

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<v Speaker 2>camp from day one up until day one of the

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<v Speaker 2>regular season.

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<v Speaker 4>Yeah, I mean, I think there are some things that

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<v Speaker 4>we're able to kind of subjectly put it in. So

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<v Speaker 4>if we want to block a defender at the second

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<v Speaker 4>level based upon number one things, understand what scheme we're running, right,

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<v Speaker 4>Number two, Understand what type of track of the back has.

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<v Speaker 4>Number three obviously you got understand your defensive personnel, all right,

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<v Speaker 4>So with all that information, we can give a starting

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<v Speaker 4>point for if I'm on the play side of a player,

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<v Speaker 4>if I'm on the backside of a play, So we

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<v Speaker 4>start with the starting point of a concept right now,

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<v Speaker 4>being a professional, that's where we can go individually and

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<v Speaker 4>find tune. Hey, for you, let's let's move this aiming

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<v Speaker 4>point a little bit further, a little bit tighter, right

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<v Speaker 4>So now when we have that, we can start to.

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<v Speaker 1>Really get detailed.

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<v Speaker 4>But everything starts as a starting point. So everyone starts

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<v Speaker 4>with the same starting point, and that's what we rep.

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<v Speaker 4>That's what we rep. That's what we rep, that's what

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<v Speaker 4>we rep, and that's what we're going through right now.

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<v Speaker 4>So when things may not look perfect at times in practice,

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<v Speaker 4>because we're going off a starting point now is I

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<v Speaker 4>know each guy better and better and better, and based

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<v Speaker 4>upon the personnel that we're going against and having pads

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<v Speaker 4>on now I can start to find tune that. Hey,

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<v Speaker 4>you've got to be a little tighter theory point. Hey,

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<v Speaker 4>you got to be a little wider theating point, because

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<v Speaker 4>who it is, who the defense personnel, who the offensive

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<v Speaker 4>player is, all those things. That's where now you know

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<v Speaker 4>what I mean, And that's probably in the next week

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<v Speaker 4>and we started to get to Atlanta, that's where we

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<v Speaker 4>can start to get into those details per our players

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<v Speaker 4>and then per who we're going against right. So right now,

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<v Speaker 4>we're just trying to get the process of what is

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<v Speaker 4>the starting point of every block that we do relative

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<v Speaker 4>to every scheme in backfield action.

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<v Speaker 2>And to just put a bow on this particular point.

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<v Speaker 2>Coach Barry was asked about what quantifies a good camp

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<v Speaker 2>for Patrick Paul, but he answered it in a more

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<v Speaker 2>general sense, which I think, you know, I think is

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<v Speaker 2>better because it just it kind of continues the idea

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<v Speaker 2>of what we're talking about here. But this is probably

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<v Speaker 2>the first time I've heard a coach talk about something

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<v Speaker 2>like this. So for someone who hasn't missed a camp

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<v Speaker 2>or an OTA practice since twenty nineteen, I've been to

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<v Speaker 2>every practice since OTA is twenty nineteen. I'm trying to

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<v Speaker 2>be coachable and always learning about this game. And I

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<v Speaker 2>thought this was incredibly instructive from butcher Berry.

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<v Speaker 4>That would be something where we, like number one, understanding

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<v Speaker 4>fundamentally how we want to approach.

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<v Speaker 1>A pass block.

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<v Speaker 4>Okay, everything of that entails with your set in initiation

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<v Speaker 4>of contact, second run game, how do I initiate that,

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<v Speaker 4>what's my approach, how do I attack defenders? What's my

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<v Speaker 4>leverage on every play relative to the concept. Right, So

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<v Speaker 4>that has to begin there. If I understand that that means,

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<v Speaker 4>and then I'm understanding what we're doing as an offense. Now,

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<v Speaker 4>I think that's a great training camp, right. Is it

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<v Speaker 4>based upon production results? No, at some point we all

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<v Speaker 4>know that that matters, but not for the training camp

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<v Speaker 4>at this point.

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<v Speaker 2>Fantastic stuff there. Let's go ahead and stay on the

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<v Speaker 2>line and make that first position group that we hit

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<v Speaker 2>here today on the podcast. I think Aaron Brewer has

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<v Speaker 2>had a fantastic couple of days here, especially where I

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<v Speaker 2>saw him opening lanes, squatting and anchoring and pass sets

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<v Speaker 2>and the best part about his game and the athletic

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<v Speaker 2>ability getting out in space. I mean, we saw it today.

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<v Speaker 2>I saw him carry a block on fifty six Quentin Bill.

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<v Speaker 2>I had fifty eight my notes, and I was like, ah,

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<v Speaker 2>that's fifty six because he got to the edge and

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<v Speaker 2>Quentin Bell has been around with the one, so that's

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<v Speaker 2>kind of where it made the most sense. And he

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<v Speaker 2>carried this block all the way out to the perimeter

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<v Speaker 2>ten yards down the field and just buried a dude

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<v Speaker 2>where I was like, oh, okay, yeah, that's that's the

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<v Speaker 2>that's the old Michael or block from the blind side.

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<v Speaker 2>Sandy Bullock would have lover that from the sidelines. So

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<v Speaker 2>Aaron Brewer nice day to day. Let's go ahead and

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<v Speaker 2>get some more audio here from coach Butch Berry, who

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<v Speaker 2>talked about Aaron Brewer ahead of practice today. Yeah.

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<v Speaker 1>Absolutely.

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<v Speaker 4>I think in every phase of his game, we can

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<v Speaker 4>make him a better run blocker, we can make him

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<v Speaker 4>better pass bloker. I think in every phase of his game.

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<v Speaker 4>I feel very strongly about the assets that he has

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<v Speaker 4>that are his talents, and then where we can from

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<v Speaker 4>a skill set work.

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<v Speaker 1>To get better.

0:10:34.480 --> 0:10:36.160
<v Speaker 2>And I wanted to play that because it tracks with

0:10:36.320 --> 0:10:38.720
<v Speaker 2>you know, the podcast. But I think the words that

0:10:38.760 --> 0:10:41.520
<v Speaker 2>he said were valuable, but the tone of how he

0:10:41.600 --> 0:10:44.560
<v Speaker 2>said that to me was more valuable. I saw some

0:10:44.600 --> 0:10:46.480
<v Speaker 2>of you guys on Twitter, you know, praising this hire

0:10:46.520 --> 0:10:48.720
<v Speaker 2>of coach Butch Berry and how great it's been, you know,

0:10:48.760 --> 0:10:51.160
<v Speaker 2>the first offensive line coach to return for a second

0:10:51.240 --> 0:10:53.920
<v Speaker 2>year since like you know, Chris Furster back in twenty

0:10:54.040 --> 0:10:56.920
<v Speaker 2>sixteen seventeen, And you know, I mean, shoot, we went

0:10:56.960 --> 0:10:59.280
<v Speaker 2>through two head coaches in three days back when Brian

0:10:59.280 --> 0:11:01.520
<v Speaker 2>Flores's first year, Pat Flurry got fired like on day

0:11:01.520 --> 0:11:03.400
<v Speaker 2>three on his day off two And I thought The

0:11:03.440 --> 0:11:06.319
<v Speaker 2>answer was a great indicator of how this staff knows

0:11:06.360 --> 0:11:09.520
<v Speaker 2>exactly what they're doing at that position and what traits

0:11:09.559 --> 0:11:12.000
<v Speaker 2>they need to make it successful, and how they can

0:11:12.520 --> 0:11:15.160
<v Speaker 2>you know, spat a talent in Austin Jackson and they

0:11:15.160 --> 0:11:18.360
<v Speaker 2>can get that talent to emerge, which it hadn't done previously,

0:11:18.440 --> 0:11:21.040
<v Speaker 2>right and successfully enough so to be the number one

0:11:21.080 --> 0:11:23.360
<v Speaker 2>offense in the National Football League, which is a point

0:11:23.360 --> 0:11:25.600
<v Speaker 2>of contention that I see so frequently from you know,

0:11:25.640 --> 0:11:27.559
<v Speaker 2>not just Dolphins fans, but national media, Like I see

0:11:27.559 --> 0:11:29.480
<v Speaker 2>Mina Kimes all the time talking about the offensive line.

0:11:29.520 --> 0:11:31.520
<v Speaker 3>It's like, well, it's okay.

0:11:31.559 --> 0:11:34.480
<v Speaker 2>So the ESPN Insider List hates the offensive line, they

0:11:34.559 --> 0:11:37.079
<v Speaker 2>hate the quarterback Tyreek they think is great. They don't

0:11:37.080 --> 0:11:39.440
<v Speaker 2>think Wall is a top twenty receiver. So how that

0:11:39.559 --> 0:11:41.280
<v Speaker 2>Raheemos was a twenty first running back? Like, how the

0:11:41.280 --> 0:11:42.880
<v Speaker 2>hell was it the number one offense in the NFL? Then,

0:11:42.960 --> 0:11:44.520
<v Speaker 2>Like the math isn't that up there? You know, not

0:11:44.559 --> 0:11:48.080
<v Speaker 2>a math guy, but two plus two ekals five? Right? Okay,

0:11:48.160 --> 0:11:50.280
<v Speaker 2>last one here, and maybe it's just filler, but I

0:11:50.280 --> 0:11:52.559
<v Speaker 2>think it's important. I've run so much audio on here

0:11:52.559 --> 0:11:55.880
<v Speaker 2>of players praising Butcher's approach to to you know, coaching.

0:11:56.040 --> 0:11:57.880
<v Speaker 2>So I asked him, why is it so important to

0:11:57.920 --> 0:12:01.160
<v Speaker 2>you to have that collaborative approach with your player?

