Thursday, August 18, 2011

2011 Indianapolis Colts Season Preview

Andy Benoit is previewing all 32 N.F.L. teams. This week, he is analyzing the A.F.C. South.

Last year, there was an unofficial national movement to declare the Indianapolis Colts old. People looked only at the unusually lengthy list of injuries striking this team and chalked it up to Father Time. Never mind that all of the key players who missed significant time – tight end Dallas Clark, running back Joseph Addai, wide receivers Austin Collie and Anthony Gonzalez, safety Melvin Bullitt, linebacker Clint Session and cornerbacks Jerraud Powers and Kelvin Hayden – were all, save for Clark, under 30 years old.

In truth, time  is closing in on this team. But it’s closing in on everybody. And, with 31-year-olds Dwight Freeney and Gary Brackett being the defensive elder statesmen but still firmly in their primes, it’s fair to say that Father Time is chasing only the offense. Clark is 32. So are Reggie Wayne and right tackle Ryan Diem. The esteemed center Jeff Saturday is 36. And that guy who takes the snaps from Saturday is 35.

We can stop right here. Really, if Father Time wants to take down this franchise, he need only sack Peyton Manning. As 31 N.F.L. teams can attest, that’s not easy. But for the first time in 14 years, it doesn’t seem impossible.

Manning spent virtually the entire off-season recovering from a second neck operation to correct a bulging disk. He originally said he wouldn’t have even had the surgery if the lockout hadn’t wiped out off-season team activities. But with nearly three months now gone by and Manning still not practicing (which is akin to you or I not eating or sleeping), our antennas of suspicion are effectively raised.

Still, this summer, the Colts owner Jim Irsay followed through on his mission to re-sign Manning long term and make him the highest-paid player in the N.F.L. Or he tried, anyway; Manning threw the organization a bone by signing on for five years at $90 million ($69 million the first over three years), which is a few hairs below his market value.

That’s a considerable investment in a 35-year-old quarterback, but no one batted an eye, as it’s common knowledge that Irsay didn’t have a choice. The Colts’ organization can replace Coach Tony Dungy with Jim Caldwell and not skip a beat. It can endure significant player personnel moves like replacing, say, the legendary Marvin Harrison with an unknown like Pierre Garcon. It can cycle through defensive personnel without much hiccup. It can stand to lose a longtime offensive assistant like Tom Moore (who left his consultant post and has now been completely replaced by the offensive coordinator Clyde Christensen). It can even handle a passing of the torch from the team president Bill Polian to his son Chris Polian without drifting from the blueprint that has led to seven A.F.C. South titles in eight years (we assume it can handle this, anyway; it’s early in that transition, but so far so good).

But what this organization cannot survive is a change under center. The Colts can survive all those other changes only  because of who’s under center. Lose Manning and that’s it – era over. So long, thanks for the memories. It was fun. All the best! Oh, and by the way, just a heads up: you’ll probably be remembered as football’s version of the Atlanta Braves. The 90s Braves, that is. Nothing personal or too pejorative, really. Just, you know, the consistent regular season dominance and lone world title.

This is what the Colts are fighting from here on out. There is still plenty of time … but yes, the clock’s also ticking.

Offense

We’re not going to bother analyzing what this offense might be like if Dan Orlovsky or (Colts fans, cover your ears) Curtis Painter has to run the show for a little while. Just know it wouldn’t be good. As for Peyton Manning running the show, there is no arguing against his magnificence. There was once a time when people questioned whether the presnap gyrations and neurotic preparation and attention to detail robbed this offense of its flexibility and personality. But that was many M.V.P.s and several 4,000-yard seasons ago.

