Q. So much of special teams is guys who show in preseason games that they really want to be a part of it, that they are committed to it. How do you replicate that, learning that about them without the preseason games?
DAVE FIPP: Yeah, I would say that's definitely a challenge. Those preseason games have been great for us in the past. You know, there's a handful of things that are good, one good thing is everybody's under the same restrictions, so nobody has those, and then Coach Pederson has done an outstanding job of really setting up the practice schedule and the structure so we can get a lot of competitive drills in there.
We try to make it as game like as possible. Obviously we're not going to get it to be exactly like a game but we try to set up drills in the best way we can where it's competitive but maybe there's not 11 guys on the field. Maybe there's 8 or something like that or there's 4 instead of 11 and we can kind of take some of the space out of the drills and some stuff like that, so we are working hard to make it as competitive as possible and simulate game like conditions without actually having those games.
Q. Last time we got to talk to you, nobody brought up the specialist. What luxury is it to have guys that are so entrenched that you're not really that worried about it?
DAVE FIPP: Yeah, it's great to have those three guys here, and I would say the best thing about all three of them is just how much they love their craft. They are really serious about what they do. They had a terrific off-season. Those guys got together all the time. I would say those guys came into training camp here in great shape and in great form, really. So it's definitely nice having veteran players there, especially this year obviously. But just like anybody, those guys are still working hard to continue to improve, and there's areas in their game where they can work on. But like I say, the best part about them is just how serious they are about it, so they really do all that stuff on their own. You don't have to worry about them nearly as much.
Q. We have seen Jalen Reagor do punt return stuff and he's boggled a few catches, is that something you're worried about at all?
DAVE FIPP: I'm not worried with him. We're excited about him. He's going to have some ups and downs like any other player in this league. Right now he's doing a great job, getting settled in back there. Feel really good about him. He's an explosive player, so we are highly encouraged.
Q. On that topic, you've used several guys returning so far. What will you be looking at to figure out who is your guy? If Reagor has a big role in the offense, he doesn't get to return? What are you looking at?
DAVE FIPP: I would say probably all of the above. I mean, first part of it is just the roster makeup in general. Obviously we have limitations on the number of players on the active roster, the number of players active on game day. So a guy has to fit into the roster high enough that he's going to be around on game day. If he's an exceptional returner, then I think maybe he would be there for his return skills only but I would say most of the time it's either a combination of offense and defensive play, as well as return skills. So I would say there's a lot of variables to that. It is definitely without the preseason games that, was always a nice opportunity to get players who might have been further down the roster an opportunity just to return.
Maybe if he was just a returner only and exceptional in that area, he might have gotten a chance to prove himself. You know, it's just something we've got to work through.
The other challenge you have is for us right now, you only have so many punts coming off the punter's foot and you can take a JUGS machine and try to simulate it the best you can, but it's really not perfect.
And then you've got to prioritize who is going to get those reps off the punter's foot. We try to pair that down and obviously Jalen has got a bunch of that work and Greg Ward, DeSean Jackson has got a little bit of it there. I would say it's difficult to evaluate every player. The one thing Coach Pederson does do a good job of is he has a specialist period before practice starts. So we do get a chance to shoot the JUGS to a lot of different guys back there, and those guys get an opportunity to work their return game in that, and then they also get a chance in practice to work on holding up guys or rushing punts or doing the other ten jobs on the field other than the returner.
Q. When it comes to the punt coverage and the kickoff coverage teams, have there been any of the new guys that have stood out so far in training camp?
DAVE FIPP: I would say any guy in particular, it's hard for me to name in particulars, but I would tell you this that I'm really excited about this group of young players. We've had a bunch of young guys come in here and they are all really competitive. Our young group of players I feel like is really pushing the top group, and it really making us better collectively. In my time here I would say our best units are always when that bottom group has really driven and pushed that top group and those guys compete and make each other better.
The other thing about that is half the time in those seasons, at the beginning of the year, some of those guys are not on the roster but, by the end of the year because of injuries and things that happen throughout the course of the year and then they end up playing for us. So I'm excited about the group overall.
Q. There was such a big emphasis in the off-season of getting faster and speedier. Have you noticed that? Has that manifested itself on the field?
