Dayton Daily News

Former coaches say Emerson ‘a steal’ in 3rd round

- By Nate Ulrich

Martin Emerson Jr.’s shoulder popped out while he tackled an opponent in Mississipp­i State University’s 2020 season opener, and his reaction stunned cornerback­s coach Darcel McBath.

McBath knows how painful a dislocated shoulder can be. He suffered one during his playing days at Texas Tech but didn’t brush it off quite like Emerson.

“Give me some ice and a Gatorade,” McBath said with a laugh.

Emerson, however, took a different approach on the sideline. He begged an athletic trainer and McBath to let him return to the action against Louisiana State. Playing with essentiall­y a single arm, Emerson immediatel­y entered the fray on another tackle, prompting McBath to pull him from the game in the third quarter.

“That just showed his toughness,” McBath said Tuesday during a phone interview. “The next week, you would think he would be out for a few days. No, he didn’t miss a rep in practice. To me, that kind of sums him up. It’s who he is. He loves ball. He loves practice. He loves to get better.”

Emerson’s passion for football is among the reasons the two position coaches who guided him at Mississipp­i State, McBath and Terrell Buckley, believe the Browns will be pleased with their decision to select him April 29 in the third round of the NFL Draft. After General Manager Andrew Berry traded down 24 spots and out of the second round, he chose Emerson 68th overall, making him Cleveland’s first pick this year.

“The Browns are getting, I think, a first-round talent in the third round, so I think they’re getting a steal,” Buckley, one of the XFL’s new head coaches, said Tuesday by phone.

“A lot [scouts] told me they were surprised that he would even get out of the second round,” McBath said, “so I think [the Browns] got a steal and a great one.”

To say Emerson has mentors capable of informing him what to expect in the NFL would be an understate­ment.

The Denver Broncos drafted McBath in the second round (No. 48 overall) in 2009. He played safety for the Broncos, Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and San Francisco 49ers through the 2012 season.

The Green Bay Packers drafted Buckley in the first round (No. 5 overall) in 1992. He played cornerback for 14 seasons and won Super Bowl XXXVI with the New England Patriots on Feb. 3, 2002.

“He used to come and just hang out in my office,” Buckley said of Emerson. “He knew why he was there, and he wanted to learn as much as he could from me. He would just come back and forth all day.”

McBath and Buckley believe Emerson, whose nickname is “MJ,” will take advantage of joining a Browns cornerback group led by two-time Pro Bowl selection Denzel Ward and 2021 first-round pick Greg Newsome II.

“It’s a great fit and a great opportunit­y for him,” McBath said. “When he gets to go in there and learn from guys who are doing what he wants to do at the highest level, you can’t ask for much more than that. He’s a guy who’s going to soak up everything that he can and emulate and try to duplicate the success that other people are having.”

Emerson’s former coaches admire the way he comports himself. He’s confident and competitiv­e. He received honor-roll recognitio­n in the SEC in 2019 and 2020. He also carried a grade-point average of more than 3.5, McBath said.

McBath coached Emerson the past two seasons after Buckley and former Mississipp­i State head coach Joe Moorhead had recruited him out of Pine Forest High School in Pensacola, Florida, and spent 2019 with him. Emerson picked Mississipp­i State over his other top considerat­ions, Miami and Oregon.

“I grew up in Pittsburgh, and I’m Steelers fan,” Moorhead, now the coach at Akron, said Monday by phone. “So as my youngest son and I were watching the draft, we were excited for Martin to see his name called [when the Browns picked him]. But then at the same time, we were like, ‘Damn it.’”

Moorhead explained he’ll root for Emerson in 15 regular-season games a year. The two exceptions will be when the Browns face the AFC North rival Steelers.

Moorhead recently texted Emerson about having dinner together now that they’re both going to be living in Northeast Ohio. The two talked via FaceTime as Emerson prepared for the NFL Scouting Combine in March, when Moorhead heard his former pupil would likely become a second- or thirdround pick.

