1 00:00:01,040 --> 00:00:08,440 Speaker 1: All right, that's for now. Okay, let's up here. When 2 00:00:08,520 --> 00:00:10,640 Speaker 1: Logan Wilson was coming up, did you have the chance 3 00:00:10,680 --> 00:00:16,159 Speaker 1: to interact much with him? Not too much. Do you 4 00:00:16,239 --> 00:00:18,680 Speaker 1: view him a sort of a linebacker that didn't any 5 00:00:19,239 --> 00:00:22,040 Speaker 1: any scheme or was he sort of take a linebacker 6 00:00:22,120 --> 00:00:26,200 Speaker 1: that might be better that specific. There's definitely a lot 7 00:00:26,200 --> 00:00:35,760 Speaker 1: of strong points. There's they're probably playing anything Bill, How 8 00:00:35,840 --> 00:00:39,280 Speaker 1: do they use um Chasing Higgins and those guys pretty 9 00:00:39,400 --> 00:00:45,840 Speaker 1: interchangeable or do they have set rules? Yeah, they're they're 10 00:00:45,920 --> 00:00:49,240 Speaker 1: personal and then they do certain things more than others. 11 00:00:49,320 --> 00:00:54,280 Speaker 1: But their interition, let's say, there's the great Interchangeabillow, I 12 00:00:54,280 --> 00:00:58,320 Speaker 1: don't need this a question for Zach. Really we don't 13 00:00:58,400 --> 00:01:01,600 Speaker 1: look like Chase work guy. To break down, it feels 14 00:01:01,600 --> 00:01:03,120 Speaker 1: like you have a lot of work after the catch 15 00:01:03,680 --> 00:01:10,200 Speaker 1: he does. It's une production after the catch. Yeah, very 16 00:01:10,360 --> 00:01:16,040 Speaker 1: very good. Helps him as far as it's fast, quick, strong, 17 00:01:19,080 --> 00:01:25,160 Speaker 1: It's a good place to start. Well, what has made 18 00:01:25,400 --> 00:01:29,240 Speaker 1: Matthew Slater and Kevin mccordy's six great leaders over the 19 00:01:29,319 --> 00:01:34,080 Speaker 1: years with you here, they both have a lot of 20 00:01:34,120 --> 00:01:39,000 Speaker 1: natural leadership that's very passionate. That's set a great example. 21 00:01:39,120 --> 00:01:42,360 Speaker 1: So It's easy to lead when you do everything right, 22 00:01:42,400 --> 00:01:51,120 Speaker 1: which they do. They're very unselfish as you. Judn said 23 00:01:51,160 --> 00:01:52,760 Speaker 1: that he called him last night and told him that 24 00:01:53,080 --> 00:01:55,640 Speaker 1: made the Pro Bowl. Um. How enjoyable has he got 25 00:01:55,680 --> 00:01:59,600 Speaker 1: into coach in past two seasons? Yeah? Great, He's got 26 00:01:59,600 --> 00:02:02,840 Speaker 1: a great two more chart puts the team first. Got 27 00:02:02,840 --> 00:02:08,480 Speaker 1: a lot of energy every day. It's great on off 28 00:02:08,520 --> 00:02:13,919 Speaker 1: the field, and a lot of room. Get to take 29 00:02:13,960 --> 00:02:15,800 Speaker 1: a look the last couple of days at the rookie 30 00:02:16,000 --> 00:02:18,920 Speaker 1: offensive tackled their stupor. I mean, is this similar to 31 00:02:18,960 --> 00:02:22,160 Speaker 1: like blood cell Leicster year when you got him at 32 00:02:22,200 --> 00:02:24,480 Speaker 1: the end of the year. Does he maybe even have 33 00:02:24,560 --> 00:02:31,000 Speaker 1: a chance to possibly help you en years? Afisleven out 34 00:02:31,040 --> 00:02:36,560 Speaker 1: there two days? How's it look in two days? Yeah? 35 00:02:36,600 --> 00:02:40,079 Speaker 1: I actually have any bed of pads. Right, You're exactly right. 36 00:02:42,639 --> 00:02:45,239 Speaker 1: It's good to have him back. It's good at it. 37 00:02:45,360 --> 00:02:47,440 Speaker 1: I have ever player out there that we have out there. Sure. 38 00:02:54,240 --> 00:02:57,880 Speaker 1: Joe Cardona on the injury report after Addington to the 39 00:02:57,919 --> 00:03:03,240 Speaker 1: practice squad last week, what have you seen from Tucker? Um, 40 00:03:03,480 --> 00:03:11,799 Speaker 1: you know, getting acclimated timing and acclimation to you know, 41 00:03:11,960 --> 00:03:15,200 Speaker 1: pun fieldable protection. Obviously, punt protection is a lot more 42 00:03:15,240 --> 00:03:21,080 Speaker 1: to it, but calls and blocking assignments and coverage responsibilities 43 00:03:21,080 --> 00:03:30,240 Speaker 1: and so forth. Really wanted as about the weather on Saturday. 