The remaining scrap of doubters were hushed last season, when Manning posted career highs in yards and pass attempts to prove once and for all that he can carry this unit no matter which 10 guys line up with him. This year shouldn’t be as challenging. Dallas Clark is back posing matchup problems off the line of scrimmage or out of the slot. And it’s now known that his backup, Jacob Tamme, has the fluidity and soft hands to beat linebackers underneath and even the occasional safety down the seams. Tamme isn’t a good in-line blocker, though, so don’t be surprised if the Colts use the more physical Brody Eldridge in their base two-tight-end sets.

At receiver, everyone is praying Austin Collie, victim of at least two nasty concussions late last fall, can stay safe for 16 games. The Colts would not put him back in the slot if they did not trust doctors who say he’s fine. Collie has a good feel for seeing what Manning sees, which is what sets him apart from Blair White. If Collie is unavailable, the quicker Anthony Gonzalez (barring one of his regularly occurring injuries) will get another opportunity to fulfill his first-round promise.

Starting outside receiver Pierre Garcon is one of the physically strongest catch-and-run weapons in the N.F.L. The Colts will need a breakout season from Garcon, a fourth-year pro, because, with the exception of center Jeff Saturday, none of their older veterans have shown as stark a decline as Reggie Wayne. This may sound preposterous considering Wayne is coming off a 111-catch, 1,355-yard season. But in an offense as proficient as this, the numbers will always be there (especially when your quarterback attempts 679 passes). What’s more important is how those numbers are obtained. Are they coming against double teams and coverages tilted his direction over the top? Or are they against a lot of soft zones, where a receiver can get by on timing and precision? This is not a rhetorical question – there’s an answer: zones. Wayne can still feast on zones. But in a private moment with all walls down, the Colts’ brass would probably tell you that Wayne is no longer explosive enough to consistently separate against quality man coverage. (Which may be why he has not received the long-term contract he desires.)

We’ve seen the Colts succeed without an effective ground game before, but they would make life easier on themselves (and perhaps a little longer for Manning) if they had one. Most of Indy’s rushing production comes from Manning audibling against a seven-man front. But in short-yardage situations, the futility of this front five, and specifically the painfully weak interior three, gets exposed.

Saturday is strictly a movement-oriented player at this point. He can’t win many power battles. The second-year left guard Jacques McClendon is an unknown. It would be sensible for the second-round rookie Ben Ijalana, a gifted 317-pound right tackle at Villanova, to start inside ahead of the hard-working but overwhelmed Mike Pollak. But the Colts insist that Ijalana is strictly a tackle (and thus, relegated to backup duty for now). Too bad – he would most likely be an upgrade over recent years’ fill-in starters Kyle DeVan and Jamey Richard.

It’s a matter of time before the first-round rookie Anthony Castonzo starts ahead of the unqualified Jeff Linkenbach at left tackle. The long-armed Ryan Diem is still one of the league’s best right tackles but not quite the force he was a few years ago (hence the Ijalana pick).

Fortunately, Manning is decisive in the pocket and does not need first-class blocking (defenses don’t even bother game-planning to sack him; they focus only on making him move his feet before throwing – something he’s not always comfortable doing). Running back Joseph Addai, and especially the hesitant first-round bust Donald Brown, however, do need first-class blocking. Addai has unusual lateral acceleration that allows him to create his own wiggle room, but usually not until he breaks the line of scrimmage. Because he is a fervid pass-blocker and Brown a mechanical runner who is perhaps less effective than even the undrafted third-stringer Javarris James, Indy would probably love to ride the 28-year-old Addai as a three-down back in 2011. Problem is, he has never shown that kind of durability, which is why the Colts will probably use the fourth-round rookie Delone Carter.

Defense

It wouldn’t be a gargantuan stretch to say that Dwight Freeney is as important to Indianapolis’s defense as Manning is to Indianapolis’s offense. This statement, though, held more water before the third-year defensive coordinator Larry Coyer’s arrival, when this defense ran almost strictly zone schemes that relied on a straight four-man rush. To be clear, this is still a finesse unit built to take advantage of the fast Lucas Oil surface. But Coyer has incorporated more interior blitzes and eight-man run fronts into the early down packages, saving the club’s hallmark Tampa 2 concepts predominantly for long passing situations (which is really how the passive zone defense is meant to be played these days).

