1 00:00:00,040 --> 00:00:03,840 Speaker 1: What well Jennings is working on the side field. Did 2 00:00:03,840 --> 00:00:06,160 Speaker 1: you have any issues? They just had a little tightness, 3 00:00:06,160 --> 00:00:10,639 Speaker 1: I mean saved from them like tightness, samoth ba both 4 00:00:10,640 --> 00:00:11,400 Speaker 1: of them same boat. 5 00:00:12,520 --> 00:00:15,159 Speaker 2: The thought process behind that last real you guys do 6 00:00:16,000 --> 00:00:17,400 Speaker 2: eleven on eleven, no homes. 7 00:00:18,200 --> 00:00:21,160 Speaker 1: Just try to ease 'em into that, something that I 8 00:00:21,280 --> 00:00:24,520 Speaker 1: never wanted to do. We did a last year to 9 00:00:24,560 --> 00:00:27,760 Speaker 1: have the easing of going slower. We'll eventually put those 10 00:00:27,760 --> 00:00:29,600 Speaker 1: helmets on those and no one busts their face up. 11 00:00:30,400 --> 00:00:32,320 Speaker 1: But just making sure guys learn how to use their hands. 12 00:00:32,920 --> 00:00:36,280 Speaker 3: And when you're when you're evaluating quarterbacks, this's early OTAs, 13 00:00:36,440 --> 00:00:37,879 Speaker 3: are you judging. 14 00:00:37,479 --> 00:00:39,760 Speaker 4: Off of timing accuracy for work? What? 15 00:00:39,760 --> 00:00:43,040 Speaker 1: What do you really look at? Timing accuracy? Where the 16 00:00:43,040 --> 00:00:46,000 Speaker 1: ball should go? What play they have? Who makes the 17 00:00:46,159 --> 00:00:50,760 Speaker 1: consistent right play the most? Who plays the most realistically 18 00:00:50,960 --> 00:00:52,120 Speaker 1: that gives you a chance to win? 19 00:00:55,080 --> 00:00:57,280 Speaker 4: Right and Sam do for the most part. 20 00:00:57,280 --> 00:00:57,440 Speaker 5: They have. 21 00:00:57,440 --> 00:00:58,920 Speaker 1: They've had two days. I thought they've they've done a 22 00:00:58,960 --> 00:01:01,840 Speaker 1: great job. You know, we're just putting our base stuff 23 00:01:01,840 --> 00:01:04,720 Speaker 1: in on offense and defense, and that has been two 24 00:01:04,760 --> 00:01:10,200 Speaker 1: real good days for him. I think he did for 25 00:01:10,400 --> 00:01:16,039 Speaker 1: today and yesterday so far, yea, yes, but it no, 26 00:01:16,319 --> 00:01:18,640 Speaker 1: it'll it'll even out. We'll make sure to get that right. 27 00:01:20,200 --> 00:01:22,959 Speaker 4: That's good. Different ideas of whether they, you know, should 28 00:01:23,000 --> 00:01:23,560 Speaker 4: be here and work. 29 00:01:23,959 --> 00:01:25,640 Speaker 1: And the first team is kind of funny cause there's 30 00:01:25,640 --> 00:01:29,120 Speaker 1: no line out there and most of our receivers are 31 00:01:29,200 --> 00:01:31,280 Speaker 1: second and third team on the first team today, So 32 00:01:31,319 --> 00:01:33,399 Speaker 1: I'm curious what everyone thinks first and second and third 33 00:01:33,400 --> 00:01:38,119 Speaker 1: team is uh the snap, Yeah, he was out there. 34 00:01:38,000 --> 00:01:41,440 Speaker 4: The first snaps whether they should be out here or not. 35 00:01:41,480 --> 00:01:43,800 Speaker 4: And you guys sure don't mind as long as they're 36 00:01:43,800 --> 00:01:46,479 Speaker 4: taking care of their business away from here. But when 37 00:01:46,480 --> 00:01:49,480 Speaker 4: you have a guy like McCaffrey who's out there setting 38 00:01:49,480 --> 00:01:52,560 Speaker 4: a pretty torrent pace for a for an ota, it appeared, 39 00:01:52,920 --> 00:01:54,080 Speaker 4: what does that do for the rest. 40 00:01:53,920 --> 00:01:57,960 Speaker 1: Of the team. I mean not just Christian, but I 41 00:01:58,000 --> 00:02:00,360 Speaker 1: mean the majority of our players. That's I think it's 42 00:02:00,400 --> 00:02:02,120 Speaker 1: been rare that we have had guys miss so I 43 00:02:02,120 --> 00:02:04,160 Speaker 1: think we do as good of that as most teams. 