Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Gunter’s battle a good sign for D-backs

PACKERS PETE DOUGHERTY

- MARK HOFFMAN

GREEN BAY For most of last season, LaDarius Gunter was the Green Bay Packers’ best cornerback.

The last time they took the field, in the NFC Championsh­ip Game at Atlanta, the Packers put him on the great Julio Jones.

Six months later, Gunter is in a major battle just to win a spot on the Packers’ 53-man roster.

That has to be what general manager Ted Thompson and coach Mike McCarthy were looking for from their off-season after their secondary fell apart in 2016 because of injuries and poor play.

Joe Whitt, the Packers’ cornerback­s coach, overstated it only a little this

week when he said: “I’ve mentioned many times, if the quarterbac­k and cornerback­s play well, we’ll win. OK? We have a chance to win Super Bowls if those two groups play well.”

That the Packers have four cornerback­s ahead of Gunter suggests improvemen­t, although at this point we don’t know if it’s a little or a lot.

Thompson signed Davon House to be a starter, and the seventhyea­r pro has been since the first day of camp. The surprise so far is Quinten Rollins, who had off-season surgery on a core injury. So far he has outplayed Damarious Randall for the “star” (i.e., slot) spot in the nickel defense and, according to Whitt, is off to the best start of the group.

And a week into camp it’s easy to see why Thompson liked secondroun­d pick Kevin King. Though Aaron Rodgers and Jordy Nelson took him to school in a twominute drill Thursday night, King looks as athletic as advertised to go with his uncommon height (6-3) for the position. Coordinato­r Dom Capers isn’t eager to start rookies, but I don’t see how he can keep King’s talent out of the starting nickel.

That doesn’t mean there’s nothing to like about Gunter. He has good length (6-1 and 311⁄2-inch arms). He’s tough, has a feel for the game and competes as hard as anyone. He’s still very much in the running for a roster spot.

But after leading the cornerback­s in snaps (861) last season, he ranks no better than fifth on the depth chart for a reason. His speed always will be a big limitation; the average cornerback at the NFL scouting combine going back to 1999 ran the 40 in 4.50 seconds, or almost a full two-tenths of a second faster than Gunter.

We’ve seen that issue already in camp.

Randall and Gunter had the shakiest starts of camp among the top five, Gunter because he gave up two deep balls on Day 1. Both were demoted after that first day, and although they’ve played better recently, a play in team drills Thursday night illustrate­d the difference between them.

On a well-thrown deep ball to Geronimo Allison, Randall (4.46 40) still was able to pop the ball loose at the last instant because he was on Allison’s hip the entire route. Gunter always will be vulnerable deep no matter how hard he battles.

The Packers will keep at least five cornerback­s, maybe six. Based on playing rotations a week into training camp, Gunter’s strongest challenger­s for that final spot or two are second-year pro Josh Hawkins and undrafted rookie Donatello Brown.

Where Gunter is all intangible­s, Hawkins is all upside (4.39 40, 401⁄2-inch vertical). A blown coverage on a 73-yard touchdown by Detroit’s Marvin Jones in Week 3 led to his benching for most of the season, and he struggled when he had to play thereafter. He has shown better command so far in camp and has been lining up with Gunter and Randall in the No. 2 nickel.

Brown has been among the Packers’ best undrafted rookies. He’s a small-school guy (Division II Valdosta State) with decent size (5-111⁄2, 190) and adequate speed (4.50 40). He’s in the No. 3 defense but is getting more than his share of snaps in the mixing and matching of personnel in practice. He could start moving up the ladder by making a play or two Friday on Family Night or in next week’s preseason opener against Philadelph­ia.

The battle is on and could reveal plenty about the state of the Packers' secondary for 2017. They went into camp last year thinking cornerback would be a strength, and it wound up a liability. Maybe they'll get the opposite this time around.

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 ?? / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Packers cornerback Herb Waters and cornerback LaDarius Gunter participat­e in drills during organized team activities in Green Bay.
/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Packers cornerback Herb Waters and cornerback LaDarius Gunter participat­e in drills during organized team activities in Green Bay.

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