That said, take away Freeney (who, as of right now, is the best pure speed rusher and best pure bull rusher in the N.F.L.) and the high-speed fumble-forcing machine Robert Mathis, and this defense would be hurting. The Polians know their ends are essential to almost everything their defense does – that’s why they drafted 255-pound Jerry Hughes in the first round last year. (They may regret this pick, too, considering Hughes made about as much impact on this team last season as Danica Patrick.)

The absence of off-season team activities prevented the coaching staff from getting a good look at the third-round rookie Drake Nevis and whatever undrafted gems they probably would have uncovered (Indy always find one or two). Thus, to augment depth along the defensive front, the Colts took the unusual step (for them) of signing the free agents Jamaal Anderson and Tommie Harris. Although disappointing as a first-rounder in Atlanta, Anderson is a premier run-stopping end who can offer 15 quality snaps a game. Harris can do the same as an explosive interior pass rusher. It is apparent, though, that his long-ailing knee will not allow him to recapture his every-down All-Pro form. Because of this, the underappreciated and energetic 26-year-olds Fili Moala, Eric Foster and Antonio Johnson will handle a bulk of the work at defensive tackle.

The Colts’ fast-flowing style against the run can lead to stops on the outside but also open the door to plenty of 7- and 8-yard gashes. In this scheme, the strong safety is often counted on to allay these gashes. If healthy, Melvin Bullitt is up to task. While no Bob Sanders, Bullitt, a undrafted fifth-year pro, is one of the fastest run attackers in football. He benefits from operating alongside a free safety with superb run-pass recognition in Antoine Bethea. Instincts and familiarity allow Bethea to play with much better range than his fairly ordinary athleticism suggests he should.

As important as Bullitt and Bethea are in the box, stopping the run still comes down to middle linebacker Gary Brackett and his two outside mates. Last year’s second-round pick, Pat Angerer, has the recognition skills and physicality to be a long-term cog on the strong side. He has a tad more speed than you would guess but is still not fast enough to play Will linebacker in this scheme. But last year’s seventh-rounder, Kavell Conner, may have the requisite speed. Conner, a supple athlete who sees the field fairly well, will get a chance to work ahead of the utility backup Phillip Wheeler. The Colts also signed the free agent Ernie Sims, but he gets lost in coverage and probably will not earn the trust of the linebackers coach Mike Murphy.

As for the rest of the coverage, the third-year pros Jerraud Powers and Jacob Lacey will be asked to headline a razor-thin cornerbacking group. Powers is a physical underneath defender but does not have the quickness to regularly make big plays. Lacey is similar, only less assertive when the ball is in the air. On most teams, Lacey would be a fringe nickel back. But most teams don’t have guys like the utterly untested Kevin Thomas (missed all of his 2010 rookie season with a knee injury) or the special teams veteran Justin Tryon vying for serious snaps.

Special Teams

Adam Vinatieri is pretty good in the clutch. You know punter Pat McAfee is good if he can get arrested for public intoxication during the season and still remain part of this family-values organization. This year he may get a chance at kicking long-distance field goals.

The Colts’ return games have always been one of the most boring things in professional football – right up there with the fullback handoff and halftime interviews. Because of this, we will no longer bother listing their return guys’ names (they change from week to week anyway).

Bottom Line

Put ‘em down for at least 10 wins and, more likely, 12 or 13. It is surprisingly easy to forget, but the last time this team stayed healthy, it started 14-0 and reached the Super Bowl. The lockout figures to favor clubs that have built familiar, successful systems over the years. Thus, the question is: Is this system familiar enough to operate without Manning having practiced in it for six months?