44 00:02:05,240 --> 00:02:07,600 Speaker 1: But yeah, it's huge. It's it's a voluntary thing. So 45 00:02:08,080 --> 00:02:09,440 Speaker 1: you sit there and you I mean, it is what 46 00:02:09,480 --> 00:02:11,760 Speaker 1: it is. But I think it's really hard to practice 47 00:02:11,760 --> 00:02:14,720 Speaker 1: football compared to other sports. We got a lot of 48 00:02:14,760 --> 00:02:17,919 Speaker 1: rules that don't allow you to practice football. So it's 49 00:02:18,040 --> 00:02:20,200 Speaker 1: very good if guys can prepare to practice, so they 50 00:02:20,240 --> 00:02:22,760 Speaker 1: got a chance to get better, and it's cool all 51 00:02:22,760 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 1: the guys to try to work with. 52 00:02:23,720 --> 00:02:27,240 Speaker 3: That reference betrayed in the past that that finger injury 53 00:02:27,320 --> 00:02:29,520 Speaker 3: kind of out slowed his development a little bit. Where 54 00:02:29,600 --> 00:02:31,239 Speaker 3: is he now in terms of being you know, kind 55 00:02:31,240 --> 00:02:32,960 Speaker 3: of far away from removed from that And how much 56 00:02:33,000 --> 00:02:34,799 Speaker 3: did it impact his first couple of years. 57 00:02:34,840 --> 00:02:37,000 Speaker 1: I think impact him a ton because he had to 58 00:02:37,000 --> 00:02:39,040 Speaker 1: adjusted during the season just to be able to get 59 00:02:39,040 --> 00:02:41,480 Speaker 1: through and adjust how you know, he was healthy, but 60 00:02:41,520 --> 00:02:43,680 Speaker 1: it didn't heal healthy, so he had to change how 61 00:02:43,720 --> 00:02:46,360 Speaker 1: he played in the middle of a year while mainly 62 00:02:46,520 --> 00:02:48,880 Speaker 1: taking scout team reps and being prepared as a number 63 00:02:48,880 --> 00:02:51,440 Speaker 1: two except for a couple of games. So going to 64 00:02:51,440 --> 00:02:53,400 Speaker 1: the off season have to recorrect that. I think it 65 00:02:53,440 --> 00:02:56,200 Speaker 1: took him all off season. So he worked at recorrecting 66 00:02:56,240 --> 00:02:58,400 Speaker 1: that throughout the whole offseason and then he was just 67 00:02:58,400 --> 00:03:02,160 Speaker 1: thrown into practice with us going into this year. That 68 00:03:02,240 --> 00:03:05,320 Speaker 1: was corrected throughout last year, his grip and everything, and 69 00:03:05,880 --> 00:03:07,320 Speaker 1: so I thought he'd got to go in this time 70 00:03:07,680 --> 00:03:09,760 Speaker 1: with his time away just he knew what he had 71 00:03:09,760 --> 00:03:12,040 Speaker 1: to focus on. He had known what he had struggled with, 72 00:03:12,200 --> 00:03:13,639 Speaker 1: he had known what he had done good with. He'd 73 00:03:13,680 --> 00:03:16,760 Speaker 1: gonna see two different quarterbacks playing our offense two different ways. 74 00:03:17,160 --> 00:03:19,440 Speaker 1: And I just think his time away was a lot 75 00:03:19,480 --> 00:03:22,079 Speaker 1: more deliberate and in a position where he knew what 76 00:03:22,120 --> 00:03:24,040 Speaker 1: he could isolate on, which I think helped him compare 77 00:03:24,040 --> 00:03:24,480 Speaker 1: to last. 78 00:03:24,400 --> 00:03:28,200 Speaker 3: Year, even up to like week one of last season. 79 00:03:30,040 --> 00:03:32,720 Speaker 1: No, I think when you spend four months trying to recorrect, 80 00:03:32,919 --> 00:03:34,840 Speaker 1: I mean, everything's about muscle memory and stuff and how 81 00:03:34,880 --> 00:03:37,920 Speaker 1: you develop things to repetition, and when you throw a 82 00:03:37,960 --> 00:03:41,320 Speaker 1: certain way for an entire football season, and justin because 83 00:03:41,320 --> 00:03:43,920 Speaker 1: of how a finger feels, that becomes your muscle memory. 