Quinn

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  • #69270
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    The
    The top 10 players at what might be the defense’s most important spot

    Gary Gramling and Andy Benoit

    LINK TO AUDIO: https://art19.com/shows/the-mmqb-10-things/episodes/cd977b80-1d71-466a-bf7e-b7282c0adb53/embed#

    Edge rushers, in the conversation for the most valuable non-quarterbacks in football. We’re unveiling the top 10, based on the votes of myself, Andy Benoit and researcher Cal Klyman.

    I’m not sure if anything here will make you spit out your froot loops, but we do have a second-year player on the verge of making the Big Two a Big Three.

    * * *

    Number 10—3:23 – Vic Beasley(Falcons)

    Number 9—7:14 – Whitney Mercilus(Texans)

    Number 8—12:58 – Chandler Jones(Cardinals)

    Number 7—15:06 – Robert Quinn(Rams)

    Number 6—22:51 – Justin Houston(Chiefs)

    Number 5—23:56 – Cliff Avril(Seahawks)

    Number 4—28:46 – Olivier Vernon(Giants)

    Number 3—31:57 – Joey Bosa(Chargers)

    Number 2—35:33 – Khalil Mack(Raiders)

    Number 1—37:58 – Von Miller(Broncos)

    #69273
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    In the audio, they talk about Quinn at about 16:30.

    Agamemnon

    #69334
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from laram

    You ever had back surgery? It takes awhile before you are able to do heavy core exercises again. I can totally understand the drop in weight last year and look for him to bounce back this season.

    Two seasons removed and the first offseason where he can go full bore.

    I’m pulling for him big time!!

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 9 months ago by Avatar photozn.
    #69348
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    moved by zn

    Quinn is gonna be one of the more interesting topics of the new season. Personally, I think he’s gonna love the new D…I think he’s gonna have less responsibilities in the run game….essentially seal the end….and this will lead to more “pinning the ears back” rushing the passer, which is what he really wants to do.

    I’ll also be interested to see him drop back if and when they rush Barwin from the other side….do they go to 5 rushers? Do they drop Quin? Maybe a tackle drops or end drops to essentially cover the middle and Tree moves outside as the play evolves? All gonna be fun to watch the options.

    #69349
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Regardless of his position, Rams need a healthy Robert Quinn

    Alden Gonzalez

    http://www.espn.com/blog/los-angeles-rams/post/_/id/33762/regardless-of-his-position-rams-need-a-healthy-robert-quinn

    LOS ANGELES — One of the early impressions of new defensive coordinator Wade Phillips is that he likes to keep things simple, which isn’t surprising if you get to know him a bit. He wants his guys to play fast, to play with confidence, so the instructions are relatively straightforward, a refreshing development for a Los Angeles Rams defense that will convert from a 4-3 to a 3-4.

    The biggest transition, it seems, will be made by Robert Quinn, the veteran defensive end who is now officially an outside linebacker.

    His instructions, per Quinn himself: “Just go out and make plays. That’s what they say. From day one, that’s what they told me. So, I just wipe my hands and put a smile on my face. It’s time to get back to work.”

    Quinn will in essence be the weakside linebacker, but, as rookie coach Sean McVay said, “He’s a rush player. He’ll play a similar role to what DeMarcus Ware did in Denver for Wade the last couple of years. He’s going to be an elite rusher in this league for years, and that’s what we’re hoping to do with him moving forward.”

    The Rams just need Quinn to stay healthy.

    The 14th overall pick out of North Carolina in 2011, Quinn racked up 40 sacks from 2012 to ’14, making it onto a couple of Pro Bowl rosters and being named first-team All-Pro. But the 26-year-old has been limited to 15 starts over the last two years. Back surgery forced him to miss the second half of the 2015 season. In 2016, he nursed a shoulder injury from Weeks 5 to 6. In the middle of November, he was admitted to a hospital for what was initially feared to be a seizure but that Quinn eventually chalked up to dehydration. He played in the next two games, then missed the final five with what the team listed as a concussion.

    Quinn, speaking from the start of veteran minicamp on April 25, said he’s “feeling great” now.

    “Of course, I hate missing a year,” Quinn added. “It’s been a rough couple of years for me. With the new coaching staff, I just kind of took a step back, took a deep breath. It’s like waking up every day. As long as you can wake up with a smile, you come to work with a positive energy, you just continue to work.”

    Quinn has always played out of a three-point stance, though he said there were moments last year when he wore a neck roll that caused him to rush the quarterback from an upright position. He may need a big year. The dead money on Quinn’s extension will soon drop significantly, from $8,072,326 in 2017 to $955,354 in 2018. The Rams also selected a couple of outside linebackers in this year’s draft — Samson Ebukam in the fourth round, Ejuan Price in the seventh.