0:12:01.160 --> 0:12:02.640
<v Speaker 4>Well, just what we just talked about, and I think

0:12:02.640 --> 0:12:06.000
<v Speaker 4>that's right there, understanding what your personnel is. Right. And

0:12:06.040 --> 0:12:09.040
<v Speaker 4>a guy once he is trying to do my starting point,

0:12:09.080 --> 0:12:11.320
<v Speaker 4>but maybe he's not having the success that I've had

0:12:11.320 --> 0:12:14.400
<v Speaker 4>with another player on that starting point, he can articulate

0:12:14.440 --> 0:12:17.160
<v Speaker 4>to me, Well, because we've done that starting point, we

0:12:17.240 --> 0:12:18.680
<v Speaker 4>do a lot of the same things over and over.

0:12:18.720 --> 0:12:23.480
<v Speaker 4>He can articulate to me, Hey, I'm struggling with this right,

0:12:24.080 --> 0:12:26.440
<v Speaker 4>and I've been putting a lot of thought into for

0:12:26.559 --> 0:12:29.240
<v Speaker 4>me and my body. Here's what I think. And then

0:12:29.720 --> 0:12:32.160
<v Speaker 4>sometimes I say, no, I don't agree with that. Here's

0:12:32.160 --> 0:12:34.680
<v Speaker 4>what I think, and there's given taker sometimes like I

0:12:34.679 --> 0:12:36.679
<v Speaker 4>think you're exactly right. I think let's go with that,

0:12:36.920 --> 0:12:37.880
<v Speaker 4>and then I'll work with you.

0:12:37.840 --> 0:12:38.480
<v Speaker 1>With that avenue.

0:12:38.480 --> 0:12:40.280
<v Speaker 4>So there's a lot of variables with each scenario on.

0:12:40.240 --> 0:12:41.760
<v Speaker 2>That Let's go ahead and take a break right there.

0:12:41.800 --> 0:12:43.760
<v Speaker 2>I have so much more to get to, including a

0:12:43.760 --> 0:12:44.920
<v Speaker 2>great day from the quarterbacks.

0:12:45.120 --> 0:12:45.520
<v Speaker 3>That's all.

0:12:45.559 --> 0:12:48.480
<v Speaker 2>Next Draft Time Podcast, your host Travis Wingfield brought to

0:12:48.480 --> 0:12:53.520
<v Speaker 2>you by I dontation talked offensive line play butcher Berry

0:12:53.559 --> 0:12:55.560
<v Speaker 2>and segment one and then we go ahead and scoop

0:12:55.600 --> 0:12:58.680
<v Speaker 2>back to the quarterback position, the guy's under center, which

0:12:58.840 --> 0:13:03.680
<v Speaker 2>was positively on this Thursday with Tua just dominants as usual.

0:13:03.920 --> 0:13:06.120
<v Speaker 2>And then I thought Skyler had himself a great day

0:13:06.160 --> 0:13:09.800
<v Speaker 2>and has put together a very solid camp cumulatively. In fact,

0:13:09.800 --> 0:13:12.319
<v Speaker 2>Skyler had another play today that just shows me how

0:13:12.360 --> 0:13:14.600
<v Speaker 2>it's slowing down for him and how much better he's

0:13:14.640 --> 0:13:17.400
<v Speaker 2>seeing it. And I, you know, you go back to

0:13:17.440 --> 0:13:19.559
<v Speaker 2>the podcast the All twenty two breakdowns and you know,

0:13:19.640 --> 0:13:22.199
<v Speaker 2>during Scaler's starts in his rookie season, and I just

0:13:22.240 --> 0:13:24.920
<v Speaker 2>got so frustrated because like he just wasn't seeing it.

0:13:24.960 --> 0:13:27.560
<v Speaker 2>And I remember talking to Brett Coleman, the great film

0:13:27.559 --> 0:13:30.600
<v Speaker 2>analysts from you know, the Film Room podcast and the

0:13:30.679 --> 0:13:34.040
<v Speaker 2>Bootleg Football podcast and NFL media as well, and he

0:13:34.120 --> 0:13:35.920
<v Speaker 2>was like, yeah, just give Skyler some time, because you

0:13:35.960 --> 0:13:38.360
<v Speaker 2>know that Kansas State offense, like the verbia is and

0:13:38.360 --> 0:13:40.320
<v Speaker 2>the amount of plays that you have in a McDaniel

0:13:40.320 --> 0:13:42.719
<v Speaker 2>offense is going to be four times what he ran

0:13:42.720 --> 0:13:45.440
<v Speaker 2>at Kansas State. And going back to the offensive line discussion,

0:13:45.760 --> 0:13:47.800
<v Speaker 2>playbooks are just a lot easier in the college game,

0:13:48.120 --> 0:13:50.360
<v Speaker 2>and I'm watching this guy play the game now and

0:13:50.360 --> 0:13:52.680
<v Speaker 2>he's seeing it better and ripping it, and it's you know,

0:13:52.800 --> 0:13:54.800
<v Speaker 2>I go back to that that rookie season when everyone's like, oh,

0:13:54.840 --> 0:13:57.040
<v Speaker 2>Skylar Thompson's arm strength and he has all these great

0:13:57.080 --> 0:13:59.360
<v Speaker 2>preseason stats, and then of course the regular season comes

0:13:59.360 --> 0:14:02.840
<v Speaker 2>around and the production changes and it's a different ballgame,

0:14:02.880 --> 0:14:07.599
<v Speaker 2>and it's you know, I get so bogged down in

0:14:07.679 --> 0:14:10.880
<v Speaker 2>this point because I'm currently like in search of a

0:14:10.920 --> 0:14:13.600
<v Speaker 2>new national NFL podcast because the death of the Round

0:14:13.640 --> 0:14:17.040
<v Speaker 2>the NFL podcast, which again I say, like, you know,

0:14:17.040 --> 0:14:19.560
<v Speaker 2>I try to be as informative as possible on this show,

0:14:19.720 --> 0:14:22.360
<v Speaker 2>and I want to do that, and I think I've

0:14:22.600 --> 0:14:25.760
<v Speaker 2>done that pretty well, but I also think maybe I

0:14:25.840 --> 0:14:28.720
<v Speaker 2>just episodes in the past that were too informative and

0:14:28.760 --> 0:14:31.680
<v Speaker 2>not enough fun, because I think in a podcast, it

0:14:31.760 --> 0:14:33.800
<v Speaker 2>has to be a fun setting for a thirty minute show.

0:14:33.840 --> 0:14:36.160
<v Speaker 2>It can't just be dense information. And that's why I

0:14:36.160 --> 0:14:38.480
<v Speaker 2>love the Around the NFL podcast, and they killed that thing.

0:14:38.560 --> 0:14:40.560
<v Speaker 2>So I'm trying to find the new one. And one

0:14:40.600 --> 0:14:42.520
<v Speaker 2>of the ones that was recommended to me was The

0:14:42.560 --> 0:14:45.960
<v Speaker 2>Athletic Football Show with Robert Mays and he's a great

0:14:45.960 --> 0:14:47.560
<v Speaker 2>host and a very insightful person. But I saw a

0:14:47.600 --> 0:14:49.720
<v Speaker 2>tweet from the other day where he was like, you know,

0:14:50.160 --> 0:14:52.760
<v Speaker 2>crapping on to as a fifty three million dollars quarterback

0:14:52.760 --> 0:14:53.920
<v Speaker 2>because he wants more traits.

0:14:54.000 --> 0:14:54.720
<v Speaker 3>And then what does he do.

0:14:54.800 --> 0:14:57.520
<v Speaker 2>He goes out and brings Derek Klassen in, the quarterback

0:14:57.560 --> 0:15:00.640
<v Speaker 2>guy that only cares about quarterback trade and I'm you know,

0:15:00.800 --> 0:15:03.520
<v Speaker 2>I'm looking at this stuff with Justin Herbert who has

0:15:03.520 --> 0:15:05.840
<v Speaker 2>a planter fashion injury, and you know, they say he's

0:15:05.840 --> 0:15:07.840
<v Speaker 2>going to play week one, but is he hurt again?

0:15:07.880 --> 0:15:11.280
<v Speaker 2>Because you know next up on get up here, they

0:15:11.320 --> 0:15:12.880
<v Speaker 2>regret the contract. We're going to talk about that for

0:15:12.920 --> 0:15:14.400
<v Speaker 2>three straight days. We're going to talk about his bad

0:15:14.400 --> 0:15:16.640
<v Speaker 2>production last year, his bad production twenty twenty two. We're

0:15:16.640 --> 0:15:18.080
<v Speaker 2>going to talk about any of that. We're going to

0:15:18.160 --> 0:15:19.920
<v Speaker 2>talk about how, you know, he should retire because he's

0:15:19.920 --> 0:15:22.000
<v Speaker 2>been hurt too much. Like I just want to know

0:15:22.080 --> 0:15:24.680
<v Speaker 2>when it's going to even out for these quarterbacks that

0:15:24.680 --> 0:15:28.840
<v Speaker 2>have you know, all shown really good ability. And the

0:15:29.080 --> 0:15:31.120
<v Speaker 2>reason I bring this up is because you know, I'm

0:15:31.120 --> 0:15:34.280
<v Speaker 2>so sick of the Herbert traits stuff like and you

0:15:34.320 --> 0:15:36.760
<v Speaker 2>know that the scholar Thompson preseason that one year was

0:15:36.800 --> 0:15:38.760
<v Speaker 2>all traits, right, But then you get into playing the

0:15:38.760 --> 0:15:41.160
<v Speaker 2>position where I need to be able to understand what

0:15:41.240 --> 0:15:44.400
<v Speaker 2>the defense is doing, how my offense attacks that particular play,

0:15:44.560 --> 0:15:46.760
<v Speaker 2>and where their adjustments are, where my side adjustments are,

0:15:46.800 --> 0:15:48.040
<v Speaker 2>and how the ball has to come out at a

0:15:48.080 --> 0:15:50.960
<v Speaker 2>certain time and a certain location to execute the offense

0:15:51.000 --> 0:15:53.760
<v Speaker 2>to execute what they're doing to us. It's such a

0:15:53.760 --> 0:15:56.120
<v Speaker 2>critical part of the position. It's the most important part.

