Bengals’ second-year defensive tackle Kris Jenkins Jr. is showing all the signs of a breakout season, particularly after his 1.5 sacks and six tackles last Sunday in Minnesota.
The son of two-time All-Pro defensive tackle Kris Jenkins Sr., and the nephew of another defensive tackle who played 184 games in 13 years, Cullen Jenkins, Jenkins Jr. has a wise cabinet of defensive tackles to consult as he bounces back from a rookie season plagued by an early thumb injury.
Bengals.com senior writer Geoff Hobson caught Jenkins in a gap earlier this week, and they talked about how his famous relatives have helped him, the impact of new defensive line coach Jerry Montgomery, leadership opportunities and his short-lived singing career.
The Conversation
GH: The coaches have been raving about you ever since training camp began. Did you do anything different in the offseason?
KJ: I did a lot more work with my uncle, and he really helped slow down the game for me. And it’s been very helpful having him and my dad, because we think very similarly. So he knows how to communicate to me what I’m doing right, what I’m doing wrong, what I need to work on.
GH: You’ve always said this, right, that you’re more similar to Cullen than your dad. You’re 6-3, 310 pounds. Cullen was 6-2, 305. Your dad just wrecked games at 6-4, 360. Not many like your dad.
KJ: My dad, as we know, was just a beast. There’s not many ways you’re going to stop somebody moving as big as him, as fast as him, as strong as him. My uncle and I are similar because we have to be technically sound since we’re smaller guys.
GH: How does Cullen fit your game?
KJ: He’s a lot quicker than I am. I will give him that. So he’s been teaching me really emphasizing my quickness, my lateral movement, and we did a lot of that, and then my flexibility as well. And working on the little things, like technique when it comes to my get-off, and a lot of film watching, too. Like the stuff he does to identify tendencies.
GH: Do you have an example?
KJ: We talked a lot about hand placement, and it’s one of those little things where if you can identify when they’re heavy on their hands, when they’re light on their hands. If they have both hands up, if they’re a little heavier leaning down, what does that mean? If they’re a little more sitting back, what does that mean? Pull? Pass? Etc.
GH: Did you go to him? Did he come to you? How did that work out?
KJ: I went to him. Right down the road in Bellville, Mich. That’s about a three-and-a-half-hour drive from up here.
GH: Clearly, you saw things you needed to work on after your rookie year.
KJ: Absolutely. My lateral footwork, being quicker and just mentally being able to process the game quicker. And that was a big thing. My Unc explaining to me that 90% of the game is mental. If I could get my mental right and quicker, that’s just going to make the game slow down more and make it so much easier.
GH: Did your dad have some thoughts?
KJ: Absolutely. He just told me, he keeps it short and sweet, he just tells me be me. He knows when I’m thinking too much when I play. Whether it was texting me after the games or giving me a call and just, hey, play faster, be more confident, you know what you can do.
GH: I remember Cullen playing for the Packers drilling Carson Palmer here in his first preseason game after tearing his ACL in the 2005 playoffs and when he got up, everyone knew he was back.
KJ: He was showing me some of his film, and that was one of the clips we watched. There’s also a screen that’s still on YouTube where he retraced the screen and he just laid into, I think it was D.J. Ware of the Giants. He was with the Eagles at the time. He just laid dude out on the retrace. That’s how you track the ball. He’s like, you want to be able just to get that knockout.
GH: How much time did you spend with him?
KJ: Pretty much every day in the offseason, whether it was working, or we do a lot of stuff, it wasn’t just football. A lot of landscaping. Working on the house, stuff like that. It may not be lifting weights, which we would do. To pass the time.
GH: What was your favorite job fixing the house?
KJ: Between fixing the yard and mowing the lawns. And we did a lot on the pools he’s got, and we made a purchase on a pool cleaner. That’s how I know I’m getting a little older, because that was like Christmas. We were just watching it go. “Yeeeah.”
GH: Was it a person or machine?
KJ: It was a machine, like, one of those Ivacuum robots. It will clean the bottom of the pool. You just turn it on, have the filter set up, and it will go on the walls to the bottom of the pool. All you need to do is put chlorine in there and let it go.
GH: Second-round pick mowing lawns?
KJ: It keeps us humble. It was fun for us to do. We like trying to fix things. The least I can do for everything he’s given to me. Help him out.