articles on Givens; Brown & Havenstein; Laurinaitis; Darrell Wms.

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  • #30237
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    Chris Givens has something to prove — and a friend’s memory to honor

    Nick Wagoner

    http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/13626155/st-louis-rams-receiver-chris-givens-gains-perspective-new-number-mourning-loss-friend

    EARTH CITY, Mo. — The question had barely even been asked before St. Louis Rams wide receiver Chris Givens blurted out the answer.

    Is this a big year for yo …

    “Yes, point blank, period,” Givens said. “I’ve got a lot to prove and I have got a lot on my chest I want to express through football, so I’m excited.”

    Entering his fourth NFL season, a contract year, Givens is carrying the weight of unmet expectations and an uncertain future. And when he says he has a lot on his chest, he’s not just offering an athlete’s platitude. Givens is wearing a new uniform number, 19, to honor a friend who died last Christmas Eve.

    It’s in that number Givens finds a daily reminder of how quickly everything can be lost.

    Givens, 25, was the Rams’ top playmaker this preseason, scoring on 80- and 44-yard catches. It was reminiscent of 2012. Wearing No. 13 back then, he led the Rams with 698 receiving yards during the regular season and set a rookie record by snaring at least one catch of 50 yards or more in five consecutive games.

    But his production diminished in the two years that followed. Givens, unable to evolve as an intermediate route-runner, had just 11 catches in 2014. He was a healthy scratch in Weeks 5 and 6 and played just five snaps in Week 7.

    Givens needed support as he dealt with his frustration. He got it from Kevin Smith-Franklin, Givens’ best friend since their early high school days at T.H. Williams High in Plano, Texas.

    Givens and Smith-Franklin were instant friends who became football rivals when Givens transferred to nearby Wylie High and Smith-Franklin ended up at Plano East. The pair would reunite at Wake Forest in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

    “When Chris and Kevin went to Wake, they were the only Texas guys,” mutual friend Jordan Bowman said. “They had known each other a long time, but they were roommates and the only Texas guys around, so they leaned on each other.”

    Smith-Franklin was a starting defensive end for Wake Forest in 2010, but his football career ended the following summer. He was dismissed from the team after what head coach Jim Grobe described as “too many off-the-field issues.”

    When Givens’ own career appeared headed toward a premature finish last year, he turned to Smith-Franklin, who arrived in early November to offer support and plenty of laughs. His friends knew Smith-Franklin, who cut an imposing figure at 6-foot-4, 230 pounds, as a “gentle giant.”

    “He was a big guy and just friendly, everybody loved him, very playful,” Givens said. “He was just one of those guys that everybody loved to be around.”

    As Thanksgiving approached, Samon Taylor, Smith-Franklin’s mother, called her son and asked him if he’d be returning to Texas for the holiday. “He said, ‘Momma, I need to spend time with my best friend,'” Taylor said. “He said he wasn’t done spending time with him.”

    When Christmas came, Smith-Franklin went back to Plano with the intent of returning to St. Louis. He spent his first day enjoying Taylor’s home cooking and hanging out with his little brother, Chris Smith.

    On Christmas Eve, Smith-Franklin attended a party at a friend’s house. He arrived with his friend Trayveon Wiley, who spent time as Smith-Franklin’s understudy on the football field and basketball court in high school.

    According to Wiley and some of Smith-Franklin’s friends, an argument broke out at the party between another friend, Regis Hayes, and a woman. The police were called to the scene in response to the argument. Upon their arrival around 4 a.m., the remaining partygoers scattered.

    Instead of getting back in Wiley’s car, Smith-Franklin opted to hop in with Hayes. According to Wiley, Smith-Franklin needed to retrieve a phone charger from Hayes’ car.

    As the Plano police arrived, Hayes sped out of the parking lot in his black 2008 Saab — Smith-Franklin was still in the car. An officer followed in pursuit on suspicion of intoxicated driving, according to police reports. Hayes initially pulled over, but as the officer prepared to talk to Hayes, he decided to flee. At speeds in the range of 100 mph, the officer decided to stop his pursuit.

