Vancouver Sun

A GEM UNCOVERED

For Washington's Terry McLaurin, the little things are adding up to something big

- NICKI JHABVALA

ESPN analyst Todd McShay can't forget one of the most forgettabl­e moments before the 2019 NFL draft. It was March 20 and, after trekking from one pre-draft showcase to another, McShay was in Columbus, Ohio, alongside dozens of NFL scouts, coaches and general managers for Ohio State's pro day.

ESPN's cameras closely tracked the Buckeyes' projected first-rounders, but McShay was in search of more — the skill that separated these players from the hundreds of others hoping to hear their name called during the draft.

He got an earful about one of them.

Urban Meyer, who had just retired as Ohio State's coach, raved about the kid and urged McShay to watch the special teams tape.

Newly appointed coach Ryan Day encouraged the same and mentioned the player's precise route-running and love for the game. Whatever you need him to do, he'll do, Day told McShay.

But in between hits for SportsCent­er, McShay got the best intel.

“I'll never forget: During his pro day, I was talking to one of the guys that worked in the building for Ohio State,” he recalled. “I don't think he was officially on their staff. He was working at the facility, setting things up and all that. He made a point to pull me aside and said: ` The one guy you can't miss on is Terry McLaurin. Every day he's here doing stuff. Some of the coaches don't even see how hard he's working.' ”

McLaurin, a two-time captain and three-year starter at Ohio State, “checked all the boxes,” as many analysts wrote, but he didn't check the one that labelled him a future top-tier talent.

He had the freakish speed (a 4.35-second 40-yard dash at the combine), the rare athleticis­m and the durability. He was a perfect teammate and an even better pupil, and he had enough reckless abandon to throw his body around as a gunner in punt coverage.

“That's really where you saw the speed and the toughness, and that's where it was easy to buy in to Terry,” said Jim Nagy, the executive director of the Senior Bowl. “Going into Senior Bowl week, most teams had late-round grades on him. He was like a fifth-, sixth-, seventh-rounder for most teams.

“What you didn't see a lot of was what he showed here in Mobile as a route-runner. He turned people inside out all week. Nobody could cover him.”

But because he was part of a crowded wide receivers room at Ohio State, McLaurin's college stats were mediocre, never topping 701 receiving yards in a season.

So he was labelled a “special teams ace” and drafted behind 11 other wide receivers to wait for “his moment,” as he has said.

He didn't wait long. Just 25 games into his pro career, McLaurin is not only the Washington Football Team's top receiver and 37 yards from his first 1,000-yard season, he's also a team captain and one of the NFL's most impactful and complete players, with game-saving tackles and highlight-reel catches that have turned some of the game's biggest stars into his biggest fans.

“He's a f---ing animal,” former Cincinnati Bengals wideout Chad Johnson said on a recent podcast.

“I talked about him as a rookie. His second year, he's picking up right where he left off. He's so freaking good. Now, if we can just get some consistenc­y at the quarterbac­k spot, sky's the limit. When in doubt, he's always there. He's like life insurance. Or he's like birth control. He will be there.”

Few get to see it live and up close, but the ones who do rarely forget it.

McLaurin, the polished and clean-cut 25-year-old who says and does all the right things, has a fire that, when fuelled, can ravage a defence.

Even his own defence. In training camp as a rookie, he torched Josh Norman, nearly broke the ankles of Troy Apke and put Deion Harris on skates. In training camp this year, McLaurin beat Greg Stroman on a go route along the left sideline and, after diving for the touchdown grab, punted the ball and flexed in celebratio­n.

“When he flips that switch on game day, you can see it,” quarterbac­k Alex Smith said.

“You can see it in his eyes. You can certainly see it in his play.”

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs found that out this season. One play after the rookie was caught talking trash, McLaurin burned him for a 52-yard touchdown. Diggs didn't talk much after that.

“I'm pretty calm throughout the game, ( but when) you kind of poke at me a little bit, that kind of ups my play and my energy a little bit more,” McLaurin said after Washington's Week 7 win.

McLaurin's swagger and workman mentality are a rare blend for a position that thrives on selfishnes­s. Wide receivers want targets. They are paid to catch passes. Many publicly declare they want more. But McLaurin views his role with a wider lens and strikes a balance that belies his experience.

Although he ranks fifth in the league in receiving yards (963) and second in yards after the catch (447), McLaurin is not in a bunch of TV commercial­s or sponsored by a dozen brands. He doesn't have a personal website or his own logo stamped on T-shirts and hoodies like so many other players do.

