Donald Improving the Details for Year 3

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  • #45585
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    Donald Improving the Details for Year 3

    By Myles Simmons

    http://www.therams.com/news-and-events/article-1/Donald-Improving-the-Details-for-Year-3/1e0cd2ce-e4ba-4eff-8cc4-11a4243d48dd

    Say you’re Aaron Donald. You just finished your second year as a pro — one in which you led the league’s defensive tackles with 11.0 sacks to become a candidate for Defensive Player the Year. You’d think that would earn you a little break in the offseason, right?

    Maybe you would, maybe you wouldn’t. But there is a reason Donald has earned a reputation for having a relentless work ethic.

    “I took a week off, then started training a little bit more, getting ready for the Pro Bowl. Came back from the Pro Bowl, took another week off, then went right back to work,” Donald said recently at OTAs.

    That mindset has propelled Donald to one of the NFL’s premier players in just two seasons. He’s already racked up 20.0 sacks, two Pro Bowl appearances, and an AP Defensive Rookie of the Year award. Opponents routinely bring up his name as one of the most significant challenges they’ll face on gameday.

    And yet, Donald said he still found plenty to improve over the offseason. He went through game film week-by-week, studying both what he liked and what he didn’t.

    “Just clean up the pass rush, play the run a little better. Things like that,” Donald said of his offseason goals. “I don’t want to just work on one thing. If I’m going to work on one thing, I might [as well] work on everything. So just working on my overall game and trying to do a little bit better in the film room studying stuff.”

    “There are always things you can fix, you’ve just got to take the time and do the things to help you,” Donald added.

    The Pitt product said he noticed he could get a bit too aggressive at times, and plans on cleaning that up for 2016.

    “Just taking a little too many chances getting out of my gap and losing [contain]. Little things like that — jumping out of my gap and hurting the defense,” Donald said, adding he feels he sometimes needs to be a little more unselfish on the field. “I get a lot of freedom, but at times you have to play [within the scheme] — hold the double team a little longer than what I did, and things like that.”

    Donald is probably the only one who would describe his play as “selfish,” and it’s something that illustrates his team-first mentality. It’s part of why he can become more of a vocal leader this year, especially after the departures of former captains, Chris Long and James Laurinaitis.

    “Losing two guys like that, playmakers, and defensive leaders the last couple years — so definitely got to be more of a vocal guy at times and have to speak up,” Donald said. “I feel like I kind of earned the respect from the guys and from what I did, and things like that.”

    There’s no question Donald has earned his teammates’ respect through his work ethic and performance. As defensive end Will Hayes explained it, Donald translates his “freakish” athletic ability into results so often, it almost seems too easy.

    “I look at film and I joke around all the time — when he gets blocked, it’s actually surprising,” Hayes told therams.com “You know what I’m saying? You realize these guys on the other side play in the NFL, too, and you know they’re very talented at what they do — they’re one of the best in the world. And when one of them blocks him, I’m actually surprised.

    “People don’t really realize how great he is from the standpoint of, when he’s not getting a sack, how much he affects the play,” Hayes continued. “So it’s just an honor and it’s a blessing just to play beside a guy like that.”

    All of that adds up to Hayes making a significant declaration about a player who was just drafted in 2014.

    “If he keeps going the way he’s going, and stays smart, and keeps training the way he trains, you’re talking about a guy who could potentially be a future Hall of Famer,” Hayes said. “And I’m saying that with him going into Year 3, I believe. The kid’s special. I’ve played with a lot of guys, and for sure he’s the most talented specimen I’ve ever seen at the D-line position.”

    Again, it’s an early pronouncement — one dependent on Donald’s continued good health. But should the young defensive tackle’s career end that successfully, it will undoubtedly have come from the days off Donald simply refused to take.

    #46375
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    https://www.profootballfocus.com/pro-101-best-nfl-players-right-now/

    4. Aaron Donald, DT, Rams

    Aaron Donald was the best player of 2015, but he doesn’t have the résumé that the players ahead of him on this list own. There’s nothing to say that Donald can’t achieve that kind of staying power, and his career trajectory is in almost perfect lock-step with J.J. Watt’s over the same time period, but until he does it, it would be premature to leap him above players that have shown elite-level performance over many seasons. It took years to convince people just how good Watt was, and Donald is experiencing the same issue of denial right now. Having come to accept Watt as a generationally-great player, it seems illogical that we would see a second one come along just a couple of years later rather than in, you know, another generation. However, it seems that may be happening with Donald. He was the most disruptive defender in the NFL in 2015, generating 79 total pressures and actually getting pressure at a higher rate than Watt on a per-snap basis, despite playing almost exclusively inside, while Watt played the majority of his snaps on the edge where pressure comes more readily. With only one year of play at this level, keeping Donald at No. 4 is the right move, but if he can repeat that production in 2016, the battle for the No. 1 spot becomes intense.

    Agamemnon

    #46953
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000671174/article/jj-watt-rob-gronkowski-top-nfls-best-nonqbs

    J.J. Watt, Rob Gronkowski top NFL’s best non-QBs

    By Chris Wesseling
    Published: June 23, 2016 at 03:04 p.m.

    As much as it might stagger the imagination of a 21st century football fan, quarterbacks weren’t always atop the NFL’s salary-structure food chain. Back in the late 1970s, Hall of Fame running backs O.J. Simpson and Walter Payton were the highest-paid players in the league.

    The subject is back in the news of late, with Von Miller’s quest to become the highest-paid defensive star and Fletcher Cox’s new contract that rewards him as the second-highest paid non-quarterback in NFL history.

