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Skins Quotes 8/3/19: Landon Collins

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August 3, 2019
S Landon Collins

On fan appreciation day during training camp:
"It's awesome man. It shows that the guys and the fans out there, they cherish what we do, they love what we do, they acknowledge what we do. They're standing out there in the heat just like we are playing in it. They want us to win and they want us to win as bad as they do. It's a dream come true to have those fans out there cheering us on."

On how his familiarity with the defense:
"We breaking it down part by part, piece by piece. We're taking our time with it. We are not trying to rush through it. We are breaking down each individual person that we have to have. We have the seam, we have the flats, we have the man-to-man. How we are playing it game plan wise, how we are playing it camp wise. It's just breaking down the components just to make sure we all on the same page. We talk more than anything. Communication is the biggest key within the defense. On that part we just stay on the same page, making sure what we got to do, and how we got to play it."

On his impression of QB Dwayne Haskins:
"He's doing a great job out there – making his plays, making his drills, reading his reads. He's being a rookie. Honestly, all rookies are going to make them mistakes. I am glad he is making them now in camp, so he can know what he can and cannot do; what he cannot throw, and what he can throw, just how to read the defense. The more you go against a good defense, the more you go against, and get his reps, the better he's going to become."

On the differences between the three quarterbacks and how they impact the defense:
"You never – honestly as a DB or as a defensive player – you don't know who is back there when you got three different quarterbacks throwing the ball. I don't realize until after the play. I couldn't even tell you who threw the ball when I caught that interception. From that standpoint, you just get to know the defense, and you get keen in all positions – knowing our technique, knowing our job is supposed to do. From that standpoint, we go from there. Now when I get to be on the sideline and watch these guys and watch their reads, I can see that Colt [McCoy] is definitely going through his reads, his steps, his progressions and getting the ball out there as quick as possible. Same thing with Case [Keenum] and Dwayne [Haskins Jr.]. It goes hand-in-hand. Then, going against other quarterbacks, that is more of a study habit. I'm watching more film on other quarterbacks. I get to watch them and watch their reads, what's their keys, their concepts; offensive coordinator, what they like to do, down the distance it goes. It goes way farther into the film work than going against them on the field."

On joining a new team as a proven veteran and leader:
"The opportunity kind of presents itself as quick as possible, honestly. When you see a guy [with] a head down or the demeanor in their walk or you can see the frustration in their face – it depends on how you attack it from that point on, but the opportunity always presents itself as for how are you going to attack it. From that standpoint, I'm a guy that's gonna pull a guy to the side just to see what's going on with his mindset. What he should be looking at? What he should be reading? I just try to give him a key-set on what a veteran guy would do [rather] than what a rookie would do. And, give him my mistakes of what I did in the past so they can understand that from that standpoint."

On talent of this defense:
"Man, this defense, we could ride it all the way, honestly. We have a great deep front that's going to put pressure on quarterback faces. They're going to have maybe two seconds to have that read down field and get the ball out. If they don't, it's either a sack or it's going to be a tipped fumble or it's going to be a tipped ball in the air and it's going to give the DBs an opportunity to make plays. I go to Jonathan Allen, Matt [Ioannidis], Daron Payne – I go to all those guys, Ryan Kerrigan – make sure to say, 'Hey, get pressure on this quarterback,' because we got guys back here that can force turnovers and get the ball back to our offense."

On his acrobatic interception in practice today and the meaning of big plays even in practice:
"I'll go through the progression. Honestly, I was on a three-to-two read. My three didn't come up the field so my next read was to my two. Both of my two's went outside, so I didn't have any reads. All I had was space and opportunity and I just knew looking at the quarterback, he was drifting my way. So from that standpoint I knew the ball was coming in that area, I just didn't know where it was going at. I broke on the ball and played with instincts from there. But with big plays like that, it shows the team that we got talent on our back end that's going to make plays, that's going to be playmakers, game changers, get an opportunity to win a game, and try to make a run for the big dance. With that being said, that's what we have to continue to do. We have guys all over the field to do that, and it's very special and I can see it on this team."

On past preconceptions of the Redskins that have been different:
"No, when I was looking from the outside in, I definitely just knew I wanted to be on this team. They had – I mean I was looking from a defensive perspective. They had all the guys, they had all the keys, they had all the things I wanted on a defense. From that standpoint I was like I just need to be over here. I know I can make a difference, make a change and help out as much as possible and that was my perception from that standpoint."