Predicted Finish: 1st A.F.C. South

Angels call up catcher Hank Conger, send Tyler Chatwood to triple-A

Conger_640 The Angels made a move to bolster their sagging offense Thursday night, recalling catcher Hank Conger from triple-A Salt Lake and optioning struggling pitcher Tyler Chatwood to triple-A.

Journeyman right-hander Jerome Williams is expected to replace Chatwood in the rotation and start Sunday against the Baltimore Orioles in Angel Stadium. Williams, 29, was called up from Salt Lake Wednesday and threw two-thirds of an inning of relief Wednesday night, his first big league appearance since 2007.

Conger was hitting .214 with five home runs and 16 runs batted in and struggling defensively when he was demoted to Salt Lake on July 19. In 27 games at Salt Lake, Conger hit .300 with five homers and 26 RBIs.

Angels catcher Jeff Mathis is solid defensively, but with a .177 average, two homers and 17 RBIs, he is one of the worst hitters in the major leagues.

Chatwood, a 21-year-old right-hander, has been brilliant at times this season, with a 6-9 record and 4.35 earned-run average, but he is 0-3 with an 8.53 ERA in his last four starts.

RELATED:

Hank Conger not ready to catch for Angels

Jerome Williams back in the big leagues

--Mike DiGiovanna

Photo: Hank Conger. Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea / US Presswire

London 2012 Olympics: Totilas who? British gold heralds new era for dressage


It’s very difficult to express quite how monumental Britain’s first gold medal in dressage actually is.


Today in Rotterdam the quartet of Carl Hester, Laura Bechtolsheimer, Emile Faurie and newcomer Charlotte Dujardin won the European team championship, not because the previously all-conquering Germans or Dutch were weak, or even because the British were merely the best team on the day.  The reality is that Britain was inspirational, delivering a world record team total of 238 and with all four riders making such a significant contribution that they could have dropped the score of Bechtolsheimer- the British number one, no less – and still won by a handsome margin.


Even more importantly, this particular team shows that, whatever  elitist perceptions outsiders still harbour about equestrian sport, anyone can succeed with talent and hard graft. Bechtolsheimer is the only one from an equestrian background. Hester, at the other extreme, grew up on the island of Sark and learned to ride –literally – on a donkey, only moving to mainland Britain aged 19, after which he was talent-spotted; Faurie was born in South Africa and literally jobbed his way across Europe, building up his reputation as a horseman layer by layer till he landed up in the UK; while Dujardin was herself noticed by Hester who  spotted the same hunger he had craved 20 years before and resolved to give her a break. Many will be especially thrilled for Hester, a colourful character who has underpinned the team since 1990. He finally has an individual title – to be decided on Saturday and Sunday – within his grasp.


Anything can happen with horses, and it is quite possible that gold medallists from the two most recent European and world championships Totilas (with new partner Matthias Rath) and Jerich’s Parzival (Adelinde Cornelissen) will rally after finishing below Hester in today’s overall standings.


If they do, no matter. With three riders scoring over 77 per cent, the British raised the bar for everyone using three  home-produced horses – Uthopia, Valegro and Elmegardens Marquis – that are young and still improving. No other country has this strength in depth in the run-up to London 2012. At the post-event press conference, a German journalist asked if Valegro (Dujardin’s mount, which is owned by Hester and his long-standing collaborator Roly Luard) was for sale. She wasn’t being flippant.


For generations the British regarded dressage, the horsey equivalent of figure skating, as something you took up only if you had either got too old to go eventing or were too nervous to jump in the first place.  Up to two Olympics ago, our dressage riders were merely making up the numbers and drew scant media attention compared with their eventing and show jumping colleagues. It took a long time for dressage to be perceived as “cool” by the younger generation, and for their enthusiasm to be matched by investors willing to buy quality horsepower and then patiently wait six years for them to be nurtured to this level.


