LIVE: Houston Texans Coordinators address the media
I’m good. How are you guys doing? Good. I don’t know. We’re out. Let’s go. Let’s jump into it. He’s got me. What do you guys like about MJ Stewart? What he brings to the table? He’s been with you guys for a couple years now. Yeah. Uh, you know, veteran guy. um has done played a lot of positions throughout his career. Uh you know, has actually played outside in college, played some nickel, played some safety. So, we like guys like that. Uh just a kid that’s always been on the details of what we’re asking him to do. Um obviously has had a big role in special teams. So, from like a run, hit tackle. Uh you know, he’s had a lot of experience uh in open space, doing those things. So, but just been a kid that’s been really working for us and was always kind of in the right spot. So, uh there’s a lot of value in that for sure. Yeah, I mean all of our linebackers again sort of similar that question. I mean we um ask all our positions to do a lot of different things and so the more versatile you are and and adaptable you are, it just helps how we can call things and matchups and those sort of things. So uh I would put a lot more guys in that category uh in in that room. So, um, you know, you guys that have been here, uh, from a linebacker spot, we like to cross trainin guys there as well and play, uh, you know, Mike and Will and and Sam and Nickel, Will and those sort of things. So, um, really feel like a lot of those guys, uh, in that room have done a good job of of mastering multiple spots and and it helps us uh, just how we deploy them. Jimmy Ward right now. Uh, I could see lots of scenarios. I mean, I think right now uh we’re just trying to get a lot of guys work and in different spots and uh, you know, some of those injuries are short-term and some are longer term. So, you know, we just sort of try to get them ready to play this week and and as the season gets closer, we’ll we’ll figure out how to deploy our guys best. Um, you know, Jaylen’s had history at a lot of spots as well. Again, another guy that’s played multiple roles for us. So, uh, I think we just, again, part of what we’re doing in camp is really trying to cross train a lot of people and, you know, injuries happen and so obviously always looking ahead to, hey, if something happens at one spot, how do we fill that in or who’s the next guy up? So, uh, playing lots of scenarios. SGE has kind of done. Yeah, man. I would say uh Russ probably signifies like just the growth mindset that we really like here, man. I mean, uh from when we got him towards, you know, last year. Um but I would say like just full process from literally like day one back from the spring. uh his growth from just a communication and grasping and um and I don’t want to say it like this but like I feel like when he started again maybe whether it was confidence or whatever like a little bit more in the background but like really especially when he came back from the summer and and started training camp just like the urgency to communicate and be honest thing and and the confidence in it you know sometimes if you’re not sure of a call or what you’re doing then kind of quiet but man like to see his growth of the communication level that he’s just like I feel like his confidence has grown from tied into like his knowledge of what we’re doing and what we’re asking him to do. So, I feel like uh Russ is a really cool example of just the full process from coming back in the spring and growing, growing, growing, getting better every day and now I think his confidence in what he’s doing in his role is showing and now that led to more communication and then he’s louder and he’s more become a part of it. It just kind of builds and builds. So, uh I really think Russ has been a guy that’s just gotten better every day and and and it’s sort of showing the the fruits of those labors, man. What are you talking about, John? Oh. EJ crossing everybody. What do you add to your Sure. Yeah. I mean, again, probably a prototype uh from a physical uh skill set of what we look for in in Will linebacker. He’s long, he’s fast, he’s physical, he showed his uh his physicality in the game, uh uh last Saturday. So, uh, again, another guy that just growing into the techniques and the responsibilities that we’re asking him to play and, um, did a really, really good job in the game, like just being on it, being on his details of what he’s what he’s what we’re asking him to do. And, um, you know, when you do that, like your skill set, your physical tools can show. So, um, really, again, another guy like the earlier question, just length, speed, uh, physicality, like those would probably be the top three traits we’re looking for in linebackers. So, uh, as he’s putting it all together and again growing in the system, uh, I think those abilities are starting to shine through. What have you seen from him? Oh, man. Je, you know, a lot of us on staff have been with Jay for a while. So, um, you know, again, another guy that’s played a lot of positions. He started at corner uh, when I was with him in Philly and then we moved to safety. He’s played nickel. Um, so again, just another veteran guy, really smart. Uh, kind of has always been uh, in throughout his career been a real headsy player uh, around the ball. Um and uh you know had spent some time with the Jets last year in a similar system. So just was able to really pick things up pretty quickly from a