Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Winfield Jr. showing that he ‘can do it all’

- By Andrew Crane

TAMPA — Back at The Woodlands High School, about a decade before his versatilit­y became the buzzword of another NFL preseason, Antoine Winfield Jr. settled into a different hybrid role.

On paper, he was The Woodlands’ safety from 2013-15. That’s where he played most of the time. But when a college recruiter asked then-position coach Emory Bartolazzi if Winfield could play cornerback, Bartolazzi shared the Texas high school’s approach: Yes, but only for a special matchup or package.

“Our biggest fear is that they’re gonna put the superinten­dent’s son out there,” Bartolazzi said, “and we’re wasting Antoine covering somebody that we could cover with somebody else.”

Instead, the team left Winfield to clean things up in the back of their 3-4 defense. Safety has been his primary position — through high school, college at Minnesota and his first two years in the NFL — but Winfield’s versatilit­y defined him from the night the Tampa Bay Bucs selected him.

This year, he has emerged as the team’s slot-corner option in nickel packages. Playing at that spot most of the time for the first time, Winfield now hovers where “all the action is.”

The Bucs used that package more in their opener against the Dallas Cowboys. Four defensive backs (Winfield, safety Mike Edwards, and cornerback­s Carlton Davis and Jamel Dean) played 100% of the snaps, while safety Logan Ryan logged 57 of 69 to give the Bucs five defensive backs on the field during those plays.

“[Winfield] can do it all,” Edwards said. “He can blitz, play man, zone, and all three of us — all three-safety looks — we can interchang­e. We can do a lot of things with that threesafet­y look.”

Winfield had 6 total tackles and an intercepti­on, returning it 15 yards. Pass game coordinato­r/inside linebacker­s coach Larry Foote said the Bucs weren’t surprised by how well Winfield played. He helped their point of emphasis — communicat­ion between the linebacker­s and defensive backs — carry into the season opener, too.

The origin of Winfield’s versatilit­y, though, dates to his earliest days of football, he said. He played quarterbac­k, running back, safety, middle linebacker — “everything.” In a local 7-on-7 league, where Winfield played with the son of Pat Kennedy, his future defensive coordinato­r at The Woodlands, “you could tell he was different than the average kid,” Kennedy said.

When The Woodlands faced Katy High, Winfield shadowed future NFL running back Rodney Anderson during his snaps as a receiver. In a playoff matchup against Westlake High, Bartolazzi recalled Winfield shifting to cover a future Division-I wideout, too. Bartolazzi and Kennedy avoided placing Winfield where his impact could be mitigated, but occasional­ly they needed him to eliminate the impact of someone else.

“That guy had to be important enough to take Antoine away from wherever else the ball might be,” Bartolazzi said.

Winfield’s first season with The Woodlands coincided with his father, Antoine Sr.’s, final NFL training camp in 2013. Bartolazzi said the relationsh­ip paid dividends during their seasons, as Winfield Jr. would share new tendencies or signals he learned. Hints by opposing offenses — intentiona­l or unintentio­nal — became more obvious: a wideout drying or circling his hands at the line of scrimmage, a quarterbac­k touching his hip or helmet.

Winfield continues to FaceTime his father and prop the camera up so they can watch film together. Recently, they’ve focused on his transition, and dad will point out techniques and positions that worked in his career.

But having a player like Winfield always helps the defense, safety Keanu Neal said. Offenses don’t know what to expect before the snap. And once the play begins, they can’t “pin exactly what we’re doing,” either.

“You ask him to blitz, he’ll get the quarterbac­k. Ask him to cover, he’ll cover slots one-on-one. Put him outside, he’ll do anything,” outside linebacker Joe Tryon-Shoyinka said.

“So, his versatilit­y is elite, and it showed [last] Sunday.”

 ?? FILE ?? Cowboys receiver CeeDee Lamb is swarmed by safety Antoine Winfield Jr. after a second-half catch during a 19-3 loss in the season opener last week.
FILE Cowboys receiver CeeDee Lamb is swarmed by safety Antoine Winfield Jr. after a second-half catch during a 19-3 loss in the season opener last week.

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