DC.com: Teaching is Campo's Middle Name

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Fast Times
Teaching is Campo's Middle Name
by Rob Phillips

http://www.dallascowboys.com/news/editorial.cfm?id=3FA7C9DC-E1AD-BE3C-CFA0FA468F8C686F



SAN ANTONIO - Time is precious for Cowboys secondary coach Dave Campo here inside the Alamodome. He and secondary/safeties coach Brett Maxie have 14 defensive backs to supervise daily in practice and meetings.

Among the priorities:

A new starting free safety (Alan Ball), who's preparing for his first full season at the position, and a second-year safety (Mike Hamlin) pushing him; four more primary contributors (Pro Bowl cornerbacks Terence Newman and Mike Jenkins, slot corner Orlando Scandrick, and starting strong safety Gerald Sensabaugh) that need attention and feedback; four other rookies, including two draft picks, one of which (safety Akwasi Owusu-Ansah) just completed his first professional practice.

There would seem to be few openings on his daily calendar for newly-signed Teddy Williams, the fifth first-year DB on the roster who satisfies the full essence of the word, "rookie."

He hasn't played football since his senior year at Tyler (Texas) John Tyler High in 2006. He was a receiver, not a defensive back. He's spent the last four years collecting All-America sprinting honors five minutes down the road at the University of Texas-San Antonio.

He's fast - word is the Cowboys clocked his 40-yard dash time at 4.27 seconds - but even in football, he's used to running forward, not backward.

This is a vast project. Two to three years, maybe, before Williams could contribute. He won't be able to help Campo and the Cowboys' defense in 2010, and who knows, maybe he moves back to receiver at some point, anyway.

But you can't teach speed, football savvy and coach-ability. Williams has shown all those traits over the last six days.

And there's no better man to instruct him than Campo.

He's probably best known for his biggest job title in Dallas: head coach from 2000-02. With 53 players, there's often more macro- than micro-managing.

At his core, though, the 63-year-old Campo is a teacher. A college DB, he's now been coaching defense for 40 years, starting in 1971 at his alma mater Central Connecticut State. In 22 NFL seasons, he's been a defensive assistant and coordinator at four different stops: Dallas, Cleveland and Jacksonville.

In all his years directing secondaries, never has he tackled a raw talent quite like Teddy Williams.

There have been running backs or quarterbacks converting to defense, but there was an accelerated learning curve for those guys. They'd already been in the league or, at the very least, former college standouts. They had to make a successful transition quickly, show the coaches they could help the team, or they'd be gone.

There's more patience here. The realistic goal for Williams is the practice squad, where he can continue developing on the scout team and adapt to the NFL landscape.

Campo wants to help him get there.

"It's fun," Campo said. "That's why I'm out here. I enjoy that part of it.

"That's why I've enjoyed coming back as an assistant (in 2008) because that's what I really got into coaching for in the first place, was being able to take a guy, improve him each day, get a little bit better each day and see what happens from there."

As mentioned before, Campo can't devote a large portion of his training camp day to Williams. Much of that has come in 15-minute segments after each practice, breaking down the fundamentals. Stance, backpedal, drive and plant, etc. It's got to be natural against receivers, because as Campo says, if he's thinking about what to do with his feet, "Bam, they're gone."

Campo has help. Fellowship coach Marco Butler, the defensive back/special teams coordinator at Norfolk State, is providing one-on-one advice to Williams during practice and assisting Campo afterward. And Pro Bowler Terence Newman has simulated receivers for him.

Williams is already starting to get it. He seems a little more comfortable with his techniques, and he broke up a hitch route throw intended for Sam Hurd on Wednesday.

Credit Williams' patience and work ethic so far. Credit Campo for working with him, too.

His football knowledge and people skills, along with Maxie's, are a big reason why the Cowboys have successfully groomed a talented young secondary.

Head coach Wade Phillips has noticed. "Our secondary guys have gotten just markedly better this year, he says. "We have some good players. But the young guys are coming along quicker, the techniques are better."

"It does help when the player says exactly what the coach says and then you're getting the same thing from them all the time, and I think we're getting that."