language standpoint. Um so again once you know a lot of these guys just once you have a grasp of this the communication in the system the techniques we’re asking you to play then you can go play ball. So he’s he’s picked up things really quickly from our history with them together and history in the system and excited to see him go play. follow that guys. What are you see? Yeah, I mean same same thing really again especially guys that were asking to play multiple positions, right? Like can you handle that? A lot of times if not nothing’s set in stone at this point, but if you are a backup player in the league, like you have to be a backup at multiple spots and you can’t just be a one position player. So, can you handle those roles right as we get thrust into a game, whenever that may be, whether it’s this Saturday or in December, like, can you handle that? Can you be the third safety and the backup nickel? Can you be a corner nickel? Can you be a Sam and a Mike? Can you play this? You know, so as we put you in these positions in the game, like, can you how much can you handle? And and when the lights come on and things are going a little bit faster, like can you can you play those roles? So, I think all positions across the board, like that’s what we’re looking for. or can you handle the coaching we’re giving you and can you execute the techniques and and the things we’re asking you to do when when it’s when it matters. Couple more guys. What’s the value for your frontline players of facing an opponent when you already know what these guys can do? What’s the value practice against? What’s the value if your front line? Yeah, the same for everything. I mean, I think like uh you know, you’re just going against the the same scheme in camp and the same players a lot of times like your matchup across the ball is the same or or roughly. So, uh between, you know, maybe you’re up front you’re playing an offensive line that has a little different set or blocks a little differently and so how are you going to respond to that? You know, obviously again schematically it’s going to be a little different structure from what we’re used to. So, there’s going to be have to be some different checks and different calls or we’re seeing some different route patterns. So, I think all those things like you’re just that’s how the season’s going to go, right? You come into a week and each opponent’s different and your challenges and and your matchups are different every week. And so, that’s to me, you know, we get to chance to to see that in action. Tim had Tim. Okay, that’s cool. Interesting analogy when describing that it’s like a migraine headache. But I wanted to like when it comes to the defense, what are y’all trying to accomplish in trying to contain offense? Like how would you describe that? I figure I got to unpack that one. Uh I’m I’m going to pass on the Tim Settle part on that if that’s okay. That’s fair. Um, yeah. I think like look, what we preach is um, and I think I’ve said this before, but just a as as a defense, right, you’re naturally uh, a reactionary position, right? You have to wait for the offense to put their personnel out there. You have to wait for the formation and we have to make checks based on what we’re seeing, what we’re getting, right? So, uh, our swarm mentality and the way we play and what we talk about as an attack style front is we try to flip that script a little bit. And so, we try to be on the front foot and make people have to respond to how we play. And so, I think that’s what ties into the swarm besides just our fronts and our and our techniques, but just in the mindset of like just the overwhelming attack mentality, like now that puts offenses a little bit on the defensive. So, that’s kind of how we try to flip that. So I think from a schematic standpoint when we talk that like again we want our tape to look a certain way and and for offenses that are preparing for us to understand how we play and and to have to react to how we play not necessar always we’re reacting to what an offense does. Thanks for All right guys, thank you. Yep. seniority. How’s it going? Yep. Are you leaning away? What are the pros and cons to each style? Yeah. Uh well, I’ve I’ve done both. Um as a position coach, as a non-Cordinator, obviously the last eight I’ve been on the field. So, um, starting back, you know, when I was coaching on defense, most of my time was probably split, but I think this is the time to do it. Um, I think there’s advantages, you know, to both. And I think this is the time to, you know, to experiment and and get a flow for it and the communication through the staff and everything else. So, I’m going to do it this week and make an assessment after that. I’m comfortable in either situation. Just want to see what what works best for us this year. Are you leaning either way? Um, I’m going into it with an open mind and I’m going to see how this uh this week goes. Yeah. Evaluate take coming into this job. What did you see uh what did you see on tape that you figured out you could use or that would help backup quarterback Davis Mills and wide receiver John Mitch? Those two seem to be having such a good camp. They seem to be comfortable in your offense. Yeah. Well, I think I mean it all honestly starts with setting a foundation. They both pour a lot into it. They both love football. So, I think dating back to the spring, they did a good job of of staying ahead of everything and really