NEW ORLEANS — The
Saints’ two biggest offseason acquisitions
were praised by their former college coach Tuesday
morning.
Larry Coker, who coached tight end Jeremy Shockey and
linebacker Jonathan Vilma at the University of Miami,
is now an ESPN commentator and was the guest speaker at
Day 2 of the Sun Belt Media Days.
Coker, who led the Hurricanes to a BCS championship and
No. 2 finish before being fired after the 2006 season,
said the Saints made good moves when they traded with
the Jets to get Vilma in February and with the Giants
to canonize Shockey on Monday.
“Jeremy Shockey is an outstanding talent,”
said Coker, who recruited Shockey to Miami.
“He’s a special, special player. Jonathan
Vilma is one of the smartest players I’ve ever
been around. He can be as good as he wants to
be.”
The Saints gave up second- and fifth-round picks in
next year’s draft for Shockey, whose ongoing
dissatisfaction with his role on the Giants made his
future there untenable. A four-time Pro Bowler, he will
turn 28 next month.
Coker acknowledged Shockey’s excessive emotion
and said his passion for the game is a plus as long as
it’s channeled properly. He thinks the fact that
Saints coach Sean Payton was the Giants’
offensive coordinator during Shockey’s All-Pro
rookie season in 2002 bodes well for the reunion.
“That says it all,” Coker said of
Payton’s familiarity with Shockey.
“Sean’s not going to bring a bum into his
football program. Get Jeremy on your football team and
you’re going to win some games. I think
it’s a great match.”
New Orleans’ first major offseason acquisition
came when it brought in Vilma, a former Pro Bowler, to
be its new starting middle linebacker.
Its last major acquisition, apparently, was bringing in
Shockey, who missed New York’s postseason run to
the Super Bowl title because of a broken leg last
season, to add a new weapon to an already potent
offense.
Shockey’s proven ability to get open down the
middle of the field should cause another concern for
defenses that also have to try and contain running
backs Deuce McAllister and Reggie Bush and cover wide
receiver Marques Colston while quarterback Drew Brees
orchestrates things.
“One of the special things I love about Jeremy
Shockey is that he brings passion and emotion to the
game every week,” Coker said. “He’s
my kind of player. He’s a tremendous
playmaker.”
Coker recalled speaking with Shockey when he was trying
to convince the young tight end to leave his native
Oklahoma and join the Hurricanes.
He asked Shockey what he wanted to accomplish and
Shockey said he wanted to win a national championship,
be a first-round draft choice in the NFL, and be the
first tight end drafted.
After Miami won the national championship in
Shockey’s junior season and Shockey was a
sure-fire No. 1 draft choice, Coker knew he had to
recruit him all over again.
“Like a good head coach, I had to tell him,
Jeremy, you’re not ready,” Coker said.
“You’re not going to be that high a draft
choice this year, there are 14 tight ends in the draft.
Of course, he went into the draft, was the 14th player
picked and was the first tight end.”
Coker also remembered something Shockey’s mother
told him when he was trying to get her son to become a
Hurricane.
“She said, he might not be your best football
player,” Coker recalled, “but he’ll
be your toughest football player. She was right.”
(2theadvocate.com)