DAVE FIPP: Yeah, absolutely. I would say definitely. We definitely look faster out there. We've got a lot of speed. You need speed and good football players but would he have got a bunch of guys that can do both of that. We are really excited about it. You see it on the practice field. It's been encouraging and the other thing along those lines, so many of our plays on special teams are just wide area plays. They are long field plays where there's 20, 30 yard zones where you're not being touched, for example on kickoff, you run 30 yards before anyone is even by you. These guys on special teams plays end up getting to a top speed more often probably than you would on any offense or defensive play, and I would say it's definitely shown up for us.
Q. In preparation for potential worst-case scenarios with regard to COVID down the line, have you had to change your approach at all? Have you had to expand the reps to guys that you might not ordinarily give reps to in case you need them down the line? Has anything changed for you in that respect?
DAVE FIPP: Not a ton because you're kind of preparing for a lot of this stuff on any given year, who is the backup snapper, who is going to be the third one after that. But we have given some of those guys a few more reps than we normally would, and then I would say the other thing that we are starting to do is shift guys around positionally. So for example, on kickoff return, maybe a guy was playing a frontline position, and then recently we moved him to like a back end position and some of it's just contingency planning or preparing them for an emergency in the course of the year.
So we are trying to get some of that stuff under our belt now, so if we have to make a change in the middle of the season, it's not the first time a guy has ever played that position back there.
It's definitely difficult. You only have so many reps and so much time to get it all done and you're trying to figure out a lot of things right now, but yeah, we're going through that, also.
Q. How much has that shown on teams --
DAVE FIPP: If he's chasing somebody, he closes the field really fast. And he's a great guy. He's working really hard. The game's important to him. He puts a lot of time into it. He wants to be a really good player. He's like a lot of these guys. He has a lot to learn, especially in our world on special teams, he has not played quite as much of that stuff in his past. You guys all know his history in the game anyway but he's an exciting player. I think his upside in the future is really bright.
Q. Nate has been a core special teams guy for you the past few years, took the most snaps of any players last year in. Practice he's been an every-down linebacker. Are you still anticipating him being part of the group?
DAVE FIPP: Good question. I thought you were going to tell me in practice he has not taken that many reps in practice on special teams because he hasn't -- because right now he has taken a lot more reps on defense.
That being said, obviously also you mentioned the fact that he's got a lot of experience for us, so he's a guy for us that we could put into a bunch of different spots at any time. He's also a really good long snapper for us, so we've practiced him a little bit more in that area, so that's been good for him. But yeah, we'll just see how it plays out on defense. That's kind of everybody's position this time of year. In my shoes, you're kind of waiting for the top end of the thing to sort itself out and then as it sorts itself out, you can make a little bit more sense of exactly the pieces that we're going to get to work with a little bit more.
Like I've always told you, we are always trying to balance a guy's load on game day, if he's playing a lot of defense, maybe he can't play quite as much on teams or vice versa. So we'll just see how that all shakes out. We try to kind of get everybody in position, so when the top falls, then our stuff falls in line, too.
Q. How much do you grind the tape on the special teams snaps of these rookies from when they were in college and how much you balance that versus what you see from them in practice, a guy like Dante Olson, who was a very good special teams player in college?
DAVE FIPP: Yeah, I would say it's interesting you say that. We watch everything going in, or before we get them, and then there's even times where you go back and you say, hey, like now that we've seen them, this is kind what have we're thinking. But let me double-check that with his college film and see, you know, does that show up in his college film, too. Did I see that the first time right? And you kind of double-check with games, especially because like you guys are all saying, we don't have those preseason games. Maybe in a normal year, you go off more of -- I know I've seen him with us and under what we're asking him to do, I would say maybe for me this year, maybe going back a little bit more to that college stuff and does that match up with what he's done in the past.
Now that being said, you're also trying to give these guys kind of a clean slate. So you want to bring a guy in here, teach them what you're teaming them and not hold what he did in college against him necessarily. I would say it's a balance of both, but I would definitely tell you that I've looked back at the college film this year more than normal.
Q. I wanted to ask you about having Sproles around and how helpful that is with respect to training Reagor to handle that job?
DAVE FIPP: I would say with Darren here, it's great. Obviously you guys all know my relationship with Darren. I love him. He's obviously an unbelievable player but he's just really just an unbelievable resource for this whole organization. I mean, the guy played back there for a long, long time. He's got a lot of experience. Obviously him talking to Jalen really is -- means a lot more than me talking to him because of all his experience and all that stuff. So not to mention, I'm sure Jalen has a healthy amount of respect for obviously what the guy accomplished in this league.
But Darren is just such a great guy and a great resource, and you know, obviously I'm thrilled to have him around.
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