0:15:55.960 --> 0:15:56.480
<v Speaker 3>Of the position.

0:15:56.880 --> 0:15:58.840
<v Speaker 2>And that's why two was so good, and that's why

0:15:58.880 --> 0:16:01.720
<v Speaker 2>I don't think those folks appreciate to it as much

0:16:01.800 --> 0:16:05.560
<v Speaker 2>because he executes the offense and was handpicked by the

0:16:05.640 --> 0:16:10.280
<v Speaker 2>quarterback or the quarterback whisper the offensive genius, right Mike McDaniel,

0:16:10.520 --> 0:16:13.480
<v Speaker 2>who went to his you know, personnel staff and was like,

0:16:13.520 --> 0:16:15.320
<v Speaker 2>I want this guy here long term because he makes

0:16:15.360 --> 0:16:15.840
<v Speaker 2>my offense.

0:16:15.920 --> 0:16:15.960
<v Speaker 3>Go.

0:16:16.520 --> 0:16:19.680
<v Speaker 2>Like, how are we not taking that as the serious

0:16:20.040 --> 0:16:22.520
<v Speaker 2>like end all be all part of the conversation, and

0:16:22.720 --> 0:16:26.440
<v Speaker 2>instead we're trusting these people that you know. I respect

0:16:26.480 --> 0:16:30.200
<v Speaker 2>the film study analysts crowd as much as anybody, but like, gosh,

0:16:30.400 --> 0:16:32.560
<v Speaker 2>the game is not played in trades. Dog gets played

0:16:32.560 --> 0:16:35.160
<v Speaker 2>in production, and you know what you do between the

0:16:35.160 --> 0:16:37.600
<v Speaker 2>lines and how you execute an offense and how you

0:16:37.640 --> 0:16:40.440
<v Speaker 2>communicate a play call, and it's there's so much more

0:16:40.480 --> 0:16:43.080
<v Speaker 2>than arm strength. Dude, like drives me crazy, and so

0:16:43.160 --> 0:16:47.000
<v Speaker 2>with Skylar Thompson, I see major growth in that area

0:16:47.040 --> 0:16:49.560
<v Speaker 2>because today was this blitz installer. You know, tons of

0:16:49.560 --> 0:16:52.160
<v Speaker 2>blitzes and throwing the kitchen sink at the offense, various

0:16:52.160 --> 0:16:55.320
<v Speaker 2>looks and overload pressures and zero looks and disguises, just

0:16:55.440 --> 0:16:58.160
<v Speaker 2>challenging the quarterbacks every single step of the way, and

0:16:58.200 --> 0:17:00.600
<v Speaker 2>they responded in a big way. The best play I

0:17:00.600 --> 0:17:03.200
<v Speaker 2>think of Skyler Thompson's entire career so far was a

0:17:03.240 --> 0:17:06.280
<v Speaker 2>touchdown throw he had the Jody Fortson where Channing Tyndall

0:17:06.440 --> 0:17:09.600
<v Speaker 2>sprung free a free run to the quarterback, but Skyler

0:17:09.800 --> 0:17:11.480
<v Speaker 2>saw it, felt it, got to a spot where he

0:17:11.480 --> 0:17:14.199
<v Speaker 2>could get to a threatening throwing position and got the

0:17:14.240 --> 0:17:16.879
<v Speaker 2>ball hot to replace the blitz with the football for

0:17:16.920 --> 0:17:19.240
<v Speaker 2>a touchdown. And I've seen that a couple times this camp.

0:17:19.280 --> 0:17:22.679
<v Speaker 2>So that's a high level quarterback play and that's way

0:17:22.920 --> 0:17:26.760
<v Speaker 2>more important than Zach Wilson running around in shorts at

0:17:26.760 --> 0:17:29.280
<v Speaker 2>a BYU Pro day where he shows you cool throws

0:17:29.320 --> 0:17:32.080
<v Speaker 2>on air in a controlled environment that he showed on

0:17:32.119 --> 0:17:34.680
<v Speaker 2>tape against future insurance sales them running six five forty

0:17:34.760 --> 0:17:37.679
<v Speaker 2>yard dashes chasing him around provo. You know that's not

0:17:37.680 --> 0:17:39.760
<v Speaker 2>what you get at lambeau Field or you know at

0:17:39.920 --> 0:17:40.840
<v Speaker 2>MetLife Stadium.

0:17:40.880 --> 0:17:42.160
<v Speaker 3>Like, it's a different ballgame, bro.

0:17:42.200 --> 0:17:43.440
<v Speaker 2>You have to be able to play from the pocket

0:17:43.440 --> 0:17:46.399
<v Speaker 2>and play between the ears and outsmart the opposition, and

0:17:46.560 --> 0:17:49.520
<v Speaker 2>execute the offense as they are designed by these genius coordinators.

0:17:49.520 --> 0:17:51.919
<v Speaker 2>That's how NFL football is played. And I saw that

0:17:51.960 --> 0:17:54.280
<v Speaker 2>with Skoylar Thompson today in this training camp opposed to

0:17:54.640 --> 0:17:57.040
<v Speaker 2>you know, his rookie year kind of just playing on vibes, right.

0:17:57.600 --> 0:18:00.000
<v Speaker 2>He also had some good ball placement, including a gorgeous

0:18:00.160 --> 0:18:02.760
<v Speaker 2>throw to Malik Washington at the back pylon in one

0:18:02.760 --> 0:18:05.040
<v Speaker 2>on ones today and also just real quick to put

0:18:05.080 --> 0:18:08.280
<v Speaker 2>a point on that as well. Please don't get mad

0:18:08.320 --> 0:18:10.360
<v Speaker 2>and my mentions when I talk about running fades, it's

0:18:10.440 --> 0:18:12.520
<v Speaker 2>it's every football practice of all time and one on

0:18:12.520 --> 0:18:14.479
<v Speaker 2>ones you're gonna see fades. If they want to get

0:18:14.480 --> 0:18:16.440
<v Speaker 2>open with a fade, if the quarterback wants to try

0:18:16.440 --> 0:18:17.960
<v Speaker 2>that throw, they're gonna run in practice. I know it

0:18:18.000 --> 0:18:20.040
<v Speaker 2>was not successful last year and some instances and third

0:18:20.080 --> 0:18:22.800
<v Speaker 2>downs and whatnot in the red zone. But don't get

0:18:22.800 --> 0:18:24.240
<v Speaker 2>mad when I tell you about a great rep on

0:18:24.400 --> 0:18:26.520
<v Speaker 2>on air or you know, one on ones in a

0:18:26.520 --> 0:18:29.719
<v Speaker 2>fade route. Okay, all right, so tua, let's let's talk too,

0:18:29.840 --> 0:18:32.320
<v Speaker 2>shall we. I want to start here with some audio

0:18:32.359 --> 0:18:34.680
<v Speaker 2>from coach Bevill. You know, I asked coach McDaniel the

0:18:34.720 --> 0:18:37.080
<v Speaker 2>other day about the ball handling importance at the quarterback

0:18:37.119 --> 0:18:40.040
<v Speaker 2>position and the importance of executing your play fax and

0:18:41.280 --> 0:18:43.919
<v Speaker 2>being able to influence the defense with play action. And

0:18:43.960 --> 0:18:46.040
<v Speaker 2>the way you do that is your run action and

0:18:46.080 --> 0:18:48.239
<v Speaker 2>the ball handling and the running game is you have

0:18:48.320 --> 0:18:50.080
<v Speaker 2>to sell the same action and you have to be

0:18:50.240 --> 0:18:51.280
<v Speaker 2>deliberate with that stuff.

0:18:51.359 --> 0:18:51.520
<v Speaker 1>Right.

0:18:51.800 --> 0:18:54.760
<v Speaker 2>So didn't really get that, you know, pure answer from

0:18:54.760 --> 0:18:57.560
<v Speaker 2>coach on that one, But from Darryl Bevell today we did.

0:18:57.880 --> 0:18:59.879
<v Speaker 2>And it's kind of two soundbites here put together. So

0:19:00.040 --> 0:19:02.480
<v Speaker 2>two quotes here from coach Bevell on the importance of

0:19:02.480 --> 0:19:04.600
<v Speaker 2>ball handling and the kind of the points they drew

0:19:04.880 --> 0:19:05.920
<v Speaker 2>with to a tongue of Bi Lowe.

0:19:06.280 --> 0:19:08.320
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, I mean we're I mean, we're always trying to,

0:19:09.400 --> 0:19:11.040
<v Speaker 5>you know, see if we can pull one guy out

0:19:11.080 --> 0:19:12.080
<v Speaker 5>of the defense.

0:19:12.080 --> 0:19:13.920
<v Speaker 3>On really all of our run game. You know, that's

0:19:13.920 --> 0:19:14.560
<v Speaker 3>that's our job.

0:19:14.600 --> 0:19:17.520
<v Speaker 5>It's not a playoff. You know. One one we have

0:19:17.600 --> 0:19:19.280
<v Speaker 5>to be able to to get it to the running

0:19:19.320 --> 0:19:21.160
<v Speaker 5>backs on the on the white course that we have,

0:19:21.520 --> 0:19:24.119
<v Speaker 5>but also is continue to carry out our fakes to

0:19:24.400 --> 0:19:25.240
<v Speaker 5>be able to affect if.

0:19:25.119 --> 0:19:26.800
<v Speaker 1>We can affect one guy out of the defense, and

0:19:26.880 --> 0:19:27.600
<v Speaker 1>we've done our job.

0:19:27.720 --> 0:19:29.640
<v Speaker 5>So we try to do that each and every play.