84 00:03:43,960 --> 00:03:46,000 Speaker 1: It takes a while to correct that. You got to 85 00:03:46,040 --> 00:03:48,160 Speaker 1: work and isolate on just that for a long time. 86 00:03:48,200 --> 00:03:51,000 Speaker 1: And there's a lot of other stuff you need to 87 00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:53,960 Speaker 1: isolate on besides that, which allows you not to do 88 00:03:54,160 --> 00:03:56,120 Speaker 1: that other stuff. So I think he spent most of 89 00:03:56,120 --> 00:03:57,920 Speaker 1: his time working on a grip and things like that, 90 00:03:57,960 --> 00:04:01,720 Speaker 1: trying to get it back, which is usually a prerequisite, 91 00:04:01,840 --> 00:04:05,160 Speaker 1: but because of his circumstances, he got in that, so 92 00:04:05,200 --> 00:04:06,800 Speaker 1: he was just late to working on other things. 93 00:04:06,880 --> 00:04:07,360 Speaker 4: This year. 94 00:04:07,760 --> 00:04:10,200 Speaker 1: He went into this offseason knowing exactly just football wise, 95 00:04:10,240 --> 00:04:11,960 Speaker 1: what he had to work on, and I think that's 96 00:04:12,000 --> 00:04:13,040 Speaker 1: why he's ahead of last year. 97 00:04:13,560 --> 00:04:16,640 Speaker 5: He had to carry himself he differently inside the building 98 00:04:17,000 --> 00:04:19,080 Speaker 5: as opposed to last year, where he was the starter. 99 00:04:19,240 --> 00:04:22,680 Speaker 5: Everybody knew he was a starter, and now he's competing 100 00:04:22,760 --> 00:04:24,480 Speaker 5: for this spot. 101 00:04:25,040 --> 00:04:26,800 Speaker 1: I mean, I think Tray's been the same guy this 102 00:04:26,839 --> 00:04:30,679 Speaker 1: offseason he was last offseason. Trey is a very special 103 00:04:30,720 --> 00:04:33,320 Speaker 1: person that I don't think has to try to act anyway. 104 00:04:33,360 --> 00:04:36,839 Speaker 1: I think guys have the respect of Trey whether he 105 00:04:36,880 --> 00:04:39,279 Speaker 1: played any other position, whether he was the one, two, 106 00:04:39,360 --> 00:04:42,640 Speaker 1: or the three. Yeah, obviously, when you're the number one 107 00:04:42,720 --> 00:04:44,960 Speaker 1: quarterback and you've done that and had experience, that carries 108 00:04:45,000 --> 00:04:48,880 Speaker 1: more weight. But also when you're number one quarterback and 109 00:04:48,880 --> 00:04:51,400 Speaker 1: you haven't played that, stuff still isn't real till you 110 00:04:51,400 --> 00:04:53,799 Speaker 1: go out there and do it. That's all just outside perception. 111 00:04:53,960 --> 00:04:56,000 Speaker 1: So Trey's been the same since he's been here. The 112 00:04:56,000 --> 00:04:59,880 Speaker 1: guys respect the hell out of them, and they'll continue 113 00:04:59,920 --> 00:05:00,320 Speaker 1: to that. 114 00:05:01,120 --> 00:05:05,440 Speaker 2: The finger issue have a domino effect where you know, 115 00:05:05,480 --> 00:05:07,919 Speaker 2: it effected his arm to the point where it wasn't 116 00:05:08,320 --> 00:05:11,280 Speaker 2: a natural motion anymore. Can that maybe where some of 117 00:05:11,320 --> 00:05:14,120 Speaker 2: the fatigue or soreness. 