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Haynesworth article from Tennessee...dated 11-21-08

Posted: Sun May 10, 2009 8:58 pm
by BurgundyandGoldfaith
http://www.titansonline.com/news/articl ... fdff33073e


Haynesworth drawing attention

Posted Nov 21, 2008


NASHVILLE, TN, Nov. 21, 2008 — Tennessee defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth ponders the question while sitting at his locker, then answers.

Opposing teams have had a hard time containing Albert Haynesworth, who is enjoying his best season to date.
No, he doesn't think he's playing better now than he did a year ago.

The New York Jets have studied him on film. Respectfully, they disagree.

"Haynesworth is playing unbelievable," Jets quarterback Brett Favre said. "To say we're going to block him, I'm sure a lot of teams have said that. We got to find a way to run the ball effective, slow down their pass-rush and be able to deal with their back end."

Jets left guard Alan Faneca called it rare when an offense has to prepare for an interior lineman but sees Haynesworth as someone they must target to stop. The last such lineman he had to prepare for like that?

"Warren Sapp in his heyday, you definitely had to account for him because he brought that speed and power, kind of like how Albert is bringing now," Faneca said.

Statistically, Haynesworth is having his best year in his seventh NFL season. He already has a career-high seven sacks, and he also is tied for sixth on the team with 54 tackles. He is tied for the team-lead with 15 quarterback pressures, and he also has six tackles for losses.

The timing couldn't be better for the 6-foot-6, 320-pound man still best known to some for swiping his foot across Andre Gurode's head in 2006, a move that brought him the NFL's longest suspension ever for an on-field act.

Tennessee (10-0) franchised him last February, and both sides failed to reach agreement on a new contract before the league deadline. The Titans agreed to some incentives allowing Haynesworth to play his way into free agency, and he's easily on his way to doing just that.

"He's clearly ahead of where he's ever been right now," Titans coach Jeff Fisher said of their 2002 No. 1 draft pick from the University of Tennessee. He's playing more plays, he's very disruptive, he's putting great pressure on the passer."

A year ago, Haynesworth was playing so well that he was being mentioned as a candidate for Defensive Player of the Year. Then he strained a hamstring, an injury that kept him out of three games and limited him the rest of 2007. Now he's making a quiet case for himself this year on a defense that has been without end Kyle Vanden Bosch for most of the past six games.

Titans linebacker Keith Bulluck sees a more mature Haynesworth this season.

"Last year was such a big breakout for him, it probably didn't settle in until after the season. ... He had time to reflect and realize and understand what he did and the approach he wanted to bring to this season. Obviously, he's got himself ready to play, worked out on his own, came into camp ready even though he wasn't with us ...," Bulluck said.

"You can see the work that he put in."

Good thing because Haynesworth estimates he's been double-teamed 95 percent of the time this season, up from 75 percent in 2007. In last week's 24-14 win at Jacksonville, he said the Jaguars even used a fullback to chip on him in the backfield after he got past center Brad Meester. He still managed a sack, two tackles for loss and had seven tackles with a forced fumble.

Haynesworth takes it as a sign of respect.

"They're game-planning for me, it's giving everyone a chance to get free, and I have to make things happen if I can," Haynesworth said.

That is why the Titans move Haynesworth around. He often flips to the outside with Vanden Bosch moving inside, and the Titans also switch up by putting both tackle Tony Brown and Haynesworth on one side. Brown, originally signed to fill in for Haynesworth during his suspension, has started beside the veteran the past two seasons.

"I've never seen him play like he's playing right now. He's on track. I'm just so glad to be beside him because he just causes so much confusion," Brown said.

The Titans will have a chance to sign Haynesworth to a new deal once the regular season ends and before free agency begins in late February. Haynesworth repeatedly has said he wants to stay with the Titans.

"That would be great because right now I don't think there's anyone out there we can find that's comparable to Albert to play in our defense," Bulluck said.

Posted: Sun May 10, 2009 9:02 pm
by BurgundyandGoldfaith
Double teams 95% of the time, and those kind of numbers is outrageous. he has the meanest bull rush of anyone I watch on NFL replays. The only guys who take him 1-on-1 are good left tackles

Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 11:14 am
by BurgundyandGoldfaith
In fact, for some reason they never show Redskins games on NFL Replay but the Titans are on three times a day. I'd much rather watch a Redskins replay but it is sort of cool to see Haynesworth just blast guards and centers, sorta reminds me of when Lavar came back and just blasted that Olinemen from San Francisco, only Albert brings that every time.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BynBZNiE9EA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgvSnIMvTic

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRvAJBftuJc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6B9WV4N ... re=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcSt-3hr ... re=related

Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 11:37 am
by BurgundyandGoldfaith
Image

Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 1:35 pm
by goinhogwild
he is honestly unstoppable.
it'll be fun to watch how the defense shifts around him

Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 3:30 pm
by BurgundyandGoldfaith
My impression from watching his Tennessee games is that he just picks a place along the line where he feels his instincts take him, and everyone else just arranges themselves in the remaining spots, whether he rushes from end or left middle or right middle. It really looks like he moves all over the place to wear the O-line out. I'm probably ranting now but no one else in this league gets a push on double teams and giant LT's EVERY time. He goes middle a couple of plays and then he'll pick on the LT, and he's not a spin move guy, he doesn't have to be. He goes straight forward and hits like a car crash. No human can stop him in his tracks. It's amazing how different Tennessee's D was when he wasn't in the game. I'm sure we'll notice the same thing here

Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 9:43 pm
by Deadskins
BurgundyandGoldfaith wrote:It's amazing how different Tennessee's D was when he wasn't in the game. I'm sure we'll notice the same thing here

I hope not.