The Province

Emerging star is far from satisfied

Daniels trained with his former NFLer father in the off-season to get even stronger

- Vicki Hall SPORTS COMMENT vhall@postmedia.com twitter.com/vickihallc­h

As the son of a former NFL quarterbac­k hunter, nineyear-old DaVaris Daniels expected magic from himself during his first game of organized football.

Let’s just chalk up that maiden outing as one to forget.

“I was playing safety,” the Calgary Stampeders wideout says. “It was one-on-one and I had to make the tackle. I closed my eyes and missed, and the guy ran in for a touchdown.

“It was embarrassi­ng. I just remember opening my eyes after I missed. I was just completely embarrasse­d.”

Embarrasse­d and mortified about messing up in such epic fashion, especially in front of his father Phillip.

“I looked at him, and he was just shaking his head,” Daniels says. “It was just a bad moment. Thank God I’ve gotten better since then.”

Better? Well, that’s a minor understate­ment coming from the CFL’s most outstandin­g rookie in 2016. In just 11 appearance­s — after waiting half the season for his chance — Daniels hauled in 51 catches for 885 yards and nine touchdowns. He soundly beat Ottawa Redblacks offensive lineman Jason Lauzon-Seguin in the rookie-of-the-year voting and is widely considered a rising star in the three-down circuit.

But drawing on a lesson preached by Calgary quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell — to never, ever be satisfied — Daniels moved to Philadelph­ia this off-season. There, in the City of Brotherly Love, he trained under the watchful eye of his father, now the defensive quality control/ assistant defensive line coach for the Philadelph­ia Eagles.

Call it a lineman boot camp for a wiry receiver.

“It’s different, because it’s something I’ve never done before. Just trying to get more power in my legs and get stronger all the way around,” DaVaris Daniels says.

The 6-foot-5, 302-pound Phillip Daniels logged 15 seasons in the NFL trenches with Seattle, Chicago and Washington.

“He’s a big guy and I was this little frail thing,” says DaVaris, who played last year at 6-foot-1, 207 pounds. “So it’s definitely been different, but I definitely see the benefits of what he’s been teaching me.

“We’ve done a lot of squats. A lot of deadlifts. A lot of everything. We do these pullover presses that I’ve never done before. Burnouts. It’s tough, but it’s definitely good.”

Daniels, 24, is already good. The overriding question is whether he has what it takes to be great and realize his dream of playing in the NFL just like his dad.

But he is not about to get ahead of himself.

“Last year was definitely a big year for me,” he says.

“I just want to build off it. I just want to get better and better. I have to brace myself for a complete 18 games this year as opposed to the 10 or 12 games I played last year. I’m excited. I feel like there’s added pressure on me now.”

Some of that pressure comes from being a known commodity. Defensive coordinato­rs around the league have studied film on the Notre Dame product for the last six months. The athletic specimen is a marked man, and defensive backs are no doubt determined to shut him down.

“I honestly don’t think of it as me being a target, because we have so many playmakers that it makes my job easy,” Daniels says.

“Marquay McDaniel, Kamar Jorden, all those guys made plays and are capable of making a lot of plays.

“So especially in our offence, I don’t think you can key on any one guy specifical­ly. You kind of have to pick your poison. And it’s all poison.”

Mitchell saw that poison in Daniels early last season when the newcomer was on scout team during practice. Explosive with top-end speed, Daniels approached every series as a chance to prove he belonged in the starting lineup.

“To me, it was the same feeling I had with Eric Rogers walking in,” Mitchell said of the former Stampeders wideout who now plays for the San Diego Chargers. “DaVaris is a special player. He’s going to do a lot of great things in this league.

“I think he’s a guy who has an NFL chance. Obviously, I want him to stay here and help me break records. But obviously, I want him to do what’s best for him. And while I have him, I’m going to take advantage of him.”

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Calgary Stampeders receiver DaVaris Daniels was the CFL Rookie of the Year last season after hauling in 51 passes for 885 yards in just 11 games. He’s looking to build on those totals and prove he’s an elite receiver over a full 18 games this coming...
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Calgary Stampeders receiver DaVaris Daniels was the CFL Rookie of the Year last season after hauling in 51 passes for 885 yards in just 11 games. He’s looking to build on those totals and prove he’s an elite receiver over a full 18 games this coming...
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