Special Attention at the Rookie Minicamp

Randy's Radar

Special Attention at the Rookie Minicamp

Published: Sat, May 3, 2008 - 2:18pm EST
Randy Lange

By Randy Lange

Lange is editor-in-chief of newyorkjets.com. He covered the Jets for 13 years for The Record of Hackensack, N.J.


File Under: Eric Mangini, David Harris, James Dearth, Ben Graham, Jeremy Kapinos, Bob Sutton, Bryan Cox, Vernon Gholston, Kevin O'Dea, Dustin Keller, Danny Woodhead

05/03 — The air was a little brisk, in the upper 50s perhaps, for this morning's third practice of the Jets' weekend rookie minicamp, leading to this exchange between defensive coaches:

Bryan Cox: "Bob, you look cold."

Bob Sutton: "It's linemen's weather."

It was also special teams weather, at least for much of the 40 minutes of media availability. And while the Jets' 50 draft picks, undrafted free agents and tryouts worked on offense and defense during other periods of the practice, head coach Eric Mangini definitely wasn't glossing over the specialty work.

"Some of these guys like Vernon Gholston and Dustin Keller are getting work on special teams, which they hadn't been part of over the latter parts of their college careers," Mangini said. "Now it's something they not only have to be aware of but be involved in deeply. It's another rock on the pile."

ST coordinator Kevin O'Dea, who let's remember may be in his first practices as a Jets coach but is starting his 15th NFL season with his sixth team, was right in his element, monitoring the punting, moving players around.

The two punters in this camp are Jeremy Kapinos, who kicked in the Tennessee game last year, and tryout candidate Patrick Fisher from LSU. Their hang times were good, not great, and Kapinos made a nice save of a bounced snap to get off a field-position-saving boot. On another non-contact rush (players are in helmets but no other pads), tryout TE Chris Hopkins appeared to get a nice push, drawing "Blocked punt, blocked punt" from O'Dea.

Mangini said at his noon news conference that Kapinos and incumbent Ben Graham will battle for the job in training camp.

"We're going to look at both of those guys and give them both opportunities to state their case," the head coach said. "They've been working with Kevin, and he has a strong track record with kickers and punters, not just improving established guys but developing younger guys. That's one of the things I liked about Kevin when I interviewed him before I eventually hired him."

Another wrinkle on punt returners was No. 35 putting them away and running upfield. That number is being worn by Danny Woodhead of Chadron State, whom the coach talked about Friday.

Woodhead said the last time he returned punts in game action was in high school, although he did some PR work in practice at his Division II college.

"It's something I've done in the past," Woodhead said. "I'm comfortable catching kickoffs and punts."

Woodhead, an undrafted free agent signing in the minutes after the draft ended last Sunday night, put a nice move on sixth pick of the draft Vernon Gholston. It wasn't really a fair "fight," since it came in the "tackling drills" that Mangini likes, one offensive player vs. one defensive player in a confined area. This one again wasn't live tackling, but contact sometimes occurred, as when undrafted FA Nate Lyles met his man and bumped him to the ground.

Gholston didn't get the chance with Woodhead, who gave him a headfake and then used his 4.38 speed to motor out of harm's way.

And the little we've seen of Marcus Henry, the sixth-round WR from Kansas is, as billed, a big receiving target at 6'3½". Al Pereira, our unparalleled team photographer, took a number of shots from Friday's late workout that are now up on the newyorkjets.com home page, and two of the shots show Henry plucking a high toss like it's low-hanging fruit.

Two Jets we knew of were around the complex the last two days even though veterans are off from their conditioning workouts until next week. Long-snapper James Dearth was briefly out at practice and no doubt eyeballed two tryout snappers, Will Collins of Southern Cal and Nick Jarvis of Wake Forest. And Mangini said that second-year LB David Harris also stopped by Friday.

"David claims he was in for a workout," the coach said, "but I think it was a function of him wanting to be here and not be part of rookie weekend the way he was last year and enjoy the afternoon and see these guys. He appreciates the transition these guys are going through. He seemed a lot happier yesterday than he did a year ago yesterday."

  4/5 : Rate this Post
29 ratings submitted

Fans Respond

Here's your chance to tell Randy what you think! Add a Comment | Show All (44)

Ray Said:

Thu, May 8, 2008 - 3:05am EST

"No offense Richard, but the last thing this team needs is another modern, cheesy new logo. The greatest gift Bill Parcells gave Jets fans besides a team we could be proud of, was the return to the original uniforms. They are classic and timeless and should be left alone. I say this knowing that Woody will no doubt change them when we go into the new stadium."

Offensive Comment?

Tirrell Said:

Mon, May 12, 2008 - 9:17am EST

"Ryan...if you don't know what the Jets and N.Y. have in common you may need to check your fanhood. The owner Woody owns the Gass Company Hess...and when he purchased the team planned the move to shea stadium where the mets play. which is next to laguardia airport..thus the Jets flying over the field. "

Offensive Comment?

Fan Said:

Wed, May 14, 2008 - 1:28pm EST

"Are they out of their minds - guys in the league can't tackle Bush, and Catanese took him down right and left, 13 tackles USC game. Bush, when asked who was the toughest tackler named Catanese. Think intelligence, finished college play a year ago, needs time to get back into drills. Jets aren't taking time to utilize quality talent. Standings reflect a need for change."

Offensive Comment?

Randy's RSS

The fastest way to get Randy's articles. Subscribe now.
Randy's Radar