OTA's 2022
Posted: 24 May 2022 15:00
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Love
I still say yep, it is. Here is my measuring stick, if Aaron shows up for mandatory minicamp and Bak is still standing there, I will raise the red flag. Right now they afford to be overly cautious and go through there process. Whenever the time comes that it’s important enough for Aaron to be under center, I expect Bak to be going through the motions at LT or then I agree we have a much bigger problem.
fair enough.NCF wrote: ↑24 May 2022 16:04I still say yep, it is. Here is my measuring stick, if Aaron shows up for mandatory minicamp and Bak is still standing there, I will raise the red flag. Right now they afford to be overly cautious and go through there process. Whenever the time comes that it’s important enough for Aaron to be under center, I expect Bak to be going through the motions at LT or then I agree we have a much bigger problem.
What is Aaron's reason for not being there? Does he want 60 mil a year? The Diva gets his money and continues to show exactly the leader he is.PackerNation wrote: ↑24 May 2022 16:28I liked J-Love's comments after practice. Basically supported Aaron in not being there and knows his reasons, but said: "He is not here right now so I'm the man right now. That is the way I look at it."
That is exactly how he should look at it. J-Love is hungry and will get his shot someday. Aaron sat 3 years.
The Packers raise that Lombardi this year, and I think Aaron will choose to go out on top. J-Love era may begin in 2023. The future is bright for Jordan. All the haters that say he will never amount to anything...I heard the exact same things said about Aaron from 2005 to 2007. The EXACT same things.
Aaron never missed a OTA day for many years. He is a older player now and chooses to get his body ready in Cali at Pro-Active. Aaron will be there probably for a few days next week, and then for sure for the mini camp on June 7th-9th. Then he will be at the full training camp starting in July.
You do realize this is fairly common throughout the league, right? Maybe a better question is what do either the Packers or Rodgers gain by him being there now that they cannot cultivate in Training Camp?Realist wrote: ↑24 May 2022 16:37What is Aaron's reason for not being there? Does he want 60 mil a year? The Diva gets his money and continues to show exactly the leader he is.PackerNation wrote: ↑24 May 2022 16:28I liked J-Love's comments after practice. Basically supported Aaron in not being there and knows his reasons, but said: "He is not here right now so I'm the man right now. That is the way I look at it."
That is exactly how he should look at it. J-Love is hungry and will get his shot someday. Aaron sat 3 years.
The Packers raise that Lombardi this year, and I think Aaron will choose to go out on top. J-Love era may begin in 2023. The future is bright for Jordan. All the haters that say he will never amount to anything...I heard the exact same things said about Aaron from 2005 to 2007. The EXACT same things.
Didn’t show up last year and won MVP. Next.Realist wrote: ↑24 May 2022 16:37What is Aaron's reason for not being there? Does he want 60 mil a year? The Diva gets his money and continues to show exactly the leader he is.PackerNation wrote: ↑24 May 2022 16:28I liked J-Love's comments after practice. Basically supported Aaron in not being there and knows his reasons, but said: "He is not here right now so I'm the man right now. That is the way I look at it."
That is exactly how he should look at it. J-Love is hungry and will get his shot someday. Aaron sat 3 years.
The Packers raise that Lombardi this year, and I think Aaron will choose to go out on top. J-Love era may begin in 2023. The future is bright for Jordan. All the haters that say he will never amount to anything...I heard the exact same things said about Aaron from 2005 to 2007. The EXACT same things.
Yup. Packer fans disdain for Rodgers is baffling. Hate on him for taking too much money but love Jaire and Bak who are the highest paid at their positions. Hate him for wanting to leave but don’t have any disdain for Adams who actually refused to play for the team meanwhile Rodgers stayed. Rodgers wins MVP and fans first reaction that off-season to just trade him and start Jordumb Love.PackerNation wrote: ↑24 May 2022 16:56Aaron never missed a OTA day for many years. He is a older player now and chooses to get his body ready in Cali at Pro-Active. Aaron will be there probably for a few days next week, and then for sure for the mini camp on June 7th-9th. Then he will be at the full training camp starting in July.