0:19:29.720 --> 0:19:31.719
<v Speaker 5>But we we coach a lot on you know, how

0:19:31.800 --> 0:19:33.280
<v Speaker 5>we want them to hand it off, what we want

0:19:33.320 --> 0:19:36.119
<v Speaker 5>them to do with their hands, and then also like

0:19:36.160 --> 0:19:38.600
<v Speaker 5>the tempo with which as you're referring to the tempo

0:19:38.680 --> 0:19:41.639
<v Speaker 5>with which they come off the fake, I think that

0:19:41.720 --> 0:19:44.880
<v Speaker 5>intent that they have that you know, the backside defenders

0:19:44.920 --> 0:19:47.720
<v Speaker 5>can can recognize that or see that. So yeah, we're

0:19:47.720 --> 0:19:48.840
<v Speaker 5>trying to do that every play we can.

0:19:48.920 --> 0:19:50.680
<v Speaker 2>All let's go ahead and do the two of highlights now,

0:19:50.720 --> 0:19:53.480
<v Speaker 2>so again one on one period for him. Location is

0:19:53.480 --> 0:19:55.360
<v Speaker 2>always still er. There's no point in covering it every

0:19:55.400 --> 0:19:57.400
<v Speaker 2>single day, but I will say the timing of it

0:19:57.440 --> 0:20:00.520
<v Speaker 2>has just been impeccable. Like the guys out breaks, the

0:20:00.520 --> 0:20:02.600
<v Speaker 2>ball is usually on them, which again is kind of

0:20:02.640 --> 0:20:05.120
<v Speaker 2>a copy and paste, but it's worth noting.

0:20:05.119 --> 0:20:06.920
<v Speaker 3>I suppose that for that much.

0:20:07.200 --> 0:20:09.440
<v Speaker 2>His first throw and team was this forty or fifty

0:20:09.520 --> 0:20:12.439
<v Speaker 2>yard strike I didn't count exactly to Tyreek Hill, and

0:20:12.480 --> 0:20:14.200
<v Speaker 2>I think it was a sack by Zack Steeler who

0:20:14.240 --> 0:20:16.400
<v Speaker 2>kind of got around the edge and dipped back inside

0:20:16.400 --> 0:20:18.639
<v Speaker 2>to meet Tua when he hitched up, but to a

0:20:18.720 --> 0:20:21.280
<v Speaker 2>man like springing off that back foot hitches up delivers

0:20:21.320 --> 0:20:23.679
<v Speaker 2>a great ball that was right there on Tyreek for

0:20:23.760 --> 0:20:26.439
<v Speaker 2>a big completion. So a great throw, great route, great catch.

0:20:26.680 --> 0:20:28.720
<v Speaker 2>But I think Zach's great pass rush was the one

0:20:28.720 --> 0:20:30.480
<v Speaker 2>that won the play. But it's always good to see

0:20:30.480 --> 0:20:32.040
<v Speaker 2>the whole thing play out and get you know, good

0:20:32.080 --> 0:20:34.000
<v Speaker 2>on good on good. He also had a handful of

0:20:34.040 --> 0:20:36.400
<v Speaker 2>catch rock throw completions, a bunch of those of Tyreek

0:20:36.440 --> 0:20:38.320
<v Speaker 2>where you know, a little short hitch on third and

0:20:38.359 --> 0:20:40.800
<v Speaker 2>five to six yards to move the sticks that you know,

0:20:40.920 --> 0:20:43.680
<v Speaker 2>deep stem comeback down the hooks one eighteen yards where

0:20:43.680 --> 0:20:45.639
<v Speaker 2>we fired that thing in there between two defenders. But

0:20:45.680 --> 0:20:47.440
<v Speaker 2>here's what I wanted to focus on today, because you know,

0:20:47.480 --> 0:20:49.760
<v Speaker 2>we'll go to coach Bev for some audio here about

0:20:49.760 --> 0:20:53.360
<v Speaker 2>the added mobility and how it's you know, progressing Tua's

0:20:53.400 --> 0:20:56.320
<v Speaker 2>game and how it's added to the overall body of

0:20:56.359 --> 0:20:58.560
<v Speaker 2>work to mobility. Let's go ahead and hear first from

0:20:58.560 --> 0:21:00.920
<v Speaker 2>coach Bevill on Tua's added mobility.

0:21:01.080 --> 0:21:01.240
<v Speaker 4>Yeah.

0:21:01.400 --> 0:21:03.720
<v Speaker 5>I think every year, you know, you try to evaluate

0:21:03.800 --> 0:21:06.600
<v Speaker 5>where you're at and try to find the improvements that

0:21:06.640 --> 0:21:08.720
<v Speaker 5>you can make. And I think that's one of the

0:21:08.720 --> 0:21:12.280
<v Speaker 5>things that that we've talked about. And you know, I

0:21:12.280 --> 0:21:14.399
<v Speaker 5>mean you could see it. He's he's a little bit

0:21:14.440 --> 0:21:16.600
<v Speaker 5>he's a little bit slimmer, but you know, you still

0:21:17.040 --> 0:21:20.199
<v Speaker 5>want to make sure that you're still strong, and you know,

0:21:20.440 --> 0:21:22.160
<v Speaker 5>it's not it's not like we're trying to turn him

0:21:22.160 --> 0:21:24.440
<v Speaker 5>into you know, Lamar or Russell Wilson or any of

0:21:24.480 --> 0:21:29.120
<v Speaker 5>those things. But being able to to escape the pocket

0:21:29.200 --> 0:21:33.040
<v Speaker 5>be a little bit more explosive just can only benefit you.

0:21:33.560 --> 0:21:37.240
<v Speaker 5>But again, the strength of his game is being on time,

0:21:37.960 --> 0:21:41.240
<v Speaker 5>throwing with quickness, throwing with accuracy and seeing the field.

0:21:41.320 --> 0:21:44.080
<v Speaker 2>I thought today was just a fantastic example of exactly that.

0:21:44.240 --> 0:21:47.320
<v Speaker 2>Lots of pressure, Disgui's looks and just stuff that can

0:21:47.359 --> 0:21:49.680
<v Speaker 2>make a quarterback's mind swim a little bit. But I

0:21:49.720 --> 0:21:52.200
<v Speaker 2>thought too did a fantastic job of not just getting

0:21:52.240 --> 0:21:54.560
<v Speaker 2>away from the pressure, but sensing it and feeling it.

0:21:54.840 --> 0:21:56.560
<v Speaker 2>You know, I watch all those videos that JT. O.

0:21:56.600 --> 0:21:58.680
<v Speaker 2>Sullivan does, and one of the things that he always

0:21:58.680 --> 0:22:01.760
<v Speaker 2>stresses with all the offenses is sliding your protection in

0:22:01.800 --> 0:22:04.040
<v Speaker 2>a way that if you're going to have a free runner,

0:22:04.480 --> 0:22:07.000
<v Speaker 2>make it be the guy that's in the quarterback's face

0:22:07.040 --> 0:22:09.040
<v Speaker 2>something he can see it, so it's not off the

0:22:09.040 --> 0:22:12.000
<v Speaker 2>blind side. And on one play today Ramsey came around

0:22:12.080 --> 0:22:14.879
<v Speaker 2>the edge and bent the arc and gosh, Jalen is

0:22:15.040 --> 0:22:17.400
<v Speaker 2>so explosive and has so much speed off the edge

0:22:17.440 --> 0:22:19.960
<v Speaker 2>where he even blocked a field goal today, or would

0:22:20.000 --> 0:22:21.880
<v Speaker 2>have if they didn't you know, if he didn't pull

0:22:22.000 --> 0:22:24.040
<v Speaker 2>up at the end to not you know, take out

0:22:24.040 --> 0:22:26.960
<v Speaker 2>his holder and kicker. But he just comes screaming off

0:22:27.000 --> 0:22:29.439
<v Speaker 2>the edge. On this particular rep, he beat Austin Jackson

0:22:29.480 --> 0:22:32.200
<v Speaker 2>around the outside. But to have felt that even though

0:22:32.359 --> 0:22:35.520
<v Speaker 2>it's his blind side right hitched up and scrambled his

0:22:35.560 --> 0:22:38.199
<v Speaker 2>way through a vacant gap on the offensive line or

0:22:38.240 --> 0:22:41.320
<v Speaker 2>I guess the defensive line, and that right there is

0:22:41.359 --> 0:22:43.800
<v Speaker 2>the impact of his running ability, because now you have

0:22:43.840 --> 0:22:47.040
<v Speaker 2>a guy who can not only you know, beat you

0:22:47.200 --> 0:22:49.920
<v Speaker 2>hot with the football when you blitz. But now if

0:22:49.920 --> 0:22:52.080
<v Speaker 2>he doesn't do that, now he has the option to

0:22:52.080 --> 0:22:54.000
<v Speaker 2>scramble and make you pay with his legs, especially if

0:22:54.000 --> 0:22:56.480
<v Speaker 2>you're in man coverage, because that's where all those vacancies

0:22:56.520 --> 0:22:58.000
<v Speaker 2>come from. Where you see some of these top running

0:22:58.080 --> 0:23:01.640
<v Speaker 2>quarterbacks really exploit defense is who blitz and then play

0:23:01.640 --> 0:23:03.520
<v Speaker 2>man coverage. And if they play it right, then you

0:23:03.560 --> 0:23:05.000
<v Speaker 2>still have to finally way get the quarterback to the

0:23:05.000 --> 0:23:07.119
<v Speaker 2>ground because if you don't, he can escape for a

0:23:07.119 --> 0:23:08.760
<v Speaker 2>big play with his feet.

0:23:08.800 --> 0:23:10.359
<v Speaker 3>And so that's not going to be Tua's game.

