CFLredzoned
Hall of Famer
http://arizonasports.com/category/podcast_player/?a=335857&sid=1004&n=Doug+&+Wolf
Holy crap! This guy does not pull any punches. Great interview.
Starts off with Veldheer's struggles. Surprisingly though, he's giving no credence to the RT switch. He sees the issue not being physical or mechanical, but all mental. Says he sees a guy that had no fight and looks like he's quit. Says once you have your foot out the door, it's too hard to turn it back on. Sees that position and player as the biggest concern for the Cards going forward.
Then Wolfley asks what he sees as the problem around the league with OL play. Rather than point to the spread offense in college or lack of practice time, he's pointing to the OL coaches in the NFL. Says OL play is an intimate and delicate process, with the patriarch that has to bring it all together being the OL coach. Says what we're seeing now is coaches that spend more time berating players and flexing their egos than developing the skillsets of their players - part of the reason being that they're not willing to invest the time to develop and educate themselves outside of the narrow scope of what they already know. Says this all creates a toxic environment that makes guys dread coming to work and makes it difficult for development to occur.
Nobody said it, but listening to this almost made me think, is he calling out Harold Goodwin - without actually calling out Harold Goodwin? He's worked with several Cardinals players at his camp. So I'm sure he knows better than most what goes on it that locker room when it comes to OL.
Holy crap! This guy does not pull any punches. Great interview.
Starts off with Veldheer's struggles. Surprisingly though, he's giving no credence to the RT switch. He sees the issue not being physical or mechanical, but all mental. Says he sees a guy that had no fight and looks like he's quit. Says once you have your foot out the door, it's too hard to turn it back on. Sees that position and player as the biggest concern for the Cards going forward.
Then Wolfley asks what he sees as the problem around the league with OL play. Rather than point to the spread offense in college or lack of practice time, he's pointing to the OL coaches in the NFL. Says OL play is an intimate and delicate process, with the patriarch that has to bring it all together being the OL coach. Says what we're seeing now is coaches that spend more time berating players and flexing their egos than developing the skillsets of their players - part of the reason being that they're not willing to invest the time to develop and educate themselves outside of the narrow scope of what they already know. Says this all creates a toxic environment that makes guys dread coming to work and makes it difficult for development to occur.
Nobody said it, but listening to this almost made me think, is he calling out Harold Goodwin - without actually calling out Harold Goodwin? He's worked with several Cardinals players at his camp. So I'm sure he knows better than most what goes on it that locker room when it comes to OL.