One is loath to gloat but it would be interesting to be a fly on the wall in the German camp tonight. This time last year, Holland’s Edward Gal and the Dutch super stallion Totilas won three golds at the world championships and so Germany – who have won nearly every Olympic gold since the second world war – trounced their bitter rivals (blogs passim) by making Totilas’s  owner a £15 million offer he could not refuse. Germany certainly achieved their ambition of beating the hosts in Rotterdam, but somewhere in all that wheeler-dealing they overlooked the Brits.



Robert Guerrero injures shoulder; Aug. 27 fight postponed

Robert Guerrero's most significant fight yet was canceled Thursday, a day after the Gilroy boxer suffered a left shoulder injury while sparring in Big Bear.

Guerrero, scheduled to fight Argentina's Marcos Maidana on Aug. 27 in the main event of an HBO card at San Jose's HP Pavilion, underwent follow-up examinations in the Bay Area to establish the extent of his injury and how long he'll be out of action.

Promoter Richard Schaefer said he should know Guerrero's status by Monday.

"This is a fight people wanted to see," Schaefer said. "We don't know what it is yet. If it's a month or so, we'll reschedule the fight. If it's something that's going to require five or six months of rest, Maidana's not going to sit around. Once you move ahead, you don't know if the paths will cross again." 

Had he defeated the hard-punching Maidana, Guerrero (29-1-1, 18 KOs) was poised to land a shot at someone such as world junior-welterweight champion Amir Khan.

"It's just a shame," Schaefer said. "This fight was selling so well, we had $300,000 in sales already, I'm sure it would've been a sellout."

-- Lance Pugmire 

 

Abner Mares agrees to rematch with Joseph Agbeko

Fabforum 

Abner Mares has accepted the mandatory rematch order by the International Boxing Federation to fight Joseph Agbeko by the end of the year, Mares' manager said Thursday.

"Abner is going to do the right thing and take the fight," Mares' manager Frank Espinoza said. "We understand the IBF's position, and respect Joseph."

Mares, of Hawaiian Gardens, took Agbeko's IBF bantamweight belt Saturday at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, winning a controversial majority decision after referee Russell Mora awarded Mares a knockdown on a left uppercut that clearly qualified as a low blow that should've led to a one-point deduction.

Earlier, Mora gave Mares a first-round knockdown after Agbeko fell because his foot was stepped on. Agbeko also endured a hard 10th-round low blow.

Outrage followed, both from the crowd inside the venue, and those who watched the bout on Showtime. 

"Sometimes, controversy can be a good thing for a fighter," Espinoza said. "People want to see this fight again. That's a good thing for Abner. We're confident he'll preval again."

Mares' promoter, Richard Schaefer, said Showtime has already expressed interest in televising the rematch. Schaefer said a December date is likely, and that a site in Los Angeles is "my first choice."

Mares, 25, will be honored by the City of Hawaiian Gardens Sunday.

--Lance Pugmire

Joseph Agbeko, left, and Abner Mares during their Aug. 13 fight. Credit: Steve Marcus / Reuters.

Chris Foster shares his thoughts on UCLA football [video]

Times staff writer Chris Foster talks with CineSport's Noah Coslov about Kip Smith's confidence, the UCLA offensive line and Kevin Prince's recent play. For more on the Bruins, check out The Times' UCLA page.

ALSO:

Bill Plaschke: Don't be fooled by the 'new' Michael Vick

Ndamukong Suh fined $20,000 for throwing down Andy Dalton

Coliseum fight puts Rose Bowl ahead as potential fill-in NFL home

Sam Farmer breaks down the Raiders [video]

Times NFL columnist Sam Farmer talks with CineSport's Noah Coslov about the season ahead for the Oakland Raiders. For more NFL coverage, check out The Times' NFL page.

ALSO:

Bill Plaschke: Don't be fooled by the 'new' Michael Vick

Ndamukong Suh fined $20,000 for throwing down Andy Dalton

Coliseum fight puts Rose Bowl ahead as potential fill-in NFL home

T.J. Simers: Miami has problems, but USC still cheated

Usc3
This just in: USC is still guilty.