    With that in mind, let’s take a look at the most valuable non-quarterbacks entering the 2016 season:

    1. J.J. Watt, DE, Houston Texans: Winner of three of the past four Defensive Player of the Year awards, Watt is the dominant, game-wrecking defensive force of his generation. He now ranks with Lawrence Taylor and Reggie White as the most devastating defenders ever to stalk the gridiron.

    This isn’t the first time we’ve wondered if Watt might just be more valuable than several of the NFL’s franchise quarterbacks.

    2. Rob Gronkowski, TE, New England Patriots: The offense’s answer to Watt, Gronkowski is such a freakishly stellar specimen that NFL Media analyst Nate Burleson once suggested he was “built in a lab” or “pieced together by the football gods.” Stopping Gronk is a Herculean task that would require a Frankenstein-like mashup of Jamie Collins’ size and athleticism, Richard Sherman’s playmaking ability and Patrick Peterson’s speed and quickness.

    Cardinals general manager Steve Keim explained earlier this offseason that NFL teams no longer find complete tight ends. Today’s tight ends are either inline blockers (Y) lacking the skill set of pass catchers or overgrown wide receivers (F) who get blown up at the point of attack. Gronkowski is not just the exception to the rule. He’s the best to ever do it.

    3. Aaron Donald, DT, Los Angeles Rams: What separates Donald from other stud defensive tackles is his unparalleled first-step burst off the snap. That quickness is enhanced by a swashbuckler’s strong but dexterous hands, a relentless array of moves and the ferocious closing speed of an apex predator.

    “Extremely. Extremely (disruptive),” Buccaneers coach Dirk Koetter raved late last season. “Our scouting department scouts teams a couple of weeks in advance, and they told me that he was on the same level as J.J. Watt. And I thought to myself, ‘Wow! That’s hard to believe.’ “When it came my time to watch the tape, I said, ‘Oh, wow! He’s on the same level as J.J. Watt!’ I mean, this guy’s having a fantastic year, definitely a game-wrecker for this game.”

    4. Von Miller, LB, Denver Broncos: A true outcome shifter, Miller was the difference between the Broncos and the losing teams in the AFC Championship as well as Super Bowl 50. When an offensive tackle overcompensates for his dynamic speed off the edge, Miller unleashes a devastating spin move that accounted for 16 QB pressures alone last season, per Pro Football Focus. He’s going to be rewarded as the NFL’s highest-paid non-quarterback when he signs his next contract.

    5. Luke Kuechly, LB, Carolina Panthers: The Panthers ask more of their linebackers than any team in the league, and Kuechly is driving force with freakish athleticism and the ability to process reads at an uncanny speed. His closing speed in the run game and range in the passing game jump off film, as evidenced by his Thanksgiving Day performance that ranks as one of the most impressive by a linebacker in the past half-decade. If not for Miller’s MVP performance, we would have spent the offseason recounting Kuechly’s own dominant playoff run.

    6. Antonio Brown, WR, Pittsburgh Steelers: Chris Harris is one of the NFL’s premier cornerbacks, earning Pro Bowl nods in back-to-back seasons. Football’s best route runner flat-out tortured him in a December shootout, hauling in 13 of 15 targets in Harris’ coverage for 147 yards and a pair of scores.

    “It was the best versus the best, and he won,” Harris conceded. “I haven’t given up a touchdown in two years. … He’s a great player. The best receiver in the game right now.”

    7. Julio Jones, WR, Atlanta Falcons: If Brown stands atop the NFL’s wide-receiver hierarchy, Jones is nipping at his heels. In fact, Jones is clearly the more physically dominant of the two. He closed out the 2015 season with the second-most receptions (136) and receiving yards (1,871) in league history.

    More valuable than franchise quarterback Matt Ryan, Jones has been the unique power/speed dynamo making the Falcons offense go since he entered the league in 2011.

    8. Odell Beckham, WR, New York Giants: Brown and Jones should enjoy the attention now, because the greatest pure athlete in the league is coming like a freight train. No receiver in NFL history can match Beckham’s production through two NFL seasons. Since he debuted in Week 5 of the 2015 season, Beckham has 25 touchdowns. Gronkowski is the only player in the league within five receiving scores of Beckham over that span.

    What makes Beckham so special? Let’s start here: vertical explosiveness, incredible leaping ability and hang time, improvisational creativity, mid-air dexterity, rare suddenness, easy separation, ability to play every wide-receiver position and run a full route tree, humongous suction-cup hands and world-class athleticism.

    9. Khalil Mack, LB/DE, Oakland Raiders: Just two seasons into his career, Mack is already pushing Miller as the NFL’s best all-around edge rusher. He made history last year as the first player selected at two different positions (defensive end, outside linebacker) on the Pro Football Writers Association’s All-NFL team. After watching his teammate close out 2015 with 10 sacks in his final six games, Derek Carr believes Mack can break Michael Strahan’s single-season record this year.

    “I think he’s going to sack the quarterback 30 times,” Carr recently told Adam Schein on SiriusXM’s Mad Dog Sports Radio. “Watch the tape. He’s held every play. He’s like nobody else in the league. He’s talented.”

    10. Patrick Peterson, CB, Arizona Cardinals: Peterson has long been viewed as football’s most physically gifted defensive back. Prior to last season, though, there was a sense that his annual spot in the Pro Bowl and on the All-Pro’s first team was due more to reputation than results. After dropping weight and getting his Type 2 diabetes under control last offseason, Peterson put it all together in 2015. The NFL’s stingiest shutdown cornerback, Peterson topped all cornerbacks with a 45.6 passer rating and 18.9 coverage snaps per reception.

    Just missed: Geno Atkins, Ndamukong Suh, Richard Sherman, Earl Thomas, Le’Veon Bell, Adrian Peterson, Todd Gurley, DeAndre Hopkins, Dez Bryant, A.J. Green, Fletcher Cox, Tyrann Mathieu

    Agamemnon

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