Jump to content

Captain Tez leads new-look backers


Recommended Posts

Captain Tez leads new-look backers

 

 

At the tender age of 22 in just his second season on one of the NFL's best defenses, Vontaze Burfict is The Captain.

burfict130120_645.jpg
Vontaze Burfict

If left end Robert Geathers is The Dean and tackle Geno Atkins is The Best Player and cornerback Leon Hall is the Stately Secretary of the Secondary and James Harrison is The Baddest Hired Gun in the West ambling into Paul Brown Stadium, then what does that make WILL linebacker Vontaze Burfict at the tender age of 22 in just his second season on one of the NFL's best defenses?

It just well might make him The Captain.

Burfict now wears the Bat Phone helmet that has the direct line to defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer, which is rated R by the censors but the NFL's top six by Elias. He sets the huddle, he calls the play and he never comes off the field.

Captain Tez?

"He's a smart kid. He knows football, he understands the big picture," Bengals linebackers coach Paul Guenther said after Wednesday's practice. "He understands what the offense is trying to do. Guys say, 'Wow, this guy really knows his stuff.' And now guys look up to him."

 

 
Burfict will really have to know his stuff at Soldier Field in Sunday's opener (1 p.m.-Cincinnati's Channel 12) against the Bears when the beat-up Bengals linebackers are going to be under the microscope against Bears rookie head coach Marc Trestman's creative offense that threatens all points of the field.

 

The season-ending injury toEmmanuel Lamur, Cincinnati's best cover linebacker, leaves the Bengals with just five backers and no one that can really do what Burfict and Lamur do on third down.

So safety Taylor Mays, on the bubble before Lamur's shoulder popped out in Thursday night's preseason finale after losing his starting job toGeorge Iloka, is suddenly being reinvented as a linebacker.

Ever since the 6-3, 230-pound Mays arrived in a trade two years ago and couldn't break into the starting lineup despite his speed, size and strength, everyone wanted him to be a linebacker.

Presto. Now he is in pass defense and Mays is wondering if this is the position that really fits him.

"It’s the same thing as when a safety inserts into the box," Mays said. "Some of the run gap fits are a little different. Paul does a good job of teaching and making things simple. I’ve been picking it up quick.

“They’ve been talking about it before. I think when E-man went down that’s what makes the most sense. We have the same body type. It just made sense ... maybe naturally for me it’s a little better. More in the box and could be a better position for me. I felt good about it and excited. It’s the kind of plays that I can make.”

Unbelievably, Guenther has starred in this movie before. The Bengals lost their best nickel player for the second time in 349 days when Lamur went down against the Colts last Thursday night. On the Thursday before last season's home opener against Cleveland, Thomas Howard blew out an ACL that is still rehabbing. When the Bengals brought him in for a workout Tuesday, there wasn't even a rustle of a signing.

Back then, Guenther tapped Burfict even though he had never played a snap at WILL. Carolina linebacker Luke Kuechly won Defensive Rookie of the Year, but Burfict could have if he wasn't undrafted because after he came off the bench against the Browns, he started the rest of the games and racked up 174 tackles.

"Just like last year with Howard and Burfict," Guenther said. "Same situation. Same teaching and really teaching him the same way as Vontaze. We’ve been watching Chicago for some time now and just understanding what they are doing with alignments and blitzes along with it. He’s doing good. I think he’ll do real good in the game and I don’t think he’ll miss a beat.”

Guenther says he's using the same method on Mays that he used to teach Burfict on such short notice. Burfict spent much of those 72 hours in the Paul Brown Stadium gym as Guenther rearranged a group of 11 chairs in varying formations to speed up recognition of alignments and blitzes.

Mays, who is attending the backers meetings and is practicing with them, has an edge on Burfict since it's his third year in the system and fourth in the league. So the question isn't so much if Mays knows, but if he can do it physically. Burfict's instincts combined with an ability to cover are rare.

"He can play in the back half on some of the things. He’s versatile. Trying to get him ready the same way. It worked last year so hopefully it will be the same way this year,” Guenther said of Mays. “He’s a lot like Emmanuel, body size, ability, coverage-wise. Obviously it will be something a little bit new but it goes along with our system as far as the rules and all those things. Little bit of a different alignment and he’ll be good at it.”

Burfict has gone from a crash course to crashing the party and is developing into an extension of Guenther and defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer on the field a la Dhani Jones.

"I've come very far. I feel like I'm taking a role as a defensive leader, more vocal, a leader on the field," Burfict said. "For me I just want to make sure everyone is on the same page out there. If the safety or corner mess up, it's my bad. I didn't communicate to them. I take full responsibility for what happens out there."

Burfict sees this as a tag team with middle linebacker Rey Maualuga.

"I set the huddle and tell them the huddle call and Rey sets the front," Burfict said. "It's a team game. Me and Rey take full responsibility to whatever happens out there and the communication part, that's me because I have to tell the safeties, the corner, the D-line what the play is."

Burfict doesn't turn 23 until two days after the third game of the season. But he sounds like the position has aged him.

"There's more weighing on me. I feel like I need to make more plays than I did last year because I'm not a rookie anymore," Burfict said. "Plays that I missed last year I feel I need to improve this year, which is coverage and blitzing."

Maualuga admits that not having the headset has taken some of the pressure off him.