keeping up to speed. and you know they have a lot of different experiences and they’ve they’ve played in different systems and a lot of times that can actually be an asset to those to those guys and u they’ve just done a really good job of catching on. Um they’re both you know hardworking good dudes and uh they care about doing a good job and they’re prepared. So that that really is a testament to them. The defense every day now you guys got that first preseason game in the books now practice tomorrow. What’s that transition like going from the offense going from facing your own defense to now defense? Well, I think it just depends on who you’re seeing, right? I mean, there’s different front structures, there’s different coverage families. Um, so each defense, you know, is in and of itself its own identity. And so, you know, getting a chance to you go, you go against our defense or, you know, any defense, you know, in training camp in that time of the year, you get used to seeing the things that they do, and then you get a change of pace when you see somebody that does something different. So, I think it’s advantageous because it’s going to prepare us for the longevity of the season. And uh it’s it’s a good thing, you know, both getting our work against our guys and then obviously whoever we play here in joint practices in the preseason. How close is this offense to setting who they want at the offensive line? Yeah, I think we’re working towards that every day. I think the the it’s a it’s a good problem to have in the sense that it’s a highly competitive group and they’ve shown progress across the board. So, um Cole and Zach have done an outstanding job with those guys. the players have worked their asses off and um I think that you know it’s a testament to them. So we’re going to continue to see who the five most consistent guys are and when we see a clear separation in that we’ll make a decision on that at the appropriate time. How many different has he Yeah. First of all, Jerry Shaplinsky is um he’s a great friend. He’s a great man. He’s an outstanding football coach. I’ve been fortunate to be at three different places with him. Um he’s he’s steady. He’s consistent in his approach. He’s a very very uh an excellent teacher of the game. And I think just his consistency, who he is every single day, um rubs off on all of us, especially, you know, quarterbacks, but you know, all of us as a staff. And I’m I’m very thankful and grateful to have a man like him to help us here uh this year. Christian mentioned to us he’s seen the physicality, the offensive line really throughout camp. How have you seen that progress and how’s that going to open up the running Yeah, I mean I think it all starts up front, you know, and it and and I’ve said that it’s not cliche. It’s what I believe in. I think you got to be physical. You have to establish the line of scrimmage, and that’s in the run game. That’s being coordinated in protections. That’s not having free runners at the quarterback. That’s knowing where we’re working to. That’s getting a hat on a hat in the run game, whether that’s zone schemes or gap double teams. And I think as long as you can start there and you’re tough and physical, you can stay on schedule and you can move forward. And not to oversimplify things, but if you do it the other way, like I don’t, you know, I don’t believe that that’s the right way to to go about things. So, we’re far from where we need to be, but we’re making progress and we’re seeing improvement and we just have to keep continuing to do that every single day here. I mean, they just they’ve they’ve brought the same approach from day one. Um, they’ve got great pedigree. They come from a great program with Matt Campbell at Iowa State. They love the game. They work hard. They’re versatile. Are they the same exact player? No, they’re not. Um, no player really is. But they’ve just continued to get better. And the more experience they have in time on task with the fundamentals, the route tree, the blocking mechanics, the techniques, the better they’ve just continuously got. So, I’ve been very pleased with them. The whole unit in general has gotten better. Um but but they’ve done a really good job for first year guys coming in here and competing. What was your impressions of first game and what do you hope to do over these next joint practice? Yeah, I think he uh I think he competed. I thought he he was tough. He he anchored. He played hard. He finished. And we just need to continue to see that. Um, and you know, continuing to play, uh, you know, with good fundamentals and technique consistently, especially when you get tired, you’re you’re building, you know, you’re starting to try to get calloused in the in these parts of training camp where you’re, uh, you know, building stamina as you go, not just physically, but, you know, competitive stamina mentally. And I think he’s done a good job of that. I mean, he loves football and he works. So, we just got to keep going at that trajectory and keep pushing him. And he wants to be coached. And, um, and again, Cole and Zach do a really good job with those guys. Damen Pierce on the field. What’s the for him after the time that he did miss on the field. What’s the expectation? Yeah, the expectation is just to be be the best version of himself. Um he’s a physical violent runner on contact. I’ve had an appreciation for him since he came out of college. So, um you know, not to