0:23:10.520 --> 0:23:13.680
<v Speaker 2>But if he can simply add a five yard scramble

0:23:13.800 --> 0:23:15.679
<v Speaker 2>a post what maybe was a six yard sack in

0:23:15.720 --> 0:23:18.480
<v Speaker 2>the past, that's going to change the entire dynamic of

0:23:18.520 --> 0:23:20.600
<v Speaker 2>this offense. And that was a major part of his

0:23:20.680 --> 0:23:24.680
<v Speaker 2>scouting profile back at Bama right his ability to erase

0:23:24.760 --> 0:23:28.520
<v Speaker 2>free rushers and basically you know, the quick twitch elusiveness

0:23:28.520 --> 0:23:29.919
<v Speaker 2>to get off the spot and make some plays to

0:23:29.920 --> 0:23:32.639
<v Speaker 2>his feet, but also extend plays to hit bigger throws

0:23:32.680 --> 0:23:35.000
<v Speaker 2>down the field. So I think the added a loosenesth's

0:23:35.040 --> 0:23:36.680
<v Speaker 2>going to help him, it's gonna help the offense, it's

0:23:36.680 --> 0:23:38.080
<v Speaker 2>going to help the running game because of what he

0:23:38.080 --> 0:23:40.560
<v Speaker 2>can do off of that boot action. It just has

0:23:40.640 --> 0:23:43.320
<v Speaker 2>a ripple effect that's going to, I think, very very

0:23:43.359 --> 0:23:47.119
<v Speaker 2>greatly impact this offense in a positive fashion. There was

0:23:47.160 --> 0:23:49.840
<v Speaker 2>one play where they dial up this overload pressure with

0:23:49.880 --> 0:23:52.520
<v Speaker 2>the safety coming off the edge and you know, it

0:23:52.560 --> 0:23:54.399
<v Speaker 2>gets in, but there's a small crease that opens up

0:23:54.400 --> 0:23:56.040
<v Speaker 2>on the inside and to a sprints through it for

0:23:56.080 --> 0:23:58.160
<v Speaker 2>a game where he had like five or six yards

0:23:58.320 --> 0:24:01.760
<v Speaker 2>before the defense originally convert. And that's just the example

0:24:01.840 --> 0:24:04.199
<v Speaker 2>of the nimbleness that goes from you know, second and

0:24:04.240 --> 0:24:08.560
<v Speaker 2>fifteen to second and five, which is a massive, massive difference.

0:24:08.720 --> 0:24:10.920
<v Speaker 2>As for the throws, well, there were plenty of those

0:24:10.960 --> 0:24:13.600
<v Speaker 2>as well. The back of the end zone throw from

0:24:13.600 --> 0:24:15.760
<v Speaker 2>the twenty five yard line or so, where he you know,

0:24:15.800 --> 0:24:20.000
<v Speaker 2>a thirty five yard touch pass that's literally Wattle plants

0:24:20.000 --> 0:24:21.719
<v Speaker 2>his feet in the back of the end zone and

0:24:22.040 --> 0:24:24.000
<v Speaker 2>extends his hands up and then it kind of starts

0:24:24.000 --> 0:24:26.520
<v Speaker 2>to fall back to maximize the amount of space he has,

0:24:26.560 --> 0:24:28.560
<v Speaker 2>and he catches it and falls down and the ref

0:24:28.600 --> 0:24:30.919
<v Speaker 2>comes over and hits him with the touchdown signal. Just

0:24:31.320 --> 0:24:33.879
<v Speaker 2>a pinpoint, perfect throw from like thirty five yards away.

0:24:34.119 --> 0:24:36.520
<v Speaker 2>He also hit Tyreek on this little touch pass over

0:24:36.560 --> 0:24:39.639
<v Speaker 2>the curl flat defender underneath the half field safety. Just

0:24:39.680 --> 0:24:42.760
<v Speaker 2>this nice touch throw right in that soft spot, right

0:24:42.800 --> 0:24:46.000
<v Speaker 2>on time. And then two of my favorite throws came

0:24:46.040 --> 0:24:48.800
<v Speaker 2>against what do you know, more pressure ones, A thirty

0:24:48.840 --> 0:24:51.480
<v Speaker 2>five yard touchdown strike to Julian Hill. On this one,

0:24:51.640 --> 0:24:54.840
<v Speaker 2>Ramsey shows blitz and Tua sees it, makes a check

0:24:55.160 --> 0:24:57.800
<v Speaker 2>and then Ramsey ends up backing off. But because of

0:24:57.880 --> 0:25:01.760
<v Speaker 2>the check, I think what the defense was expecting this

0:25:01.920 --> 0:25:04.480
<v Speaker 2>run that he had or this back off blitz.

0:25:04.520 --> 0:25:05.240
<v Speaker 3>I should say that he have.

0:25:05.960 --> 0:25:08.879
<v Speaker 2>They don't reroute Julian Hill, who takes a free release

0:25:08.960 --> 0:25:10.720
<v Speaker 2>right in the middle of the field and two finds

0:25:10.760 --> 0:25:13.880
<v Speaker 2>him for a wide open touchdown. Just smart quarterback play man.

0:25:14.000 --> 0:25:16.080
<v Speaker 2>The other one was a forty yard touchdown to Waddle.

0:25:16.080 --> 0:25:18.760
<v Speaker 2>In the situational period, they're trying to get themselves into

0:25:18.800 --> 0:25:21.600
<v Speaker 2>field goal range and the defense goes this zero blitz

0:25:21.960 --> 0:25:23.840
<v Speaker 2>man coverage and if you do that against us, you

0:25:23.920 --> 0:25:26.040
<v Speaker 2>might pay, And that's exactly what happened. Wattle runs a

0:25:26.080 --> 0:25:28.760
<v Speaker 2>slamt Two puts it round the upfield shoulder. Kind of

0:25:28.800 --> 0:25:31.440
<v Speaker 2>reminded me of the opening day touchdown against the Patriots

0:25:31.440 --> 0:25:34.840
<v Speaker 2>two years ago for touchdown. Let's go ahead and pivot

0:25:34.880 --> 0:25:36.399
<v Speaker 2>here now, or not pivot, but go back to the

0:25:36.400 --> 0:25:38.639
<v Speaker 2>tight end that I talked about there, Julian Hill, who

0:25:38.640 --> 0:25:40.640
<v Speaker 2>made some plays in this practice and continues to knock

0:25:40.720 --> 0:25:43.040
<v Speaker 2>heads as a blocker. Let's go ahead and hear from

0:25:43.119 --> 0:25:45.800
<v Speaker 2>John Embry on how the second year tight end has

0:25:45.840 --> 0:25:47.320
<v Speaker 2>progressed in his second year.

0:25:47.359 --> 0:25:49.720
<v Speaker 6>You know, when you're in this offense and you start

0:25:49.880 --> 0:25:53.040
<v Speaker 6>getting comfortable with it, then you can do as I say,

0:25:53.040 --> 0:25:56.200
<v Speaker 6>play the game within the game. So now with him,

0:25:56.359 --> 0:25:58.440
<v Speaker 6>I'm at a different level as far as coaching him,

0:25:58.480 --> 0:26:00.960
<v Speaker 6>teaching him kind of what defenses are doing so you

0:26:01.000 --> 0:26:04.359
<v Speaker 6>can anticipate some things. Whereas when you're first running the offense,

0:26:04.440 --> 0:26:06.399
<v Speaker 6>I just want you to know your assignment and then

0:26:06.440 --> 0:26:07.080
<v Speaker 6>we'll figure.

0:26:06.840 --> 0:26:07.920
<v Speaker 1>Out some other things later.

0:26:08.040 --> 0:26:11.320
<v Speaker 6>So with him, now we're doing some things going to

0:26:11.359 --> 0:26:12.080
<v Speaker 6>the next level.

0:26:12.240 --> 0:26:13.199
<v Speaker 1>He is very physical.

0:26:13.240 --> 0:26:14.720
<v Speaker 6>He reminds me of a guy had when I was

0:26:14.760 --> 0:26:17.760
<v Speaker 6>in Kansas City, Jason Dunn, as far as being that

0:26:17.880 --> 0:26:21.240
<v Speaker 6>physical tone setter, kind of kind of player, and that's

0:26:21.280 --> 0:26:22.199
<v Speaker 6>exactly what he is.

0:26:22.359 --> 0:26:24.359
<v Speaker 2>Always nice when a guy that you highlight scores a

0:26:24.359 --> 0:26:26.760
<v Speaker 2>long touchdown. Julian's had a nice camp so far, and

0:26:26.800 --> 0:26:29.600
<v Speaker 2>then with Waddle man like he's going to be the

0:26:29.600 --> 0:26:32.720
<v Speaker 2>Orange jersey. Prediction for tomorrow today was a chance, So

0:26:32.760 --> 0:26:35.159
<v Speaker 2>I was wrong again on that, but I'm with Tua

0:26:35.359 --> 0:26:39.399
<v Speaker 2>or Waddle for tomorrow. And gosh, Wattle's catching everything to

0:26:39.440 --> 0:26:40.960
<v Speaker 2>put a bow on it like Tua was.

0:26:41.560 --> 0:26:41.800
<v Speaker 3>You know.