Sensabaugh has slightly been around Campo longer than any other player. He spent his rookie season under Campo, the Jaguars' secondary/assistant head coach, 2006.

Campo's messages are well-received because he's constructive and he treats every player the same, "no matter what your status is," Sensabaugh says. And, as mentioned before, he enjoys teaching.

"He loves to see a player just blossom," Sensabaugh says. "He loves the challenge."

So it's no surprise these overtime sessions with Teddy Williams seem to be paying off. It's what Dave Campo does. It's his life's work.
 
too bad he doesn't teach them to look for the ball.
 
jimmy40;3482946 said:
too bad he doesn't teach them to look for the ball.

I disagree

The only DB's who had problems with interceptions are Newman and Ken Hamlin.

Neither are Campo products.
 
zrinkill;3482968 said:
I disagree

The only DB's who had problems with interceptions are Newman and Ken Hamlin.

Neither are Campo products.

And you can teach all you want to teach, some of ball awareness is like pocket awareness for a QB:

A QB can get fixated on his receivers to where he doesn't feel the pressure.
A DB can get fixated on covering the receiver to where he doesn't sense the ball is on the way.

Jenkins is a guy who senses and feels the timing of the play and seems to have a knack for when it's time to look for the ball...and where.

Gotta love TNew's coverage ability, but he's never been a natural at looking for the ball...he keeps his eyes locked on the receiver in order to blanket him.
 
wayne motley;3482993 said:
And you can teach all you want to teach, some of ball awareness is like pocket awareness for a QB:

A QB can get fixated on his receivers to where he doesn't feel the pressure.
A DB can get fixated on covering the receiver to where he doesn't sense the ball is on the way.

Jenkins is a guy who senses and feels the timing of the play and seems to have a knack for when it's time to look for the ball...and where.

Gotta love TNew's coverage ability, but he's never been a natural at looking for the ball...he keeps his eyes locked on the receiver in order to blanket him.

I agree. Campo is teaching them how to get proper position in coverage and to use proper technique. He is not teaching Jenkins one thing and teaching Newman something different as you mention there is a sense of timing of knowing exactly when to look back to the ball.

When I see coaches like Jimmy Johnson hiring a man like Campo as his DB coach in college then bringing him to the Dallas Cowboys and now Campo working with one of the top defensive coaches in the game I think it is safe to say Dave Campo is a quality coach in the secondary
 
I doubt very much that he is not teaching those guys not to break up balls or get INT's.
 
zrinkill;3482968 said:
I disagree

The only DB's who had problems with interceptions are Newman and Ken Hamlin.

Neither are Campo products.

You nailed a fine observation. Jenkins was one of Wade's boys coming in. Wade now has described him as a true shut down corner. He has the measureables to do this as well. Wade has strongly swung the draft for his type of players: strong pass rushers and playermakers in the secondary. We are just now starting to see the 'Wade' affect on the 3-4 started by Parcells.
 
Doomsday101;3483003 said:
I agree. Campo is teaching them how to get proper position in coverage and to use proper technique. He is not teaching Jenkins one thing and teaching Newman something different as you mention there is a sense of timing of knowing exactly when to look back to the ball.

When I see coaches like Jimmy Johnson hiring a man like Campo as his DB coach in college then bringing him to the Dallas Cowboys and now Campo working with one of the top defensive coaches in the game I think it is safe to say Dave Campo is a quality coach in the secondary

No doubt about it.
 
I thought his middle name was Poodle Boy but maybe I'm mistaking that for his nickname.
 
wayne motley;3482993 said:
And you can teach all you want to teach, some of ball awareness is like pocket awareness for a QB:

A QB can get fixated on his receivers to where he doesn't feel the pressure.
A DB can get fixated on covering the receiver to where he doesn't sense the ball is on the way.

Jenkins is a guy who senses and feels the timing of the play and seems to have a knack for when it's time to look for the ball...and where.

Gotta love TNew's coverage ability, but he's never been a natural at looking for the ball...he keeps his eyes locked on the receiver in order to blanket him.

Spot on
 

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