118 00:05:13,960 --> 00:05:16,880 Speaker 1: At all, that everything if it was a hit that 119 00:05:16,880 --> 00:05:19,400 Speaker 1: bother and would lead everything. So I mean you're throwing 120 00:05:19,440 --> 00:05:21,800 Speaker 1: motion as your whole body is connected from the ground up, 121 00:05:21,960 --> 00:05:24,120 Speaker 1: similar to golf swing. So anything that gets thrown off 122 00:05:24,120 --> 00:05:26,560 Speaker 1: it can definitely adjust you. I mean adjust things and 123 00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:30,120 Speaker 1: when you overcompensate it, whatever it is. Watch any quarterback 124 00:05:30,120 --> 00:05:33,359 Speaker 1: throughout the year, that's when things start to hurt and 125 00:05:33,400 --> 00:05:36,640 Speaker 1: then you got to go back and recalibrate it. Quarterback 126 00:05:36,680 --> 00:05:41,159 Speaker 1: room you've had since being coached forty yers, I mean, 127 00:05:42,400 --> 00:05:43,520 Speaker 1: I don't know, I don't want to compare it to 128 00:05:43,520 --> 00:05:45,680 Speaker 1: other years, but I mean we got three guys. We 129 00:05:45,760 --> 00:05:48,280 Speaker 1: got two guys who are talented enough to be taken 130 00:05:48,279 --> 00:05:49,599 Speaker 1: in the top five of the draft, and we have 131 00:05:49,640 --> 00:05:52,760 Speaker 1: another guy who played like it last year. So I 132 00:05:52,839 --> 00:05:54,880 Speaker 1: like the three guys we got. And I've always been 133 00:05:54,880 --> 00:05:57,440 Speaker 1: a fan of Brandon Allen just watching him throughout his 134 00:05:57,480 --> 00:05:59,080 Speaker 1: career and to be able to get him in here. Also, 135 00:05:59,120 --> 00:06:02,160 Speaker 1: I feel real fortunate with her for pretty doing on 136 00:06:02,200 --> 00:06:06,920 Speaker 1: his recovery. He's doing good, still staying the same, Yeah, yep, on. 137 00:06:06,920 --> 00:06:10,960 Speaker 5: Schedule here in the next week or so yeah, I. 138 00:06:10,880 --> 00:06:12,520 Speaker 1: Think he's allowed to throw sometime next week. 139 00:06:14,360 --> 00:06:17,240 Speaker 4: Like a veteran presence, he's still young or is he 140 00:06:17,320 --> 00:06:20,680 Speaker 4: kind of a younger quarterback still? 141 00:06:21,640 --> 00:06:23,600 Speaker 1: I mean I met Sam just when he came out 142 00:06:23,640 --> 00:06:27,920 Speaker 1: of college, just interviewing him at Indy. He's then he 143 00:06:27,960 --> 00:06:29,640 Speaker 1: seemed like he had a veteran presence. I mean, just 144 00:06:29,680 --> 00:06:31,520 Speaker 1: the way he carries himself. I think whether he's in 145 00:06:31,520 --> 00:06:34,159 Speaker 1: the football building or whoever his peers are off the field, 146 00:06:35,480 --> 00:06:37,720 Speaker 1: and he seems almost like the same guy I met 147 00:06:37,760 --> 00:06:40,120 Speaker 1: four years ago. So he is a little bit more 148 00:06:40,120 --> 00:06:41,880 Speaker 1: of a veteran being in a couple of places. But 149 00:06:42,320 --> 00:06:44,600 Speaker 1: Sam's come in here with to me being the same 150 00:06:44,600 --> 00:06:46,080 Speaker 1: guy he's always been. That's why he's had such a 151 00:06:46,120 --> 00:06:49,720 Speaker 1: good reputation. And he's coming here acting like he's learning 152 00:06:49,760 --> 00:06:52,240 Speaker 1: everything from scratch, which he is, and trying to act 153 00:06:52,279 --> 00:06:53,640 Speaker 1: like a rookie in that way because it is all 154 00:06:53,680 --> 00:06:55,440 Speaker 1: new to him. He doesn't want to make any assumptions. 155 00:06:55,480 --> 00:06:57,679 Speaker 1: And he's been awesome in Phase and one. In Phase 156 00:06:57,680 --> 00:06:59,840 Speaker 1: two trying to just do techniques. He's not used to 157 00:07:00,000 --> 00:07:02,040 Speaker 1: things like that, and it's been cool that he put 158 00:07:02,080 --> 00:07:04,800 Speaker 1: the work in those two phases that he's been able 159 00:07:04,800 --> 00:07:06,520 Speaker 1: to use some of it here in these last two practices. 