0:26:42.119 --> 0:26:45.359
<v Speaker 2>That was one of those special quarterback performances today and

0:26:45.600 --> 0:26:47.920
<v Speaker 2>those are always such a treat to watch. And oh yeah,

0:26:47.960 --> 0:26:49.760
<v Speaker 2>I almost forgot one of the best moments of the

0:26:49.880 --> 0:26:52.239
<v Speaker 2>entire day from Tua for me before we go back

0:26:52.240 --> 0:26:54.880
<v Speaker 2>to Wattle. Here was an incomplete pass where Tua throws

0:26:54.880 --> 0:26:58.920
<v Speaker 2>a football inside Tyreek breaks outside miscommunication. It happens right,

0:26:59.000 --> 0:27:00.399
<v Speaker 2>and then the huddle comes to the other at the

0:27:00.440 --> 0:27:02.840
<v Speaker 2>conclusion of the play, and the quarterback often you know,

0:27:02.880 --> 0:27:05.760
<v Speaker 2>stands on the periphery of the huddle while guys kind

0:27:05.760 --> 0:27:07.320
<v Speaker 2>of come together to get back in shape for the

0:27:07.320 --> 0:27:10.440
<v Speaker 2>next play, and he gives the call to the offense

0:27:10.480 --> 0:27:12.560
<v Speaker 2>after that. But on this one, he takes a few

0:27:12.600 --> 0:27:14.720
<v Speaker 2>extra steps away from the huddle and kind of motioned

0:27:14.760 --> 0:27:16.440
<v Speaker 2>Tyreek like Peyton Mann used to do. Right at the

0:27:16.520 --> 0:27:19.000
<v Speaker 2>end cut there, Dallas get the end cut there, Brandon

0:27:19.000 --> 0:27:22.119
<v Speaker 2>Stokely Marvin Harrison and Tyreek kind of like taps his

0:27:22.119 --> 0:27:24.040
<v Speaker 2>head for the universal sign of like my bad dog.

0:27:24.320 --> 0:27:26.440
<v Speaker 3>So I asked Tyreek about that moment.

0:27:26.760 --> 0:27:28.480
<v Speaker 7>Man, Look, I'd be so fired up, I'd be so

0:27:28.560 --> 0:27:31.080
<v Speaker 7>ready to go against Ramsey bro that sometimes I forget

0:27:31.119 --> 0:27:34.800
<v Speaker 7>my freaking route, man. And on that play, like he

0:27:34.920 --> 0:27:37.119
<v Speaker 7>threw it to a spot he was right, and I

0:27:37.160 --> 0:27:39.280
<v Speaker 7>went out and it was supposed to be in and

0:27:39.880 --> 0:27:41.800
<v Speaker 7>I was just so fired up and ready that like

0:27:41.840 --> 0:27:45.239
<v Speaker 7>sometimes like when you get like sowing the mold and

0:27:45.280 --> 0:27:47.960
<v Speaker 7>going against these guys, it's like you don't even be

0:27:48.000 --> 0:27:50.200
<v Speaker 7>thinking sometimes, like you hear a word and you like, okay,

0:27:51.040 --> 0:27:52.639
<v Speaker 7>you automatically assume you got that.

0:27:52.720 --> 0:27:54.480
<v Speaker 1>But it's just one of those things.

0:27:54.200 --> 0:27:55.560
<v Speaker 7>That I got to be in the right spot at

0:27:55.560 --> 0:27:56.880
<v Speaker 7>the right time, and he came and told me.

0:27:56.800 --> 0:27:58.720
<v Speaker 1>Come on, Reek, like I need you in the right spot.

0:27:59.000 --> 0:28:01.440
<v Speaker 1>So I was in the wrong spot.

0:28:01.520 --> 0:28:03.280
<v Speaker 2>The reason I run that audio, and I think that's

0:28:03.280 --> 0:28:06.080
<v Speaker 2>so cool is just the peer ownership of the offense,

0:28:06.200 --> 0:28:09.040
<v Speaker 2>the unquestioned leader of this football team. I mean, it

0:28:09.080 --> 0:28:11.360
<v Speaker 2>was two years ago when the national media headlines were

0:28:11.359 --> 0:28:14.760
<v Speaker 2>wondering how could the Dolphins fully maximize Tyreek Hill, who

0:28:14.800 --> 0:28:16.320
<v Speaker 2>by the way, has had the best two year run

0:28:16.359 --> 0:28:18.919
<v Speaker 2>of his career here and now here we are and

0:28:18.960 --> 0:28:22.120
<v Speaker 2>Tua is getting on him a little bit more than

0:28:22.280 --> 0:28:24.480
<v Speaker 2>like you know, Dan Marino style. And I just love

0:28:24.560 --> 0:28:26.880
<v Speaker 2>that because I talked to Juice about this and he's like, yeah,

0:28:26.880 --> 0:28:28.760
<v Speaker 2>that's me and Danny and Camp most of the years.

0:28:28.760 --> 0:28:30.200
<v Speaker 3>You got to have that to get better.

0:28:30.640 --> 0:28:34.000
<v Speaker 2>So just a really cool, all around, all encompassing day

0:28:34.040 --> 0:28:36.680
<v Speaker 2>from QB one back to Waddle. I think he's been

0:28:36.680 --> 0:28:39.320
<v Speaker 2>the best player we've had out here from day one

0:28:39.360 --> 0:28:39.720
<v Speaker 2>to now.

0:28:39.880 --> 0:28:40.760
<v Speaker 3>Just a total stud.

0:28:41.040 --> 0:28:43.120
<v Speaker 2>Let's actually go ahead and go back to Tyreek on

0:28:43.160 --> 0:28:45.680
<v Speaker 2>the work that Jalen Wattle put in this summer and

0:28:45.680 --> 0:28:47.800
<v Speaker 2>why he thinks Jalen's going to just keep getting better.

0:28:48.280 --> 0:28:48.440
<v Speaker 1>Man.

0:28:48.480 --> 0:28:51.760
<v Speaker 7>You know what, obviously, when you got the mindset and

0:28:51.800 --> 0:28:53.800
<v Speaker 7>you take the right approach on you know, wanting to

0:28:53.880 --> 0:28:55.680
<v Speaker 7>lean on some of some of the veteran guys that

0:28:55.680 --> 0:28:58.000
<v Speaker 7>you got in the room, and he's done a tremendous

0:28:58.040 --> 0:29:00.600
<v Speaker 7>job with it, leaning on myself, of leading on.

0:29:02.280 --> 0:29:02.959
<v Speaker 1>Coach Welker.

0:29:03.080 --> 0:29:05.240
<v Speaker 7>He's done a great job of like being real coachable,

0:29:05.560 --> 0:29:08.040
<v Speaker 7>you know, in that aspect of it.

0:29:08.080 --> 0:29:09.560
<v Speaker 1>And for me, that's what.

0:29:09.520 --> 0:29:11.320
<v Speaker 7>I told him, I said, when I came into the league,

0:29:11.480 --> 0:29:13.960
<v Speaker 7>you know, it's a lot of guys who are real talented,

0:29:14.040 --> 0:29:16.360
<v Speaker 7>but the guys that are successful in this league or

0:29:16.400 --> 0:29:18.479
<v Speaker 7>the ones that are real coachable, you know what I'm saying, Like,

0:29:19.520 --> 0:29:21.160
<v Speaker 7>because at the end of the day, we all trying

0:29:21.160 --> 0:29:21.640
<v Speaker 7>to get better.

0:29:21.680 --> 0:29:22.840
<v Speaker 1>Like, ain't none of us perfect?

0:29:23.080 --> 0:29:25.960
<v Speaker 7>I mean, I can go for two thousand yards, there's

0:29:26.000 --> 0:29:27.600
<v Speaker 7>still ways that I can get better.

0:29:28.000 --> 0:29:29.720
<v Speaker 1>And for him.

0:29:29.800 --> 0:29:32.520
<v Speaker 7>He's coming He's come in with a different approach on

0:29:32.760 --> 0:29:35.360
<v Speaker 7>what routes I need to get better at. How can

0:29:35.400 --> 0:29:39.640
<v Speaker 7>I be, you know, more talkative with the quarterback and

0:29:39.640 --> 0:29:41.400
<v Speaker 7>what spots I need to be in and stuff like that,

0:29:41.480 --> 0:29:43.400
<v Speaker 7>and so far as paid off for him. Man, he

0:29:43.480 --> 0:29:46.000
<v Speaker 7>came out here like each and every day busting his

0:29:46.080 --> 0:29:48.400
<v Speaker 7>tail and we still compete in his team versus my

0:29:48.440 --> 0:29:50.880
<v Speaker 7>team in one on ones, you know, and you can

0:29:50.880 --> 0:29:52.400
<v Speaker 7>see at the end of the camp, man, the results

0:29:52.400 --> 0:29:54.720
<v Speaker 7>paid off. Like he's busting his tail. He scored a

0:29:54.760 --> 0:29:55.760
<v Speaker 7>big one at the end.

0:29:56.200 --> 0:29:58.880
<v Speaker 2>Big plays, big catches, touchdowns, one on one wins for

0:29:58.960 --> 0:30:01.120
<v Speaker 2>Jaillen Waddle. He looks every bit the part of a

0:30:01.160 --> 0:30:04.200
<v Speaker 2>true star. Number one wide receiver. Last receiver note here

0:30:04.280 --> 0:30:08.160
<v Speaker 2>is River Craycraft who go kooks, catches everything, dude. He

0:30:08.240 --> 0:30:10.880
<v Speaker 2>had three balls today where I'm like, there's no way

0:30:10.920 --> 0:30:13.760
<v Speaker 2>that ball gets complete. There's a cornerback that's all over

0:30:13.840 --> 0:30:16.719
<v Speaker 2>him and it's not going to be a completion. As

0:30:16.720 --> 0:30:18.000
<v Speaker 2>the ball goes up in the air and then eighty

0:30:18.040 --> 0:30:19.920
<v Speaker 2>five comes down with it, it looks like he has

0:30:20.000 --> 0:30:22.160
<v Speaker 2>velcrow on his jersey and the ball has velcro that

0:30:22.200 --> 0:30:25.160
<v Speaker 2>attaches to it because he catches everything. And Tyreek Hill,

0:30:25.320 --> 0:30:27.760
<v Speaker 2>who he plays a game now every year with Gilen

0:30:27.760 --> 0:30:29.720
<v Speaker 2>Waddle as the captain of the other team where they

0:30:29.800 --> 0:30:33.600
<v Speaker 2>have these point assignments and every team tries to win

0:30:33.640 --> 0:30:35.400
<v Speaker 2>the practice. They have two receiver team try to win

0:30:35.440 --> 0:30:37.600
<v Speaker 2>the practice and Tyreek say, is up four to one

0:30:37.680 --> 0:30:39.120
<v Speaker 2>right now or five to one I think it was,

0:30:39.520 --> 0:30:41.800
<v Speaker 2>And he was asked, why do you always take River

0:30:41.880 --> 0:30:43.840
<v Speaker 2>Craycraft first on your team?

