Saturday, March 26, 2011
Spring primer: Jarvis Jones
A lot of people may be looking for Jarvis Jones to be the big playmaker on this year’s Georgia defense, to fill that void left by Justin Houston.
Jones, who has still yet to play a down for the Bulldogs, is being careful to avoid any bravado.
“I don’t know, I’m gonna go out there and play my heart out just like everyone,” Jones said after Thursday’s third day of spring practice. “All of us want to make plays. That’s what we’re going to do, we’re going to make plays and we’re going to have fun. I think we’re going to be a dominating defense.”
Jones isn’t actually filling the exact spot vacated by Houston, who left for the NFL after leading the SEC in sacks (10) during the regular season. Houston played the weakside, or “Will” outside linebacker spot in the 3-4 alignment. Cornelius Washington, a rising junior, began the spring with the first-team spot at the Will, but incoming freshman Ray Drew will compete there too.
Jones ends up at the strongside spot, the same one he occupied during his first and only year at Southern California. The Columbus native came off the bench for the Trojans, recording 13 tackles over eight games before a neck injury sidelined him the rest of the way.
After transferring to Georgia, Jones spent last fall in a green non-contact jersey. Jones, who had to sit out anyway per NCAA rules, said his neck was fine even before he left USC.
Once last season ended, the question became where to use Jones. Even though he played outside at USC, Jones admits he felt more natural in the middle. But when defensive coordinator Todd Grantham decided to shift Alec Ogletree from safety to inside linebacker, that put Jones on the outside.
“You’ve still gotta be able to manufacture a pass rush and have guys that make plays at outside backers,” Grantham said after announcing the Ogletree and Jones moves. “And I think what we’ve done is we’ve moved two guys that can make plays closer to the ball. Kind of around the action a bit more. So I’m excited by that.”
Jones is taking a whatever-they-want approach to it all.
“When I came here they told me they wanted me to play outside. Then they moved me to the inside on the scout team. Pretty much I want to be anywhere I can help my team,” he said. “I know I can play inside. Outside I’ve been learning a lot.”
He’s also taking a cautious approach to his own development. When asked about it, he started by saying, “I’ve been doing great,” then amended that.
“Well not great, but I’ve been doing well,” Jones said. “My teammates are really helping me to settle into my position. By moving Tree to middle linebacker it really helped our defense to play fast and be big and strong. So I think it was a great move for us all.”
Jones, who has still yet to play a down for the Bulldogs, is being careful to avoid any bravado.
“I don’t know, I’m gonna go out there and play my heart out just like everyone,” Jones said after Thursday’s third day of spring practice. “All of us want to make plays. That’s what we’re going to do, we’re going to make plays and we’re going to have fun. I think we’re going to be a dominating defense.”
Jones isn’t actually filling the exact spot vacated by Houston, who left for the NFL after leading the SEC in sacks (10) during the regular season. Houston played the weakside, or “Will” outside linebacker spot in the 3-4 alignment. Cornelius Washington, a rising junior, began the spring with the first-team spot at the Will, but incoming freshman Ray Drew will compete there too.
Jones ends up at the strongside spot, the same one he occupied during his first and only year at Southern California. The Columbus native came off the bench for the Trojans, recording 13 tackles over eight games before a neck injury sidelined him the rest of the way.
After transferring to Georgia, Jones spent last fall in a green non-contact jersey. Jones, who had to sit out anyway per NCAA rules, said his neck was fine even before he left USC.
Once last season ended, the question became where to use Jones. Even though he played outside at USC, Jones admits he felt more natural in the middle. But when defensive coordinator Todd Grantham decided to shift Alec Ogletree from safety to inside linebacker, that put Jones on the outside.
“You’ve still gotta be able to manufacture a pass rush and have guys that make plays at outside backers,” Grantham said after announcing the Ogletree and Jones moves. “And I think what we’ve done is we’ve moved two guys that can make plays closer to the ball. Kind of around the action a bit more. So I’m excited by that.”
Jones is taking a whatever-they-want approach to it all.
“When I came here they told me they wanted me to play outside. Then they moved me to the inside on the scout team. Pretty much I want to be anywhere I can help my team,” he said. “I know I can play inside. Outside I’ve been learning a lot.”
He’s also taking a cautious approach to his own development. When asked about it, he started by saying, “I’ve been doing great,” then amended that.
“Well not great, but I’ve been doing well,” Jones said. “My teammates are really helping me to settle into my position. By moving Tree to middle linebacker it really helped our defense to play fast and be big and strong. So I think it was a great move for us all.”
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9 comments:
Seth,
Is it out of the ordinary for a team to move its players around in the off season as much as UGA does? I don't ever hear about other teams constantly making changes, but that probably is because I don't read every possible written word about other teams. So, as someone who has covered other teams, are all these moves normal?
Sam, from my experience it's very normal. Georgia may have actually had less position switches this spring than last year.
Let's hope that Jarvis will get a chance to be his former talent and put the finishing touches to a great story that is sprouting loyalty wings.
Defense has a lot of work to do.
SEC:
9th in sacks
9th in tackles for loss
12th in 3rd down conversion
As much as I want to be optimistic about our team... I see two three glaring problems:
WRs
Secondary
ILBs
I mean, do we really expect to replace Green/Durham with guys that haven't significantly contributed to this point? Also, safety is a huge concern... the guys don't even grasp the defense, yet! And... the ILB spot looks so weak. C-Rob is a great leader and he's great for feel-good quotes... but we are seriously lacking proven talent there. With those three areas such a concern, I really don't see how we can contend w/ the elite teams in the SEC.
*three, not "two three"
Folks, these ball players didn't just fall off the turnip truck..they're players who've had many different contact practices and experienced game action. It's just a new position..a new perspective to the game for them. They will quickly adapt to this and bring a lot of energy to the game. Don't sit on the couch and pontificate on player's abilities when you don't have any idea of what they can or can't do. Go Dawgs, GATA!!!
WR's, Safeties, and ILB's arn't problems. We had all those last season and went 6-7.
Hope Jones lives up to the hype of Seth's story. I don't think he's played a play yet.
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