meet Brandon Staley

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  • #111227
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    #111228
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    Brandon Staley sees the field from a unique perspective

    Stu Jackson

    https://www.therams.com/news/brandon-staley-sees-the-field-from-a-unique-perspective

    New Rams defensive coordinator Brandon Staley’s college playing days consisted of preparing against the side of the ball where he has spent the majority of his coaching career so far.

    Unorthodox as the quarterback-turned-defensive coordinator route may seem, it has played an instrumental role in his career and uniquely shaped the approach to his job.

    “What being a quarterback has done is really opened up my lens, and from a defensive perspective, try and get the player to understand what he’s looking at and how they’re operating,” Staley told theRams.com. “And so, it’s really meant a lot to me in my career. I would say that it’s been the biggest benefit for me.”

    The decision to make the switch, according to Staley, was not his but former Northern Illinois head coach Joe Novak’s.

    In 2006, Staley joined Novak’s staff as a defensive graduate assistant after his college career as a quarterback concluded. According to a story published on broncos.com last November, Novak loved that angle because a quarterback is responsible for all 22 players on the field.

    “You have to command the huddle, you have to be able to reach everybody on the team,” Staley told broncos.com. “And as a defensive graduate assistant, that’s kind of your role. You’re running the scout team, you’re kind of the quarterback of the scout team. He really liked that.”

    Novak’s guidance paid off, as Staley was named 2016 FootballScoop Division III Coordinator of the Year in his final season overseeing John Carroll’s defense 10 years later. The award’s recipient is chosen by previous winners. The Blue Streaks ranked fourth nationally in scoring defense, sixth nationally in pass efficiency defense, third nationally in total defense and 13th nationally in rushing defense that year.

    At the professional level, it remains a prudent approach as NFL offenses evolve and attempt to exploit defenses by spreading them across the line of scrimmage and creating mismatches in space.

    Take, for instance, the 2018 season when all 32 NFL teams combining to score a new league record 1,371 touchdowns and the second-most total points with 11,292, according to a January 2019 article by the New York Times.

    “A quarterback is responsible for all 22 players on the field,” Staley said. “As a defensive coordinator, when you operate like that, you know the tempo and the rhythm that you have to be able to function at to be able to compete with these guys. There’s only 32 starting quarterbacks in the world and they’re all really, really special. So if your defenses can’t operate at the same speed that the quarterbacks and the offenses do, then you’re just going to be behind.”

    Perhaps it’s no surprise that a former quarterback sees communication as a cornerstone of his defensive philosophy, and Staley has current Broncos head coach Vic Fangio to thank for that.

    Fangio gave Staley his big break into the NFL, hiring him as outside linebackers coach for the Bears defensive staff in 2017. When Fangio departed two years later to become the Broncos head coach, he brought Staley will him to fill the same position in Denver. Staley credits those three seasons working alongside Fangio for accelerating his growth as a coach.

    “You got to think about being a great teacher for your players, and I think that’s something that Vic is exceptional at,” Staley said. “To be a defensive coordinator in the NFL for over 20 years and to do it at the level he’s been able to do it at and now as a head coach, to have that type of consistency, you have to be a really good teacher, you have to be a really good communicator. You have to be someone that people believe in, you know, as a leader.”

    Staley said there won’t be “wholesale changes” to the Rams defense.

    The 3-4 scheme will remain, and the transition sounds a lot like the one he made at the beginning of his coaching career.

    “The roles and responsibilities of a lot of the guys is going to remain the same, just, schematically, and maybe fundamentally, situationally, there’ll be some some new things for them,” Staley said. “But in terms of the jobs that they’re going to be doing, they’re going to be doing the same job. So I think that gives the players a lot of confidence to know that, ‘Hey, I’m going to be performing the same role. Just maybe a little bit different.'”

    #111432
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    Khalil Mack’s ‘After-School Tutor’ Has Helped With the Learning Curve in Chicago
    Khalil Mack has put in extra work with outside linebackers coach Brandon Staley to get up to speed in Chicago

    SEP 14, 2018

    https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/09/14/khalil-mack-chicago-bears-after-school-tutor

    LAKE FOREST, Ill.— Eddie Jackson filed out of the defensive meeting room after the full-team post-practice meeting, the last event of the day on the team’s in-season weekly schedule. It was quitting time, around 5:30 p.m., so Jackson, the second-year safety, headed toward the front entrance of the facility with most of his teammates. Halfway down the hall, he noticed one player separate from the group and duck into a position room.