0:30:44.240 --> 0:30:46.560
<v Speaker 7>Grill is one of those guys that he understands the

0:30:46.600 --> 0:30:50.040
<v Speaker 7>offense and he's he's always in the right place. And

0:30:50.520 --> 0:30:54.600
<v Speaker 7>last year when we was doing this we counted blocks.

0:30:54.200 --> 0:30:56.720
<v Speaker 7>He's that one guy that's gonna make a key block

0:30:56.760 --> 0:30:58.959
<v Speaker 7>for a chain of most of the break win, like

0:30:59.000 --> 0:31:00.800
<v Speaker 7>to the house every time and that's why I always

0:31:00.800 --> 0:31:04.479
<v Speaker 7>Pete rio Man because he's smart, he knows what to

0:31:04.480 --> 0:31:06.440
<v Speaker 7>be at on the field, and you can always account

0:31:06.480 --> 0:31:07.800
<v Speaker 7>for him. And he's one of those guys.

0:31:08.200 --> 0:31:09.800
<v Speaker 2>All right, go ahead and get to our last break

0:31:09.840 --> 0:31:11.800
<v Speaker 2>right here and finish up in segment three in the

0:31:11.840 --> 0:31:14.840
<v Speaker 2>mode of extra points and Orange Jersey predictions. That's next

0:31:15.120 --> 0:31:17.800
<v Speaker 2>Draft Time podcast to your host, Travis Wingfield, brought to

0:31:17.840 --> 0:31:21.600
<v Speaker 2>you by Auto Nation Real Quick, on the topic of

0:31:21.760 --> 0:31:25.000
<v Speaker 2>wide receivers. I'm sure you guys saw Willie Snead, the

0:31:25.120 --> 0:31:27.920
<v Speaker 2>fourth I believe is that where it is was signed

0:31:28.400 --> 0:31:29.920
<v Speaker 2>to come in here and compete, and he was a

0:31:29.920 --> 0:31:31.960
<v Speaker 2>guy that played the last couple of years in San Francisco.

0:31:32.200 --> 0:31:33.640
<v Speaker 2>And I think what you have here, and this is

0:31:33.680 --> 0:31:35.880
<v Speaker 2>me talking, I think what you have is, you know

0:31:36.080 --> 0:31:38.120
<v Speaker 2>a guy that knows the offense can come in today

0:31:38.240 --> 0:31:40.240
<v Speaker 2>and play and give you reps and kind of lighten

0:31:40.280 --> 0:31:43.680
<v Speaker 2>the workload because Obj's not out there. Ericazukama hasn't been

0:31:43.720 --> 0:31:46.280
<v Speaker 2>out there for a couple of days. Taj Washington got hurt.

0:31:46.280 --> 0:31:48.400
<v Speaker 2>Some of the young guys I think maybe coming along slowly,

0:31:48.640 --> 0:31:50.160
<v Speaker 2>like they probably needed a guy that knew the offense.

0:31:50.200 --> 0:31:51.480
<v Speaker 3>I can run multiple positions.

0:31:51.720 --> 0:31:53.280
<v Speaker 2>Hence, I think that's why he's here, and I think

0:31:53.360 --> 0:31:55.760
<v Speaker 2>would be a good option for your practice squad come

0:31:55.880 --> 0:31:58.800
<v Speaker 2>the regular season in that exact same role and also

0:31:58.840 --> 0:32:00.560
<v Speaker 2>helped coach up the young guys. So that's kind of

0:32:00.600 --> 0:32:03.760
<v Speaker 2>my thought. There some more extra points notes here. Jalen

0:32:03.800 --> 0:32:07.240
<v Speaker 2>Wright gosh, gosh, he looks good. He looks really really good.

0:32:07.400 --> 0:32:09.880
<v Speaker 2>His ability to hit those quick inside runs like some

0:32:09.920 --> 0:32:12.040
<v Speaker 2>inside zone stuff has stood out in a big way.

0:32:12.280 --> 0:32:14.520
<v Speaker 2>I think he might be a touchdown maker for you

0:32:14.560 --> 0:32:16.240
<v Speaker 2>in mid and low red zone because he had a

0:32:16.280 --> 0:32:18.040
<v Speaker 2>touchdown run today in mid red zone where he got

0:32:18.040 --> 0:32:20.720
<v Speaker 2>skinny and hit that gap with conviction. He sees that

0:32:20.800 --> 0:32:22.560
<v Speaker 2>a gap and he just goes for it. Then he

0:32:22.600 --> 0:32:24.960
<v Speaker 2>scores in the next play, and two offensive line were

0:32:24.960 --> 0:32:27.080
<v Speaker 2>like dancing around in the end zone, which tells me

0:32:27.120 --> 0:32:28.880
<v Speaker 2>like they think that they had a legit touchdown there.

0:32:28.920 --> 0:32:31.960
<v Speaker 2>So fun moment. But you pair that with his speed

0:32:32.000 --> 0:32:35.160
<v Speaker 2>to the edge, it's just impressive. An impressive looking player.

0:32:35.560 --> 0:32:37.720
<v Speaker 2>I think if you just dropped me into Dolphins camp

0:32:37.760 --> 0:32:40.520
<v Speaker 2>without any institutional knowledge of the team, I would say, like,

0:32:41.040 --> 0:32:43.440
<v Speaker 2>why does this team have three starting running backs with

0:32:43.480 --> 0:32:45.800
<v Speaker 2>thirty one twenty eight and twenty five. That's really how

0:32:45.840 --> 0:32:48.520
<v Speaker 2>I view it. Alec Ingold's also a starter and he's

0:32:48.520 --> 0:32:50.840
<v Speaker 2>a great player. He had some awesome work today, including

0:32:50.840 --> 0:32:53.760
<v Speaker 2>an absolute slobber knocker block where he comes across the

0:32:53.800 --> 0:32:55.440
<v Speaker 2>formation and clear to laying out for one of those

0:32:55.720 --> 0:32:58.720
<v Speaker 2>you know, gliding raheemoster runs. Jeff Wilson had a third

0:32:58.720 --> 0:33:01.720
<v Speaker 2>and one conversion in a situation spot today, so really

0:33:01.760 --> 0:33:03.360
<v Speaker 2>good word from the running backs. Continue to love that

0:33:03.480 --> 0:33:05.880
<v Speaker 2>role for Hefe. A couple of rough days. I thought

0:33:05.960 --> 0:33:08.480
<v Speaker 2>Keon Smith wasn't his best day or his best camp

0:33:08.560 --> 0:33:10.400
<v Speaker 2>so far. I think it's it was better last year

0:33:10.400 --> 0:33:12.120
<v Speaker 2>in my opinion. He's doing some cross raining. I think

0:33:12.160 --> 0:33:14.280
<v Speaker 2>maybe is. You know, it's tough on some guys, but

0:33:14.320 --> 0:33:16.040
<v Speaker 2>that's the progress we're gonna watch in tracking as we

0:33:16.120 --> 0:33:17.960
<v Speaker 2>go forward here. And then Jody Fortson has a lot

0:33:17.960 --> 0:33:19.400
<v Speaker 2>of drops this camp, man, I don't know what's going

0:33:19.440 --> 0:33:21.640
<v Speaker 2>on with that. Some more rough days. I thought Ethan

0:33:21.680 --> 0:33:23.080
<v Speaker 2>Bonner was kind of the guy that got picked on

0:33:23.120 --> 0:33:24.959
<v Speaker 2>a little bit today. Mike White the ball was kind

0:33:24.960 --> 0:33:26.239
<v Speaker 2>of spray all over the field with him, and then

0:33:26.240 --> 0:33:28.800
<v Speaker 2>Malik Washington a couple more drops that just seem a

0:33:28.840 --> 0:33:32.080
<v Speaker 2>little bit out of character for him. Back on defense,

0:33:32.120 --> 0:33:34.480
<v Speaker 2>here chop Robinson another sack today. It's been copy and

0:33:34.520 --> 0:33:37.600
<v Speaker 2>paste every day for him. Extremely fast out of his stands,

0:33:37.680 --> 0:33:40.280
<v Speaker 2>very very productive. I thought Jonathan Harris had a really

0:33:40.320 --> 0:33:42.360
<v Speaker 2>good day getting off blocks and reading things from that

0:33:42.440 --> 0:33:47.000
<v Speaker 2>stack and shed position. Funny enough, I asked Benito Jones, like,

0:33:47.080 --> 0:33:49.280
<v Speaker 2>what's the process been like for you getting to kind

0:33:49.280 --> 0:33:51.800
<v Speaker 2>of nail down Anthony Weaver's defense and all those fronts

0:33:51.800 --> 0:33:53.600
<v Speaker 2>they run, Like, how's it coming along? He's like, dude,

0:33:53.600 --> 0:33:55.920
<v Speaker 2>I'm a nose tackle. It's like pretty much shed blocks

0:33:55.960 --> 0:33:58.840
<v Speaker 2>and that's it. So stack and shed blocks. Man was like,

0:33:58.960 --> 0:34:01.320
<v Speaker 2>all right, I appreciate the trend exparency there, Benito, But

0:34:01.400 --> 0:34:03.160
<v Speaker 2>Tierre Tart doesn't do that role. He's more of a

0:34:03.240 --> 0:34:05.600
<v Speaker 2>dynamic tackle and he had some dominant reps where he

0:34:05.600 --> 0:34:07.360
<v Speaker 2>stacked things up. He also had a sack on a

0:34:07.400 --> 0:34:10.040
<v Speaker 2>blowby rep with pure speed. He looks to me like

0:34:10.080 --> 0:34:11.960
<v Speaker 2>he did on Titan's tape before things kind of got

0:34:12.080 --> 0:34:13.880
<v Speaker 2>nasty at the end of the year last year. Jordan

0:34:13.920 --> 0:34:16.239
<v Speaker 2>Brooks might be the best addition this team has made

0:34:16.239 --> 0:34:19.120
<v Speaker 2>this offseason. I've been very high on Kendall Fuller, but

0:34:19.360 --> 0:34:21.480
<v Speaker 2>it might be Jordan Brooks because he just makes plays

0:34:21.480 --> 0:34:23.920
<v Speaker 2>in every single way. Today he condensed down off the

0:34:24.040 --> 0:34:27.160
<v Speaker 2>edge and rushed and then felt the now screen throw

0:34:27.200 --> 0:34:29.840
<v Speaker 2>to Tyreek Hill and he pulled up and got himself

0:34:29.880 --> 0:34:31.720
<v Speaker 2>in the passing line and deflected it for the PBu

0:34:32.080 --> 0:34:35.759
<v Speaker 2>run game, pass, game, rush, stack, scrape, edge, deep, hook drop.

