METAIRIE – Jonathan
Vilma backpedaled about five yards before breaking
to his left towards the line of scrimmage.
No grimace on his face.
No brace on his knee.
No problem.
The only thing holding New Orleans’ newest
linebacker back is, well, head coach Sean Payton.
“It felt good. Obviously, limited in
practice,” Vilma said. “But me and coach
worked out a nice little bargaining agreement.
He’s letting me do a couple of things outside.
Letting me work with the team a little bit, work with
the linebackers. It’s exciting to come from the
rehab and come from the surgery to get to this
point.”
Several months after having a bone spur removed from
his knee – the result of a previous injury
– the 6-foot-1, 230-pound linebacker is getting
ever closer to being 100 percent.
But with so much at stake, his doctors and coaches are
wary of him doing much during OTAs – Organized
Team Activities – or during the Saints upcoming
minicamp.
“I had to make the first move,” Vilma said.
“I had to initiate the conversation. It’s
good. I feel good out there.”
“His progress has been good and very
encouraging,” Saints head coach Sean Payton said.
“There haven’t been any setbacks.
It’s been very positive.”
A few years ago, Vilma said, he likely wouldn’t
have understood how or even why needs to come along
slowly.
“Probably if I were five years younger, I’d
go out there and ignore what the coaches say,”
Vilma said. “Right now, I have to take care of my
body and we’re all on the same mission.”
He added, “I feel like I can do the whole
practice. Is that the best thing for me? Probably not.
The best thing for me is to gradually get into
it.”
For the move to work for both the Saints and Vilma,
though, he’ll need to at least get back to the
way he produced in his sophomore campaign with the New
York Jets.
As a rookie, he started 14 of 16 games and compiled 107
tackles. But in his second season, he started all 16
contests and recorded 169 tackles – 124 solo
– and forced four fumbles.
But then Eric Mangini took over the Jets and changed
defenses, going from a 4-3 with three linebackers to a
3-4 with four linebackers. Vilma’s production
went down.
Now in New Orleans, Vilma will again play in a 4-3, and
that’s making his transition to the South that
much easier.
“A lot of the concepts are the same,” Vilma
said. “I’m just learning a different
language now.”
It’s likely Vilma will sit out of most of the
heavy contact drills during the Saints’ minicamp,
which begins May 30 at the team’s Airline Highway
facility.
The question is whether he’ll be ready for
training camp, which starts in late July.
“We’ll see,” he said.
(wwltv.com)