Miles
Well-known member
- Mar 18, 2019
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When you were a player, what characteristics did you like in your position coaches?
“There were coaches who were stern in their belief. There were coaches who were flexible when they had veteran leadership. To take control of the room, they let veterans have control of the room and they could step aside. But I think the combination of it all, maybe having someone who’s disciplined and someone who’s stern and flexible, because I guess the way coaching is now, you’re going to fall into a lot of different rooms, and there are going to be opportunities when you need to be stern, or maybe you have a young core or maybe a group where you have some veteran leadership and you can allow it to be a little bit flexible once you hear your message being delivered through those guys. I think it takes an open coach to understand that, ‘Yeah, I have my principles, and how can I still get my principles addressed and get them across to those guys?’ But I think it’s first letting them know where you stand and then understand what you do have in your rooms. I took it all. I enjoyed it all, having those different coaches in my room, and I try to do the same in evaluating where my room is at and what needs to be done. Do I need to be more stern? Do I need to be more flexible? It’s just having a balance of both, I believe.”
What’s it been like working with Head Coach Vic Fangio and what have you been able to learn from him?
“Honestly, I feel like a little kid, just learning from Day 1. Everything that he says I’m just trying to absorb. It gives me opportunities to absorb and understand that there’s a different way of doing things, not just the way I’ve been exposed to. It’s a constant growth. If you see his defenses from San Fran to Chicago, it’s always a new element that they’re adding. He can kind of take you back through those archives and [how] things have evolved. I think in this game, you need to continue to evolve, so I’m a sponge in there. I’m really quiet and to myself, just trying to take in everything, because I know it’s a lot of knowledge of the defensive part of the game.”
As a former defensive back, what is it you admire most about your two most veteran players in Chris Harris Jr. and Kareem Jackson?
“They’ve been battle-tested. They’re great leaders in the room for those young guys. They’ve been a part of groups where they’ve been the young guy and they saw others showing leadership, and they’re able to reciprocate that and give it back to those guys. They’re pros at what they do: They’re locked in in meetings, they’re detailed, there’s a lot of questions. So, they’re preparing themselves even by asking the questions to take their games to the next level. It’s a constant with that, and they’re hoping that the young guys sense that, feel that and are able to put some of that in their game.”
You have some history with Alabama Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban. You played for him at Michigan State and more recently were able to observe his practices. How’s he changed over the years?
“To me, I told some of the guys he’s lightened up a little bit. I can remember walkthroughs where we weren’t even allowed to say a word if weren’t in the play. I was kind of in shock and awe when I went back to Bama and could hear guys kind of talking while the walkthroughs were going on. But that’s all a part of it. That’s part of evolving, too, and learning that it’s just a different generation, and you have to be able to adapt to those things as well. But as far as on the field, he’s the same guy. I probably can jump back in there and jump right into the same terminology, same drills and have an understanding of what he’s doing. And it’s worked over the years. The one thing he will do is he’ll definitely tweak and adjust, but he’ll keep his basic core the same. And that’s what you like about him. You know what you’re getting all the time. It’s not going to be one year something totally different, then the next year it switches. He’s stern and he’s the same in that aspect, but he does evolve as the game evolves, with the change from being two-back pro [formations] when I played to now RPOs [run-pass options]. He’s still able to adapt, and the thing you like about his system is that it is adaptable to the change in football.”