Daily Press

Rivera: Commanders still learning how to practice

- By Stephen Whyno

ASHBURN — Ron Rivera doesn’t mind the chirping and taunting coming from Washington’s players during training camp.

The veteran coach just wants it to turn into something useful.

Following the second practice of camp that was full of barbs mostly from the defense, Rivera thinks his young team is still figuring out how to handle those moments. He sees it as another stage in maturation in the aftermath of getting fined $100,000 and being stripped of two offseason workouts next year for excessive contact on the field during the spring.

“There is a fine line: We don’t want it to be destructiv­e as much as we want it to be constructi­ve,” Rivera said Thursday. “If you beat somebody, that’s great. You may woof a little bit, but then go up and tell him how you beat him, tell him why you beat him, tell what they need to do to be better, and that’s what we’ve got to get to.”

Rivera, in his third season with Washington after coaching Carolina for nine years, believes he has evolved with NFL rules that limit practice time and have made hard-hitting two-a-days a thing of the past.

“Going through this process, learning how to adapt and adjust, I’d like to believe we’ve done it right,” Rivera said. “Granted. I got in trouble in the spring, but it took

12 years for me to get in trouble, I guess, so I think I’d like to say that I adapted for the most part doing the things that we need to do.”

Rivera was incensed by one particular hit during organized team activities June 8 to the point he stopped practice for a lecture. Safety Jeremy Reaves made significan­t contact with second-year receiver Dyami Brown without pads. While Rivera disagreed with

the league’s assessment, he continuall­y reminds players about safety.

“Sometimes things happen,” he said. “Guys run into each other. I try to make a point of it. I try to emphasize it during OTAs and minicamp that we’re supposed to keep our heads out of it.”

Contact wasn’t an issue Thursday, though it’s not difficult to imagine some of the trash-talking escalating in the coming weeks

when players put the pads on and the physicalit­y increases. Players didn’t even stop jawing — mostly playfully — when practice ended.

“That’s just the competitiv­e nature of the game, just having fun and competing against each other — even after, walking off the field still talking trash,” said veteran Kendall Fuller, an eighth-year cornerback from Virginia Tech. “That’s just the nature of the game and everybody having fun.”

Rivera is fine with fun as long as things don’t get out of hand. He also cautioned players that this early in camp mismatches will happen and to not overreact to big plays.

“I said, ‘Listen guys, understand what I have to balance. I want to see you guys excel, but at the same time we’re not game-planning, so we’ve got to understand how to practice, how to work with each other, how to connect, how to understand what it takes for us all to grow and develop, and that’s the balance,’” he said

Ex-Liberty standout retires

Antonio Gandy-Golden, a fourth-round pick in 2020 who was attempting to convert to tight end from receiver, told the team he’s retiring from football and plans to return to school.

The move surprised Rivera, who thought the 24-year-old from Liberty University could help the offense.

“He was making some pretty good strides,” Rivera said. “He showed his ability, and we felt this was a guy that could’ve been a matchup problem for some people. A little surprised, but I love who he is as a young man and I want to wish him all the best as he goes back and starts the rest of his life.”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON /AP ?? Washington coach Ron Rivera watches as former Old Dominion quarterbac­k Taylor Heinicke throws during practice Thursday.
ALEX BRANDON /AP Washington coach Ron Rivera watches as former Old Dominion quarterbac­k Taylor Heinicke throws during practice Thursday.

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