    Soon after, the officer found Hayes’ car had crashed into a dumpster and an unoccupied van in a preschool parking lot. Neither Smith-Franklin nor Hayes was wearing a seatbelt. Hayes survived and was charged last month with two felonies: intoxication manslaughter with a vehicle and evading arrest detention, causing death.

    Smith-Franklin died at the scene.

    “It was all very shocking as details started rolling in; it’s almost like getting punched in the stomach,” Simone Bridges, a longtime friend of Smith-Franklin’s, said. “Every detail just becomes more and more crippling and painful and you wonder, why, why, why? Everyone has been asking that question for the past eight months. A lot of us are still like, this did not have to happen at all.

    “That decision ended Kevin’s life, and it affected so many other lives. It affected a whole city, really. I don’t think Christmas will ever be the same. It’s one of those things that will always taint that day forever.”

    Hours after the accident, Givens was sitting in a special teams meeting at Rams Park, preparing for that week’s game against Seattle, when he got the text message. Givens’ first instinct was outright denial but a flood of phone calls followed the message.

    Smith-Franklin had just left Givens’ house on Sunday to return to Texas. By early Wednesday morning, he was gone.

    “I just didn’t want to believe it,” Givens said. “I got the text message in a special teams meeting and I was like, ‘Somebody is just messing with me.’ I thought, ‘Kevin’s phone was just off because his phone is always dead.'”

    Givens played against the Seahawks with a heavy heart, logging 11 snaps before returning to St. Louis and then heading to Texas for the funeral.

    Depending on who you ask, Givens was one of anywhere from 1,500 to 2,000 people at Smith-Franklin’s funeral on Jan. 3.

    “I was in the front but I heard people were standing outside the church,” Chris Smith said. “I knew he had a lot of friends, but I didn’t know he had that many friends.”

    Chris Givens
    Givens spent time in personal reflection this offseason while mourning the death of a close friend.

    In the months since, Givens has emerged as one of many trying to help his friend’s family. He regularly texts Smith-Franklin’s brother and sister as they pursue their own athletic dreams; Chris is attempting to walk on to the football team at a junior college and Tatiyana is playing basketball at Arkansas. Givens also checks in with Taylor and is doing his part to help the family and Bridges establish a scholarship in Smith-Franklin’s name at Plano East.

    Givens also spent time in personal reflection after his friend’s death.

    “I used it as a lesson to give it my all every day, because you never know,” Givens said. “It was a car crash. Anything can happen at any moment. I just thank God that I’m here and try to live each day to the fullest.”

    Givens said he was “completely honest” with himself, re-evaluating all he had and hadn’t done in his first three NFL seasons. What he saw was an inconsistent player without the precision route-running or proper mindset needed to succeed. So Givens returned to Phoenix to spend a second consecutive year with Mack Newton, the renowned trainer who has worked with Bo Jackson, Charles Barkley and Rickey Henderson.

    Givens initially connected with Newton at the behest of Hall of Famer Aeneas Williams, a former Ram who has served as a mentor of sorts for Givens. It was in Newton’s gym Givens found his support system.

    Newton and Givens discussed Smith-Franklin’s death at length with Newton focusing on ways to ensure Givens was finding the proper ways to channel his grief — by improving as a person and as a football player — instead of internalizing it.

    “He was searching, like a prospector searching for gold,” Newton said. “The unfortunate passing of his friend really indicated to him the sense of urgency that he needed to have with his gift. This represents something that has an expiration date. None of us are going to survive this life, but it’s what we do between the birth and the death that’s really important.”

    Givens arrived daily at Newton’s training facility at 9:15 a.m. Each morning started with a word of the day from Newton — words like integrity, patience, compassion and determination.

    From there, Newton put Givens through 20- to 30-minute stretching sessions and then a workout tailored toward improving his football skills. That would last for about an hour and a half. On most days, Givens would return at 3:45 for an afternoon session.

    Chris Givens
    The Rams could use a fast start from Givens during the season opener against the Seahawks.

