There are cliches in soccer identical to in life. When Kansas Metropolis Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo has a long-limbed, rock-solid defensive finish in his lineup, that’s a “Spags defensive end” to many soccer followers.
At this level in Spags’ 17-year profession as an NFL coordinator or head coach, that appears like an overblown narrative, and the defensive mastermind echoed that sentiment throughout his press convention after Wednesday’s minicamp follow.
“I like to think I just like good football players; they don’t all come in one molded size,” Spagnuolo mentioned after questioning the stereotype.
The reporter talked about that “mold” for defensive ends in reference to this 12 months’s second-round decide, edge rusher R Mason Thomas.
“We’ve had really tall… and we’ve had the other kind too,” Spagsnuolo acknowledged. “R Mason is not the tall, long guy.”
At 6 ft 2 inches tall and 241 kilos, Thomas doesn’t meet the cliche, however he isn’t dissimilar from former gamers coached by Spagnuolo or defensive position coach Joe Cullen. In his personal press convention on Wednesday, Cullen made two historic comparisons to emphasise Thomas’s distinctive expertise.
“He has a unique ability,” Cullen began. “Way back, when I first got in the league, we had Cliff Avril. We had Frank [Clark] my first year here… guys that can bend and get in Gumby-like positions and still be running full speed, he has that ability.”
DENVER, CO – OCTOBER 17: Joe Flacco #5 of the Denver Broncos scrambles earlier than being sacked by Frank Clark #55 of the Kansas Metropolis Chiefs within the third quarter at Empower Discipline at Mile Excessive on October 17, 2019 in Denver, Colorado. (Picture by Dustin Bradford/Getty Photographs) Getty Photographs
With that uncommon flexibility for a Chiefs defensive finish, it isn’t the ability that Spagnuolo highlighted when reflecting on the pre-draft analysis of the group and common supervisor Brett Veach.
“The thing that stuck out to Brett and myself, all the scouts, was his get-off,” Spagnuolo mentioned. “He’s got a little bit of juice to him, which I think any defense wants and needs.”
The entrance workplace had a assured analysis of the individual and the participant, due to the hiring of working backs coach DeMarco Murray, who coached on the College of Oklahoma for the whole lot of Thomas’ four-year profession in Norman.
“Anytime we’re grabbing these guys from college, you don’t have insight on what you can’t see on film; I always think it’s a little bit risky,” Spagnuolo admitted. “DeMarco was great with sharing what he thought of R Mason, and it all kind of became true.”
“Ultimately, he’s a team guy,” Murray shared throughout his press convention on Wednesday. “That’s the first and foremost thing that’s important now more than ever, when you’re dealing with college and NIL… having spent the last four years with R Mason, I had a really good understanding of who he was as a person, a player, and went up against him every single day, competed against him at a high level, team captain.… just a great character guy.”
“Understanding that, once I got here, character is everything from top to bottom,” Murray went on. “I knew he would fit right into the locker room. It wasn’t a lot of selling on my end… he’s a great kid, really, really good effort and a tremendous talent.”
The fortieth decide on this 12 months’s draft is a novel participant in Kansas Metropolis, and that has clearly made him stand out to many members of the teaching workers and entrance workplace.