    Curious, Jackson glanced inside the position room door that read OUTSIDE LINEBACKERS in block-style capital letters. It was new arrival Khalil Mack sitting down to watch film with outside linebackers coach Brandon Staley. They both settled into their chairs, looking like they planned to be there for a good, long while.

    When Mack’s trade and contract extension with the Bears was finalized, he had exactly seven days before the season opener in Green Bay. Just a week to learn Vic Fangio’s 3-4 defense and Chicago’s game plan for the Packers. But in his debut as a Bear, Mack looked all caught up on his summer reading, despite cramming an entire playbook in a week. He sacked backup quarterback Deshone Kizer and forced a fumble, returned an interception for a touchdown and provided an assist on rookie Roquan Smith’s first sack. Mack was the first player since 1982 to record a sack, an interception, a touchdown, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery all in one half. And even though the Bears fell to the Packers in dramatic fashion, Mack nearly chased down Randall Cobb on his runaway, game-winning 75-yard touchdown.

    Mack is an incredibly gifted athlete, but the early and late hours he spent in the outside linebackers room with just Staley also played a part in his dominant debut. “This is a whirlwind for this guy,” Staley said Monday afternoon. “He’s left everything he has known, coming to a brand new city and meeting all these new people. And for him to be able to perform like he did each day last week—it wasn’t just Sunday night, it was a culmination of a great week of preparation and he deserves a lot of credit.”

    Mack’s week began when he flew to Chicago from New York City, where he’d been visiting his agent, on the Saturday night the deal was finalized. The overachiever didn’t have his playbook to study on the flight to Chicago, but once he touched down, he didn’t waste much time getting his hands on it. “I don’t know if I can say that,” Mack said coyly, not wanting to give away anything about his new team. “But I got it after I landed. I got it as soon as I landed and got to the hotel.”

    The sessions with Staley started right after Mack spent his first night at a Chicagoland hotel with his iPad playbook nearby. Halfway through his first week of practice, Mack referred to Staley as his “after school tutor.” The two met each morning around 6 a.m. and again after meetings were done for the day, from around 5:30 until 10 p.m. “The guy still had to get some sleep,” Staley conceded.

    Staley made a conscious effort to contain his excitement and not rush through any part of the teaching process. “We just really wanted to be purposeful in not skipping any steps,” he said. “You can jump ahead really easily and try and get too far ahead of yourself. We really wanted to build a foundation and get to know each other first and then get to know us on defense.”

    They started with technique and by going over how Staley wants his outside linebackers to play. Some things are still a work in progress, like Mack playing with his hand down during some of his snaps on Sunday. Staley mentioned he’d prefer Mack to play up, rather than down, but switching between the two shows how versatile he is. “He had his hand down, I know he can play hand up, hand down, either side,” Staley said. “That’s the great thing about him and what was neat is he really has adapted in seven days to the way we want to play.”

    Next, they learned Fangio’s scheme, and mastered all the base calls so that Mack would have a foundation to guide his assignments for the different looks he might see out of the Packers offense. Staley built on this day-by-day and added in the situational standpoint, the defense as it related to the game plan for Green Bay. A few times, Mack requested to take the studying out of the linebackers room. He and Staley walked through different assignments and techniques at the team’s indoor practice field, the Walter Payton Center. “He wanted to feel it,” Staley said. “He wanted to live it. It’s one thing to watch it on tape and see it in a playbook and its another to go out and move.”

    “Learning the defense so fast, it shows you what type of player he is,” Jackson, the Bears safety, said.” He is always in the meeting room with his position coach by himself. I’m like, okay, yeah, he’s getting his work in. He is fitting in well. You would think he’s been here forever.”

    Mack hasn’t even been in Chicago long enough to move out of the hotel where he’s been staying for almost two weeks. He told The MMQB he’s closing on a house this week, so he’ll be moving soon. About time, he said at his locker on Thursday. He’s getting tired of hotel living.

