Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fackrell, Elliott still seeking to harness their potential

- MICHAEL COHEN

GREEN BAY - Ever

since Julius Peppers and Datone Jones left via free agency, members of the Green Bay Packers coaching staff dutifully have toed the party line about their remaining crop of outside linebacker­s, even if it means bending the truth.

There was the quote from coach Mike McCarthy that labeled this particular group as perhaps the deepest collection of pass rushers in his tenure as head coach.

There was associate head coach/linebacker­s

Winston Moss asking a reporter if he disagreed with McCarthy’s statement and following up by expressing his “love” for “every single guy that’s in that room.”

And there was defensive coordinato­r Dom Capers explaining that the Packers have been thinner at outside linebacker in the past.

These statements were aimed, for the most part, at Kyler Fackrell and Jayrone Elliott, the two players bumped up the depth chart from fringe contributo­rs to key supporting roles.

After nearly a month of training camp, Fackrell remains behind on the learning curve, rookie fourth-round pick Vince

Biegel is rooted to the PUP list and Elliott dropped out of the last two practices with back spasms. The fragility of the position is now impossible to ignore.

“Listen, the reality is that the pass rush this year, the majority of the impact that we anticipate

has got to come from me and Nick,” outside linebacker Clay Matthews said of himself and Nick Perry.

“There was a four-man rotation last year with Datone and Julius. I don’t know if we’re asking anything more from them or if they need to do anything more. I think they just need to stay ready and make sure there’s not a lapse in play in that time that Nick and I aren’t on the field.”

There is plenty of time for Fackrell and Elliott to harness the potential that makes their skill sets so enticing. Fackrell has the height, length and speed to be a matchup nightmare for opposing linemen. Elliott has the quick-twitch athleticis­m to make splash plays behind the line of scrimmage.

It’s far too early to write them off, but that doesn’t make the party line any easier to toe.

“I really like what I see from Jayrone so far this camp,” Matthews said. “I think he’s taken that step to become that first guy in, and Kyler as well has shown a lot of promise in that he can really turn it on as far as the way he rushes the passer.”

Personal touch: As training camp winds down, the cruel reality of roster cuts hangs thick in the air above draft picks and undrafted players alike. And this year, with the eliminatio­n of the initial cut from 90 to 75, the final decisions by general manager Ted Thompson will issue as many as 15 extra pink slips next weekend.

In the past, Packers coaches or executives have tried to meet with each released player individual­ly. They share the disappoint­ing news and offer a brief summation of what the organizati­on thought of that player’s performanc­e in training camp.

But now, with final rosters shrinking from 90 to 53 in the span of 10 or 12 hours, the ability to provide a personal touch is lessened by the sheer volume of decisions Thompson and his subordinat­es need to make.

“This year the numbers might be such that we have to divide it up more,” Thompson said, “but we have I think a fairly good system — if you can call it a good system — so there’s a process and the players are not held up too much because oftentimes they want to get about traveling home or whatever.

“But our personnel group, our coaching staff, Coach McCarthy historical­ly have all done an outstandin­g job of putting their arm around the players and letting them know how much we appreciate them.”

Cash money: Philadelph­ia Eagles wide receiver

Bryce Treggs was fined $24,309 for his blindside block on cornerback Damarious Randall during the Packers’ first exhibition game earlier this month.

Later in the same game, rookie ride receiver Malachi Dupre was leveled by Eagles safety Tre Sullivan. The vicious hit landed Dupre in a local hospital and saddled him with a concussion.

Sullivan, however, was not fined. While brutal, the hit on Dupre was deemed legal by the league.

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