Imperial Valley Press

Jaguars take kinder, gentler approach to training camp

- B2 Jacksonvil­le,

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. (AP) — Tom Coughlin and Doug Marrone are getting soft. Or maybe just smart.

After running what many believed to be the NFL’s toughest training camp the last two years, Coughlin and Marrone are pretty much taking it easy on the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars.

Earlier starts. Extended breaks. Fewer workouts in full pads. Free time. Shorter days at the facility.

It’s a complete about-face for two oldschool coaches who seem to take pleasure in grinding guys into the ground before the season.

Coughlin, the team’s top executive, and Marrone, the head coach, teamed up in 2017 and started pounding players into shape. The Jaguars were in full pads for 14 consecutiv­e days to open camp in 2017 and 11 in a row last year. All of them took place outside, in Florida’s sweltering summer heat and humidity.

Players openly complained and were mostly ignored.

But following a 5-11 season in which the Jaguars ended up with nearly 30 players, including several offensive starters, on injured reserve and were without running back Leonard Fournette for half the year, Coughlin and Marrone decided to take a different approach.

“Doug is showing love,” two-time Pro Bowl cornerback Jalen Ramsey said. “The body feels better. The energy is better. Everyone is a little bit happier out here.”

The kinder, gentler Jags are on the field nearly two hours earlier than they were in 2018, avoiding the hottest part of the day as well as afternoon thundersto­rms. They get 90 minutes after practice for lunch and to visit with family and friends.

They have recovery time built into the schedule, too, allowing players to get cryotherap­y, cupping, dry needling or other therapeuti­c care after lunch.

They also leave the facility in the afternoon and hold meetings at a nearby hotel, providing players with a brief break to travel between venues and allowing them to go straight to their rooms once the nightly sessions end.

“It’s way different,” veteran defensive end Calais Campbell said. “I think the team is maturing and he’s allowing us to be pros and to kind of do what we need to do to get ready. We’re still working really hard, getting a lot of good quality reps out there, competing.”

The practice pace has been slowed, too, but likely will pick up next week when the Jaguars spend two days working opposite the Ravens in Baltimore.

Marrone said the decision to lighten the load started when owner Shad Khan asked how he planned to reduce the number of injuries in January. Marrone started digging into research and talking to experts. He learned that an unusually high number of soft-tissue injuries occur during the first 10 days of camp, while players are still getting acclimated to the heat and tempo.

“It’s my responsibi­lity to make sure that we do the right things for the players, so with the informatio­n that I have, that’s why we’re doing what we’re doing,” Marrone said. “Now, in the same sentence, how do we get everything in that we need to get in to be a good football team? We’re still getting the same amount of work in. I just like to say that we’re working smarter.”

No one can blame Jacksonvil­le for trying something new following last year’s debacle.

Campbell and guard Andrew Norwell were among the key starters banged up during 2018 camp. Center Brandon Linder sprained a knee in the exhibition opener, and the injuries really started to mount from there. Receiver Marqise Lee tore several knee ligaments in the preseason finale. Fournette went down in the regular-season opener. Left tackle Cam Robinson and cornerback D.J. Hayden got hurt in Week 2.

 ??  ?? Jacksonvil­le Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette runs through a drill during an NFL football practice at the teams training facility, on July 26 in Fla. AP PhoTo/John RAoux
Jacksonvil­le Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette runs through a drill during an NFL football practice at the teams training facility, on July 26 in Fla. AP PhoTo/John RAoux

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