PATS’ SECONDARY TALKS A BIG GAME
How offseason communication will help defense stay a step ahead
The Patriots cannot play. They cannot practice. They cannot meet.
They can, however, talk. A lot.
Believe it or not, the Patriots are good at talking. As much as they effort to remain tight-lipped in interviews, they break an even bigger sweat over-communicating behind the scenes and on the field. So, unable to drill any of their physical skills during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, it’s jibber-jabbering in football jargon they’re practicing now.
On Tuesday, veteran cornerback Jonathan Jones used some version of the word “communicate” eight times while explaining to reporters how the Pats just kicked off their Organized Team Activities (OTAs) during a 14minute interview. The interview was held via video conference, just like all the team’s meetings have been this offseason. Players sit at home listening to presentations from their coaches, take notes and ask questions, just as they would during any other year but from inside the team’s facility.
The focus of every meeting is the same.
“It’s to have everyone on the same mental plane as far as communication, (and) refreshing that,” Jones said. “I mean, even for the veteran guys, just hearing some of those terminologies over and over again, and starting from scratch. I think that’s something we kind of do every year. We don’t assume that everyone knows anything, so we start on the playbook from page one.”
Now entering his fifth season, Jones firmly belongs with those veteran guys. No position group is older and wiser than his secondary, where Jones’ elders include fellow corners Stephon Gilmore and Jason McCourty, plus safeties Devin McCourty, Patrick Chung and Adrian Phillips. Together, aside from Phillips (a free-agent addition), they comprised the NFL’s best pass defense in 2019, when they ranked No. 1 in yards allowed per game and per pass attempt.
Because of that experience, Jones expects the Patriots to be among the league’s elite again — right from the get-go.
“In the (secondary), just having those guys who have seen the same thing over and over, there’s subtle communication between each other that we’ve grown into an understanding. So, getting back to that once we get on the field, I think we’ll be a step ahead,” Jones said. “But, like I said, we have to contin
ue with that with these meetings to just kind of refresh that.”
Communication is the lifeblood of any secondary, but particularly the Pats’. Defensive backs will frequently swap positions, assignments and alignments, sometimes all in one series. Chung switches from playing deep zone coverage to in the box as a linebacker and occasionally over the slot. Meanwhile, Jones will ping-pong between covering slot receivers to those out wide, while he part-times at free safety, where he took snaps in 11 games last year.
None of this could be remotely possible without proper communication.
Such pre-snap coordination sets the table for prized, post-snap versatility, which allows the Patriots defense to stay ahead of offensive innovation. Bill Belichick has long recognized the value of a shape-shifting secondary; one that can adapt game to game and even series to series, ironing out opponents’ game-plan wrinkles before the first quarter is over.
Most recently, Belichick inked Jones to a comfy contract extension last September that should keep him in New England through 2022. In March, Belichick resigned Devin McCourty and added Phillips — who played five different positions last year for the Chargers — then spent the Pats’ first draft pick on safety Kyle Dugger in April. Dugger’s ceiling has been described like a portrait of the perfect modern pass defender: a safety with McCourty’s speed and savvy, plus Chung’s ability to hang and bang in the box.
The lessons Dugger will soon learn from his new teammates, veterans of several Super Bowls, Pro Bowls and, in McCourty’s case, a few All-Pro second teams, should help unlock this potential.
That is, provided he communicates.
“For the young guys, I definitely say you never know when the opportunity is going to come, so you must be prepared whatever it may be,” said Jones, a former undrafted rookie free agent. “It may be a special teams role for a year and that might not be your own personal goals, but you have to stay the course and improve.
Improvement is also key. From day to day, that’s extremely important just to improve.”
At home, Jones has been taking his own advice during virtual OTAs. He said striving to better himself daily is how he intends to snap a personal interception drought that dates back to 2019. Last season, his defensive teammates often playfully ribbed him about recording zero interceptions, despite the fact he forced two fumbles and performed as one of the league’s best cornerbacks through midseason.
Because even for the league’s best pass defense, and one of its central figures, there’s plenty of room to improve — especially if they want to stay a step ahead.
“I think the whole team … the secondary, (it’s) just all working together as one group. That’s what we have to start this year to get anywhere close to where we were last year,” Jones said. “Like I said, it’s a whole new year, a whole new defense, a whole new team. So, just figuring out who we are as a team and how we win best on defense is our task this year.”
TAMPA, Fla. — Tom Brady isn’t letting the coronavirus pandemic — or NFL rules against players working out at team facilities — keep him from preparing for a new season with his new Tampa Bay team.
Brady gathered some of his Buccaneers teammates on a high school field early Tuesday for a throwing session. Brady wore a Buccaneers helmet and an orange jersey over his shoulder pads. The informal, playersonly workout at Berkeley Preparatory School lasted two hours, according to The Tampa Bay Times.
It’s not unusual for quarterbacks to organize passing workouts before training camp, but the pandemic has changed normal routines. Teams have had to rely on virtual meetings instead of traditional offseason programs as the NFL tries to make plans for a 2020 season, possibly without fans at stadiums.
Because of the pandemic, which has forced social distancing and sheltering at home as the new rules, any gathering of players is notable — especially one involving Brady, a six-time Super Bowl champion with the New England Patriots. Brady, 42, signed a two-year, $50 million contract with the Bucs in March.
After signing with the Bucs, Brady asked for phone numbers of his teammates. He apparently made use of that list to organize Tuesday’s workout.
It was an encouraging sign for fans on the same day NFL teams began opening facilities to a limited number of personnel. The facilities are still off-limits for coaches and players, except for players undergoing injury rehabilitation.
Center Ryan Jensen practiced shotgun snaps to Brady on the artificial turf football field.
Though he’s the newcomer, Brady was in charge, according to the newspaper. Brady walked through a route with receiver Mike Evans, demonstrating for the veteran and other players exactly where to make their cuts.
Quarterbacks Blaine Gabbert and Ryan Griffin also threw passes.
Among other players attending the session were receiver Scotty Miller, tight ends Cameron Brate and O.J. Howard and running back Dare Ogunbowale.
Teams cannot organize such workouts, and the Buccaneers did not publicize Tuesday’s session. There was no immediate reply from the team to a request from The Associated Press for comment on the workout.
Tuesday’s session went better than Brady’s attempt to work out privately at a Tampa park last month. After he was told by a security guard that the park was closed and he had to leave, Brady received an apology from Mayor Jane Castor.