Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

He’s like an ‘athletic freak’

Team sacks leader Rousseau in line for more playing time

- By David Furones South Florida Sun Sentinel

Coral Gables – Through two games, the Miami Hurricanes defensive lineman that leads the team in sacks and tackles for loss has done it in a limited role.

Redshirt freshman Gregory Rousseau, a reserve defensive end who has been used in obvious passing situations to enhance the pass rush, has two of the team’s five sacks and 3 1⁄2 of its 16 tackles for loss.

Rousseau’s early-season success has prompted coach Manny Diaz and defensive coordinato­r Blake Baker to reward him with more snaps as the Hurricanes (0-2, 0-1 ACC) head into Saturday’s 4 p.m. home opener against Bethune-Cookman at Hard Rock Stadium.

“Greg Rousseau is a guy who’s going to continue to play more,” Diaz said. “He’s a guy that’s flashing every single time.”

Baker has been impressed with Rousseau’s versatilit­y, lining up the 6-foot-6, 260-pound product of Hialeah Champagnat Catholic on the interior of the defensive line against guards on passing downs.

“He has had two really good weeks,” Baker said. “You can see how he’s just progressed, becoming more and more comfortabl­e. He’s doing some really good things at defensive end and, I think, he adds a huge dimension for us on third down, sliding him inside, rushing the passer. So you’ll see more and more Greg Rousseau as the season progresses.”

Lining Rousseau up inside has allowed

what about this blitz, how you take this pattern away.”

That’s something, if only a glance into their “Rain Men” relationsh­ip, right?

And in the 2008 offseason, after asking for a one-on-one interview regarding his former boss and then-Dolphins czar, Bill Parcells, Belichick phoned a month later at 11 p.m. as I wrote in Doak Campbell Stadium at the end of a Miami-Florida State game. I took the call, deadline be damned.

“The biggest thing I’d say about Bill is he never lost sight of the big picture,’’ Belichick said. “He’s not a real detail guy. I’m probably little bit more the other way around. I’m a detail guy and he’s a big-picture guy.”

That’s something interestin­g too right? We talked five minutes. I made deadline.

And so our chatty relationsh­ip has gone for two decades. He talks on the phone like water moving through a gutter. I look for any crack of insight.

Typically, when you link the years, one league-mandated interview after another, Belichick gives a canned and unintentio­nally comical narrative of the Dolphins’ walk through the wilderness these past two decades.

It wasn’t just Tuesday when he delivered unintentio­nal comedy gold by saying a Dolphins team that lost the opener to Baltimore 59-10 has so many “great players,” that they “can’t get them all in the game at the same time.” Ba-da-bing!

In 2004, Belichick praised Dave Wannstedt’s chaotic Dolphins of being an “very obviously wellcoache­d team.” He said Cam Cameron’s 1-15 Dolphins in 2007 were, “very talented across the board,” and that Joe Philbin’s 2014 team, soon lost in Bullygate, was a “talented and discipline­d team.”

In 2012, before another Dolphins regime left, Belichick said, “These division games are always big.” In 2018, before yet another Dolphins regime left, he said, “It’s always tough to play in the division.”

Maybe all this swept together really is the insight into his excellence. Maybe it’s small and simple thoughts like doing your job well, no matter the opponent, that allow him to win the AFC East 16 times in 17 years and collect Super Bowls like silverware.

Amid the coachspeak, Belichick has dropped an occasional nugget of insight. Before beating the Dolphins in 2011, he was asked about the importance of making adjustment­s in a game. A little thing, but this seemed to catch his attention.

“When you’re an assistant coach or coordinato­r, you go in with a game plan based on what an opponent’s done or likely to do,’’ he said. “As the game starts to unfold, first series, second series, certainly by the end of the first quarter, there are certain parts — often certain personnel groupings — that are doing better or worse than planned.

“You, as a coach, have to see that. You’re trying to adjust to those things. None of us are reinventin­g plays or changing the history of the game. Sometimes, as you’ve seen, you run a play and it isn’t good, but the second, third, fourth time, it’s better. That’s a credit to the players, really. Adjustment­s are a little bit overrated because people like to talk about them, but they’re an element of the game.”

That right there is the Tao of Bill. It’s as good as it gets. It’s also as rare as, say, Belichick once entering the Dolphins’ postgame locker room long after beating Saban in Foxboro. Most players had gone. He just wanted to say hi to his friend.

Mostly, though, listening to Belichick for nine hours over 20 years is like listening to sand drop through an hourglass. On Tuesday, for instance, he was asked to define, “The Patriot Way.”

“Yeah, I don’t know that I’ve ever used that term,’’ he said. “I’m not sure what it means either. I appreciate you asking about it, though.”

As always, we appreciate the answer too. Hurricanes tight end Brevin Jordan is known as an elite pass-catching tight end, but coaches also like

 ?? JOHN RAOUX/AP ?? blocking.
JOHN RAOUX/AP blocking.

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