Joyner played with a broken toe

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  • #53464
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

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    from PFF: BEST PLAYER AT EVERY POSITION IN NFL WEEK 2

    Slot cornerback: Lamarcus Joyner, Los Angeles Rams, 87.3

    Joyner spent 35 snaps in the slot against Seattle, more than all but two other players in the league in Week 2. He allowed three catches on six targets, but they went for a total of just 18 yards.

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    Off the net from Kind of Blue/Gold

    Some know that, but others may not, he was one of the highest recruited defensive players in Florida State history (including Hall of Fame LB Derrick Brooks).

    Had been a stud at FS and SS for FSU, than had the athleticism to switch to CB in his last season.

    Nickel CB seems like a perfect NFL position for him, he has outstanding instincts (height-wise a mismatch on the outside, and may lack ideal range for S).

    To paraphrase Neal Stephenson, he hits like the Devil’s electric axe handle.

    * Great blitzer in college, too, tied for national sack lead among DBs that last year (5.5?). He was coming and probably would have got to Wilson but SEA called a run play that cut inside his forward/outside momentum.

    Independent scout Matt Waldman likened him to a mash up of the Honey Badger, Bob Sanders and Antoine Winfield (some of the best pound for pound tacklers I’ve ever seen).

    Read more on him here:

    http://www.footballoutsiders.com/futures/2013/futures-florida-state-db-lamarcus-joyner%5B/quote%5D

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    Off the net from TexasRam

    I loved Joyners bounce back game. The kid is not a man cover CB but is a real good roaming zone DB near the line of scrimmage.

    His burst and ability to read a play and close the space is really good. He’s also a fearless tackler that brings some pop.

    With the emergence of HIll and return of Gaines soon, I think Joyners role in this defense will change to what it needs to be. Joyner and Barron are like two nomads roaming around wherever they want and constantly applying pressure in the backfield and filling up passing zones. Williams has really got a good system in place that makes it difficult for an offensive Coordinator to know where to attack.

    We really have an unorthodox defensive approach that is hard to predict. Pressure coming not only up the middle from super talented Donald and Tree but also Barron, Joyner, Alexander and others are constantly shooting gaps and occupying unknown zones.

    It’s mad confusion coming from quick hard hitting intense players.

    #53473
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    i like him. a lot of people were down on him especially after that hard knocks episode, but everything i read about him prior to that had nothing but glowing things to say about his character and attitude.

    #53479
    bnw
    Blocked

    Broken toe is some serious pain. (So are broken ribs.) He played well too.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #53488
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Lamarcus Joyner breaks toe, plays anyway, shines

    Alden Gonzalez

    http://www.espn.com/blog/los-angeles-rams/post/_/id/30834/rams-cb-lamarcus-joyner-breaks-toe-plays-anyway-shines

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — It was early in the second quarter last Monday, in the season opener against the San Francisco 49ers, when Lamarcus Joyner’s left foot suddenly fell asleep. The third-year cornerback finished the Los Angeles Rams’ stand on defense, then walked gingerly toward the sideline and noticed that his second toe would not move.

    He knew then that it was broken, but he also knew that no one else would.

    “I didn’t really want to say anything to anyone because I knew the defense was depending on me,” Joyner said. “We didn’t have anyone else that ran nickel throughout the week, so I knew I just had to be accountable for the defense. I just kept my mouth closed and kept playing.”

    Joyner finished that game, then played in the next one six days later, a 9-3 win over the Seattle Seahawks that was driven almost entirely by a supreme defensive effort. With a broken toe, the 5-foot-8, 184-pound Joyner matched up against the great Russell Wilson and was ultimately rated the best slot corner of Week 2 by Pro Football Focus. He spent 35 snaps in the slot, third-most in the NFL, and allowed only three catches for 18 yards on six targets.

    Joyner didn’t even bother with a splint.

    “I just strapped on my cleats and I played, man,” he said. “I knew that was an important game for us.”

    Joyner thought back to 2014, when the Rams moved up in the draft to select him 41st overall out of Florida State.

    “All that kind of stuff just ran through my mind,” Joyner said. “This organization made a lot of sacrifices for me so that I could fight through something like this if I’m able to still go.”

    Rams coach Jeff Fisher said Joyner’s toughness was “why we drafted him.” The pain, Joyner said, was “bad” throughout Sunday’s game. But secondary coach Dennard Wilson talked him through it.

    ‘Every time he said, ‘We need you,’ it just gave me the strength,” Joyner said. “It gave me the strength to fight through the pain.”

    Joyner plans to play again against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday. He’ll be returning to his home state, 280 miles north of his hometown of Miami and 160 miles east of his college campus. Family will be there, but he doesn’t anticipate spending much time with them.

    “This is a business trip,” he said.

    Joyner has “no doubt” he will continue to play through his broken toe.

    “It’s getting better,” he said. “We have the best training staff, I think, out of all 32 teams. [Head athletic trainer Reggie Scott] and all those guys all do a good job of rehabbing it. I trust their words. Rehabbing has been going really good this last week and a half. I’m going to just do what I can until it’s all the way healed.”

    #53491
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    The coaching staff should get some credit for Joyner’s positive attitude. I mean we read that he was thinking about walking out a while back. Now he seems to be an inspired leader type — so, the coaches must have pushed the right buttons.

    w
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