Kelly Jennings

Kelly Jennings out until training camp

KellyJennings
Seahawks CB Kelly Jennings will miss all pre-training camp workouts while recovering from shoulder surgery.
It sounds like this was a reconstructive operation. Jennings, Seattle's 2006 first-round pick, appears to be a dime cornerback at best. Ken Lucas and Marcus Trufant are the starters with Josh Wilson likely covering the slot.

(rotoworld.com)
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No love from home: How bad has this season gotten for Seahawks cornerback Kelly Jennings?

KellyJennings
He'll be returning to his home state this weekend, and his parents won't even be there to see him.

Jennings said that his parents are planning to make the 400-mile trip from Live Oak, Fla., to Miami to attend the University of Miami-Virginia Tech game on Thursday night. It's Senior Night, and the Jennings family plans to watch Hurricanes cornerback Bruce Johnson, who is the son of Kelly Jennings' older sister, Cassandra.

The Seahawks cornerback said that his parents don't want to make the trip twice in a week, so they'll be skipping the Seahawks-Dolphins game.

"I'll see them in the offseason," Jennings said with a shrug. "Of course, I'd love for them to be there. It's always great to see your parents. But I don't let it bother me."

Jennings added that his parents have seen him play live just three times during his three-year NFL career.

(heraldnet.com)
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Jennings wilting in Seattle Seahawks' secondary

KellyJennings
Twenty-five-year-old Kelly Jennings was Wilson this time last season: a second-year player who had moved into the starting lineup and improved each week. Those days seem so far away now.

Since Jennings got demoted to the role of Wilson's backup, he's trying not to let his confidence waver.

"You've just got to let it go," he said of the negative energy that comes with losing a starting job. "It's tough to let it go because you want to be good, and if you're not, you feel like you're letting people down. But if you hold on to that, you'll never get back to where you need to be."

Seahawks fans have seen how confidence can affect a players' career -- both good and bad. While former first-round pick Marcus Trufant gained so much confidence early last year that he went on to have a Pro Bowl season, former starting safety Michael Boulware lost so much confidence during his third season in Seattle that he eventually got shipped out of town.

Confidence, at the defensive back position more than any other, can be the fine line that separates the Pro Bowler from the unemployed.

"As a defensive back, you have to be able to brush things off very quickly," Seahawks safety Brian Russell said. "There comes a time when every defensive back gives up a play. You've got to get ready for the next play because if you let it linger in your mind, it's going to get ugly for you."

While teammates say that confidence has been a big part of Wilson's emergence, they claim that Jennings has shown no signs of losing his. Even after the third-year player missed a tackle to help set up the Philadelphia Eagles' second touchdown last Sunday, Jennings kept his head high.

"Kell, his confidence level is there," safety Deon Grant said. "He's just real quiet, so when people see his demeanor, they think his confidence level might not be high. It's high; he's just a quiet dude."

Defensive coordinator John Marshall said he hasn't noticed any change in Jennings's psyche.

"He's not in the tank or anything like that," Marshall said. "He's very workmanlike about what he's doing. But I didn't ask him about how he's feeling or anything -- because I was afraid he'd tell me."

Defensive back Jordan Babineaux is among the players who have rushed to Jennings's defense this season. When reporters descended on Jennings' locker after the benching, Babineaux tried to shoo them away.

It brought back memories of a postgame locker room incident in 2006, when Babineaux barked at reporters who had surrounded Boulware's locker minutes after the safety had given up a game-winning touchdown pass against San Diego.

Babineaux did not want to compare the situations, and he added that he isn't trying to single Jennings out.

"At this point right now, being in the situation we're in, we could all use a little uplift," Babineaux said this week.

Jennings started 20 of Seattle's past 22 games -- a concussion relegated him to a lesser role in the Oct. 5 game against the New York Giants -- before officially losing his starting job on Oct. 12. He had given up too many long passes, including two touchdowns, in the first four games of this season.

This week, Jennings said that demotion came as no surprise.

(heraldnet.com)
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Kelly Jennings Not Playing Well

KellyJennings
Kelly Jennings' decline, however, was not. Jennings did a good job last year for the Seahawks, but this year he has been unacceptably bad, so much so that he lost his starting spot. Surprising for a third year player. His replacement, Wilson, took some time to adjust, and had a few bad games, but has started to play well.

(seatownsports.net)
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Seahawks demote Jennings

RENTON -- Sunday's blowout loss to the New York Giants came with a price for at least two Seattle Seahawks.