44 00:03:30,280 --> 00:03:31,800 Speaker 1: I know it's your favorite topic, but as far as 45 00:03:31,840 --> 00:03:34,160 Speaker 1: the winds that are projected could be thirty forty miles 46 00:03:34,200 --> 00:03:36,960 Speaker 1: an hour throughout the game, how do you account for 47 00:03:37,040 --> 00:03:39,320 Speaker 1: that in your preparation? And obviously it's not that windy 48 00:03:39,320 --> 00:03:46,360 Speaker 1: out for practice. We talked about what it could be. 49 00:03:49,800 --> 00:03:51,120 Speaker 1: Like you said, it's a lot easier to wait and 50 00:03:51,160 --> 00:03:54,520 Speaker 1: see what it is. It's a waste time on ten 51 00:03:54,560 --> 00:03:57,760 Speaker 1: different forecasts and then figure out which one it actually is. 52 00:04:01,520 --> 00:04:07,840 Speaker 1: We've practiced in window all year. But what do you 53 00:04:08,000 --> 00:04:11,960 Speaker 1: remember about Ted Carriss and the impact he had here 54 00:04:12,800 --> 00:04:17,920 Speaker 1: talking with you? Right? Yeah, Ted's um all positive. Came 55 00:04:17,960 --> 00:04:20,799 Speaker 1: in as a rookie, he worked hard, We got bounced 56 00:04:20,839 --> 00:04:22,839 Speaker 1: around a lot, but you know he hung in there 57 00:04:25,120 --> 00:04:27,440 Speaker 1: on the practice squad for a short time, I think 58 00:04:27,440 --> 00:04:31,840 Speaker 1: a second year. And you know David got hurt, started 59 00:04:31,920 --> 00:04:39,800 Speaker 1: center all year, tough, good energy, smart plays hard, always 60 00:04:39,800 --> 00:04:42,680 Speaker 1: plays with high effort. One thing he said this year 61 00:04:42,880 --> 00:04:45,719 Speaker 1: is that he learned how to be a leader here 62 00:04:46,040 --> 00:04:48,599 Speaker 1: because there's so many leaders in that locker room. Is 63 00:04:48,600 --> 00:04:52,240 Speaker 1: that something you could kind of see that personality from Ted, 64 00:04:52,440 --> 00:04:56,400 Speaker 1: you know, grow develop in terms of becoming you know, 65 00:04:56,440 --> 00:05:00,400 Speaker 1: he's a captain there now. He's got very positive, very 66 00:05:00,440 --> 00:05:06,120 Speaker 1: positive personality. Yeah. I mean every day he's big smile 67 00:05:06,120 --> 00:05:08,120 Speaker 1: on his face, ready to go, but but working hard 68 00:05:08,200 --> 00:05:11,840 Speaker 1: and these smiles on he works hard, smiles on things 69 00:05:11,880 --> 00:05:13,760 Speaker 1: aren't going good, but you know, it just looks forward 70 00:05:13,760 --> 00:05:16,400 Speaker 1: to the next player, the next you know, he doesn't 71 00:05:18,160 --> 00:05:24,239 Speaker 1: it doesn't a well on anything negative in the past. 72 00:05:26,360 --> 00:05:29,479 Speaker 1: It's happy when he wins and looks ahead the next 73 00:05:29,480 --> 00:05:33,040 Speaker 1: opportunity of things don't go as well. He's got a 74 00:05:33,080 --> 00:05:39,680 Speaker 1: great outlook. Well, I think the first thing you mentioned 75 00:05:39,760 --> 00:05:42,840 Speaker 1: yesterday when we asked about Burrow was toughness. Why is 76 00:05:42,839 --> 00:05:49,960 Speaker 1: that an important characteristic for that position? Does you're good hit? 77 00:05:54,800 --> 00:05:57,799 Speaker 1: Is there anything to like that position? Setting an example 78 00:05:57,880 --> 00:06:00,679 Speaker 1: maybe even in terms of what they show there? M hmm. 79 00:06:00,839 --> 00:06:10,479 Speaker 1: That's true. That position, so you know, centerpiece of every 80 00:06:11,400 --> 00:06:14,880 Speaker 1: every pro offense. There's a lot of things that that 81 00:06:14,920 --> 00:06:23,600 Speaker 1: position carries. On the long snapper, Can it be difficult 82 00:06:23,640 --> 00:06:27,040 Speaker 1: to introduce somebody into that operation this late in the 83 00:06:27,040 --> 00:06:30,160 Speaker 1: season with how much timing it requires? There obviously it's 84 00:06:30,279 --> 00:06:32,960 Speaker 1: not something you've had to deal with in quite a while, 85 00:06:32,960 --> 00:06:39,920 Speaker 1: with Joe playing every game since has been here. Yeah, 86 00:06:40,040 --> 00:06:43,600 Speaker 1: it's not ideal. It's not You wouldn't go into the 87 00:06:43,640 --> 00:06:45,599 Speaker 1: year of saying, yeah, we hope this is what happens. 