    Before training camp, Givens appeared an early candidate to be replaced on the roster. Then he led the Rams with nine catches for 206 yards and two touchdowns in the preseason and is positioned to get more snaps in the regular season, which begins Sunday in St. Louis against the defending NFC champion Seattle Seahawks.

    Givens’ approach isn’t the only thing that changed. That number 19 is also new to his football profile. He made the switch from 13 after the Rams cut wideout Devon Wylie early in training camp. It’s an homage to Smith-Franklin, who wore 19 at Plano East.

    “It’s just been on my heart, just trying to figure out a way where I can honor him, and I thought about the number change. But we had somebody with 19, so I was just going to pray about it and give it time,” Givens said. “Once Devon got cut, I couldn’t get a more clear sign. So I just took the opportunity.”

    Taylor and Tatiyana Smith came up with their own way of remembering Smith-Franklin, each getting a bird with his name tattooed on her arm. If Chris Smith has his way, he, too, will be able to wear No. 19 if his football career blossoms.

    But for Givens, that number is a way to carry on the lost dreams of a friend gone too soon, to represent a community in mourning and to wipe his own slate clean and begin anew.

    “One of the things I told Chris — and I’m taking it right from his file — I said, ‘Chris, you know what, most of the issues of integrity that you’re going to face are not big issues,'” Newton said. “They’re small issues, but it’s the accumulated weight of our choices that is what has the impact on your sense of who you are.'”

    It’s a weight Givens now willingly carries on his chest, not dragging him down but lifting him up.

    #30238
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    Rams’ Jamon Brown, Rob Havenstein set to take center stage
    By Nick Wagoner

    http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/21258/rams-jamon-brown-rob-havenstein-set-to-take-center-stage

    EARTH CITY, Mo. — The St. Louis Rams will start two rookies on the offensive line Sunday against the Seattle Seahawks. For left guard Jamon Brown and right tackle Rob Havenstein, it’s a difficult task.

    Which is why both Brown and Havenstein admitted this week there will be some butterflies before kickoff.

    “There’s definitely going to be some nerves,” Havenstein said. “I think anytime you step in and play your first NFL game and the bullets count, I think there are going to be a little bit of nerves. But it’s something that if I want to be a good player, I’m going to have to get past them and just go out and trust the guys around me, trust the front five I’m going to have around me and know that I’m going to have their back and they’re going to have my back.”

    Many eyes will be on the Rams’ young offensive line in 2015. It’s a group that will go a long way in determining the team’s success. The Rams enter the season as the youngest team in the league for the fourth straight year and the offensive line is no exception with the youngest projected group in the NFL. Of the five projected starters, only right guard Rodger Saffold has more than a dozen NFL starts.

    Which means plenty of attention will be paid to others across the line, specifically the two rookies. Facing a dominant Seattle defense in their first game won’t make things any easier for Brown and Havenstein, but even if both have had their hiccups in the preseason, they have impressed the coaching staff with their resilience and professional approach.

    “I think they’ll try to create some one-on-one matchups and step up in some gaps and try to confuse us,” coach Jeff Fisher said. “I wouldn’t have asked ‘JB’ or allowed JB or Rob for that matter, we wouldn’t have put them in a position to start if we didn’t think they were going to get the job done, and they’re only going to get better.”

    The Rams don’t have much time to wait. After spending five draft picks on offensive linemen this year, they’re betting big on youth to rule the day. After plugging Brown and Havenstein in on the right side from the day they arrived in St. Louis, the Rams didn’t do themselves any favors by waiting until the day before the third preseason game to juggle the line by moving Brown to the left side with Saffold on the right.

    It was a logical move considering Saffold’s success on the right in 2013, Brown’s experience playing the left side and the chance to split the rookies up but the timing was puzzling at best.

    “We did it the day before the Indianapolis game so it was very surprising for me,” Brown said. “Obviously, the type of guy I am, it doesn’t really matter. As long as I play, that’s all I’m worried about. Making that switch kind of told me something. Coach gave me an idea of what his mindset was going into that game and getting the best matchups and combinations he could. He was pleased with what I did on the left side and decided to make it final.”