KellyJennings
Cornerback Kelly Jennings and wide receiver Billy McMullen appear unlikely to start Sunday's game against Green Bay.

"We've talked to the players, and my point of emphasis was that they try not to take those things personally," coach Mike Holmgren said. "As disappointed as (they) might be, it's our job to try and win the football games and put the best group out there. And you kind of have to earn that every week. And so that's why we did a couple of things."

Jennings, who will be replaced by Josh Wilson, said that he understood the decision.

“I feel like I have a job to do on the defense, and right now I don’t feel like I’m getting it done," said Jennings, who gave up a long touchdown on the Giants' first drive Sunday. "It’s a coaches’ decision, and if I was a coach, I would do it the same way. For me personally, I can only try to get better. I can only do what I can do.”

Koren Robinson is likely to replace McMullen in the starting lineup.
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Kelly Jennings Injured

KellyJennings
CB Kelly Jennings, who was victimized on Hixon’s TD catch that initiated last Sunday’s carnage, suffered a concussion that makes his status for the Packers this Sunday questionable. But he had been having a very rough time this season before the injury, and his replacement should he be unable to start this Sunday, Josh Wilson, also has been easy pickings for opposing receivers. 

(pfw.com)
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Jennings Injured

KellyJennings
The other injury from Sunday's game is Kelly Jennings, the cornerback who suffered a broken rib. He had an injection at halftime and finished the game. He won't practice much this week, but is expected to be available for the game against St. Louis.


(seattletimes.com)
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Seahawks Player of the Day

KellyJennings
Kelly Jennings. The team's "other" cornerback had an impressive morning in what was a bounce-back performance by the entire starting secondary after they had problems stopping the Vikings' passing game in Minneapolis.

Jennings' best play was batting away a deep pass from Charlie Frye to Nate Burleson. But it wasn't his only play. The team's right cornerback also stopped Ben Obomanu short of the needed first-down yardage in a third-down drill and did it again on a third-down pass to Maurice Morris in a record-zone drill.

(blog.seattlepi.com)
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Kelly Jennings Camp Update

KellyJennings
Kelly Jennings played great coverage on a deep pass thrown to Bobby Engram during a seven-on-seven passing drill ...

This caught my eye because I think Jennings is about perfectly suited to shutdown Bobby Engram. Good cover, good reaction, great speed/quickness and enough strength. Obviously, then, it doesn't take much strength. I'll discuss this in greater detail during the podcast, but whatever Engram did last season, he's not who Seattle want to run their passing offense through.

(fieldgulls.com)
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Kelly Jennings Update

KellyJennings
TOP DEFENSIVE PLAY: Cornerback Kelly Jennings and receiver Trent Shelton wrestled for a pass during the afternoon practice. Jennings showed it's not about the size of the player so much as the size of the fight in the player. The 180-pound corner refused to let go of the pass, battling for control of the ball with a receiver that outweighed him by 22 pounds. When the mess got unknotted, Jennings still had his hands on the ball.

(seattletimes.com)
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Kelly Jennings to be Challenged in Training Camp

KellyJennings
Seattle Seahawks starting CB Kelly Jennings is expected to be challenged by CB Kevin Hobbs in training camp, according to PFW. Originally signed by Seattle as an undrafted free agent in 2006, only to be released after training camp, Hobbs was re-signed last May and ended up splitting time between the active roster and the practice squad. In this year's minicamps and OTAs, however, he was singled out as the team's most improved defender. Said one longtime team insider: "He really looked good and made a lot of plays. I don't see him beating out Jennings, but I definitely see him possibly grabbing the 'dime' role from CB Josh Wilson, whose best plays have come from having to use his athleticism to recover from all the plays he keeps missing."

(ffmastermind.com)
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Jennings could lose his job?

KellyJennings
Coach Mike Holmgren indicated at the Seahawks' last minicamp that CB Kelly Jennings is no lock to return as a starter in 2008.
"Marcus Trufant will be one corner," Holmgren said. "Then we have a bunch of guys battling that are playing very well at the other corner." 2007 second-round pick Josh Wilson and Jordan Babineaux may be threats to Jennings.

(rotoworld.com)
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Kelly Jennings suffers shin injury

KellyJennings
Jennings' return is questionable.






(blogs.thenewstribune.com)
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Kelly Jennings Season Retro

KellyJennings
Stats*

Penetrations: 1
Broken Tackles: 4
Good Coverage: 17
Blown Coverage: 8
*Includes all games minus Week 10, Divisional Round and the second half of Week 3 and the first half of week 1.

