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D.D. Lewis

#58 / Linebacker / Seattle Seahawks

6-1

241

Jan 08, 1979

Texas

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Seahawks Training Camp Report: 8/4 (AM)

Seahawks Insider is first in with, uh, well...

There is another new player on the field, though this one is an old player. With Chris Gray announcing his retirement (officially he was placed on the IR) -- which must make Ben Claxton feel a bit more secure...

Chris Gray: Ben Claxton, come over here man. Doctors told me I have to retire. Said I have a spine injury; that if I play any more it could lead to paralysis. When they told me Saturday, it hit me like a ton of bricks. Playing football has been my life. Anyway, kid, sounds like you've got a good chance to make the club. That's my spot you're taking. Do me proud.

Ben Claxton: You're debilitating injury makes me feel a bit more secure about my job.

Gray:

Claxton: Sorry about the spine.

Howard Green had another nice play, slipping a block and getting into the backfield to stop Maurice Morris.

I'm not wild about Green, but without Red Bryant, he's the team's best backup 1 tech tackle. That is, assuming nothing from Marcus Tubbs. At 29, and with better quicks than strength, for a right DT anyway, Green could enjoy a late career peak as his strength and speed hit an optimum equilibrium: being strong enough to make his speed count and not having lost enough speed to suffer.

D. D. Lewis quickly showed why Justin Forsett’s size is a liability: After Forsett caught a pass and tried to sprint away from Lewis, Lewis took his jersey with just one arm and flung him to the ground with a look of disdain.

Being tackled by the jersey, even decisively, does not make a player a liability.

I have to say, Jason Babin is having a pretty good training camp. Babin bullrushed Joe Newton on one play and pushed him into the backfield, right into Owen Schmitt, who was coming up to the line for a block. The play fell apart. It is the one concern with Newton: he is a very good receiver but his lower body is too small to sustain blocks. Later, Babin beat Kyle Williams to the quarterback.

In other words, Babin schooled a tight end that can't block and a developmental tackle that's hanging on by his fingernails. As much as I want Babin to produce, this is all but meaningless. Good God I can't wait for Friday.

Talkin Hawks

WORD OF THE DAY
Defense. As in, the pads came back on, and the defense came out pounding.

After two practices in shells and shorts Sunday, the players worked this morning for 1 hour, 45 minutes in full pads – and defensive players were popping theirs, and then popping off.

"Guys were just making plays," Pro Bowl middle linebacker Lofa Tatupu said. "And you get to jawing a little more when you're making plays."

That the defense was doing, to the rumbling displeasure of coach Mike Holmgren – whose practice barometer is an indication of well the offense performs.

Seattle's defense is clearly more talented than its offense. Especially the offense it assembles for practice. Full of holes on the line and largely without its top quarterback. So, though the story has been about how the defense has dominated the offense throughout training camp, it's really no reason to panic. The defense is playing at or near full strength. It should be dominating Seattle's patchwork offense.

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Seahawks Training Camp Report: 7/30 (AM)

Tomorrow I'll be talking about developing story lines from training camp on the Field Gulls podcast.

Seahawks Blog

LB D.D. Lewis made a great play in coverage, breaking up a pass intended for FB David Kirtman, who was coming out of the backfield. Lewis also was part of a big collision involving RB Julius Jones.

Lewis is attempting to fill the Kevin Bentely seen and not heard 4th string linebacker spot. Lewis is 29, a good age for a quick, rangy player. He's put on a little weight since last I saw him. Lewis is the best backup linebacker at coverage, especially with Will Herring indefinitely sidelined, and should be able to man the weakside ably should Leroy Hill miss time.

DT Larry Tripplett got penetration on a couple of plays, including the one that ended with Jones colliding with Lewis. The competition for the No. 5 defensive tackle is one of the hot spots on the roster with Tripplett, Howard Green and Marcus Tubbs part of that mix.

I always saw Triplett as redundant. His quick, disruptive skills are akin to Craig Terrill and both are feast or famine against the run. If you assume Triplett and Terrill are 3 techs, then should Triplett make the roster, he'd be slotted behind Rocky Bernard, Terrill, occasionally Lawrence Jackson and possibly Marcus Tubbs. Seems like a longshot.