Moorhead raved about Emerson and his family, adding the Browns are “getting a great human being.”

Buckley thinks highly of Martin Emerson Sr., and it’s one of the main reasons the longtime NFL starter coveted the younger Emerson throughout his recruitmen­t.

“His dad is a no-nonsense guy that made sure that whatever direction Martin’s going to go, he’s going to give it 100%. Not 98% — 100% every single day, and I love that,” Buckley said. “When you have parents like that and they don’t play around, they know it’s a job you have to do.”

The cornerback­s coach at Akron from 2012-13, Buckley describes himself as old school. He wants players to arrive 15 minutes early for meetings. He demands they pay attention and take notes.

Buckley explained Emerson didn’t hold up his end of the bargain for a stretch as a freshman because he had been talking too much to a teammate during meetings.

“I called Dad one time, and [Emerson] didn’t speak to me for a week,” Buckley said. “He was mad at me.

“Obviously, Dad don’t play [around]. After that, it was back on. [Emerson] ended up starting toward the end of the year. Work ethic, understand­ing, all that, is second to none.”

Emerson started five of 13 games in 2019, compiling 32 tackles, including 1½ for loss, two passes defensed, a forced fumble and an intercepti­on.

He became a full-time starter as a sophomore in 2020 and tallied 72 tackles with 1½ for loss to go along with a team-high 11 passes defensed in 11 games.

Last season as a junior, Emerson started all 12 games before declaring for the draft and opting out of the Liberty Bowl. He finished with 50 tackles, including three for loss, and three passes defensed.

Emerson has prototypic­al size for his position. He measured 6 feet, 1⅝ inches and weighed 201 pounds at the combine, where he posted an official time of 4.53 seconds in the 40-yard dash. His resume is boosted because he faced elite collegiate competitio­n in the SEC.

“I think he’s pro ready right now,” McBath said, “and I’m excited to see him get the opportunit­y because I think he’s going to excel.”

The most glaring criticism of Emerson is he registered just one intercepti­on in 36 collegiate games. He faced 130 targets, according to ProFootbal­lFocus.com.

“I know I can get the ball,” he said last week on Zoom. “I just want to prove it to myself and make that happen.”

Emerson was targeted on 50 of his 375 coverage snaps last season (13.3%) and 59 of 388 (15.2%) in 2020. He said there were still plenty of opportunit­ies to generate takeaways, though.

“He got less targets because he was the strongest piece of our defense,” McBath said.

Emerson, 21, played wide receiver growing up and switched to defensive back during his sophomore season in high school. McBath said Emerson’s hands are not an issue.

“He’s never dropped a pick that I’ve seen,” McBath said. “That’s why we harped on it so much because it’s like, ‘Man, you’ve got good ball skills. We’ve got to take advantage of this.’

“I think he was in some positions to make plays on the ball, and he did [last season]. He had one [intercepti­on] called back for too many men on the field in press coverage. He jumped a couple routes, and the ball airmailed or things like that.”

McBath considers Emerson’s ability to quickly diagnose plays his greatest strength.

“What I told of [Browns scouts] is he is as smart as any kid I’ve ever been around,” McBath said. “He learns in every way.”

Barring injury, Emerson will begin his career as a backup because Ward and Newsome are entrenched as the starting cornerback­s. The Browns’ impressive strength at the position, plus needs at wide receiver and defensive end, kept draft analysts from predicting Berry would take a corner with his first selection.

 ?? AP ?? Auburn wide receiver Kobe Hudson makes a one-handed catch for a touchdown over Mississipp­i State cornerback Martin Emerson last November. A criticism of Emerson, picked by the Browns in the third round, is that he had one college intercepti­on.
AP Auburn wide receiver Kobe Hudson makes a one-handed catch for a touchdown over Mississipp­i State cornerback Martin Emerson last November. A criticism of Emerson, picked by the Browns in the third round, is that he had one college intercepti­on.

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