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Old 12-18-2004   #1
Nors
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Default Ratliff - another miss by our scouts

Getting finer with time
Ratliff's NFL career began slowly, but now he's starting

By Kevin Kelly
Enquirer staff writer


Bengals cornerback Keiwan Ratliff broke up two passes last Sunday against New England.
Enquirer file/Michael E. Keating
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The initial steps were wobbly ones.

No sooner had Keiwan Ratliff ended a five-day contractual holdout - joining the already-in-progress Bengals at training camp - than a hamstring injury held back the rookie.

"To get injured like he did in the third practice ... and then not really be able to participate in the preseason really puts you behind," Bengals coach Marvin Lewis said. "The other guys kind of passed him up, and he wasn't able to hold his own."

So the preseason did not go as the Bengals and Ratliff hoped it might.

The 49th overall draft pick, a gifted cornerback at Florida from 2000-03, played in two of the Bengals' four preseason games.

But that setback seems minor in hindsight.

Thirteen games, and three starts, into the regular season, Bengals coaches are certain Ratliff, 23, is every bit the talent they envisioned on draft day.

"He's gotten healthy and fought through that (hamstring injury) and it's been great," Lewis said. "Obviously we keep expanding his role because of the confidence we have in him."

Ratliff, who Aug. 5 signed a three-year contract with a team option on the fourth year, has started the past two games at left cornerback with Deltha O'Neal inactive because of a nagging ankle injury.

Ratliff also has slipped into the role as the team's primary punt returner the past four games.

"Any time you get a chance to get out there and get experience on the field, it's always better than just studying film and trying to do everything mentally," said Ratliff, who led the Southeastern Conference with nine interceptions as a senior last season. "When you can get out there, physically, I think that will only help you in the long run."

Negotiating the jump to the NFL, even for those from a top-flight college program, can be tricky.

In addition to the Bengals' normal preparations, Ratliff devotes at least 30 minutes two to three times each week for extra film study. He also leans on veteran corners Tory James and O'Neal for their insight and advice.

"They've helped me tremendously," Ratliff said. "They've helped me understand what our opponent's tendencies are."

Knowing an opponent's tendencies allows a corner to react on instincts.

Last Sunday's game against the Patriots displayed that. Ratliff broke up a season-high two passes and finished the game with three tackles.

"He's a great learner," Lewis said.

Ratliff's other role - that of a punt returner - is a more familiar one.

Steve Spurrier and his staff at Florida recruited Ratliff as a wide receiver out of Whitehall-Yearling High in Columbus.

He converted to defense as a true freshman in 2000 but played some receiver as a junior. Three of his 12 career interceptions at Florida he returned for touchdowns.

"He has good hands and good ball skills," Bengals special teams coach Darrin Simmons said. "He fields the ball and reads it as well as anybody."

On Ratliff's nine punt returns this season - eight of which have come in the past four games - he's averaging 13.4 yards per return. The Bengals haven't had a player average that many yards per return since the 2001 season.

Ratliff returned one punt 49 yards against the Browns Nov. 28 that gave the Bengals' offense the ball 19 yards from the end zone.

A 23-yard return on a booming 69-yard punt Sunday was reduced to 18 because of a penalty. The ball went over Ratliff's head, but he managed to get his hands on it.

"He's got good vision and cuts well," Simmons said. "But his biggest asset is his ability to field the ball and field it cleanly.

"When he's had the opportunity, he's made plays."
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Old 12-18-2004   #2
Gaede
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He wasn't a miss really. The Bengals took him very early. No one thought he was going to go that high
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Old 12-18-2004   #3
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I saw him plenty, and hated him since I'm a Vol fan hehe. His workout #'s were'nt good, but his production on the field was.
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Old 12-18-2004   #4
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Ratliff is small. He was a backup behind a real scrub in O'Neal. Not sure I'd consider him a great selection.
But I still don't know what any team saw Thursday night that would have made them comfortable with waiting a round or two for the offensive lineman they wanted. ---Todd McShay
We just converted half our LB to DL. We have a 30m starting DL, it better be pretty friggin good.
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Old 12-18-2004   #5
Nors
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Default I had him very high on my list

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gaede
He wasn't a miss really. The Bengals took him very early. No one thought he was going to go that high
He was the calssic college football playmaker, all conference but a tad short and a tick slow.

BB BP love cornerbacks that have return skills........... Frazier, Nate Jones (all big east ST), Tnew are all return guys.
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Old 12-18-2004   #6
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Default Exactly

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bobo
I saw him plenty, and hated him since I'm a Vol fan hehe. His workout #'s were'nt good, but his production on the field was.
He's a football player.

Injured out of the gate and starting now.
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Old 12-21-2004   #7
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If starting out of the gate makes you a great football player, then Lance Frazier is destined for the Hall of Fame.

If there's a mid round CB the Cowboys "missed", it would have to be Nathan Vasher since he was in their backyard.
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