0:34:35.760 --> 0:34:37.400
<v Speaker 2>It doesn't matter what whatever you asked him to do,

0:34:37.680 --> 0:34:40.239
<v Speaker 2>He's made plays in every facet so far of training camp.

0:34:40.480 --> 0:34:43.680
<v Speaker 2>Quentin Bell Emmanuel Ogball both flashed again, pretty regular occurrences

0:34:43.680 --> 0:34:45.879
<v Speaker 2>for those two guys. Cater Co, who is my pick

0:34:45.920 --> 0:34:48.480
<v Speaker 2>for the defense of Orange Jersey because he was awesome

0:34:48.520 --> 0:34:51.280
<v Speaker 2>in this practice. Three pass breakups, two of those on waddle,

0:34:51.600 --> 0:34:54.040
<v Speaker 2>just competing his ass off and making all kinds of plays.

0:34:54.160 --> 0:34:55.680
<v Speaker 2>He looks very locked in, and we had him for

0:34:55.760 --> 0:34:58.080
<v Speaker 2>media after practice and he kind of like had some

0:34:58.440 --> 0:35:00.279
<v Speaker 2>issue to him, like, yeah, you know, that's what I'm

0:35:00.280 --> 0:35:01.680
<v Speaker 2>supposed to be doing, Like I don't know.

0:35:01.680 --> 0:35:03.160
<v Speaker 3>It just seems very locked into me.

0:35:03.600 --> 0:35:05.960
<v Speaker 2>Patrick McMorris had a nice play locking down a deep

0:35:06.040 --> 0:35:09.560
<v Speaker 2>route at one point in practice where Zeke Vandenberg rerouted

0:35:09.640 --> 0:35:11.400
<v Speaker 2>him into the coverage and then McMorris picked it up.

0:35:11.400 --> 0:35:14.279
<v Speaker 2>I was impressed by that storm Duck. I think this

0:35:14.320 --> 0:35:15.680
<v Speaker 2>is the guy that's gonna make the football team. He

0:35:15.719 --> 0:35:17.799
<v Speaker 2>made a couple of plays today and really kind of,

0:35:17.920 --> 0:35:19.719
<v Speaker 2>you know, earned that right of I can't wait to

0:35:19.719 --> 0:35:21.319
<v Speaker 2>see this guy play the third and fourth core of

0:35:21.320 --> 0:35:23.759
<v Speaker 2>a preseason game because this front office has made it a

0:35:23.840 --> 0:35:27.719
<v Speaker 2>habit of finding udfas every year, especially in that defensive backfield.

0:35:27.920 --> 0:35:29.839
<v Speaker 2>And through seven days of practice, to me, he made

0:35:29.840 --> 0:35:31.560
<v Speaker 2>the most plays and I think he has the look

0:35:31.600 --> 0:35:33.319
<v Speaker 2>of a guy that can play at this level. I

0:35:33.320 --> 0:35:35.840
<v Speaker 2>thought Marcus May was terrific today. He had an outstanding

0:35:35.880 --> 0:35:37.719
<v Speaker 2>pick and one on ones where it looked like it

0:35:37.719 --> 0:35:38.960
<v Speaker 2>was going to be a catch, and he got back

0:35:39.000 --> 0:35:40.759
<v Speaker 2>into the hand fight and batted the ball up and

0:35:40.800 --> 0:35:43.440
<v Speaker 2>then secured the catch going to the ground the referees

0:35:43.520 --> 0:35:45.640
<v Speaker 2>rule to inbound toe tap on the sideline. And then

0:35:45.640 --> 0:35:47.719
<v Speaker 2>he also came down from depth and fit this run.

0:35:47.719 --> 0:35:50.080
<v Speaker 2>That kind of shows you his range of capabilities. I

0:35:50.120 --> 0:35:53.160
<v Speaker 2>think between you know, Jevon Holland today spent a lot

0:35:53.200 --> 0:35:55.960
<v Speaker 2>of time working with cornerbacks coach Matthew Arugo, and I

0:35:56.000 --> 0:35:58.000
<v Speaker 2>continue to believe the best nickel package this team can

0:35:58.080 --> 0:36:00.399
<v Speaker 2>run out there right now given their personnel, and maybe

0:36:00.440 --> 0:36:02.600
<v Speaker 2>Cater's telling me I'm wrong on this with his production lately,

0:36:02.680 --> 0:36:04.960
<v Speaker 2>but maybe we just have more options than I think

0:36:05.400 --> 0:36:08.640
<v Speaker 2>is with Javana's kind of that star like Minka Fitzpatrick

0:36:08.719 --> 0:36:11.719
<v Speaker 2>role at Alabama, that star slot position with Poyer and

0:36:11.800 --> 0:36:14.600
<v Speaker 2>May playing the roof, and then obviously Ramsey and Fuller

0:36:14.640 --> 0:36:17.080
<v Speaker 2>can kick all around the formation as well, with kind

0:36:17.080 --> 0:36:19.520
<v Speaker 2>of like Elijah Campbell as that next man up slash

0:36:19.520 --> 0:36:22.120
<v Speaker 2>Corps special team in the safety group, or Cater Coohu

0:36:22.160 --> 0:36:24.240
<v Speaker 2>comes in and slots in the slot positioner on the perimeter,

0:36:24.320 --> 0:36:27.320
<v Speaker 2>like they've got options. This defensive backfield's deep. It's good,

0:36:27.600 --> 0:36:29.840
<v Speaker 2>but I think that Holland in that role to me

0:36:30.000 --> 0:36:32.319
<v Speaker 2>is very intriguing. And then I just want to mention

0:36:32.440 --> 0:36:35.319
<v Speaker 2>like the variety of pressures and looks and fronts and

0:36:35.840 --> 0:36:38.880
<v Speaker 2>different coverages like they did so much defensively today. I

0:36:38.960 --> 0:36:40.680
<v Speaker 2>just think it's going to be a vastly different defense

0:36:40.680 --> 0:36:43.280
<v Speaker 2>from a structure standpoint than what you've seen in the past.

0:36:43.520 --> 0:36:45.680
<v Speaker 2>One last note, Jason Matrie also had a pick in

0:36:45.719 --> 0:36:47.560
<v Speaker 2>one on ones and again I already gave us to you.

0:36:47.600 --> 0:36:48.480
<v Speaker 3>Let's go ahead and do it again.

0:36:48.480 --> 0:36:51.080
<v Speaker 2>The Orange Jersey predictions are Tua no, no, no, check that,

0:36:51.160 --> 0:36:53.680
<v Speaker 2>check that, check that, Jalen Wattle number one to a

0:36:53.680 --> 0:36:56.480
<v Speaker 2>tongue of my low number two, cater coohu number three.

0:36:56.640 --> 0:36:59.440
<v Speaker 2>We have a scrimmage on Saturday, a practice tomorrow, so

0:36:59.480 --> 0:37:01.840
<v Speaker 2>one more pod cast tomorrow and then the Saturday scrimmage

0:37:02.000 --> 0:37:03.520
<v Speaker 2>from Hard Rocks. Hey, and you guys can come out

0:37:03.520 --> 0:37:06.239
<v Speaker 2>to that if you want. I believe the information to

0:37:06.280 --> 0:37:08.080
<v Speaker 2>get tickets to that is on the website. It's free,

0:37:08.120 --> 0:37:10.160
<v Speaker 2>but you have to go reserve your tickets. So go

0:37:10.239 --> 0:37:12.200
<v Speaker 2>ahead and do that and come see us at hard

0:37:12.280 --> 0:37:14.160
<v Speaker 2>Rocks Stadium. In the meantime, you all please be sure

0:37:14.360 --> 0:37:16.759
<v Speaker 2>to subscribe to the podcast on Apple, Spotify, sit your

0:37:16.760 --> 0:37:18.120
<v Speaker 2>tune in, whatever you your podcast from.

0:37:18.120 --> 0:37:20.440
<v Speaker 3>Go ahead and leave us a rating, leave us a review.

0:37:20.600 --> 0:37:22.880
<v Speaker 2>You can follow me on social at People NFL and

0:37:22.920 --> 0:37:25.080
<v Speaker 2>the team at Miami Dolphins. Check out the fish Tank

0:37:25.160 --> 0:37:27.479
<v Speaker 2>podcast with my guys Seth and Juice, the YouTube channel

0:37:27.520 --> 0:37:30.040
<v Speaker 2>for media Availabilities, Dolphins Today, and so much more, and

0:37:30.200 --> 0:37:32.879
<v Speaker 2>last but not least, Miami Dolphins dot Com. Until next time,

0:37:33.000 --> 0:37:35.520
<v Speaker 2>fins Up, go on. Cameron Daddy just coming home.