    Maybe it seems like he’s been here forever because it was clear from Mack’s first practice rep that he wouldn’t need much of a breaking-in period before performing exactly like Bears brass expected when they traded for him. “When he first got here, everyone was anxious to see, ‘Is he going to ease his way into this?’” Staley said. “But his first practice rep, he was shot out of a cannon and you just knew then, that he’s fresh.”

    “His first get-off, it was effortless but it was super fast,” outside linebacker Aaron Lynch said Thursday before the Green Bay game. “So it’s like, yeah, we alright. It’s a done deal. If anybody blocks him, I don’t know who that person is. Nobody should block him. Everybody gets blocked, but no one should block him. Good luck to them.”

    Green Bay’s right tackle Bryan Bulaga was Mack’s regular matchup Sunday night and was asked to solo-block the Bears outside linebacker for the majority of Mack’s 42 snaps. The first half was rough for Bulaga, who had a false start and allowed much of Mack’s damage to occur. After the game, Bulaga said that at halftime, he sat at his locker and visualized all the ways Mack had beaten him in the first half. He decided to change up his technique, varying his set points and his hands to counter Mack. It worked better, but Bulaga was also helped by the quick passing game Rodgers employed in the second half, which was designed to get the ball out before the rush had time to get him.

    After the Packers win, Bulaga was asked if he’d had any fun at all with the challenge of facing off against one of the greatest pass rushers in the league. “Oh yeah,” Bulaga deadpanned. “It was my favorite thing ever.”

    Staley said his favorite thing ever was watching Mack and fellow outside linebacker Leonard Floyd running after Randall Cobb as he headed for the end zone on a short pass from Rodgers that he took all the way to the house. Mack was about six yards behind Cobb when he started running and made up the space to dive at him a yard out from the goal line.

    Jackson said he preferred Mack’s pick-6, where he juked past Green Bay left tackle David Bakthiari on his way to a score. Staley did have one note for him though. “I was a little bit worried about his ball security,” he joked. “We may need to get that cleaned up.” “He was at about the 10 yard line and I saw 17 [Davante Adams] running up and I said, ‘Oh baby, this is going to be close.’ So we will have to work on that a little bit extra in practice.”

    Staley and Mack both agree that their bonus sessions—whether focused on ball security or more pressing matters—will continue for the foreseeable future. There’s still plenty of work to be done. “He’s made it real easy for me, transitioning in,” Mack said. “We will continue to do [the sessions] as time goes on and I get the full grasp of the defense.”

    And for Staley, it’s become more than just a one-sided coach-player relationship.

    “A lot of times when guys come off the field, they may not be exactly sure of what happened out there,” Staley said. “But he is keenly aware of what happened in practice and in a game. He can tell you exactly how a tackle set or he can tell you something about the cadence. I think he is going to be able to help me and our team out that way because he has outstanding field vision.”

    A new narrative was set for the Bears’ 2018 season as soon as the deal for Mack went through. Many interpreted it as a vote of confidence for second-year quarterback Mitchell Trubisky, and as a sign that the front office felt the team had enough pieces to contend and enter win-now mode. But inside the locker room, players think everyone is reading way too much into that angle.

    “Mentally, I don’t think anybody was like, ‘Oh, now they think we can win,’” outside linebacker Aaron Lynch said. “Oh, ‘Now we can win because we got him.’ We knew we could win before we got him, but now he’s just added so much more power.”

    Staley has 11 years of collegiate coaching experience, but he’s just 35 years old and in his second season in the NFL. So he was beyond excited when a talent like Mack fell into his lap so early in his NFL career. He first heard about the trade from his wife, Amy, who had seen the news break online. He joked that Amy is probably the only person who would really know how many hours he and Mack put in last week. When asked about his tutoring hours with Mack, Staley talked openly and energetically. For him, the overtime was not just necessary, it was fun.

    At some point in the blur of last week, Staley remembers head coach Matt Nagy asking him, “So, what do you think of Mack?”

    The outside linebackers coach had just two words to say: “Thank you.”

    #111584
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    MORE OF STALEY TALKS TO LONG:

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    The Rams new defensive coordinator sits down with J.B. Long and shares his thoughts on how this defense has been successful in previous years and how he plans to utilize Aaron Donald and Jalen Ramsey.

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