160 00:07:08,279 --> 00:07:11,160 Speaker 1: He was a mobile quarterback, you know, not running on 161 00:07:11,200 --> 00:07:11,640 Speaker 1: like crazy. 162 00:07:12,280 --> 00:07:14,760 Speaker 5: He's not a big feature in what you like about him. 163 00:07:14,800 --> 00:07:17,800 Speaker 4: Now, can you get some of that in him this season? 164 00:07:18,160 --> 00:07:20,640 Speaker 1: Yeah? I mean that all happens usually with reactions and stuff. 165 00:07:20,680 --> 00:07:22,360 Speaker 1: I mean there's two types of mobile quarterbacks. I mean 166 00:07:22,400 --> 00:07:25,160 Speaker 1: it's a type that he tried to design runs for 167 00:07:25,840 --> 00:07:27,920 Speaker 1: or is there a type who's got the athletic ability 168 00:07:28,000 --> 00:07:30,960 Speaker 1: or just knack for making some off schedule plays. And 169 00:07:31,000 --> 00:07:33,679 Speaker 1: I think his knack for off schedule plays has always 170 00:07:33,680 --> 00:07:35,960 Speaker 1: been good. When something's not there and he feels space 171 00:07:35,960 --> 00:07:38,320 Speaker 1: in the pocket and he doesn't hesitate to run, he's 172 00:07:38,320 --> 00:07:41,000 Speaker 1: been able to do it very well. You know that's 173 00:07:41,040 --> 00:07:43,600 Speaker 1: usually a bonus. I mean you want that anytime you 174 00:07:43,640 --> 00:07:45,720 Speaker 1: have that. He's also got to be very good at 175 00:07:45,720 --> 00:07:49,280 Speaker 1: the quarterback position too, and Sam bringing that element something 176 00:07:49,280 --> 00:07:51,400 Speaker 1: that helps a lot of stuff as long as he 177 00:07:51,400 --> 00:07:53,520 Speaker 1: doesn't miss other elements with it. And I think that's 178 00:07:53,560 --> 00:07:55,720 Speaker 1: something you saw with Brock a good amount last year 179 00:07:55,720 --> 00:07:57,760 Speaker 1: when he came in. I Mean, people want to think 180 00:07:57,760 --> 00:08:00,120 Speaker 1: of Brock as a runner, but he is quick, is 181 00:08:00,160 --> 00:08:02,720 Speaker 1: athletic in the pocket and he makes place very similar 182 00:08:02,760 --> 00:08:06,000 Speaker 1: to the way Sam does scrambling, and that's all we 183 00:08:06,080 --> 00:08:09,640 Speaker 1: see in Sam too. It's a moving target. 184 00:08:09,640 --> 00:08:11,800 Speaker 2: But but if you and John have mentioned training camp 185 00:08:11,920 --> 00:08:15,880 Speaker 2: or Brock does that, I mean you can see what 186 00:08:15,960 --> 00:08:17,160 Speaker 2: he could be ready to start a. 187 00:08:17,160 --> 00:08:21,000 Speaker 1: Training Yes, it's not really moving target. It's that only 188 00:08:21,040 --> 00:08:24,320 Speaker 1: God knows. And that's all estimates. So it depends what 189 00:08:24,400 --> 00:08:27,200 Speaker 1: quote people have got for me. But I mean we're 190 00:08:27,240 --> 00:08:30,960 Speaker 1: hoping for week one and I feel pretty optimistic about that. 191 00:08:30,960 --> 00:08:32,640 Speaker 1: That's what we're hoping for. He'll be ready to play 192 00:08:32,679 --> 00:08:35,480 Speaker 1: in week one, and usually that doesn't mean that's the 193 00:08:35,520 --> 00:08:37,600 Speaker 1: day he comes back. Usually you got to come before 194 00:08:37,640 --> 00:08:39,679 Speaker 1: that to make that goal. And that's kind of the 195 00:08:39,679 --> 00:08:42,319 Speaker 1: goal we're hoping for and don't have any reason to 196 00:08:42,320 --> 00:08:47,280 Speaker 1: think differently. You're missing a few guys out there. Sorry, 197 00:08:47,679 --> 00:08:50,040 Speaker 1: But are you generally please with the level of participation 198 00:08:50,080 --> 00:08:52,679 Speaker 1: and energy today? Oh yeah, I'm real pleased with it. 199 00:08:52,840 --> 00:08:55,040 Speaker 1: I mean it's always different. I mean it's