Seahawks Insider

The offensive line had a few problems on successive plays, with Julian Peterson getting a sack of #8 if sacks were allowed, then Josh Wilson getting to the QB undeterred on a corner blitz. Wilson did the same thing on the next play and almost got there, slipping around Carlson.

Briefly on Josh Wilson blitzing: Wilson is not fast. Well he is, but he's not that fast. If anyone remember his touchdown return from last season, Wilson was very quickly to the sideline and around the first wave of the cover team, but to get into the endzone he had to dart around and cut back across the field. See, Wilson is incredibly quick, but his speed tops out pretty quick too. But incredibly quick is incredibly valuable, much more so than incredibly fast.

Wilson is not powerful, but he is strong. Against a lineman, he's toast. Against a back or tight end, he's got a shot.

Take those two skills together, fantastic quickness and good strength, and you have a very disruptive corner blitz that's more likely to disrupt than convert a sack. The nice thing, too, is that Wilson's quickness allows him to feign blitz and still recover into a sound short zone.

On a running play in the same sequence, Darryl Tapp completely stonewalled Mo Morris with a big hit. On the next play, Baraka Atkins ran down Morris in the backfield.

Not what you want to hear about Morris, who has a good first gear, good, but suspect vision. Great news to hear about Atkins. Any able defensive end in the NFL should be able to stonewall Morris, but for a guy like Atkins, who is toolsy, raw and played last season kind of lost, to chase down a rusher, a quick rusher, indicates increasing confidence (in his decision making) and better lines to the ball carrier.

Talkin' Hawks

PLAY OF THE DAY
Red Bryant. There were many candidates, but a strong endorsement from veteran guard Mike Wahle gave the honor to the rookie defensive tackle.

"Red made a bunch of plays today," Wahle said. "He really showed up in practice and was consistently making plays on us."

Among those plays was Bryant darting through a gap to get fullback Leonard Weaver in the backfield and using disruptive penetration into the assigned running lane that forced Duckett to bounce a run outside.

The coaches continue to take the "he's got a lot of work to do" tact with Bryant. But the fourth-round draft choice has been at his best in the full-contact drills.

"Red has some power to him, he's got some quicks," Wahle said. "He's somebody we definitely have to account for."

Bryant does have a lot of work to do. Predictably, the very talented Bryant makes a few head-turning plays a practice, but it's all those plays in between that separate his current ability from his potential. The best case scenario is inverted from the option control, weirdly old school tactics of Coach Fran and dedicated to a modern, single gap 4-3, Bryant evolves quickly, showing rapid improvement in skill and effort.
The chances of that are slim. The chances that Bryant succeeds in being a useful, sometimes spectacular player this season, and a very good to great player next season are damn good. Damn good.

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Seahawks Depth Chart: Defense

Defense/Offense

 

Free
Safety
Strong
Safety
Brian
Russell


Mike
Green

Jordan
Babineaux
Deon
Grant


CJ
Wallace

Jordan
Babineaux
Right
Cornerback
Dime
Back
SLB
MLB
WLB
Nickelback
Left
Cornerback
Kelly
Jennings


Josh
Wilson

Jordan
Babineaux
Jordan
Babineaux


Kevin
Hobbs

Rich
Gardner
Julian
Peterson


Leroy
Hill
Lofa
Tatupu


DD
Lewis

Julian
Peterson
Leroy
Hill


Will
Herring

Lance
Laury
Josh
Wilson

Jordan
Babineaux

Kevin
Hobbs
Marcus
Trufant


Kelly
Jennings

Josh
Wilson
Right
DE
Right
DT
Left
DT
Left
DE
Darryl
Tapp

Lawrence
Jackson

Jason
Babin

Brandon
Mebane

Red Bryant

Howard
Green

Chris
Cooper
Rocky
Bernard


Marcus
Tubbs

Craig Terrill

Larry
Tripplett
Patrick
Kerney


Baraka
Atkins

Nu'u
Tafisi

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