Archer on Brandon Carr

dbair1967

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Brandon Carr is quick on his feet

Cowboys cornerback's key to success is using his lower-body strength first


OXNARD, Calif. -- It all starts with Brandon Carr's feet.

Look at him at the line of scrimmage, leaning forward on the balls of his feet, staring into the wide receiver's midsection. When the receiver moves, he moves. The receiver moves left, Carr shuffles right, but not without shoving his right arm into his opponent's jersey numbers to slow down any progress.

"It's like basketball," Carr said. "You've got to be in front of the player and use your feet first, then the hands follow. People think being a press corner is just being physical up top, trying to dominate the receiver. You've got to be smart and use your feet first."

Press corner has been a term thrown around Cowboys' training camp the way Jerry Jones threw millions at a stadium in Arlington about to open its fourth season.

The Cowboys signed Carr to a five-year, $50.1 million deal as a free agent from Kansas City in March because of his ability to press. At 6 feet, 210 pounds, he has the perfect build to be a press corner: long arms, good strength and the ability to get a receiver off the spot.

Defensive coordinator Rob Ryan doesn't want corners to play soft. How many times did you wonder why Terence Newman played so far off the line of scrimmage? Ryan wants them at the line most of the time, in the receiver's face, willing to fight.

With Carr and first-round pick Morris Claiborne, Ryan has more of the corners he wants. When healthy, he has a third in Mike Jenkins, who also plays best in press coverage.


"You've got to strike in the middle of the bow," Carr said, "but it's footwork, then the hands are second. You don't always have to get a good jam on a person with your hands. You can always get yourself in position with your body and with your feet and that can be just as good as a good jam."

The receivers have noticed.

"You better have your moves ready and definitely get a bench press or two in that day because he's quite the strong guy," Kevin Ogletree said.

Press corners have to have the mental makeup to succeed, as well. Some almost look down at Cover 2 corners because they believe playing off the line of scrimmage is a sign of weakness.

"I don't know what makes them, because if I did I'd make one every year," secondary coach Jerome Henderson said of press corners. "I'd make four of them every year and just throw them out there. I know from my experience, press corners are usually very confident -- extremely confident -- because it takes a lot of confidence to go down there and know, 'I've got this guy by myself and I still have to go down there and play with good technique and discipline, and I'm not afraid.' They usually challenge a lot. They're not afraid to be in that position."

Carr names Darrelle Revis, Champ Bailey and Nnamdi Asomugha as the best press corners in the game today, but showed his confidence when answering the question.

"Why can't I name myself?" he said with a smile.

Press corners can make quarterbacks excited at times because they know the coverage. Those with big arms believe they can fit a throw into the tiniest of spaces. But press corners can also get into the head of a quarterback -- or receiver.

Jason Garrett remembers many unsuccessful two-minute drills against Deion Sanders as Troy Aikman's backup in his playing days.

"The cornerback better be good enough to play press, because it's a great opportunity," Garrett said. "They leave you by yourself. If it's a good matchup there, the quarterback is salivating. If it's Deion Sanders, one of the elite guys, that press coverage is no picnic."

The Cowboys do not believe Carr will be a picnic either.

In a division with Jeremy Maclin and DeSean Jackson in Philadelphia, Hakeem Nicks and Victor Cruz with the New York Giants and Washington's Pierre Garcon and Josh Morgan, Carr knows he has to be ready.

"It's all a mind game out there," Carr said. "I know this year is going to be a big challenge going against some of the top receivers in the division and the whole NFL. I've got my work cut out for me, but I'm up for the challenge."
 

superpunk

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He's been better than I thought he would be. Excited to see how he does Saturday. SD has alot of big receivers, and Rivers is good, it will be fun to see him get challenged see if he's up to it.
 
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Yea of course Garrett uses Dion Sanders (a rare talent) as the example of someone that would be problematic. Why you are throwing to Revis and Bailey late in the 4th quarter, dumbass. Carr is one of those corners you best not fuck with no matter the coverage.
 

dbair1967

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Yea of course Garrett uses Dion Sanders (a rare talent) as the example of someone that would be problematic. Why you are throwing to Revis and Bailey late in the 4th quarter, dumbass. Carr is one of those corners you best not fuck with no matter the coverage.

Garrett didnt throw those passes, nor did he push the "X" or "O" button on his Playstation control and instruct the QB who did to throw them there.
 
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Garrett didnt throw those passes, nor did he push the "X" or "O" button on his Playstation control and instruct the QB who did to throw them there.

I forget, you tend to take things completely literal. I’ll rephrase, you retard,

“Why does your offensive philosophy and game plan include attacking the games best corners late when the game is on the line?”
 

dbair1967

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I forget, you tend to take things completely literal. I’ll rephrase, you retard,

“Why does your offensive philosophy and game plan include attacking the games best corners late when the game is on the line?”

So WTF? We see that guy lined up on one side is our guy lined up there just supposed to fall down and not run a route? "Oh shit, Revis is there, I better not even run down the field because Romo might think he should throw to me"

You still run the damn routes. Its up to the QB to decide where to go with the ball.
 

ThoughtExperiment

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I forget, you tend to take things completely literal. I’ll rephrase, you retard,

“Why does your offensive philosophy and game plan include attacking the games best corners late when the game is on the line?”

Don't forget 4th and goal, let's go to Sam Hurd against Champ Bailey -- twice. Seems like a winning plan.
 

superpunk

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I think you should have the confidence in Romo/Dez to go after any corner in the NFL at any time.
 

dbair1967

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Don't forget 4th and goal, let's go to Sam Hurd against Champ Bailey -- twice. Seems like a winning plan.

Garrett- "Hey Romo, no matter how open somebody else is, if Hurd is matched on Champ Bailey you throw the damn ball to him"

Yeah, thats how it went down.
 
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In the recent preseason game against the Raiders, Dez had one of those over-the-shoulder catches. It was a flawless play.

So much so, that commentators proclaimed "there is no way to defend that." And those commentators were correct.

That's the issue that I have with the CB position in today's NFL. Under today's rules, there are no shut down corners. In the pass heavy NFL, today's rules favor WRs. Even the greatest CBs are not able to effectively defend very well executed passing plays. Current pass interference rules place CBs under a significant disadvantage. When the QB and WR do their jobs, the CB can't do his.

Although having a subpar CB makes you highly vulnerable, I don't believe that a great CB provides much of an advantage over a somewhat-above-average CB in today's game.

Deion Sanders playing under today's rules wouldn't have as big an impact as he had under the 1900's rules.

I'm glad that Carr is playing very well, but I firmly believe that it is better to have a top flight WR and a somewhat above average CB than a somewhat above average WR and a top flight CB.

I also believe that the top flight CBs cost more than they are worth ... that it is possible to get more difference making bang for you buck in other positions.
 
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