They were caught, they were cheaters and they couldn’t go to a bowl game last season, and won’t go again this season.

Get over it.

It has nothing to do with the University of Miami’s problems other than the fact that the joker who worked as the Hurricanes' former athletic director provides an immediate guffaw.

And no one needs a good guffaw like the USC football fan who just can’t seem to get past the fact his football program was tagged for cheating.

Dee is now being labeled a “hypocrite" for lecturing USC on its wrongdoings as chairman of the NCAA’s Infractions Committee while serving as Miami AD, but anyone who participates in name-calling from USC is one as well.

Dee’s involvement with USC is a nice piece of trivia, but USC’s problems were its own, and no matter who sat as chairman, the school was due for a spanking.



2011 Tennessee Titans Season Preview

The relationship finally went stale. Jeff Fisher and the Tennessee Titans — over, after 16 years. Good run. Or long run, anyway.

It’s somewhat astounding that Bud Adams employed Fisher as long as he did. In the Fisher era, the Titans made the playoffs just six times (in three increments of back-to-back appearances, for what it’s worth). But they were already seen as a beacon of stability – even during the nadirs of the Vince Young years. That’s why watching Fisher and this team separate is like watching your longtime friends get divorced after their youngest kid graduates from high school. It wasn’t an acrimonious or even completely necessary breakup – just an acknowledgement that life together had become too convenient and predictable.

And so the Titans, without even approaching a major rebuilding period, moved on. It may seem a little strange that Adams and General Manager Mike Reinfeldt decided to start anew by staying within the organization and promoting offensive line coach Mike Munchak to coach. It’s one lifer to another; Munchak is even more tied to this franchise than Fisher. Munchak had a Hall of Fame playing career with the Oilers from ’82-’93 and became their offensive assistant in ’94. When the organization moved to Tennessee in ’97, Munchak became the offensive line coach, a post he held until this promotion.

Munchak has still put his fresh imprint on this franchise. Eight of his top 15 assistants are new to the staff, including offensive coordinator Chris Palmer and defensive coordinator Jerry Gray. Both coordinators were given unusually weighty power that included overhauling the team’s existing playbook and having serious say in the hiring of other assistants (Palmer brought in running backs coach Jim Skipper and receivers coach Dave Ragone from his U.F.L. Hartford Colonials staff; Gray was reportedly the one who opted to keep secondary coach Marcus Robertson instead of safeties coach Tim Hauck).

Systems in place, Munchak worked with Reinfeldt to address player personnel. Only one drastic alteration was needed offensively, and that was made in the form of two moves – one to address the present (Matt Hasselbeck) and one to address the future (Jake Locker). The fact that Hasselbeck’s three-year contract includes $9 million this season tells you the Titans have no intention of rebuilding. Defensively, including position changes, there could be as many as five new starters, which makes sense given that this unit has ranked 28th and 26th in yards allowed the last two years.

Teams that change head coaches and give up on a quarterback once drafted third over all generally don’t enjoy smooth waters right off the dock. But the Titans have made it look relatively easy thus far. Do they really have it handled? Or are we witnessing the Music City Mirage?

Offense

Chris Johnson is wise to hold out. And the Titans would be wise to pay him. After an N.F.L.-high 674 carries the past two seasons, Johnson, who turns 26 in September, knows his earning power is peaking and his window will soon be closing. Given his small stature and heavy lifting in the passing game (he has caught 94 balls over the past two seasons), Johnson realistically has about three years left as a part of the “best running back in football?” discussion. After that, Tennessee will need to find another back to complement him.

It’d probably be prudent to phase in a complementary back now. Third-year pro Javon Ringer offers a similar style to Johnson. He doesn’t have Johnson’s breathtaking change-of-direction, quickness or breakaway speed, but he can accelerate by his third or fourth step and run with fairly compact power. The Titans also drafted a true bruiser in fourth-rounder Jamie Harper, who has drawn comparisons to Jacksonville’s Greg Jones and therefore could, theoretically, one day challenge for Ahmard Hall’s fullback job. (Hall, by the way, handles the ball fairly well and might make sense in an H-back role. Just a thought.)