"(Burfict) goes and makes the calls. I set everybody up, line everybody up, make the checks and whatnot, and when the nickel comes he stays and James and I run off the field," Maualuga said. "Now I just go out there and play football."

It coincides with what head coach Marvin Lewis calls the best of Maualuga's five preseasons. Guenther says he's in much better shape and looks like he did when he was a rookie. Both he and Lewis vented their feelings last year about Pro Football Focus's ranking that listed Maualuga last overall and in coverage among NFL inside backers.

"Perception is not always reality,” said Guenther, who hinted Maualuga may see some snaps in nickel.

"We’ll mix it up. I want to try and make the snaps as even as possible,” Guenther said. “He’s been playing a lot of the base snaps and second- and third-down snaps. I’m trying to spread him out so that he isn’t playing 70 snaps a game. I think I’ve seen an improvement in him. He’s good against the run and physical. We have a lot of different guys with different strengths."

The Bengals are hoping they can find one more for Captain Tez, even if he's a safety. He just has to watch how The Captain did it.

“Been here every day and in the gym. For some reason I feel like I’ve been picking it up quick," Mays said. "I feel good about it. Some stuff you have to learn on the field but I have to get it done."

 

 

http://www.bengals.com/news/article-1/Captain-Tez-leads-new-look-backers/aa462209-f2ad-4d52-b300-ce1fc52d5165

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At least Paul Guenther has a little over a week to teach a new linebacker.

It was nearly a year ago when Thomas Howard suffered a knee injury three days before the Bengals faced the Browns in Week 2. A couple hours after, Guenther, who is the team’s linebackers coach, found out that Howard was going to be lost for the season, he called Vontaze Burfict, brought him into the gym inside Paul Brown Stadium and started teaching him how to play the weak-side spot.

Burfict saw 20 snaps in that game. He started the following week at Washington and at the end of the season became the first rookie to lead the team in tackles in seven years.

With the Bengals having just five linebackers going into Sunday’s opener at Chicago, Guenther’s task this time is something that fans have been wondering about for a couple years – whether Taylor Mays can play linebacker. Mays is likely to see snaps at linebacker in nickel and dime packages.

Mays spent the weekend at the team complex getting up to speed as Guenther taught him the same way he did Burfict, sometimes using chairs and medicine balls as props to simulate formations and coverages.

Said Mays of the adjustment: “It’s the same thing as when a safety inserts into the box. Some of the run gap fits are a little different. Paul does a good job of teaching and making things simple. I’ve been picking it up quick. I feel good about it. It’s the kind of plays that I can make.”

The last time defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer was asked about moving Mays to linebacker, he said it wasn’t going to happen. But that came well before Emmanuel Lamur’s season-ending shoulder injury, which made him the third linebacker in two weeks to go on injured reserve. It was time to look at other options.

The Bengals had Howard and Tyrone McKenzie in for workouts on Tuesday, but neither one was signed.

Mays said he expects to continue to see snaps at safety, but giving him a shot at linebacker also helps his versatility. Guenther thinks the move could work because Mays has the same body size as Lamur and they are similar in playing abilities.

“He understands what we’re doing, and the way I teach the game is pretty simple. I teach it by code words ‘this coverage – boom, boom’ and get it down that way and fast,” Guenther said. “Hopefully this week and as the weeks go on we can build on it.”

Even though the linebacker group is thin, it’s not the first time the Bengals have gone into a game with just five. There was a three-game stretch in 2011 when they were down to five due to Rey Maualuga having an ankle injury and Dontay Moch being on the mend from a broken foot.

Injuries at the position have overshadowed a solid preseason for the group. James Harrison quickly fit in and did well against the run, while Maualuga had the best preseason in his five seasons here.

As for Burfict, he is seeing more responsibilities. With Maualuga being taken out of most nickel packages, Burfict is wearing the helmet with communications from the sideline and relaying the huddle calls while Maualuga sets the front.

“There’s more weighing on me,” Burfict said. “I feel like I need to make more plays than I did last year because I’m not a rookie anymore. Plays that I missed last year I feel I need to improve this year, which is coverage and blitzing.”

Maualuga had a solid preseason and acknowledges that he feels less pressure coming into this season compared to the past. He also comes into the opener healthy and 20 pounds lighter, which wasn’t the case the first half of last season.

“I feel good with my role. Would I like to expand? Of course, everyone does, but you’ve just got to sit back and take the little things you have to work on,” he said. “I think I had a pretty good preseason. Who knows if the linemen or the running backs were the best or giving it their all. You could be looking good when you’re not. We’ll find out in Chicago come Sunday, but I feel great.”

Also expect to see plenty of playing time from Vinny Rey and Jayson DiManche. When Lamur got hurt in last Thursday’s preseason finale, it was DiManche who stepped in and played in nickel. Of the 17 plays where the Bengals were in nickel last week, Rey was in for eight and DiManche five.

The Bengals will face a Chicago offense that is still trying to adjust to new coach Marc Trestman’s scheme, which is West Coast-based. Besides running back Matt Forte being a force in the run game and catching out of the backfield, tight end Martellus Bennett will pose challenges along with receivers Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffrey.

Burfict also added that quarterback Jay Cutler is more athletic and mobile than people give him credit for.

“He can run, he gets out of the pocket and he can pick up plus yards. That’s going to take the linebackers to get on their guys and if he scrambles then we all have to get to the ball,” Burfict said.

 

http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20130904/SPT02/309040161

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...