On the best he has seen from the offensive group so far:
"I would say Jordan Reed and Terry McLaurin, definitely those two. Reed is just one of those guys that has the options to do whatever he wants and he gets open. He's going to catch the ball and go get any ball. Same thing with Terry [McLaurin]. He has the ability to just run past anybody. His speed, we haven't had a speed receiver out there in a minute. From that standpoint, he can beat anybody deep and he's showing his versatility by going to get any ball that's in the air."

On his mindset for the two upcoming games against the Giants this year:
"For me? Or for the team? For me, it's going to be a lot of aggression. When I go to those types of games, I go to my college times. I was from Louisiana and I was playing LSU. So just being able to keep my composure as much as possible, keep my emotions in tack and play within my defense. When you go against a time that you have some aggression against, you want to let some self-esteem out. You want to pick your times and pick your moments to do that. You got to be able to control it at the end of the day because it could hurt the team more than it could help. From that standpoint, I just got to keep the emotions under control."

On playing rival LSU in college:
"Oh yeah, they recruited me. If you ever been to the game, it was, 'Boo LC [Landon Collins], you suck,' I got everything in the woodworks. It was a great four years beating them every year. We still haven't lost to them, still haven't lost to LSU in eight years. It's been a blessing."

On his relationship with CB Josh Norman:
"We have known each other since my third year in the league. It's been good. It's just understanding each other and what he is looking at. We go over a lot of film so we kind of work on that as much as possible, understanding what he likes to do when he likes to go after and go get something. If I see something I just give him a key concept. I mean as a corner they can attack more, then at safety we have to be the last line of defense so I can't really do much attacking, but I can tell him, ‘hey this might be coming, go get it,' so things like that."

On practicing safety blitzes with OLB unit last Thursday:
"I've been blitzing all my life so that's kind of second nature. They blitz kind of differently, so I just have to work on my technique within the defense on how to blitz differently. Other than that, it's second nature for me. I know I can read the backfield on the run, so I can either make a tackle for loss on the running back when they're handing the ball off or I could break down and tackle the quarterback if he's doing a boot or a roll out."

On the time spent among the DB group as a whole during the offseason:
"We hung out a lot during OTA's for sure. Before OTAs, a lot of us were doing different things, but during OTAs, when everybody got here, everyone was kind of doing spades night, getting together. For us it's more of a bonding and understanding each other, making sure we're on the same page and making sure we can talk to each other. When you can't talk to somebody, they go off into their own world and into their own space and they don't care to listen. They don't want to listen. So we made sure we stayed on top of each other with our group chat. This offseason, most of us went to Scottsdale [Arizona] and trained out there so we got along with a lot of the guys out there. We did a lot of things and did a lot of team bonding, so it was good."

On how long the DB group spent training in Scottsdale:
"Two weeks."




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Agree with Landon on this defense getting after qb's. Can't wait to see opposing teams forced into passing against our squad.
 
Agree with Landon on this defense getting after qb's. Can't wait to see opposing teams forced into passing against our squad.

Problem will be the same as it has been under Manusky, Barry previously, and Haslett before him...they will talk about getting to the QB with different packages, have tremendous success with it early, then forget all about it in the 4th Q when the game is on the line and our defense is worn out.

It'd be nice to see consistent pressure on the opposing QB without all the stunts. Yes, stunts are a part of the game, but not something a defense needs to get pressure on the QB...when the defense sees success with plain old man to man play.
 
It seems as if our lb corp was upgraded with speed, more coverage sacks are coming from that tweak. Throw in Sweat combined with Allen, Ion, Payne and Settle with another year in the system and we've got Moreland ball hawking all over the place. If this defense does falter it will be due to Manusky's situational playcalling.

Our 3 pass and out offense is a major player in that as well. I can't stand Jay the playcaller, Oconnel needs to take that shit over and not give it back. Guice/AP/Perine should help that along if so.

IMHO we're solid if not pretty good in all areas except o-line. Once that part gets settled we're waiting on the qb to take the team on a serious run. Trent's greed took a decent unit and made it suspect in 1 swipe at cash, or medical disagreements, or whatever his reasonong.
 
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This year's team has the 'X' factor on it that Redskins defenses in the past have not had - Montez Sweat.

The presence of a 6'6 and 250 outside rusher with 4.4 speed is a dynamic that few teams have and if Montez develops as hoped he will be a focal point for offenses to stop week in and week out.

I think Collins will show everyone what we did NOT get in Josh Norman for all that money - an accountable player that leads by example rather than by his big mouth and off the field exploits.
 

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