There was never a doubt that
Antrel Rolle would commit himself to making a
successful transition from cornerback to free
safety.
"He just loves to play the game, and he doesn't care
where he's playing," said Cardinals secondary coach
Teryl Austin. "If you said, 'Trel, we have to line you
up at nose tackle this week,' he'd say, 'All right,
what do I have to do?' "
The questions about Rolle's move were more about time
and space. How long would it take Rolle, who played
cornerback in college and in his first three years with
the Cardinals, to adapt to a position farther away from
the ball?
Turns out, about a half a season. Rolle went through
predictable rough spots early in the season, and his
transition was slowed by an ankle injury suffered in
training camp. He wasn't bad, but there were some bad
angles taken and some tackles missed.
Over the past month, however, Rolle has settled into
the free safety spot. Always a student of opponents'
tendencies, he's now comfortable in applying the
Cardinals defensive concepts to stopping them.
He returned an interception for a touchdown against the
Rams in early November and had 12 solo tackles the past
two games. He's even dabbled a bit on the offensive
side of the ball, lining up at receiver and catching a
pass for 9 yards last week against the Rams.
"When I see myself from Week 1 to Week 9 or 10, I'm
like, 'Who is that dude out there?' " Rolle said. "I
was running around like a chicken with its head cut
off. But that's all part of the process, you watch
yourself grow, week in and week out."
Strong safety Adrian Wilson has played a large part in
that process. Rolle has always been willing to study
but had to grow accustomed to the physical differences
between the two positions.
At safety, he also had to learn more about the entire
defense. At cornerback, he usually had to worry about
himself. Wilson taught him that knowing each position's
responsibilities would help.
"It's not foreign for him any more to know what each
guy is able to do," Wilson said. "It really helps our
defense to have two guys (at safety) who kind of know
what they're doing."
Wilson and Rolle are so comfortable now that they often
play interchangeable roles. In past years, if a safety
blitz was called and the offense flipped the strong
side of the formation, Wilson moved to the other side,
too.
Now, Wilson's just as likely to move back to safety and
allow Rolle to move down. It's not always just Wilson
coming down for run support, either.
"We know every formation, and we know each other's
positions," Rolle said. "So at any given time, we have
the ability and mind-set to adjust to formations.
That's what we do, we just take chances. The best thing
for a defense to do is keep an offense guessing."
Free safety has been a weakness of the Cardinals for
years. They signed Terrence Holt in free agency last
year, but he played poorly and was cut in the
off-season.
Rolle, meanwhile, struggled at cornerback for portions
of his first three seasons. The eighth overall pick in
2005, he excelled at playing the nickel corner and
returned three interceptions for touchdowns last year.
There were rumblings all along that he would make a
better safety than corner, and last off-season Rolle
volunteered to make the move.
"Each week, he's getting better," Austin said. "I
figured it would come; I wasn't sure how fast it would
come. Boy, I couldn't be happier for him and the way
he's played."
(azcentral.com)