press, not to do anything outside of just being the best that you can be, taking care of the football, pressing your tracks, knowing who you have in blitz pickup, and starting from there because I mean, he’s shown what he can do when he gets opportunities to go out there and compete. So, I’m excited to get him back out there. that game was kind of trying to show your best plays first with that versus not trying to show too much as you get ready that balance. I think it starts with first of all, how do we give our guys an opportunity to go out and compete from down after down? Okay. And so schematically giving ourselves a chance. I want to give our guys an opportunity to go out there and compete based on the front variations that we have, the coverages that we’re expecting to see. And then I think the balance is, you know, allowing them to have not too much where we can evaluate the fundamentals to evaluate each player on this team to give ourselves the best chance to make a clean evaluation. So there is there is a balancing act there, but I think it starts with the fundamentals and and giving them an opportunity to compete, you know, against whoever we’re going up against. Two more. Greg and Aaron, you talked I know that you understood that Nico was a special type. Y what have you seen from him? He looks like he really wants to go out and compete against the defense and when go that seems like one of the great battles. Yeah, it’s iron sharpening iron like like coach always talks about. Um he’s got a joy about him. I mean he he always has a smile on his face. He loves to compete. I really enjoy being around him. I’m excited uh every single day we hit the field with them. So it’s been fun. It’s been fun watching those guys compete the give and take on both sides of the ball and that’s what makes you better. Um, so, you know, I love Nico. What do you like about each one? Yeah, I a couple different things. I think in the booth, um, it’s a, uh, there’s a little bit more peace and serenity. I can lay out some stuff. I got some room to write, you know, some things down. Um, and obviously I get a bird’s eye view. Um, you know, we have great, you know, communication on the headsets. I thought that that went well with the staff. So, I have all the faith in the world, everybody that’s on the headset. When you talk about what’s the advantage of being down, um, I’ve been down, you know, basically the vast majority of my career in the National Football League. So, seeing it from that perspective is, you know, I I would say that’s what I’m, you know, most recently been used to. But you also get to engage and see guys and look them in the eyes and and get an opportunity to reset things and talk and communicate and and get that, you know, one-on-one communication with them. So, I think there’s there’s uh they’re two different perspectives. Um both, you know, are good. So, we’re going to see, you know, how it goes and this is the time to do it. How how much is obvious? I mean, just, you know, again, you’re seeing everything from top down in the booth on the sideline. I will back up a little bit and try to stay behind some things obviously um you know there’s and then you rely on obviously using you know tells tips and tells and how you see coverages live front structures but then you go back and you obviously are always using the the um the pictures and stuff that we have access to too. So, yep. Thank you guys. Have a good day. Start with the I think something Nick uh Coach Kayley just talked about was um you guys were had been asking a couple questions about whether it was the communication piece or whatever. And I it he just said something that kind of sparked. He was like, you know, I have full faith in everybody in the staff to get the communication no matter what it looks like and it’s ever evolving and they’re sorting through. Like to me, I think that that is the gist of the preseason. Like I am very happy taking it to special teams. I’m very happy with whether it was Minnesota or practice this week, yesterday, today, or the joint for tomorrow. Um like we’ve established some things that matter. We’ve got some really good communication pieces. We’ve got some really good physicality. Is it in full form? Is our execution, call it mid-season, end of season form where you want to really start, you know, answering every single bell that comes your way. Probably not there yet. Nobody is across the league. But, uh, the positivity on it and, um, where we’re at as a special teams unit, I think that’s been something that’s really excited me, especially with working with new players, new guys for this year that are going to be in key roles for us. um really excited with the kind of the build that we’ve got to this point. Some things that we started to stack days on that are really in our bag where we’re saying like, “Yeah, that’s definitely going to be a piece or a cornerstone of us uh for the kicking game.” And then we still need to turn up the execution and those things, but we’re not quite there yet. I’m excited to get there. Um but just that that’s resonated with me amongst the staff, amongst the players, the coach to the players, and what the final product looks like week one. So, um just excited with where we’re at. Love the physical piece and um there’s a few I’ll take some questions. Did you guys catch it? Did anybody catch it? Nobody Nobody caught the first first one. So, so like nerdy specialist stuff, but