You don't like Aaron and are trolling for attention. How fun. What is it accomplishing though? Exactly.
Jaire wasn't there either today. Why aren't you calling him a diva? Oh, Aaron obsession. Got it.
Booming Bisaccia Shows His Tough-Love Style
He was angry. He was excited. He was hands-on coaching. New special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia was in his element at Green Bay Packers OTAs on Tuesday.
BILL HUBER 4 HOURS AGO
GREEN BAY, Wis. – During a special teams period at the start of Tuesday’s organized team activity, Green Bay Packers rookie long snapper Jack Coco sent his snap zooming over the head of punter Pat O’Donnell.
New special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia was furious.
When the punt team broke the huddle for the next play, it wasn’t to Bisaccia’s liking. So, he made them do it again. When the punt team once again didn’t break the huddle as one, Bisaccia again screamed at them to do it again.
Welcome to life with Bisaccia, the 62-years-young man charged with bringing to life a Packers special teams that has been dead for years. When coach Matt LaFleur called Bisaccia a “fiery dude,” he wasn’t kidding.
“That’s him,” cornerback Keisean Nixon, who was a key member of Bisaccia’s special teams with the Raiders, said after Tuesday’s practice. “He’s going to be himself. It’s going to be 100 percent authentic. You’re either going to like it or not. He’s not going to change his ways for nobody.”
It’s not all fire and brimstone from Bisaccia, who as interim coach guided the Raiders to the playoffs last season. During another lengthy special teams period, he hopped and skipped his way to an enthusiastic congratulations for a rep well done by outside linebacker La’Darius Hamilton. Moments later, he yelled, “Good job 4-9” to tight end Dominique Dafney.
After the period, as the players jogged off the field and to their position groups, Bisaccia repeatedly said, “Good work.”
Those moments encapsulate what LaFleur said about Bisaccia earlier in the offseason: “He loves them tough, no doubt about it. He gets after them pretty good, but he also puts his arm around them, as well.”
Having inherited a mess, Bisaccia has a lot to get done, so you’ll have to forgive him for his lack of patience with Coco, who wasn’t the snapper on punts at Georgia Tech and is learning on the job.
Over the last eight seasons, the Packers finished last in Rick Gosselin’s annual special teams rankings three times. Going back even further, over the last 16 years – dating to Mike McCarthy’s debut season in 2006 – the Packers finished 32nd four times, 31st once and 29th three times. That’s eight seasons in or near the league’s basement. Their only top-10 finish came in 2007, a seventh-place mark under Mike Stock.
During that same span, Green Bay’s special teams under its myriad of coordinators finished ahead of Bisaccia’s units just once. Usually, it hasn’t been close, with Bisaccia’s units finishing, on average, 11.5 spots better than Green Bay.
So, Bisaccia’s tough-love approach is appreciated, even if not in the moment by those at the receiving end of his venom.
“People describe me in a lot of ways,” Bisaccia said last week. “You haven’t talked to my kids yet. Yeah, I guess that’s good. I don’t know. When they get on the field, they’ve got a jersey number on. They’re accountable to the guy next to them, they’re accountable to their job. When they come into my office, then they’ve got a name. Now we can talk about football, we can talk about anything you want to talk about.
“But when they get on the field, they have a job to do, and they’re accountable to the guy next to them, in front of them, behind them and so on, and in our one-play mentality. You can look around and there’s a lot of plays that devastate your game, and there’s a lot of plays that propel your offense or your defense in a game. I think once we can all understand the one-play mentality, what we’re trying to get across to them, how they can affect the game positively and negatively, I think maybe we’ll start to accomplish something here.”
