Mini-Camp, Day 3 -- School's out
First bit of business today is to answer Alex's comment from yesterday -- why is LaVar Arrington at the SAM and Carlos Emmons at the WIL? According to defensive coordinator Tim Lewis, strong-side (SAM) and weak-side (WIL) mean little; the Giants simply want Arrington closer to the opposing quarterback, and that means on the line of scrimmage, where the Giants' scheme sometimes has the SAM line up.
Since today was also one of our three days of access to Tom Coughlin's assistants, it was good to get some insight from Arrington's position coach, LB coach Bill Sheridan. He acknowledged that the Giants haven't had a talent like Arrington and have adjusted their defensive scheme accordingly.
"Tim coaches the personnel we have and calls the game plan according to the players' strengths," Sheridan said. "Because we have LaVar, we're definitely looking at things differently."
That means looking for ways to get Arrington into the backfield and into a QB's grille -- though Sheridan noted that he's been impressed by Arrington's ability in pass coverage as well.
Among the other highlights of assistants' day:
-- Lewis made it clear that a starting CB's job is Corey Webster's to lose. "He's got all the tools," Lewis said, "and now we need to see them." Webster and Sam Madison worked first-unit all five mini-camp workouts. Lewis also wants to see a big jump in poise and leadership from S Gibril Wilson, who will be starting alongside Will Demps.
-- QB coach Kevin Gilbride, who fills notebooks like no one else on this staff, flat out stated that Jared Lorenzen has played his way into the backup QB conversation. "He hasn't earned the job, he's not there yet, but we have to consider him as a possibility," Gilbride said. Lorenzen was the best and most accurate of the five QBs over the first two days, but struggled yesterday morning, getting picked off by Jason Shivers in the 1st-and-goal drill. Still, Coughlin noted Lorenzen's progress too.
-- Coughlin and Gilbride were intrigued by Rob Johnson's progress, and certainly the 33-year-old vet has a leg up because both of those coaches drafted Johnson in Jacksonville. Johnson's arm strength is the key, having been away 20 months since "Tommy John" surgery on his right elbow. "It's probably going to be a last-minute decision until the end of training camp," Gilbride said. That means they're giving Johnson plenty of time to prove himself, which doesn't bode well for incumbent backup Tim Hasselbeck, despite his closeness with Eli Manning.
-- New secondary coach Peter Giunta noted that last year, his fifth and final season as the DBs coach in Kansas City, he had two new veterans, Patrick Surtain and Sammy Knight, with two longtime Chiefs, Greg Wesley and Eric Warfield. "And we got off to a strong start, so you never know how the new faces are going to mix in," he said of his new secondary, which has two new vets (Madison and Demps) and two younger Giants (Wilson and Webster).
Catch of the day in the final workout was made by Jeremy Shockey, who dove across the middle to snare a TD pass from Manning. Shockey was pumped after the catch, pumped in the locker room and certainly pumped to be on a six-week vacation like the rest of his teammates, who are off until they need to show up in Albany on July 27.
Yours truly will be off for a bit too, but if there's Giants news or questions from all 10 of you out there reading, I'll check in.