super cool for him. Uh, do you remember what happened on the PA on the field goal was um or on the touchdown, excuse me, from Barios was they threw a flag. Was there a penalty? They ended up picking it up. So, we put the ball down, we kick it, and we’re good. You know, but they threw in a quarterback ball, we threw in the kicking ball. The ref goes, “No, there’s a penalty.” Throws it back out. His first ever NFL snap and kick on a season was with a QB ball. So, you know, they are different. there’s a whole process that goes into it. So proud of him. Um yeah, I thought he had a really nice outing. I thought he’s done a good job to this point. Um you know, he knows that as a rookie snapper, he will be, you know, quote unquote attacked and they’ll try to challenge him. Um I thought he did a great job in his first outing. Excited with where he is and we’ll see what he can continue to grow going forward. Guard for a few years now in special teams. How much of what he does has been taught and learned through experience? How much of in a prowess to be a good special team. Yeah. I think the second part is for anybody to be good, you’re going to have to have some of that. You’re going to have to have want to to do the dirty work or the the things that don’t, you know, quote unquote get you the glory. But, um, it’s helped him stick around for nine years in the league, whatever it is. And if you watch the Tampa Bay tape, he was making those same knifing tackles on kickoff that he’s making for us in the past few years and going to make for us this year. So, um, there is an element of just wanting to and putting real time into a special teams fundamental or technique and then stacking those with experience. Like that’s the only like and that’s why he’s one of the best special teams running backs in the league. So, um, very fortunate to learn from him, very fortunate that he’s here picking up that same role. And to me, I think he’s become a hell of an offensive player. That’s just, you know, from my special teams point of view because he’s stuck around long enough to practice offense more and more and get reps and then watch last year. He’s, you know, a third down like he’s done a great job. Everybody should have that mindset, but it starts with the want to. I saw some guys up. What did you see from him? Yeah. Um there’s an element where, you know, we want guys that can cover cover the earth and run. Man, we definitely want that. But you got to be you got to be high effort. So for us, we’re going to practice when everybody’s tagging off on the ball. Even if you’re on the backside gunner and the ball’s all the way over here. So hopefully that is ingrained where like the choice isn’t to just be stuck on a block over here. The only choice that you have is you go and you finish near or around the ball. I think that’s how good things end up happening your way. And that’s the training mechanics of our special teams unit. So, um, long, fast, athletic guy that has not done a lot of special teams. Let’s, what’s the basics? Like, we’re playing hard. Get your lever point and let’s go. And he’s probably has a lot more in his body than other people were gifted with. So excited with uh um him being here and getting a chance to see what he can really do. I think your evaluation system especially with so many groups having so many players such an overflow group now they’re coming over a lot of special yeah and distribution of opportunity like me giving them reps is really important like okay who’s going to be the last tight end receiver running back linebacker safety who’s going to be those last two or three players that are in consideration to make the job to to win that job. And all right, well, we got to give evaluations. Sometimes it’s not perfectly even on that rep distribution. And it’s just the old saying like you got to take advantage of your opportunities. So, um, in this joint practice, like we’re going to light them up and see what we can go with. And when we get to the game, like even if you repped in practice, you got to rep and do it again and show us you can do it on repeat and finish in a dominating position. And then, hey, maybe I didn’t get as many reps in the practice, but the lights are on on Saturday. like I got to go earn that rep back for the following week. Like it is a very real thing where uh it’s a few and far between rep, but when it’s your turn, like there’s no doovers. So for special teams, that evaluation, it’s going to be on a little amount of information and who can capitalize on repeat when they did get even if it’s three reps on that task for the whole preseason. And then we got to say, hey, yeah, he can project it. Hey, he can do that on repeat times 17 games over for the remainder of the season. Yeah, starts with the football. Can’t make a play until it’s in your hands. He’s definitely done a great job of understanding what these kicks are going to be, especially on the kickoff. Watch the league from the last preseason like they’re going to be in that landing zone more difficult to handle. So, he’s done a really good job of fielding the ball. He’s a consmate professional. We have a great conversations, man. fortunate to to have him on the roster and see where he’s going to uh um fit in on both phases, but we’re crossraining a bunch of guys and um he’s done a great job to this point. For the fans just now paying attention to football, could you explain the kickoff rules and kind