Chris Palmer, who’s an experienced quarterback coach, has made it clear Johnson will be the prominent feature in this new offense. Johnson, in turn, needs to show more patience as a runner and give the ground attack better sustainability than it had in 2010. He has terrific home run ability, but his tendency to over-search for cutback lanes can leave yards on the field and stall drives.

Johnson’s life will be much, much easier now that Matt Hasselbeck is under center. Though the soon-to-be-36-year-old is struggling to learn a new system for the first time in his 13-year career, he’s still sure to be a marked upgrade over Vince Young. Young’s decision-making ineptitude and subpar pocket passing allowed defenses to crowd eight and even nine defenders in the box. Unless Jake Locker – who, as a fairly inaccurate, run-first quarterback at Washington, is essentially another version of Young only with (Tennessee hopes) thicker skin and more maturity – gets on the field, defenses will have to at least hesitate before dialing in completely on Johnson.

That said, they’ll still dial in plenty often. This receiving corps simply lacks the explosiveness to discourage it. That could change if Kenny Britt continues to emerge, but Britt’s off-field problems have been so extensive that one has to question his on-field dependability. This is not referring exclusively to the possibility of suspension for conduct policy violations; the talented 23-year-old has to show he’s willing to learn and hone his craft.

He’d better. Nate Washington is a swift all-around threat but probably best suited as a slot No. 3 rather than an outside No. 2. Behind him, Justin Gage is a hit or miss over-the-middle target. Damien Williams, a third-round pick a year ago, doesn’t pop out on film. The Titans would benefit greatly from a darting catch-and-run playmaker (think Roscoe Parrish or Percy Harvin), but there’s not one on the roster (other than fringe guy Yamon Figurs).

Unless gifted third-year pro Jared Cook suddenly breaks out, Tennessee will get more blocking productivity than pass-catching from the tight end position. Replacing Bo Scaife is veteran Daniel Graham, the pre-eminent blocker at his position over the last 10 years. Graham will work behind Craig Stevens, who’s strictly an underneath option (though a swift-moving one) and sharper at chip-blocking outside than locking and sustaining.

Chip-blocking is only necessary on the right side, where scrappy right tackle David Stewart resides. On the left side, Michael Roos is as stable as the Appalachian Mountain Range and not in need of much help. He does everything well.

The interior line has jelled commendably since losing leader Kevin Mawae. Though nowhere near Pro Bowl caliber, Eugene Amano can be trusted to steer most opponents well enough. Guards Leroy Harris and Jake Scott are both mobile run-blockers – Harris especially in the way he maintains strength when pulling right.

Depth is a bit of a concern up front. The free-agent pickup Pat McQuistan can play multiple spots, but the only other contributor with recent experience is Fernando Velasco, who struggles mightily to hold ground in pass protection.

Defense

Under Fisher, the Titans were fairly ingrained in their classic 4-3 system. Jerry Gray, on the other hand, is a firm believer in playing to the strengths of the personnel, particularly in the secondary (his prime area of expertise). Gray will most likely let his cornerbacks have input as to what type of coverage the Titans predominantly use in 2011. With Cortland Finnegan, go ahead and bet on press-man. The feisty (dirty?) sixth-year pro relishes all forms of hand-to-hand combat. But if Finnegan wants to be an authentic shadower of No. 1 receivers, he must focus less on winning presnap mental battles and more on winning postsnap physical battles. He was beaten far too often last season, both over the top and especially on slants.

It’s supposedly an open competition between Alterraun Verner and Jason McCourty for the No. 2 corner job. Expert Verner to win it (he did in ’10). He’s the more confident player. And not that it’s a significant factor, but he has a chance to be one of the premier run-defending corners in the game. McCourty should easily secure the No. 3 job given that he’s competing with Frank Walker, whom teams seem to sign whenever injuries and other problems add up (see the Giants, Packers, Ravens and Vikings).