88 00:06:45,680 --> 00:06:50,320 Speaker 1: But when it happens, that's That's why your personnel department 89 00:06:50,360 --> 00:06:54,200 Speaker 1: always has who your next up players are at every position, 90 00:06:54,279 --> 00:06:57,479 Speaker 1: and if you have to go to those players econom 91 00:06:57,520 --> 00:07:02,039 Speaker 1: McDermott or whoever, then and you go to them and 92 00:07:02,120 --> 00:07:04,040 Speaker 1: you try to get them ready, or if they're in 93 00:07:04,080 --> 00:07:05,840 Speaker 1: your pride and maybe they're in your practice squad, you 94 00:07:05,880 --> 00:07:08,360 Speaker 1: already have them in your system, then great. If you don't, 95 00:07:08,400 --> 00:07:11,280 Speaker 1: then you have to go ahead and go them. It's 96 00:07:11,280 --> 00:07:14,000 Speaker 1: hard to carry back ups or you know, depth at 97 00:07:14,040 --> 00:07:17,280 Speaker 1: every single position across your team. You do the best 98 00:07:17,280 --> 00:07:21,720 Speaker 1: you can, but you have to make decisions on who 99 00:07:21,760 --> 00:07:25,360 Speaker 1: those who they are based on their skill and the 100 00:07:25,480 --> 00:07:28,920 Speaker 1: position depth that you have there or don't have. That 101 00:07:28,960 --> 00:07:32,160 Speaker 1: can change pretty quickly. You have to bring somebody in. 102 00:07:32,240 --> 00:07:36,280 Speaker 1: I mean, I would just say there's a lot more 103 00:07:36,360 --> 00:07:38,880 Speaker 1: to bring in an offensive lineman and him learning the 104 00:07:38,920 --> 00:07:41,600 Speaker 1: offensive line system than there's a long snapper learning the 105 00:07:41,680 --> 00:07:46,120 Speaker 1: snapper system not diminishing that there isn't a degree of 106 00:07:46,400 --> 00:07:49,520 Speaker 1: timing execution to both of them. There is, but you 107 00:07:49,560 --> 00:07:56,200 Speaker 1: know so, but every team will leak has to go 108 00:07:56,240 --> 00:07:58,600 Speaker 1: through that. So it is what it is. It's a 109 00:07:58,680 --> 00:08:03,800 Speaker 1: national football leak. Will you mentioned yesterday Burrow that he 110 00:08:04,000 --> 00:08:07,400 Speaker 1: sees the game well, manages it well. The importance of 111 00:08:07,560 --> 00:08:12,240 Speaker 1: disguise on Saturday? How high is that all is important? 112 00:08:20,640 --> 00:08:22,600 Speaker 1: How do you feel like you give defense is done 113 00:08:22,640 --> 00:08:25,640 Speaker 1: in that regardablyly? Think Adrian put it to a s 114 00:08:25,760 --> 00:08:28,400 Speaker 1: other way that or the other day. Excuse me that 115 00:08:29,720 --> 00:08:31,960 Speaker 1: defense is mysterious and that's sort of what he was 116 00:08:32,000 --> 00:08:33,559 Speaker 1: getting at that he feels like they've been doing a 117 00:08:33,600 --> 00:08:35,920 Speaker 1: good job in disguise. Do you feel I think that's 118 00:08:35,920 --> 00:08:39,440 Speaker 1: been a positive aspect. Always try to do it, always 119 00:08:39,480 --> 00:08:41,679 Speaker 1: try to do it better. Always, Roy, I'm do improve 120 00:08:51,000 --> 00:08:53,000 Speaker 1: the other side of the ball. One of the best 121 00:08:53,000 --> 00:08:55,560 Speaker 1: of the RPO package that you guys have had. Maybe 122 00:08:55,600 --> 00:08:57,080 Speaker 1: I'm wrong, but as far as I can tell, they've 123 00:08:57,080 --> 00:09:02,080 Speaker 1: been one or two down filling breaking RPOs versus what 124 00:09:02,200 --> 00:09:05,040 Speaker 1: seems to be mostly bubbles for the routes that are incorporated. 