Jul/23/08 06:33 PM Filed in:
Kenny
Phillips
ALBANY, N.Y. - Back in
minicamp, rookie S Kenny Phillips made an awesome
diving play to either break up a pass or intercept
it. The final ruling on that play is still
somewhat in doubt.
Whatever the result, that play still has the Giants'
defensive coaches gushing.
"I haven't seen a play like that and I've been around
the NFL. Not for a long time but over 13, 14 years,"
safeties coach Dave Merritt said this afternoon as
training camp opened. "For this kid to be playing
half-field (coverage) on the right, get his feet
turned, run and track the ball in the air, jump over
everybody's head like Superman ... and whether he
caught it or not, I don't know, but I started running
after him, giving him a high five. Unbelievable play."
So unbelievable that defensive coordinator Steve
Spagnuolo mentioned it again today - unprovoked - when
asked if he was looking forward to the competition at
the safety position in general.
"Yeah, especially after we say Kenny make that play in
the spring," Spagnuolo said. "That was a tremendous
play. ... In that setting, where we have no pads on ...
again, real football is coming up here shortly,
especially on the defensive side of the ball ... but it
was impressive."
Was that one play enough for the coaches to suddenly
formulate a different opinion of Phillips?
"It's enough for you to say, 'That's why we drafted
him. That's what we looking for,'" Merritt said of the
31st overall pick and former Miami Hurricane. "Because
on the Miami film, it was hard to find plays like that
on Kenny because he was down (in the box) a lot. But
you knew he had the range because you look at his 40
time, you look at his shuttle time and all that, so you
know the kid has the ability to go play the deep
middle. For the kid to play a half and go get it ... I
mean, you look at some plays when he was playing the
middle post and he was getting from the middle to the
sideline. It was very nice to see that."
When asked, based on that play and others, if the 6-2,
208-pound Phillips has long-striding speed or
quick-patter speed, Merritt said, "He has both. And the
thing is, his size, he has the height, has the long-arm
wingspan, so this kid has a bunch of potential."
Yeah, but come on, let's answer the real question: Did
he catch that ball in June? Or did it hit the ground.
"You know what," Merritt said with a laugh when told
Spagnuolo ruled it an interception, "he caught it."
(nj.com)