Highlights

9/16/07
Kelly Jennings performed admirably despite a terrible mismatch. He recorded three good coverages and just one blown coverage. The blown coverage? When Larry Fitzgerald jumped over him.

12/16/07
Jennings had a fine first quarter, including coverage that broke up a touchdown reception and a tackle of -1 yards against Steve Smith. The tackle was especially heartening.

1/05/08
Jennings was lined across from Reche Caldwell for most of the game. Caldwell caught one pass for 7 yards, and was the target of 3 incompletes. Caldwell isn't any great shakes, but Jennings is good. Real good.

Lowlights

10/7/07
Jennings had a couple rough stretches and despite my theorizing otherwise, it's not man but zone coverage that gives him troubles. His worst showing was on the third play of the Steelers first drive of the second quarter backed up within their own ten, third and 3. The Steelers have two receivers bunched left and Seattle is in a 4-2 nickel. Jordan Babineaux and Kelly Jennings are in zone coverage left. Babs interior, Jennings ext--oh wait, no he seems to be playing the interior too. Willie Reid catches the ball in the flat, Jennings breaks on the receiver (at this point the first down is already conceded) throws an awful tackle that slides right off the 186 pound Reid before Reid breaks it for a 25 yard gain. The worst infraction is the blown coverage as once Jennings was near Reid the first down was all but conceded anyway, but the tackle is exactly the type you fear from a slight player like Jennings, not really bad form, just wimpy. Reid barely broke stride slipping past him. Jennings has played well all year and has been a real step up in man coverage from Kelly Herndon, but what he showed on this play isn't something tackle drills can overcome.

10/14/07
Fifth play, third New Orleans drive. First and ten, the Hawks are in a base package w/ Deon Grant playing up. At the snap the Saints left side creates a big mess, Baraka Atkins leveled, Grant flies in, gets picked by Karney and only Kelly Jennings stands between Bush and the sidelines. Jennings takes a miserable angle, again somehow inexplicably underestimating Bush's speed, breaks outside containment and watches Bush dash past him for 22 along the left sideline. It's the first, and hopefully last, time I have pined for Kelly Herndon.
Back to business. Tru played decent. Grant was a non-entity. Russell is the reactionary fling following Ken Hamlin: Where Hamlin lived in the first fifteen yards, Russell rarely strays from 20 yards past the line of scrimmage. It's not the worst thing a safety can do, but it does leave a lot of middle-deep post routes open. Oh, and Jennings played awful. Here's a three play stretch that best summed up Seattle's secondary:

• Seventh play, Saints final drive of the half. It's 1st and 4 into the end zone. Seattle rushes seven, Brees feeling nary a whisper of pressure tosses the ball to Marques Colston. Jennings blows coverage, but luckily Colston drops the pass.
• Eighth play, Seattle in goal line formation. Hawks blitz on play action, Grant gets penetration, Brees rushes a pass to Eric Johnson. Trufant absolutely mugs Johnson, but doesn't get called.
• Ninth play, Hawks again in goal line. Hawks blitz, Brees tosses it out to Colston, Jennings blows coverage, this time Colston hauls in the touchdown reception. Fantasy owners rejoice. I attempt to bite off my own fist.

Outlook
The quiet corner. Noteworthy for being not-noteworthy. Jennings is one of Tim Ruskell's less recognized success stories. Second year corners are supposed to be inconsistent and a little toasty around the edges. Excepting his showing against the Saints, Jennings was a rock. A pillar of basalt, if you will, because if such a thing is possible, Jennings is a thin 178. Jennings open field tackling is, yes, wimpy. Not technically incorrect, but a bit like a superball colliding with an asteroid. The Jennings, Russell, Tapp troika oversaw Seattle's 20th ranked rush D on runs a round left end. A weakness that came to fore facing Green Bay. As hopeless as Jennings looked at times in 2007, I'd put better odds on Jennings filling out enough to put the oomph in his good angles and technically sound tackles than a larger defender acquiring new skills. Jennings is a precocious cover corner. Should he develop some ball skills, watch out. Too good to be so unappreciated.

(fieldgulls.com)
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Seahawks work on bump-and-run in minicamp

KIRKLAND -- Marcus Trufant used his right forearm to jostle D.J. Hackett as he broke off the line of scrimmage, disrupting Hackett's route and depriving quarterback Matt Hasselbeck of his primary receiver.

A few plays later, Pete Hunter missed his jam on Deion Branch, allowing Branch to run past him and take a deep pass from Seneca Wallace.