125 00:09:05,080 --> 00:09:08,439 Speaker 1: About that, why is that best for the offense relying 126 00:09:09,000 --> 00:09:12,079 Speaker 1: mostly almost entirely on those ball routes versus kind of 127 00:09:12,080 --> 00:09:19,240 Speaker 1: a wide or more diverse tree. Yeah, I don't know. 128 00:09:19,360 --> 00:09:24,160 Speaker 1: I'm not sure exactly. Yeah, the pole pass offense you're 129 00:09:24,160 --> 00:09:27,679 Speaker 1: referring to, but it's the general concept of the RPOs 130 00:09:27,840 --> 00:09:31,839 Speaker 1: is inside runs versus outside passes. You want to throw 131 00:09:31,880 --> 00:09:35,680 Speaker 1: the ball down the field and just throw it down 132 00:09:35,679 --> 00:09:39,120 Speaker 1: the field. If you're gonna try to throw it behind 133 00:09:39,520 --> 00:09:42,040 Speaker 1: the guys, then that's really what it's play action RPO. 134 00:09:42,160 --> 00:09:44,920 Speaker 1: It's it's the same concept. The timing on it's a 135 00:09:44,920 --> 00:09:48,120 Speaker 1: little bit different, but it's sort of the same concepts. 136 00:09:48,120 --> 00:09:51,240 Speaker 1: What the play action generally does is draw somebody up 137 00:09:51,280 --> 00:09:54,640 Speaker 1: and try to throw it behond. I'm not sure to 138 00:09:54,679 --> 00:09:58,000 Speaker 1: specific plas you're referring to, but if you run the 139 00:09:58,000 --> 00:10:00,840 Speaker 1: ball inside and throw the ball inside and they everybody's inside, 140 00:10:02,160 --> 00:10:04,839 Speaker 1: I'm sure what you're trying to accomplish. Unless you're trying 141 00:10:04,840 --> 00:10:09,160 Speaker 1: to throw it behind him, then that's the concept I 142 00:10:09,360 --> 00:10:13,160 Speaker 1: just talked about. So, yeah, I was curious more because 143 00:10:13,160 --> 00:10:16,560 Speaker 1: of max success with you know, throwing glance routes to 144 00:10:16,640 --> 00:10:18,640 Speaker 1: the single side at Alabama is something he seemed to 145 00:10:18,679 --> 00:10:20,079 Speaker 1: do a lot of them, and I know you guys 146 00:10:20,120 --> 00:10:22,720 Speaker 1: that incorporated more if he was this year the last season, 147 00:10:22,760 --> 00:10:25,920 Speaker 1: and why yeah it shifted more. That direction is supposed 148 00:10:25,920 --> 00:10:28,560 Speaker 1: to something you had done that or at least more 149 00:10:28,920 --> 00:10:37,560 Speaker 1: less downfield. I should say, yeah, yeah, I don't know. 150 00:10:37,600 --> 00:10:39,920 Speaker 1: I get back and watching Alabama games or whatever. I 151 00:10:39,920 --> 00:10:44,080 Speaker 1: don't really know. But the concept is to the defense 152 00:10:44,120 --> 00:10:45,600 Speaker 1: to pack the middle of the field and then you 153 00:10:45,679 --> 00:10:49,120 Speaker 1: run the ball inside and then throw the ball inside. Like, 154 00:10:49,240 --> 00:10:54,320 Speaker 1: I'm not really sure I understand what that what the 155 00:10:54,360 --> 00:11:01,880 Speaker 1: point of that is? Maybe I'm missing them. So when 156 00:11:01,920 --> 00:11:05,199 Speaker 1: teams throw a vet, the slant or something on RPO, 157 00:11:05,280 --> 00:11:07,840 Speaker 1: is that usually because they're running a wife is a 158 00:11:07,840 --> 00:11:11,439 Speaker 1: wide run fig Is that well, there's somebody that's drawn 159 00:11:11,520 --> 00:11:15,520 Speaker 1: those somebody outside to open that up. The idea of 160 00:11:15,520 --> 00:11:17,920 Speaker 1: the RPO is basically to attack the width of the field. 161 00:11:18,480 --> 00:11:21,160 Speaker 1: If you want to throw behind them, then that's a 162 00:11:21,200 --> 00:11:25,840 Speaker 1: different concept, similar to a play action pass that you 163 00:11:25,960 --> 00:11:46,280 Speaker 1: throw it behind the front part of the coverage. Yeah thanks, Yeah, Okay,