Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trying to catch up

Dropped passes leave Moore fighting for spot

- Ryan Wood

GREEN BAY – J’Mon Moore had done the hard part. He hit the jets down Ray Nitschke Field’s left sideline, running past safety Quinten Rollins. Moore had a couple steps of separation, a gimme of a catch for any profession­al receiver.

DeShone Kizer’s pass dropped neatly into Moore’s waiting hands, and …

Well, he caught this ball. Mercifully. Barely.

It took a little bobble Tuesday afternoon, Moore juggling the football as he crossed the goal line in one-on-one drills, but the Green Bay Packers rookie caught it. Given the month he’s had, Moore will gladly take it. No matter how unconventi­onal his catch looked.

“I saw it in,” Moore said. “That’s the thing. Seeing the ball in, when you bobble it, you know you’re still in control because you’re seeing the ball.”

Moore, admittedly, hasn’t been seeing the football through the catch much this preseason. The fourth-round pick opened camp getting first-team reps

with quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers. A significan­t role in the Packers offense seemed plausible, if not likely.

Now, Moore finds himself fighting for his spot on the 53-man roster. It’s unlikely the Packers would quit on a fourth-round pick this quickly, but a receiver who doesn’t consistent­ly catch can’t help much. Moore, who struggled with drops at times in college, missed a potential touchdown pass from quarterbac­k Tim Boyle in the Packers’ preseason opener against Tennessee. Then he dropped another last week against Pittsburgh.

Moore knows nothing is certain, not even for him. “Anybody can get cut any given day,” he said. Over these final two exhibition­s, he feels pressure to play better.

“The catch is supposed to be the easy part,” Moore said. “That’s the most frustratin­g thing, because everybody can’t separate. People don’t get open like that. It’s hard to get open like that. So when you get open like that and you miss the play, it’s like you do all this work to get to this point and you drop it. Man, it eats me up.

“But I let it eat me up to a certain extent, and then I’ve got to put it behind me.”

It’s why Moore arrived early to the practice field Tuesday, getting extra reps with the JUGS machine. He stayed late, catching more footballs. Moore only knows one way, he said. When adversity strikes — and, yes, his first preseason has been full of it — he keeps working. No looking back.

Moore has been conditione­d to deal with adversity. Think a rough training camp is bad? He’s been through much worse. Moore was 13 years old when he lost his older sister to lupus. He remembers being in the car on the way to the hospital, getting a call that his sister didn’t have much time left.

“We didn’t make it in time,” Moore said. “She died on our way there.”

Five years later, Moore was a freshman at Missouri. He separated his shoulder in practice, needed surgery. His season was over. He didn’t know what would come next.

“I was out of football for the longest,” Moore said. “For like six, seven months. I had never been through anything like that.”

So, no, Moore isn’t about to quit after a few dropped passes. He’s shown the athleticis­m and physicalit­y that enticed the Packers to draft him this spring.

Now, the rookie must do the easy part.

“He’s going to get opportunit­ies,” Rodgers said. “He’s been making plays in practice, it’s just got to transfer over in the game.”

Moore attributed part of his struggle to overthinki­ng. Learning a new playbook, his thoughts have been spinning through camp. From the huddle to the snap, Moore said he’s constantly running the play through his mind, making sure he knows what to do.

Eventually, the game should slow down. Right now, Moore is a three-point shooter on a cold streak. He needs to see a shot go through the basket.

“Just need that one big play,” Rodgers said. “I think just one catch and run or going up over somebody and making a big play or getting loose on the sideline. It just takes one play for some of those guys to get going, and he’s had a couple of opportunit­ies and hasn’t made them in the game. But he’s made a lot of plays in practice, and he’s figuring out what to do and running the routes, and it’s just a matter of executing and being able to relax in those moments.

“Just the easy plays is needed at those times. Once you start to stack a couple of those plays together, he starts getting more comfortabl­e and you’re going to see some good play out of him, I think.”

New spin: If Rodgers had his way, he’d get one more football spin in the end zone with his former receiver.

It’s unclear whether Rodgers will play at the Oakland Raiders on Friday, but he’ll be in the same building with Jordy Nelson. For years, the two concluded their pregame warmups seeing who could spin a football longer in the end zone. It’s unlikely, Rodgers said, they’ll get a chance Friday.

Rodgers said he spoke with Nelson this week — the two still chat “a bunch,” he said — and was informed the longtime Packers receiver has a new pregame routine.

“So we can’t play catch before the game,” Rodgers said knowingly. “I’m a little disappoint­ed by that. Which means I won’t be spinning any type of football with him in an end zone. He’s changed. He’s a new guy.”

Rodgers’ comments were in jest. He understand­s Nelson’s new role with the Raiders. Besides, Rodgers said, he has a new end-zone companion.

Before last week’s exhibition against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Rodgers and receiver Randall Cobb had a spin-off.

“Either Family Night or the first game,” Rodgers said, “I spun it by myself. I told him after that, ‘Too soon. Too soon.’ ”

Field fears: There’s always a high level of caution against injuries in the preseason, but the Packers have reason to be more careful this week than most.

Inside the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, the Packers will play on the only NFL surface that doubles as a baseball field. It used to be one of three stadiums that hosted both sports, but the San Diego Chargers moved to Los Angeles and the Miami Dolphins no longer share a home with the Miami Marlins.

Veteran cornerback Tramon Williams said it’s his first time ever playing on a baseball field and admitted he’s concerned.

“I’m not sure how it’s going to feel,” Williams said. “I hear some stories about Oakland’s field. I have to make sure I have my feet right and bring some extra cleats. I’m not sure how the field is going to be.”

Usually, teams play their starters more snaps during the third week of the preseason. It’s unclear how coach Mike McCarthy will approach Friday’s kickoff, but Rodgers and several veterans on offense have been limited to the scout team this week.

Regardless, McCarthy said, the field conditions won’t affect what his team needs to accomplish.

“Both teams have to play on it,” said McCarthy, who used to see the Raiders more frequently when he was an assistant with the Kansas City Chiefs. “I had some experience — it’s been many moons ago — but being in that division, we used to have San Diego and Oakland that we went through there yet. It’s really part of your pregame, making sure you have the right shoes on, and getting out there and getting comfortabl­e coming off the grass onto the dirty.”

 ?? ADAM WESLEY / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Green Bay Packers rookie wide receiver J'Mon Moore has had trouble hanging on to the ball during the exhibition season.
ADAM WESLEY / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Green Bay Packers rookie wide receiver J'Mon Moore has had trouble hanging on to the ball during the exhibition season.
 ?? DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Rookie receiver J'Mon Moore reacts after dropping a pass during the exhibition game against Tennessee.
DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Rookie receiver J'Mon Moore reacts after dropping a pass during the exhibition game against Tennessee.

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