Apr/22/08 08:18 AM Filed in:
Kenny
Phillips
For 13 straight years, at
least one University of Miami player has been
drafted in the first round. If the streak holds
up, it increasingly looks like defensive end
Calais Campbell -- and not safety Kenny Phillips
-- will keep the run intact. The Hurricanes' worst
record in 30 years (5-7) saw both players' stock
drop. But Campbell could be off the board in the
middle of the first round if there is the usual
run on defensive linemen.
Phillips' fall to the second round is something of an
enigma. A semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe Award, given
to the top defensive back in the country, Phillips has
a legendary work ethic that includes tireless film
study. He ran a sub-4.5 40-yard dash at the combine and
comes from the same program that produced standout NFL
safeties Bennie Blades, Ed Reed, Sean Taylor and
Brandon Meriweather.
Why, then, is Phillips falling? He's hurt by the tapes
from last season, when he didn't make plays expected of
him. North Carolina State's DaJuan Morgan seems to have
overtaken Phillips despite having just one year of
production, always risky in NFL evaluations. Arkansas
State's Tyrell Johnson also is moving up the board
after a series of great workouts.
Phillips and Johnson project as strong safeties, while
Morgan is a free safety. Those distinctions have been
muddled, though, as teams make the positions
interchangeable to handle pass-happy offenses.
SPOTLIGHT: KENNY PHILLIPS
6-2 | 208 | FS | MIAMI
Q. Miami has had a first-round pick for 13
straight years. Can you or Calais Campbell keep it
going?
A. We really don't worry about it too much. We're going
to do our best, and whatever happens, happens.
Q. How has Miami pulled off that streak?
A. The program that's there. The guys work really hard.
We have great coaches and perform well. Coaches see we
can play on that level and take us in the first round.
Q. Are you concerned that the disappointing
season the Hurricanes had last year will affect how
teams look at you?
A. It might. I think about it a little bit. But the way
I played speaks for itself. Even though we didn't have
a good season, I feel I performed well.
Q. You are known to study a lot of film. How
much time do you spend doing that?
A. It's hard to say, I spend so much time in the film
room. I got that trick from Ed Reed. When I first got
there, me and him talked a whole lot, and he told me to
stay in the film room. I spend probably three, four
hours a day [watching film].
Q. You also have played a bit of cornerback. Do
you feel a premium is being placed on cover safeties in
the NFL?
A. I think so. You have a lot of guys, I don't want to
say can't cover, but they can't cover. [Laughs.] They
are asking a lot out of safeties. They want you to
support the run and also be able to cover a tight end
and a slot receiver, so they definitely put a premium
on it.
Q. How much pride would you take in being that
player who keeps the Miami streak alive?
A. It would be real good. I don't want to be the one
who messes up the tradition. Nobody wants to be the one
who messes it up.
Q. What do you see in the future for Miami?
A. I think we're going to bounce back. Probably not
this year because we have a lot of young guys, but
definitely next year. We've got a lot of great recruits
who are going to help us. It's going to take maybe a
year, but we'll be right back on top.
(suntimes.com)