    With Saffold on the sidelines for most of the preseason with a shoulder issue, Brown was probably the Rams’ most consistent lineman until an ankle injury slowed him in the game against Indianapolis. The Rams believe Brown’s athleticism and ability to get out and pull makes him a better fit on the left side.

    As for Havenstein, he did fine as a run blocker but had some issues in pass protection, at times playing too high and, by his own admission, needs to get better at getting off the ball at the snap quicker.

    But the Rams’ refusal to spend premium picks on the offensive line until the past two years puts Brown and Havenstein in position where much will be expected of them right away — even though they have yet to take an NFL regular-season snap.

    For their part, Brown and Havenstein are aware that they must produce right away in order for the offense to have success in the early part of the season.

    “I think we kind of keep all of our motivation kind of in-house,” Havenstein said. “We know what we need to do; we know how we need to work. If you start paying attention to what others are saying, you are going to be lost, especially in today’s world. You can be up all night reading everything and go down the rabbit hole. I think this group has done a heck of a job, especially with the older guys in the group kind of keeping us on track, knowing what we have to do and our success will be dependent on our room, not on some outside influences. If we play well, we’re most likely going to have a good game.”

    #30239
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    James Laurinaitis closing in on Rams’ tackles record

    Nick Wagoner

    http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/21272/james-laurinaitis-closing-in-on-rams-tackles-record

    EARTH CITY, Mo. — St. Louis Rams linebacker James Laurinaitis is 15 tackles away from owning a piece of franchise history.

    Sitting at 901 career tackles entering this Sunday’s season opener against Seattle, Laurinaitis needs 14 stops to tie Hall of Famer Merlin Olsen and 15 to pass him. Laurinaitis already sits ahead of such Rams luminaries as Deacon Jones and Jack “Hacksaw” Reynolds.

    Laurinaitis doesn’t much care for the chance to tout his own accomplishments, but defensive coordinator Gregg Williams doesn’t mind taking up for his middle linebacker. Asked Friday why he thinks Laurinaitis doesn’t get more credit, Williams offered a rebuttal for those that criticize Laurinaitis.

    “Most of them that probably don’t think that [Laurinaitis is a good player] were the same guys that probably thought they should have been all-conference in high school that didn’t get a chance to play after,” Williams said. “I laugh and I smile about that. The all-time leading tackler? That says something. Here in St. Louis you guys also had a guy that was undrafted that everybody didn’t like, remember the comments about London Fletcher? He just played 17 years without missing a game and he tackled pretty well, too.”

    Williams went on to describe how important Laurinaitis is to all that the Rams do defensively.

    “James Laurinaitis is the epitome of a tackler,” Williams said. “I can’t think of a better person than him to be the all-time leading tackler here. I didn’t know he was that close. I’m going to wonder why he doesn’t have all those tackles in the first quarter this week.”

    Laurinaitis was second on the team in tackles in 2014 and has reached 100 tackles in each of his six seasons in the NFL.

    #30254
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    http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/florida-recruiting/blog/os-darrell-williams-nfl-rams-usf-orlando-evans-20150910-post.html

    Darrell Williams was grappled with two opposing emotions this week.

    The first came Saturday, when St. Louis Rams head coach Jeff Fisher called to inform the former Orlando Evans and USF offensive tackle that he had made the cut for the NFL Rams 2015 53-man roster.

    “I got the call and I was elated … Coach Fisher just told me to take a deep breath and that I had made it,” Williams said. “I called my agent, called my parents and let them know the good news and yeah, I was really excited that I was able to stay here and get on the 53-man roster.

    “After that it was a bunch of thank yous and celebrating.”

    Then came the news the next day that former USF teammate Elkino Watson, one of the most likeable guys on the team during Williams’ four years in Tampa, was killed late Saturday night after being stabbed several times during a fight in Ybor City.