2 reactions to this:YoHoChecko wrote: ↑24 May 2022 21:47Bill Huber on Bisaccia
Booming Bisaccia Shows His Tough-Love Style
He was angry. He was excited. He was hands-on coaching. New special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia was in his element at Green Bay Packers OTAs on Tuesday.
BILL HUBER 4 HOURS AGO
GREEN BAY, Wis. – During a special teams period at the start of Tuesday’s organized team activity, Green Bay Packers rookie long snapper Jack Coco sent his snap zooming over the head of punter Pat O’Donnell.
New special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia was furious.
When the punt team broke the huddle for the next play, it wasn’t to Bisaccia’s liking. So, he made them do it again. When the punt team once again didn’t break the huddle as one, Bisaccia again screamed at them to do it again.
Welcome to life with Bisaccia, the 62-years-young man charged with bringing to life a Packers special teams that has been dead for years. When coach Matt LaFleur called Bisaccia a “fiery dude,” he wasn’t kidding.
“That’s him,” cornerback Keisean Nixon, who was a key member of Bisaccia’s special teams with the Raiders, said after Tuesday’s practice. “He’s going to be himself. It’s going to be 100 percent authentic. You’re either going to like it or not. He’s not going to change his ways for nobody.”
It’s not all fire and brimstone from Bisaccia, who as interim coach guided the Raiders to the playoffs last season. During another lengthy special teams period, he hopped and skipped his way to an enthusiastic congratulations for a rep well done by outside linebacker La’Darius Hamilton. Moments later, he yelled, “Good job 4-9” to tight end Dominique Dafney.
After the period, as the players jogged off the field and to their position groups, Bisaccia repeatedly said, “Good work.”
Those moments encapsulate what LaFleur said about Bisaccia earlier in the offseason: “He loves them tough, no doubt about it. He gets after them pretty good, but he also puts his arm around them, as well.”
Having inherited a mess, Bisaccia has a lot to get done, so you’ll have to forgive him for his lack of patience with Coco, who wasn’t the snapper on punts at Georgia Tech and is learning on the job.
Over the last eight seasons, the Packers finished last in Rick Gosselin’s annual special teams rankings three times. Going back even further, over the last 16 years – dating to Mike McCarthy’s debut season in 2006 – the Packers finished 32nd four times, 31st once and 29th three times. That’s eight seasons in or near the league’s basement. Their only top-10 finish came in 2007, a seventh-place mark under Mike Stock.
During that same span, Green Bay’s special teams under its myriad of coordinators finished ahead of Bisaccia’s units just once. Usually, it hasn’t been close, with Bisaccia’s units finishing, on average, 11.5 spots better than Green Bay.
So, Bisaccia’s tough-love approach is appreciated, even if not in the moment by those at the receiving end of his venom.
“People describe me in a lot of ways,” Bisaccia said last week. “You haven’t talked to my kids yet. Yeah, I guess that’s good. I don’t know. When they get on the field, they’ve got a jersey number on. They’re accountable to the guy next to them, they’re accountable to their job. When they come into my office, then they’ve got a name. Now we can talk about football, we can talk about anything you want to talk about.
“But when they get on the field, they have a job to do, and they’re accountable to the guy next to them, in front of them, behind them and so on, and in our one-play mentality. You can look around and there’s a lot of plays that devastate your game, and there’s a lot of plays that propel your offense or your defense in a game. I think once we can all understand the one-play mentality, what we’re trying to get across to them, how they can affect the game positively and negatively, I think maybe we’ll start to accomplish something here.”
Haha ya that is weird. As for the rest of it, it just cracked me up because Huber was just pointing out completely normal things. Like wow this coach yells when the unit screws up, but tells them good job when they do well!!! Oh wow!!YoHoChecko wrote: ↑24 May 2022 23:27Honestly, my biggest takeaway from that article was the throw-away line that the recently signed long-snapper didn't snap for punts in college. Like...