It's called press coverage -- or bump-and-run -- and the take-and-give tactic has become something to watch at the Seahawks' minicamp because the cornerbacks are using the technique more in each practice than they did in any game last season.

The reason for the increased emphasis in this two-week minicamp that concludes Thursday is multi-faceted.
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Stronger Jennings eager for bigger role with Seahawks

KIRKLAND - When veteran receiver D.J. Hackett reported to minicamps last summer, he was excited about the matchup advantages he had against the Seattle Seahawks' hotshot rookie.

Cornerback Kelly Jennings, a recent first-round pick from the University of Miami back then, showed up with impressive quickness but not much bulk. The 6-foot-2, 200-pound Hackett learned quickly that his own size and physical game would be too much for the slight rookie.

This summer? Well, that's a different story.

"He's put a little bit of weight on, so it's not as easy to throw him around," Hackett said of the man who is expected to step in for released veteran Kelly Herndon as the starting cornerback.
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Latest change in Seahawks' secondary is fat chance for 'Slim'

KIRKLAND, Wash. -- Suddenly, the Seahawk they call "Slim" has a fat chance to become a star.

Kelly Jennings could be his listed 178 pounds - if he were wearing sandbags. He also could be the key new starter in Seattle's remodeled defensive secondary.

When the Seahawks cut starting cornerback Kelly Herndon last Friday, they all but handed one of the NFL's most difficult positions to Jennings.

"It just told me this was my opportunity to step up," Jennings said this week as Seattle's second and final minicamp began.
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Seahawks Minicamp | Turning the corner

KIRKLAND — The Seahawks are transitioning from one Kelly to another, and the similarities between the former Seahawks cornerback and the current one are uncanny.

Kelly Jennings slid into the right cornerback spot with the No. 1 defense Monday in the first practice of the team's June minicamp. The former first-round draft pick from Miami has assumed the position following the release of veteran Kelly Herndon last week.

Jennings and Herndon are of similar build and stature (5 feet 11, about 180 pounds), share a first name and a friendship and are not the most vocal people.
By the end of last season, Herndon was out with a broken ankle and Jennings had taken over as a starter for the playoffs. Jennings had one interception last season, playing mainly as the nickel cornerback and on special teams.
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Hawks' secondary quiets Cowboys, T.O.

Pete Hunter was a loan officer a week ago and lived fewer than 2 miles from the Dallas training facility, but he knocked down the Cowboys' final pass in the end zone on Saturday night.

Jordan Babineaux played strong safety two weeks ago, but he started at cornerback and made the game-saving tackle of Tony Romo on an aborted field goal.

Kelly Jennings is so skinny he gets called "Slim" by his teammates, but the rookie cornerback came up big when he forced a fourth-quarter fumble that changed the momentum of Saturday's 21-20 Seahawks win.
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Jennings, Babineaux key to thin secondary

KIRKLAND - The lockers on either side of those belonging to Jordan Babineaux and Kelly Jennings were empty on Tuesday afternoon. For a few minutes, it was as if the duo was standing on an island with no one else around.

The image served as an appropriate metaphor for this Saturday's game against the Dallas Cowboys.

Babineaux and Jennings are the Seattle Seahawks' starting cornerbacks, due in large part to a rash of injuries that have knocked out three players in two weeks.
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Rookie counts on nerves

KIRKLAND – Nerves won’t be an issue for Kelly Jennings on Sunday because he’s always nervous before he plays.

Jennings, the Seattle Seahawks’ rookie cornerback, will be making his first NFL start in Tampa Bay on Sunday. He said 18 family and friends will drive in from Orlando and Live Oak (about 21/2 hours north of Tampa) for the game.

Outside of his brother, none of his family has seen him play. Jennings, the Seahawks’ No. 1 draft pick from Miami, said the last time his family watched him he was starting for the Hurricanes.

Pressure? Nah.

“I always feel jittery,” Jennings insisted Thursday. “When I do feel jittery, that’s when I know I’m ready to play. If I don’t feel jittery, then something’s wrong. I just know that first series jitters are going to be there, but then after that, I’ll be OK.”
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Jennings set to step in

KIRKLAND — Marcus Trufant's high right ankle sprain will almost certainly keep him out of this Sunday's game — though he is listed as doubtful — and that means rookie Kelly Jennings is set to make his first career start.

Jennings replaced Trufant at right cornerback when Trufant was helped off the field with his injury early in the third quarter against San Diego last Sunday.

