Sep/18/08 09:44 PM Filed in:
Jonathan
Vilma
Q: With your tackle
totals, is it easy to say that you’re
getting the feel for this defense?
Jonathan Vilma:
"Yes, I’m getting a feel for it and Coach (Gary)
Gibbs has a really good scheme. He’s really put
in a lot of time and effort to get the right guys,
because it’s really the guys up front and the
secondary that’s been doing a great job. I just
make the tackles, but the supporting cast has been
really, really good."
Q: Your knee must be holding up if you’re
making all these tackles?
Jonathan Vilma:
"Yes, fortunately my knee’s been holding up
really well. It hasn’t been an issue up to this
point. I’m excited about that. I’m always
cognizant about my knee. Asides from that, it’s
about the guys around me that are doing a really good
job even though we didn’t play up to our
standards against Washington, we look to bounce back."
Q: When you go back to the film as a unit, how
do you look at your tackling in the Washington game?
Jonathan Vilma:
"I would have to say our tackling was average at best
starting with myself and going on down. It wasn’t
necessarily guys getting run over or a physical thing.
I think it was that we’re taking bad angles to
the ball sometimes; the players are able to cut back on
us, things like that. We just have to take better
angles to the ball and that starts at practice."
Q: How do you do that?
Jonathan Vilma:
"It just comes in practice where you’re
simulating a game. If a wide receiver catches a ball,
you’re running to the ball full speed in
practice, actually thinking about tackling him even if
you’re not doing it in practice, in the game, it
should show up."
Q: Are you coming out at all on defense?
Jonathan Vilma:
"No. I like it that way. I don’t want to come
out."
Q: Was it like that way in New York for you?
Jonathan Vilma:
Yes.
Q: Can you talk about going against Jay Cutler
this week?
Jonathan Vilma:
"He had very good game asides from that one play. He
had a really good game. The past two games he’s
been playing really well. From what I see he can make
all the throws. He’s very comfortable in the
pocket. He can roll out. You’re looking at a
young, talented guy who is very confident and is coming
into his own right now. I think he doesn’t feel
the pressure much like Aaron Rodgers with Brett Farve
and him with John Elway, he’s just going out
there and being himself."
Q: How important will this game be to set the
tone for the entire season defensively?
Jonathan Vilma:
"It’s important to respond, because this is what
we do and is our profession. We play the game to win,
not to put up a good fight or anything like that and
when you go out there and you don’t perform up to
your standards, or up to our standards, I should say,
you put the most pressure on yourself. We want to go
out there, play up to our capabilities. We know what
kind of talent we have."
Q: Going back to John Elway, Denver’s
been able to run the ball well because of their zone
blocking scheme. Why is it so effective?
Jonathan Vilma:
"It’s effective, because it forces defenses to be
very disciplined and not just the defense as a whole,
but the individual. You can have ten guys playing right
and one guy misses his gap and it breaks for ten yards
or 20 yards. On and on you see the film, you can have
seven or eight guys do the right thing, but if one guy
messes up they find the crease. It forces the entire
defense to be disciplined. Of course you have to make
the tackles."
Q: Around the league, does this offensive line
have a reputation?
Jonathan Vilma:
"They have a reputation. I don’t see it as a bad
reputation, I see it as a good one. They’re known
as athletic, smaller type of offensive line. They like
to cut block, everybody knows that. You watch it one
film, they’re 100 miles an hour, play in and play
out and they do what they have to do to get the running
back an open hole."
(neworleanssaints.com)