always different 200 00:08:55,040 --> 00:08:56,679 Speaker 1: for O line and D line because just the way 201 00:08:56,679 --> 00:09:00,480 Speaker 1: it is now, it's hard Verstus set up those guys 202 00:09:00,480 --> 00:09:02,880 Speaker 1: to get as much. So it is more of a 203 00:09:02,920 --> 00:09:06,160 Speaker 1: passing deal and skill position type thing. But for the 204 00:09:06,160 --> 00:09:08,480 Speaker 1: most part, I mean, I think we had five guys 205 00:09:08,520 --> 00:09:10,840 Speaker 1: not here, so I mean I wanted to be one 206 00:09:10,880 --> 00:09:14,160 Speaker 1: hundred percent, but pretty realistic with that, and I mean 207 00:09:14,280 --> 00:09:15,280 Speaker 1: I'll take five. 208 00:09:16,280 --> 00:09:18,400 Speaker 4: Here, all of them expected. 209 00:09:19,160 --> 00:09:20,880 Speaker 1: Yeah, I communicate with all of them, So I got 210 00:09:20,880 --> 00:09:27,000 Speaker 1: a pretty good idea your thoughts, I mean, probably the 211 00:09:27,000 --> 00:09:28,880 Speaker 1: same as all the other special teams coach. I mean, 212 00:09:29,280 --> 00:09:30,800 Speaker 1: when you don't have experience of it, you don't know 213 00:09:30,800 --> 00:09:34,080 Speaker 1: which way it's going to go. And I think the 214 00:09:34,120 --> 00:09:36,680 Speaker 1: point is for probably to eliminate more kick costs and stuff, 215 00:09:36,679 --> 00:09:38,880 Speaker 1: which is for safety. So if that's the case, then 216 00:09:39,360 --> 00:09:42,080 Speaker 1: I think everyone's for that. But you know, I'm just 217 00:09:42,080 --> 00:09:43,880 Speaker 1: not sure that it is. So we'll have to see 218 00:09:43,880 --> 00:09:45,440 Speaker 1: how it plays out now and how it goes and 219 00:09:45,440 --> 00:09:48,719 Speaker 1: how we adjust to it. But that's the rule now. 220 00:09:48,800 --> 00:09:52,520 Speaker 1: So now we'll start trying to make estimates about what 221 00:09:52,600 --> 00:09:56,400 Speaker 1: our philosophies will be, but any philosophy will be developed 222 00:09:56,440 --> 00:09:58,240 Speaker 1: through the experience of watching how it works out throughout 223 00:09:58,240 --> 00:09:58,480 Speaker 1: the year. 224 00:10:00,320 --> 00:10:02,800 Speaker 2: You said that the Droy Clark event that Brock was 225 00:10:02,880 --> 00:10:06,199 Speaker 2: working out with a towel. Can you explain what exactly 226 00:10:06,200 --> 00:10:08,360 Speaker 2: he's doing with the towel to sort of mimic the 227 00:10:08,960 --> 00:10:09,480 Speaker 2: throwing motion. 228 00:10:09,800 --> 00:10:12,000 Speaker 1: Yeah, just, I mean everything that we work on when 229 00:10:12,040 --> 00:10:14,360 Speaker 1: it comes for the NFL guys, throwing just is usually 230 00:10:14,360 --> 00:10:16,319 Speaker 1: from the ground up, and how to time their feet, 231 00:10:16,360 --> 00:10:19,960 Speaker 1: their drops, their eyes and everything. I rarely even look 232 00:10:20,000 --> 00:10:22,920 Speaker 1: at where the ball goes. You just expect it to 233 00:10:22,960 --> 00:10:26,120 Speaker 1: be there. And these are NFL quarterbacks. So it's tough 234 00:10:26,160 --> 00:10:27,760 Speaker 1: when you can't pick up the weight of a ball 235 00:10:27,760 --> 00:10:29,240 Speaker 1: and throw because your elbow, how do you work at 236 00:10:29,240 --> 00:10:32,439 Speaker 1: everything else? And Brock's healthy in every other aspect and 237 00:10:32,440 --> 00:10:33,800 Speaker 1: you can't move his arm. We just don't want to 238 00:10:33,800 --> 00:10:35,960 Speaker 1: put that weight on it. So for Brock to still 239 00:10:35,960 --> 00:10:38,160 Speaker 1: be able to do his drops, all his footwork and stuff, 240 00:10:38,679 --> 00:10:40,400 Speaker 1: you