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Jul 19 2013 03:15pm
It's nice having the best WR coach in the Business. B)

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No slack for Cecil Shorts as Jaguars receivers prepare for camp

Posted: July 18, 2013 - 11:31pm  |  Updated: July 18, 2013 - 11:33pm

By Ryan O'Halloran

Jaguars receivers coach Jerry Sullivan wasted no time telling star pupil Cecil Shorts that 2012 is over.

“Right off the bat — first day of OTAs,” Sullivan said. “I told him, ‘Look back at last year when you’re 50. You have to pick up where you left off and go from there.’ ”

Shorts was one of the Jaguars’ few offensive bright spots last year, emerging from role player to a downfield threat who caught 55 catches for 979 yards and seven touchdowns. If it weren’t for two concussions, he would have eclipsed 1,000 yards. That’s the next goal.

Although only 25 years old and entering his third season, Shorts has assumed a leadership role among the receivers. He has the production (55 catches, 979 yards, seven touchdowns), personality (vocal) and want-to (not letting up).

Only Shorts and Justin Blackmon remain from last year’s Week 1 53-man roster.

Blackmon is entrenched as a starter but will serve a four-game suspension by the NFL to start the regular season, opening the door for newcomers Mohamed Massaquoi and Ace Sanders and returnees Jordan Shipley and Mike Brown (if he makes the team) to get additional playing time.

“There will be guys who will have to compete their butts off to make the roster and that’s good,” said Sullivan, entering his 40th year in coaching and second season with the Jaguars.

Blackmon was the only Jaguars receiver to play in all 16 games last year. But in addition to his suspension for violating the league’s substance abuse policy, he also had groin surgery in late June.

If Blackmon is healthy, Sullivan said he will get “some work” in preseason games.

“Justin understands more about being in condition, and I think that was the difference last year between early and late in the season. And he had a better understanding that the NFL is a big-boy league,” Sullivan said.

Massaquoi signed in April after spending four mostly nondescript years in Cleveland. He will enter camp as the leading candidate to start in Blackmon’s absence.

“I think [Massaquoi] started off slow and understanding what we wanted from him technique-wise and the level of consistency we wanted,” Sullivan said. “He got better at times but he needs to understand the urgency — it’s not two good plays and then [nothing] on the third play. My expectations for him were bigger than his own expectations, and we had a discussion about that.”

If Massaquoi is a productive No. 2 and then No. 3 receiver, that could take some attention away from Shorts and Blackmon and also open up some room outside for Sanders and inside for Shipley and Jeremy Ebert.

Of the 5-foot-7 Sanders, Sullivan said: “Once he started practicing for us, he did a nice job — he plays a lot bigger than he is and has good instincts.”

Shipley caught 23 passes after signing with the Jaguars last November.

A sleeper candidate is Ebert, who was signed May 22 after he was released by New England and cleared waivers. The Jaguars started working him in the slot and outside.

“I like the kid,” Sullivan said. “He has a usefulness and spunk about him. He was with Wes Welker last year in New England and that was a great thing for Jeremy, to see what kind of trooper Wes is.”

Brown, who was promoted from the practice squad late last year, drew offseason praise from coach Gus Bradley and among the final four receivers on the roster — Toney Clemons, Taylor Price, Jamal Miles and Tobais Palmer — the most intriguing is Palmer.

“He’s savvy, has good downfield speed, toughness and might be a heck of a kickoff return guy,” Sullivan said.


Read more at Jacksonville.com: http://jacksonville.com/sports/football/jaguars/2013-07-18/story/no-slack-cecil-shorts-jaguars-receivers-prepare-camp#ixzz2ZWoe7Mke
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Jul 19 2013 03:19pm
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Jul 19 2013 05:46pm
Quote (draino @ Jul 19 2013 02:19pm)
http://i.imgur.com/NJbRjLZ.png


I don't see Trufant as one of the starting outside Corners. I could see him possibly starting in the Nickle over Harris though. I also don't see Pasztor starting at LG. Rackley is back off IR and should take back his spot at LG no problem.

Poz is obvious at MLB. Allen is solid and will probably start as well. I personally would rather see Julian Stanford as one of the starting LBs. There's a great article out there about him. I'll see if I can find it, but I wouldn't sleep on the kid. He flashed at times last year for being an UDFA rookie. This will be his 2nd year.
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Jul 19 2013 05:59pm
"why would we draft a RT that high?"
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Jul 19 2013 06:02pm
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Former Wagner College football player Julian Stanford seeks perfection with Jacksonville Jaguars

By Cormac Gordon
on July 11, 2013 at 6:12 AM, updated July 11, 2013 at 6:13 AM

Julian Stanford is a perfectionist.

Not just about football, either.

“Chess, bowling, you name it,” the second-year Jacksonville Jaguar linebacker said the other day following another marathon conditioning session at Wagner College. “I like working at things and getting better; it’s just my nature.”

Good thing, too.

How else would a 2012 undrafted free agent out of a way-below-the-radar football program like Wagner’s be currently in the hunt for a starting outside linebacker job in the NFL?

It’s not something that happens every day, after all.

The last Seahawk alum to build a successful pro career was future Eagles and Jets head coach Rich Kotite, who was a six-year backup tight end with the Giants and Steelers. That was almost a half-century ago.