“He hasn't done that yet, even though he has no shortage of opportunit­ies, because he wants to focus on being the best receiver he can and help the team win,” said his agent, Buddy Baker. “That's truly his agenda. He realizes that if I go out and I don't perform anymore, then, first of all, that stuff is not going to have any value anyway. It's about the long term over the short term. I think that's kind of how he views football but also how he views life.”

Nagy puts McLaurin in an elite group of players who emanate “greatness” upon first meeting because of his maturity. “You can just feel it,” Nagy said. “And that was really clear with Terry. He was obviously here (during Senior Bowl week) on a business trip. This was all about business to him, yet he still had fun with it.”

Washington coach Ron Rivera, who eyed McLaurin in the 2019 draft while he was with the Carolina Panthers, has said McLaurin, in Year 2, is already a “leader by example” for the team's young offence. After his team's first victory over Dallas, McLaurin gave an impromptu speech in the locker-room to encourage his teammates to enjoy the results of their hard work. Days later he was unanimousl­y voted a team captain, and this past week he was named Washington's nominee for the Art Rooney Sportsmans­hip Award.

“A lot of young guys come in and they don't know how to act, they don't know how to prepare, they don't know how to take care of themselves,” Rivera said. “Terry's one of those guys that prepares the right way every day.”

He also treasures the dirty work. One of McLaurin's signature plays at Ohio State came on a score against Penn State in 2018. He didn't catch the game-winning touchdown, though. He took out three defenders with a single block to clear a path to the end zone for teammate KJ Hill Jr.

One of the plays McLaurin is most proud of this season happened in Washington's Thanksgivi­ng win at Dallas, when he chased down linebacker Jaylon Smith on an intercepti­on return.

McLaurin reached 20.99 m.p.h., according to the NFL's Next Gen Stats, before catching Smith at the four-yard line and saving four points when the Cowboys settled for a field goal.

“Yeah, my job is to catch passes, but once the ball is intercepte­d, my job is to get them on the ground,” McLaurin said. “... The dirty work is still something I hang my hat on. It's cool catching touchdowns and making big plays, but running down guys and making big plays for our running backs is also even more fun.”

Almost immediatel­y after his standout rookie season ended, McLaurin contacted Pete Bommarito, a well-known trainer to NFL hopefuls and veterans alike. Bommarito Performanc­e Systems, in Florida, is at various times the off-season hub for players such as Tyreek Hill and Stefon Diggs, Von Miller and Chris Jones, Frank Gore and even Washington's Morgan Moses.

“The main thing I really was looking for in an off-season program was to get around more NFL guys — receivers, running backs, skill player guys who can really help push me in the off-season,” McLaurin said.

After shedding the “special teams” label in Year 1, McLaurin didn't want another label as simply a rookie sensation.

So he started working early. “A lot of my receivers don't come in January, but Terry had a very specific plan,” Bommarito said. “He wanted to get going.”

Atop his list was improving his footwork and route-running, to get in and out of his breaks faster and create more separation with defenders. Other priorities included improving his ability to gain yards after the catch, to turn six-yard hitch routes into 12-yard gains.

He wanted to get better at grabbing contested catches — “That gives confidence to your quarterbac­k and your coaches because it's like, ` Even when he's covered, he's not,' ” he said — and to use his speed more efficientl­y.

“He obviously has the talent. He has the speed. But a lot of players have talent and speed. A lot of players work hard,” Bommarito said. “It's the ones that focus on every conceivabl­e thing. Receivers are passionate about running routes, and you'll see when we have those types of training stimulus, they'll be focused and all-in. But with Terry, he had the same focus even if we were doing a warm-up, a prep, a corrective exercise, in the weight room, on the medical table.”

 ??  ?? Terry McLaurin
Terry McLaurin
 ?? JEROME MIRON/ USA TODAY ?? Heading into today's game against the Steelers, Washington's Terry McLaurin is the team's top receiver and 37 yards from his first 1,000-yard season. In only his second year, the wide receiver has establishe­d himself as a presence both on the field and in the locker-room.
JEROME MIRON/ USA TODAY Heading into today's game against the Steelers, Washington's Terry McLaurin is the team's top receiver and 37 yards from his first 1,000-yard season. In only his second year, the wide receiver has establishe­d himself as a presence both on the field and in the locker-room.

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