Aug/25/08 07:54 AM Filed in:
Jonathan
Vilma
Each week in the
Times-Picayune this summer, new Saints linebacker
Jonathan Vilma will let fans get behind the scenes
with a first-person journal about his experiences.
The fifth-year veteran, who arrived in a late-February
trade from the New York Jets, is expected to give the
Saints a dynamic athletic presence in the middle of
their defense. He had four tackles during the Saints'
impressive 13-0 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on
Saturday night, which was his second game of the
preseason.
"We did a lot better as a defense in this last game,
obviously, which was great for us. I think it was
important to get the bad taste out of our mouths (after
a poor showing the week before), and it was important
for us to know that we can do it. We know that's what
we're capable of, and now that's what we can strive for
in the regular season. Shutouts are always great, no
matter how you get them. You can look at all the
numbers and statistics, but if you don't let them
score, you're doing all right.
"For me personally, I think my reads were a little
better, a little quicker than last week. I think that
just comes with playing more, being in the game and
getting used to it again. One tackle that I made on
third down stood out because we talked about getting
off the field on third downs, third and long. The
secondary had been doing such a good job of that prior
to that play, so it felt good just to get in the mix.
"You can feel that the regular season is getting close.
I think we're really going to start to feel it in
practice (Monday), when we really start focusing on
Tampa Bay instead of just ourselves and our preseason
opponents. Right now, I'm very excited, especially
because I haven't played in so long in a real game that
counts on the record books. I'm going to control my
emotions though. I don't want to go out there and burn
myself out in the first series of the first game. But
I'll definitely be excited and ready to play.
"We're already into the regular-season routine in some
ways. Even though they call it the preseason, and it's
a warm-up for the regular season, the only thing that's
really a warm-up is mentally, breaking down your
opponent and understanding his tendencies. But
physically it's all the same. The tackles are all the
same, the hits are all the same. I've never heard of
anybody who tackles harder in the regular season than
they do in the preseason. And you can still feel all
those little bumps and bruises.
"The aches and pains always show up the day after, a
couple days after. The morning after, it's really all
about just relaxing your body. You're gonna be sore, so
there's really not much you can do. It's not like you
can massage the soreness away. You're just tired. So
the first day, I really just try to relax as much as
possible. Then two days after, you start with the
stretching, the massaging, getting loose and getting
back into it. I don't like to do anything in particular
on those off days. I just try to enjoy it. I'll
definitely watch some TV. I'm a big fan of 'Family
Guy.' That's always one of my favorites."
(blog.nola.com)