    “Yeah man, he was a guy that came in with me in my recruiting class. It was literally the day after I found out that I made the roster, that I heard what went down with Kino,” Williams said. “It was very sad. Terrible, terrible news when I woke up. Kino, I really liked him. He was a great guy. He had one of the biggest smiles in the locker room and always was just trying to have fun.

    “I never saw him fight and he wasn’t a very argumentative person. It’s still tough right now seeing stuff on Facebook and Twitter about his death.”

    Certainly a tough way to enter his first week in the NFL, but Williams has always been able to overcome obstacles. He’ll remain focused with just two more days of preparation as the Rams get set to host the Seattle Seahawks at the Edwards Jones Dome on Sunday.

    Through fall camp, Williams kept gaining more confidence with each practice, and he said the key has been always playing hard and studying the playbook vigorously.

    “I just treated it as if I could get cut at any moment. There were a lot of talented offensive linemen when I got there, so I didn’ take the opportunity for granted,” Williams said. “I tried to master the playbook early on so that I could play faster when it came time for preseason games and every day was a grind.”

    His confidence grew through camp, but it wasn’t always that way. During his first Organized Team Activities (OTAs), Williams said he was like a kid among men.

    “When I first arrived for OTAs, I was nervous every single day. … but, honestly, after the first preseason game I felt much better about my ability to play at this level and also after that first game, the game really slowed down for me,” Williams said. “I was actually more calm than I thought I would be coming into [the period of team cuts].

    “Going against our D-line every day in practice helped me a lot. We have one of the top D-lines in the NFL.”

    The 6-foot-5, 307-pound Williams sits on the Rams depth chart as the No. 2 left tackle behind second-year player Greg Robinson out of Auburn.

    Williams’ path to the NFL didn”t even start until after high school. He never thought about the NFL. Williams didn’t even begin playing football until his ninth grade year at Evans, his first school year in the United States after moving from Kingston, Jamaica.

    “I thought I was going to be the next great basketball player,” Williams said after committing to USF in 2010. “But when I got [to the U.S.] I saw that all the basketball players were like 6-8 or 6-9 and so I knew I had to do something else to go to college.”

    They told him he should play football, and, led by former head coach Greg Thompson, who has returned to take over the job again this season after a four-year hiatus, Evans coaches helped him hone his craft.

    “When I first got there [USF], I was still pretty raw because I had only played in high school. Initially, I wasn’t thinking this far ahead. I can’t think of what I was thinking back then, but I probably didn’t believe I could make it this far,” Williams said. “I was blessed to be at South Florida and have the opportunity to play as a freshman and then have the opportunity to start as a sophomore.

    “So I got a lot of experience and once I got [to the NFL] I just did what I was asked.”

    His perseverance and work ethic have been the driving force. He’s gone from a person who hated football as a freshman in high school, skipping workouts, making up excuses, etc., to one of the hardest working individuals on any practice field.

    “I’ve always been a very coachable athlete, so whatever is asked of me I do it to the best of my abilities,” he said. “I try not to make excuses and try to get better every day.”

    Williams joins a long line of former Evans High football players who went on to the NFL, including Kenard Lang (now head coach at Wekiva), Tony McCoy (assistant coach at South Lake), Kerlin Blaise, Keith Council, Leon Searcy, Horace Copeland, Jamie Dukes, Jeff Zimmerman, Brandon Siler, Alex Haynes and Demetri Patterson.

    “Alex Haynes gave me some wise words when I was getting ready for this process,” Williams said. “There were some big names that came out of Evans and I’m just very appreciative of that and hopefully I can be in that category as another one who had a long, successful career. I’m just trying to follow in their footsteps.”

    Williams signed a three-year contract with the Rams as an undrafted free agent worth $1,582,500. He received a $7,500 signing bonus. After finding out he had made the team this week, he found a place to live in St. Louis in an apartment complex where several young Rams players live.

    He’s a humble, well spoken individual who graduated with a communications degree last December. Don’t be surprised if you see this guy in the broadcast arena after his playing days. For now, however, he’s as focused as ever.

    “I’m just taking it one day at a time. I still don’t think it’s sunken in all the way yet,” Williams said.

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