Stanford is already on the way, with his rookie season as a sometime starter for the struggling Jags now in the rearview mirror.

A rookie’s personal assessment of his first year in the league?

MADE SOME MISTAKES

“I was OK,” he said. “But I made some mistakes.”

Still, the career arc is pretty impressive.

In early 2010, Stanford was a 200-pound college sophomore who didn’t look like anything even remotely resembling an NFL linebacker. The Connecticut product was a 6-footer with a 31-inch vertical leap. He could squat 470 pounds and run an OK time in the 40-yard dash.

He was athletic, even explosive; interesting at the Wagner level, and perhaps even a little better than that. But this was no prototype new-age NFL linebacker of the Aldon Smith or Von Miller mold hiding out in Seahawk green.

“Everything Julian has he worked for,” Wagner strength and conditioning coach Brandon Beach was saying Wednesday of his prize pupil, who is working out on campus before Jacksonville’s camp opens on July 22.

“It’s all him. He wasn’t gifted in the way some kids are. He’s a grinder who built himself into who he is today.”

Stanford’s evolution was a process. First came an internal sense of awareness.

“I started telling myself that playing football is what I really wanted to do,” he said during a chat in the Hall of Fame room at Wagner’s Spiro Sports Center. Once he came to that conclusion, the perfectionist attitude kicked in.

Stanford became just short of obsessed with conditioning and strength work, with building speed and muscle at the same time.

Pretty soon, a positive cycle emerged.

“The more I worked, the more gains I made,” he said. “That made me even more committed.”

He’d put on close to 30 pounds without losing a step.

In fact, he got quicker.

"I definitely feel better from a mental standpoint going into this year. I know a lot more about the game at this level ..." -- Julian Stanford


Pretty soon you could pick Stanford out as special, even in a room of other college players. He was a physical specimen by the time his junior season was ending, and a handful of NFL scouts had already begun checking the Wagner football schedule.

The significance of that interest wasn’t lost on someone like Stanford.

“I started thinking that maybe playing in the NFL was a realistic possibility, and that motivated me even more,” he said.

Of course, anyone trying to climb a hill this high needed all the help they could find. And there was something else about Stanford that was attractive to the interested NFL teams.

Simply put, he is smart, likable, and naturally persistent.

“He believed in doing what it took,” said Beach. “He’d stay at school during breaks to work out, no taking off or complaining.”

He showed up at the Jags’ camp last summer a man on a mission.

“I told myself that this was make or break,” he said. “I was just trying to give it my all, and thinking that the cards are going to fall however they fall.”

He received encouragement through the process from Jaguars linebacker coach Mark Duffner.

“He told me that the reason he brought me in was that he really believed I could make the team,” said Stanford. “He helped me to get comfortable.”

WAITED FOR WORD

On the day of final cuts he sat in his hotel room alone.

“I didn’t know what to expect,” Stanford said. “It was unbelievably stressful.”

He didn’t hear from the Jags until Duffner called a day later.

“Congratulations,” was the message.

Today Stanford is almost 240 pounds of absolute gristle and steel.

He squats 700 pounds, and has a 40-inch vertical leap to help make up for the three or four inches he gives away to the Smiths and Millers.


And he’s heading back to Jacksonville with the goal of beating out free-agent signee Geno Hayes and whoever else is interested in starting at strongside linebacker for the Jaguars.

“I definitely feel better from a mental standpoint going into this year,” said the proverbial long-shot. “I know a lot more about the game at this level, about the speed and the size.”

That doesn’t mean he’ll be taking anything for granted.

“I treat every day as if it could be my last,” Stanford said. “I’m on edge all the time.”

It’s the only way for a perfectionist to feel.

http://www.silive.com/sports/advance/gordon/index.ssf/2013/07/former_wagner_college_football.html


That's the article I was talking about. I highlighted a couple same things for you lazy bitches who cant take 2 minutes to read the whole thing. However, I recommend taking the 2 minutes, because it is a very good article.

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Jul 19 2013 06:04pm
Quote (HEIDTB @ Jul 19 2013 04:59pm)
"why would we draft a RT that high?"


Best player in the draft who should of never been on the board at #2. Easy choice.
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Jul 19 2013 06:08pm
Quote (Hako @ Jul 20 2013 12:04am)
Best player in the draft who should of never been on the board at #2. Easy choice.


backpeddling harder than DM

thank god you have a HOFer
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Jul 19 2013 06:09pm
Quote (HEIDTB @ Jul 19 2013 05:08pm)
backpeddling harder than DM

thank god you have a HOFer


How is it a back pedal when I said they would take him months before the draft?
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Jul 19 2013 06:10pm
Quote (Hako @ Jul 20 2013 12:09am)
How is it a back pedal when I said they would take him months before the draft?


not sure if srs, i said before that the jags should take jockel and you said why would we take a RT that high
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Jul 19 2013 06:12pm
Quote (HEIDTB @ Jul 19 2013 05:10pm)
not sure if srs, i said before that the jags should take jockel and you said why would we take a RT that high


feel free to search my posts, because I said we will draft either of the OTs, Ziggy or Jordan. Those were the only legit options for this team to take.
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