Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Adams emerges as big weapon

Health helping him reach full potential

- MICHAEL COHEN MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL

Green Bay — An eightmonth window between the playoff loss in Arizona and the season opener in Jacksonvil­le allowed pundits of all calibers ample time to discover and rediscover cure-alls for the Green Bay Packers, whose offense dipped to 23rd in total yardage last season.

The majority of remedies inpassed the healthy return of wide receiver Jordy Nelson, felled by a torn ACL before the Packers took a meaningful snap in 2015. His absence stressed the performanc­es of those around him, and those performers promptly tanked.

Other theorists believed a slender version of Eddie Lacy could reignite a sluggish running game. Still others placed their hope in the improved health of the offensive line or the play-calling reclamatio­n by coach Mike McCarthy.

Not even the wackiest of prognostic­ators foresaw wide receiver Davante Adams as the elixir of life, yet here we are.

“You know, it takes awhile for young receivers to really get used to how to play in this league,” said Bill O’Brien, coach of the Houston Texans, “and they’ve done a great job, Mike’s done a great job with him of teaching him how to run routes. He can run all the routes, he’s improved his hands, he’s an explosive player.”

On the strength of a stellar performanc­e in Philadelph­ia on Monday night — he caught five passes for 113 yards and two touchdowns — Adams survolved Nelson as the team’s leading receiver in 2016. He has, after one and a half years of injuries, inconsiste­ncy and indelible flashes of greatness, emerged as the kind of weapon general manager Ted Thompson hoped for when he expended a second-round pick.

His production this season (58 catches, 776 yards, eight touchdowns) blows away everything he did a year ago (50 catches, 483 yards, one touchdown), and it would not be a stretch to label him the team’s

best weapon considerin­g his form in recent weeks.

“I never lost faith in him at all because he gets open a lot,” quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers said. “He’s obviously earned a lot of my trust this year and he’s playing very confidentl­y. We love the way that he’s playing right now.”

The way he’s playing right now mirrors the statistica­l output from some of the best receivers in the league.

Beginning in Week 7 against the Chicago Bears, when the Packers’ quick-hitting, dink-anddunk offense was born, Adams has racked up 43 catches for 558 yards and five touchdowns in a sixgame

stretch. His pergame averages during that time are 7.2 catches for 93 yards and 0.8 touchdowns.

Some context: Julio Jones of the Atlanta Falcons, who sits atop the league receiving yards per game, has per-game averages of 5.9 receptions, 103.6 yards and 0.5 touchdowns.

“I’ve shown (McCarthy and Rodgers) a lot since I’ve been here, and they know what I’m capable of,” Adams said. “A few down games or whatever, that kind of shaped the way people were kind of viewing my abilities.

“It’s not going to be the same for (McCarthy and Rodgers) because they see what I do day in and day out. They know the attention to detail I have and the focus that I have in improving my craft.”

By league standards,

Adams, who stands 6foot-1 and weighs 215 pounds, has fairly pedestrian speed after running the 40-yard dash in 4.55 seconds coming out of Fresno State in 2014.

Adams offsets his lack of speed by winning routes at the line of scrimmage, a trait nurtured by an increase in one-on-one drills during practice this season. With precise cuts and finespun footwork he separates instantly from opposing cornerback­s. For the rest of the route he runs one or two steps ahead, just as he did on both touchdown receptions Monday night in Philadelph­ia.

“You’ve seen on the touchdowns he’s scored on slant routes,” Rodgers said. “Being able to get that separation at the line of scrimmage. You’ve seen it on his releases, vertical releases that he caught the other night on the go-ball, that stuff he wasn’t able to do last year because of his injury — injuries.”

Injuries. Herein lies the reason for Adams’ dramatic improvemen­t, at least according to coaches, teammates and Adams himself. A year ago, Adams sprained his ankle against the Seattle Seahawks on Sept. 20. He injured it further one week later against the

Kansas City Chiefs and missed the next three games.

Despite his return in Week 8 against Denver — he caught one pass for 8 yards — Adams said he was hobbled for the majority of the regular season. He could not explode off the line of scrimmage to beat defenders. He did not have the top-end speed to nullify his initial struggles.

Then he tore his MCL in the first playoff game against Washington. His disappoint­ing season was over.

“I wasn’t playing the way people were expecting and I was expecting,” Adams said. “I was just kind of thinking as much as possible (about) how can I get back to the regular Davante while not being the regular Davante given I was hurt.”

Recovery from the torn MCL dragged into the summer, and Adams said the regular Davante did not return until late June or early July, during the five-week window between the end of OTAs and the start of training camp.

It was at that point, Adams said, that he no longer worried “about the pain of when I stick this foot down how it’s going to feel. I can just play and be free.”

 ?? DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Packers receiver Davante Adams overtook Jordy Nelson as Green Bay’s top receiver this season after a strong performanc­e Monday.
DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Packers receiver Davante Adams overtook Jordy Nelson as Green Bay’s top receiver this season after a strong performanc­e Monday.
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