    If Quinn doesn’t prove to be a fit in Phillips’ system, the Rams could simply let him go the following offseason. But they’re a much better unit when he’s on the field and healthy.

    “He’s a game-changer,” Rams inside linebacker Alec Ogletree said. “When he’s on the field, you have to account for him.”

    #69350
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Robert Quinn drawing inspiration from DeMarcus Ware

    Alden Gonzalez

    http://www.espn.com/blog/los-angeles-rams/post/_/id/33915/rams-robert-quinn-drawing-inspiration-from-demarcus-ware

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — One of the first things you’ll notice about Robert Quinn’s locker now is an Instagram post, printed out and taped to one of the wood panels that hold his personal belongings. It came from the account of DeMarcus Ware, the retired former defensive end and outside linebacker who seems like a lock for the Hall of Fame. It’s a jersey graphic, half Dallas Cowboys and half Denver Broncos, with Ware’s career accomplishments highlighted along the bottom.

    It keeps Quinn going.

    “He kind of led a good path,” Quinn said from organized team activities earlier this week. “I’m just trying to either repeat it or do a little bit better. It’s just something to keep myself motivated.”

    Ware’s name has come up a lot whenever somebody on the Los Angeles Rams talks about Quinn, and it has very little to do with them donning the same No. 94. Quinn spent his first five years playing out of a three-point stance in a 4-3 system, but new defensive coordinator Wade Phillips is converting the unit to a 3-4, which will require Quinn to act as an outside linebacker when the Rams are not in subpackages.

    In the words of new head coach Sean McVay, Quinn will “play a similar role to what DeMarcus Ware did in Denver for Wade the last couple of years,” which basically means he will still spend most of his time getting around the edge to rush the quarterback.

    Quinn likes the link.

    “Coming out of college, I actually heard some comparisons to DeMarcus Ware,” Quinn said. “This was early on. And now I’m hooked up in the same system that he played in. And really I’ve got his stats in there because once he’s eligible for the Hall of Fame — in five years, however many years — he’s instantly in there. He went from [defensive] end to playing outside linebacker. If he stayed in either system, he would’ve been a Hall of Famer at either position.”

    Ware, voted first-team All-Pro on four occasions, was a star defensive end at Troy who became a rush linebacker on a Bill Parcells defense that was transitioning from a 4-3 to a 3-4 in 2005. Ware’s best years coincided with Phillips’ time as the Cowboys’ head coach from 2007 to 2010. He later transitioned back to defensive end under Monte Kiffin and Jack Del Rio from 2013 to 2014. But Ware finished his career as an outside linebacker when he reunited with Phillips in Denver from 2015 to 2016, playing a pivotal role on a defense that was deemed the NFL’s best.

    Under Wade Phillips new defensive scheme, the Rams will have Robert Quinn line up as an outside linebacker. Harry How/Getty Images
    Quinn, the 14th overall pick out of North Carolina in 2011, is walking a slightly different path.

    The two-time Pro Bowler racked up 40 sacks from 2012 to 2014, third-most in the NFL during that time. But he has been limited to 15 starts the last couple years, the first of those seasons ending prematurely because of back surgery. Quinn, who benefited from a normal offseason this year, said he feels “great” now and that “my explosion, my strength is coming back.” He’s down about 15 pounds, to somewhere around 250, and hopes to stay right around there now that he will occasionally drop back into coverage.

    “The tough part is just getting used to the two-point stance and getting used to dropping sometimes,” Quinn said. “It’s a little different. But a couple of practice days, you kind of become used to it. The less you can think about it, the faster you can play.”

    Quinn needs a big year, to free up space in the interior for Aaron Donald and to secure his own future.

    Quinn signed a six-year, $65.6 million extension heading into his fourth season, which Donald now aims to do. But he’s only got three more guaranteed years left. And less than $1 million in dead money will remain on the deal after 2017, which means the Rams can very easily cut ties with Quinn if he doesn’t prove to be a fit this season.

    “I don’t feel the pressure from the outside world,” Quinn said. “I have pride in myself to want to be a productive player.”

    Quinn has only really met Ware in passing, but he has long admired him, for obvious reasons.

    Ware’s stats on the bottom of the printout in Quinn’s locker state that he was invited to the Pro Bowl nine times and made 657 tackles. That he accumulated 138 1/2 sacks, eighth most in history. And that he won a Super Bowl — as part of a defense that was led by the same coordinator who will now try to get the most out of Quinn.

    “I look at it every day,” Quinn said. “I respect everything he’s done.”

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