Free safety Michael Griffin has seemingly rediscovered his sense of awareness in coverage. He hunts up the middle of the field well and is a good tackler in the open field. Strong safety Chris Hope must improve. Mistakes have become almost habitual for the tenth-year vet, and he rarely exhibits rapid instincts in coverage. With his hefty $6.5 million salary, it wouldn’t be out of the question for Tennessee to cut him and go with versatile, underrated free agent pickup Jordan Babineaux (who played for Gray in Seattle).

Hope will have more chances to do what he does best this season, which is drop down into the run front. Gray’s scheme will often employ the strongside linebacker (second-round rookie Akeem Ayers, who has been the buzz of training camp) in a nine-technique position, which means he’ll will be lining up over the tight end on the line of scrimmage. This nudges the weakside linebacker more toward the center of the formation and creates a wider-than-usual gap for the safety (Hope) to help fill in that outside wake.

That weakside linebacker being nudged is pass defending guru Will Witherspoon, though fiery Gerald McRath could steal snaps here and there. It’d be helpful if McRath could learn to play middle linebacker. It’s doubtful the Titans will like what they get there from free-agent pickup Barrett Ruud. Ruud was a prolific tackler in Tampa Bay, but an overwhelming majority of those tackles came well downfield. He’s not a physical head-on hitter against ballcarriers or blockers, and he has average diagnostic ability.

The saving grace for what appears to be an excruciatingly ordinary linebacking group is that in this new scheme, the defensive linemen are expected to be a more impactful force against the run. New defensive line coach Tracy Rocker is prioritizing size, which is why expensive speed-rusher Jason Babin was not re-signed, and why ascending 280-pound Jason Jones has moved from tackle to end. Jones is an athletic swimmer inside; whether he can operate on the edge remains to be seen.

If he can’t, tireless veteran Dave Ball and fourth-year veteran William Hayes will probably rotate opposite left side starter Derrick Morgan. Jacob Ford, owner of a lightning quick first step, was also re-signed, though only reluctantly given that, as a 256-pound pass-rushing specialist, he doesn’t fit this line’s new mold. Morgan (266 pounds) doesn’t either,  but unlike Ford, he has the benefit of being a recent first-round pick. You don’t earn first-round status if you’re not talented; obviously it behooves the Titans to play Morgan (who has a nice inside burst, as long as his surgically repaired ACL holds up.

With Jones now outside and high-achiever Tony Brown having been cut, both defensive tackle jobs are up for grabs. Free agent Shaun Smith and ’09 second-round pick Sen’Derrick Marks will get the first crack at filling them. Smith has size but too many lazy habits to warrant much trust. Marks played 12 games last season and had footing and technique problems. If need be, the Titans can again call on energetic Jovan Haye (but probably only as part of a rotation). They also used a third-round pick on Jurrell Casey, a 300-pounder who shows some suddenness off the snap.

Special Teams

Rob Bironas is a remarkable 8/10 on 50-plus-yard field goals over the last three years. Punt returners managed only 6.1 yards per runback against Brett Kern and Tennessee’s punting unit last season, second fewest in the N.F.L. Return specialist Marc Mariani has a gift for seeing running lanes before they open. He took a punt and kickoff to the end zone in 2010 and earned Pro Bowl honors.

Bottom Line

The sweeping changes to playbooks and day-to-day operations aren’t so concerning. What is concerning is the defensive personnel. There’s only so-so playmaking talent in this front seven, which doesn’t help a secondary that has struggled the past two seasons.

Predicted Finish: 3rd A.F.C. South

Andy Benoit is the founder of NFLTouchdown.com and covers the N.F.L. for CBSsports.com. He can be reached at andy.benoit@NFLtouchdown.com.

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