want to be able to simulate a throwing motion, 241 00:10:40,920 --> 00:10:42,520 Speaker 1: and that's hard with nothing in your arm. So he 242 00:10:42,600 --> 00:10:45,560 Speaker 1: uses a towel instead. And that's what a lot of 243 00:10:45,600 --> 00:10:48,280 Speaker 1: quarterbacks do when you try to throw every day and 244 00:10:48,360 --> 00:10:50,120 Speaker 1: work on things every day, but you don't want to 245 00:10:50,120 --> 00:10:52,040 Speaker 1: wear your arm down, so sometimes you use a towel, 246 00:10:52,080 --> 00:10:54,400 Speaker 1: sometimes you use a football. And Frock just in a 247 00:10:54,400 --> 00:10:56,000 Speaker 1: situation where you only can use a towel. 248 00:10:56,040 --> 00:10:58,760 Speaker 3: Right now, the Dwight Clark legacy event that Trey Lance 249 00:10:58,760 --> 00:11:00,880 Speaker 3: had cleaned up his base a little bit, could you 250 00:11:00,880 --> 00:11:02,080 Speaker 3: explain a little bit what that means. 251 00:11:02,480 --> 00:11:04,400 Speaker 1: It means playing with your feet wide, are apart, always 252 00:11:04,400 --> 00:11:06,520 Speaker 1: be in a position to throw. When you're a quarterback, 253 00:11:06,880 --> 00:11:10,080 Speaker 1: your feet aren't together. When you turn into a runner, 254 00:11:10,120 --> 00:11:12,160 Speaker 1: your feet are together and you look to run, but 255 00:11:12,200 --> 00:11:13,600 Speaker 1: then it takes you a second and a half to 256 00:11:13,640 --> 00:11:16,079 Speaker 1: throw where defenders can tee off on and things like that. 257 00:11:16,160 --> 00:11:19,600 Speaker 1: And it's about always being in having to be in 258 00:11:19,640 --> 00:11:22,240 Speaker 1: a certain position to throw in so when the O 259 00:11:22,360 --> 00:11:24,720 Speaker 1: line is bad, you're not one of those guys who's 260 00:11:24,720 --> 00:11:26,480 Speaker 1: just going to get sacked. Every time the line's bad. 261 00:11:26,880 --> 00:11:28,760 Speaker 1: You know how to get rid of the ball or 262 00:11:28,800 --> 00:11:30,280 Speaker 1: you know how to turn into a runner and go. 263 00:11:30,720 --> 00:11:32,360 Speaker 1: And that has to do with how you balance your 264 00:11:32,360 --> 00:11:34,400 Speaker 1: feet out, how far you keep them apart, and how 265 00:11:34,400 --> 00:11:35,640 Speaker 1: you can progress in a pocket. 266 00:11:37,600 --> 00:11:39,600 Speaker 4: Stand out in particular to you today, not. 267 00:11:39,640 --> 00:11:42,680 Speaker 1: Really just two days. So I mean, even if they did, 268 00:11:42,679 --> 00:11:44,440 Speaker 1: I make sure I don't even say anything to the 269 00:11:44,480 --> 00:11:47,840 Speaker 1: coaches because I've coached too much to get very excited 270 00:11:47,840 --> 00:11:50,600 Speaker 1: about guys on day one and not feel the same 271 00:11:50,640 --> 00:11:53,600 Speaker 1: way in day three. And vice versas. So it's early 272 00:11:53,640 --> 00:11:56,400 Speaker 1: out there and somewhat OTAs is like for the most part, 273 00:11:56,440 --> 00:11:58,200 Speaker 1: but a lot of the better ideas we get towards 274 00:11:58,200 --> 00:12:00,160 Speaker 1: the end of this, and then that's the best art 275 00:12:00,200 --> 00:12:01,960 Speaker 1: because we get away for forty days. And I've also 276 00:12:02,120 --> 00:12:05,600 Speaker 1: learned do not make any concrete decisions, because you get 277 00:12:05,600 --> 00:12:07,480 Speaker 1: away for forty days and you come back and that's 278 00:12:07,480 --> 00:12:10,040 Speaker 1: when you really see who got better or worse, and 279 00:12:10,080 --> 00:12:13,440 Speaker 1: who's really gonna make a play for this team. All right, 280 00:12:13,600 --> 00:12:14,160 Speaker 1: Thanks guys,