Jennings, used all season as the nickel cornerback and on special teams, came on and played what Seahawks coach Mike Holmgren called Jennings' best game of the season last week.

Often matched up against Chargers receiver Vincent Jackson, six inches taller and 63 pounds heavier, Jennings had two pass breakups and three solo tackles.
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JENNINGS HOBBLED

Rookie cornerback Kelly Jennings sat out the end of practice after the first-round draft choice injured his left knee. The injury was not considered serious, and Jennings was not added to the injury report.

With starter Kelly Herndon sitting out a second consecutive day to rest a sore hamstring, Jimmy Williams worked at left cornerback with the No. 1 defense.

(seattlepl.newsource.com)
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Seahawks' Jennings stunned at death of former teammate

SEATTLE - The distress spread one ring at a time. Seahawks cornerback Kelly Jennings' cellphone kept jingling, five, 10, 15 times at least. Maybe more. He lost count as the shocking news smothered his mind Tuesday night.

Someone fired a bullet into his former teammate's head. Bryan Pata was dead. This time last year, the two were reveling in the Miami's victory over rival Virginia Tech. Jennings later left Miami with degrees in finance and business management and realized his pro football dream after the Seahawks chose him in the 2006 draft.

Pata, 22, had similar aspirations. Gunfire stopped him.

"I couldn't believe it," Jennings said. "After you start hearing about it from 15 different people, though, it really sets in that he was gone."
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Kelly Jennings Update

Seahawks rookie cornerback Kelly Jennings, who played at Miami, watched replays of the Hurricanes’ brawl against Florida International on Saturday with shock and concern.

The shock was seeing so many players fighting, kicking and swinging helmets. The concern was for his nephew, Bruce Johnson, who now plays for the Hurricanes.

Johnson, a sophomore defensive back and punt returner, emerged from the brawl OK but was one of the 13 Miami players suspended.

“He’s kind of a hothead sometimes, and I’m trying to teach him a little bit of what I’ve learned,” Jennings said, adding that he agrees with the suspensions.

He said events like Saturday’s only feed into the negative image of Hurricanes players being thugs, which he said is a bad rap.

“Yes it is,” he said gesturing to the locker room and laughing. “I get that from these guys all the time.”

(thenewstriibune.com)
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Seahawks' nickel defense can turn on a dime - Kelly Jennings Update

KIRKLAND -- One of the defensive tackles really isn't. He's an end, and Bryce Fisher is a 268-pound end at that.

Same thing with the ends, who are actually 235-pound linebacker Julian Peterson and 265-pound rookie Darryl Tapp.

The secondary includes a left cornerback -- 178-pound Kelly Jennings -- who has been dubbed "Slim" by his teammates.
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Kelly Jennings Update

Seahawks President Tim Ruskell struck gold with his first two draft choices in the 2006 NFL Draft, as CB Kelly Jennings and DE Darryl Tapp both had great games. Jennings, a first round pick from Miami, managed to get his hand inside on a pass attempt to Fitzgerald and tipped it to Seahawks FS Ken Hamlin, who almost brought it in for an interception.
(seahawks.scout.com)
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Can rookie Jennings play way into starting DB spot?

KIRKLAND - Try as they may, Seneca Wallace and Maurice Morris have very little to prove tonight.

D.D. Lewis, Niko Koutouvides and Jordan Babineaux feel the same way.

In fact, almost all of the players who will suit up for the Seattle Seahawks in tonight's preseason finale against Oakland have absolutely no chance of playing their way into, or out of, a starting spot.
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Hawk Notes: Same position, different challenges (Kelly Jennings)

CHENEY — They share both a first name and a position, but Kelly Herndon and Kelly Jennings have different challenges in the eyes of coach Mike Holmgren.
"One is very inexperienced," Holmgren said, "and one has to be a little more consistent."
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Kelly Jennings Update

Word is the Seahawks have been satisfied with the steady progress of first-round CB Kelly Jennings, who got picked apart pretty good by the Cowboys in the preseason opener. But while Jennings is expected to see plenty of action this season -- we're told one thing he needs to do is finish his plays a bit better -- it could be a while before he earns a starting role over Kelly Herndon, who we hear might have had a better training camp than any Seahawks player this season.
(profootballweekly.com)
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Rookie update: CB Kelly Jennings

Kelly Jennings continued working exclusively with the second-team defense. That allowed CB Jordan Babineaux to get more work with the starting nickel defense. Jennings faces stiff competition for a starting job because CB Kelly Herndon is having a solid camp.
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