of the changes to them in recent years for the f All right, let me let me dial that audience in. Run and hit, baby. Run and hit. Let’s go. Um okay. Uh so there, you know, just with the NFL taking care of players, we want to take speed and space out of the game so there’s less collisions, less impact. So by us shrinking down the starting formation, um this sounds like I’m interviewing for Google where you got to get them trick those tricky ones, but uh I’ll do my best. When we you shrink down the formation, you’ve you’ve relaxed the sprint part of it and you’ve lessened the collision part of it. Um for the blockers and the coverage team right there. Um, for us it’s become more of a uh a tricky placement. So now the kickoffs being placed in the right position as well as the returner getting over there and fielding it cleanly are the new game within the game. So can the kicker game the returner and the returner trying to predict it? And then with the restrictions of our alignments. So you have to have two players outside of the numbers to on a kickoff team, two players between the numbers in the hash, two in the middle, two and two. So that with that distribution, um you now have rules and how you can start and stop or start your alignment. Um and then to get rid of that running start, that buildup and that car crash, you know, now it’s you can’t leave until the ball hits the ground or is touched. So, I think that overall the NFL has done a good job of adapting to the rules and players are starting to have a feel and understanding of doesn’t matter what the rule is, it’s put in place. We’re playing within that confines of that structure. And I think we’re at a good place launching point to that uh to that fact as it starts right now. And then just overall on the preseason, it’s going to be a little more vanilla and a little more basic before you start seeing the the the kind of the trickery there. Um, so for us it’s about can you win your one-on- ons both on coverage and in the blocking phase right there. Now the Panthers showed um an interesting kick in preeason where they let it bounce a little bit. Are you going to be seeing more of that? Yeah, we had one that we got onto the ground in the Minnesota game and then we had one against us that Daniel Jackson fel fielded and what you could see from that is like we talked about Barios handling the the the kick like the ball was call it turning to his right and it doesn’t bounce right forward into him. It bounced away from him. So, being able to circle that ball and play shorts stop quick off the bounce or really attack know when you can attack it out of the air and catch it on the fly and nullify that movement from the from the ball being kicked. Panthers had a it was uh it was uh Matt Wright Matthew Wright. He hit a really nice kick getting that ball side winding onto the ground and the Cleveland kid was having to feel that there. So, for us, we’ve got to know that. We got to know what kicker is. That’s us studying our matchup. And and the players can move once it hits the ground. Once it hits the ground, if it touches the returner or hits the ground, that’s when everybody can start. Yep. So, for us, how fast can we load and take off or get to our drops and can our returner catch it as clean moving forward as possible. So, we’re excited to um get our guys uh some cross trainining on that in the joint practice and continuing to build where we’re at with it. So, um if that’s anybody else good, right now. Sure. I’m interested about the difference between a QB ball and a kicker ball. Oh, yeah. Come on. Uh, we wanted to kicking ball like a ping pong ball. So, um, in the sense that they’ll we’ll scrub it down legally. There’s a rules within the how the NFL distributes the kicking balls that you’re allowed to break down and wear wear down for the games and then you check them in before the game starts with the officials for pressure and surface, etc. You basically want the kicking surface to be as smooth as possible. They’re um they’re going to be um they’re feel like they have less grip than a QB ball. There’s other QB they’re like darker brown versus like more lighter or red you would see for a K ball. Um and uh um we want basically you want that thing to mimic like a soccer ball as nice as smooth a surface as you can. That way you don’t get any um grip on your foot and things like that. Um so there’s a process the NFL has. you get three K balls a game um that can be inserted at any time from the person working the ball crew right there uh in game and let’s say you lose one let’s say one of the chips gets knocked out um then that ball is de disqualified for the game so now you’re down to two um all kinds of won’t go into the myriad of things that could happen there but um it’s important to have a really good um uh kicking surface on your foot and just a nice little shout out to Mike Redmond who is our equipment manager that um prepares all those. He’s the best in the league. If you’re another coach around the league and you got a really good guy, come find me and I’ll debate you. Like Mike is the best. We’re a better special teams unit because of Mike Redmond. Cool. See you guys. Thanks. Thank you.
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3 comments
@6:30
Can yall PLEASE PLEASE give the reporters mics so we can hear the questions?
@15:45 Nick Caley! @25:24 Frank Ross! Go Texans! #WeSWARM… big sarge, I hear yo arse back there Bro… lol…