With Cleveland Browns
training camp opening today, there’s already
a strong sense of anticipation for the upcoming
season and the success many hope will come with
it.
Last weekend at North Olmsted High School, nearly 120
youngsters got a taste of what it takes to get ready
for the season as the Browns’ All-Pro tight end
Kellen Winslow ran his first Kellen Winslow Football
Camp. Boys from throughout the Cleveland area got to
run drills and play actual games with Winslow and other
pro players, including Browns backup quarterback Ken
Dorsey and former Browns defensive back Leigh Bodden.
A number of local high school and college coaches ran
various skill stations which specialized in the
game’s basic fundamentals. The seven-on-seven
games were a favorite part of the day, not only for the
players but for the parents watching on the sidelines
as well.
With Winslow being a receiver, a big emphasis of the
camp was the passing game. Each youngster not only
received two T-shirts, but a pair of receiver gloves as
well.
The camp was run by ProCamps out of Cincinnati, which
runs similar camps featuring professional players
throughout the United States.
“We’ve been running these camps for about
eight years now,” said Tim Boesken of ProCamps.
“This year, we’ve got 22 camps like this,
and it’s split around 50-50 between football and
basketball. Dwayne Wade of the Miami Heat just finished
a camp in Florida last week.
“We’ve also done a camp down in Cincinnati
as a fund-raiser for the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame,
but mostly its football and basketball. We’re
basically a one-stop shop for pro athletes who want to
run camps like this. One thing we won’t do,
though, is run a camp for an athlete who won’t be
there to participate. This is our first camp in the
Cleveland area,” he said.
Winslow’s camp also partnered with the Boys &
Girls Club of Cleveland. “We offer up to 50
scholarships at our camps,” said Boesken.
“We always want to make sure that kids who want
to participate can do so, and they get all of the
things the other children get, the T-shirts, the
gloves, lunch, the whole thing.
“We’re able to do that through our
sponsorships, and there are times that we get
additional sponsors and can offer more than 50
spots,” he added.
Later in the morning, there was also a training session
on one of the side fields for high school players. Most
of the players were from Lakewood, John Marshall and
Rhodes. Instructors from Ignition Athletics Performance
Group of Cincinnati ran players through a number of
conditioning drills, showing various dynamic stretches
and putting them through a plyometrics workout.
“We think it’s important to help develop
the youth of our community, to develop their
potential,” said Sgt. Joshua Nitz of the Lakewood
recruiting office of the U.S. Army. The Army sponsored
the conditioning event, along with the National
Football League.
“Whether they wind up joining the Army or not
isn’t the big thing here,” said Sgt. Nitz,
who along with fellow soldiers were dressed in full
fatigues despite the hot, humid conditions. “We
know that the same principals used to be successful on
the football field are the same ones you need to be
successful in life.
“This is one of our favorite things to do. Our
slogan is now ‘Army Strong. Family Strong.
Community Strong,’ and we enjoy getting out of
the office and away from the paper work and doing
things like this to make our community better,”
he added.
But the big star of the day was Winslow, who was there
from beginning to end. He and Dorsey, who led the
University of Miami to the National Championship game
against Ohio State, showed campers how to run a variety
of pass routes, along with little tips on how to get
their feet in bounds on the sidelines and how to catch
the ball with their fingertips.
“I use these gloves because I like to catch the
ball on my fingertips,” he explained to the
campers. “I practice over and over, and
that’s one of the reasons I have soft hands. You
don’t ever want to see the palm of your hand on
the football.
“You want to have soft hands, but you have to
have strong hands as well. I think that’s the
most important thing to work on,” he added.
Dorsey threw a number of passes to the young players
during the drills, but so did Winslow. When the
seven-on-seven games got underway, Winslow
quarterbacked both teams on his field. Youngsters had
the thrill of catching a Winslow pass, some of them for
touchdowns.
Some of them went for interceptions as well, but a
smiling Winslow didn’t seem to mind.
He even brushed off a botched play as he slipped to the
turf when he rolled out of the pocket. Everyone simply
went on to the next play with the anticipation of
catching Winslow’s next aerial.
At the end of the day, Winslow talked to the players
about working together as a team, that football is a
team game.
“It’s all about being unselfish,”
Winslow told them. “There are going to be times
when your number isn’t called. We’ve got
guys like Braylon Edwards and Joe Jurevicius. Maybe I
have to run a route to clear out a defensive back so
Braylon can make the play. I’m a tight end, so
maybe I have to make a block for Jamal Lewis.
“It’s all about helping the team
win,” said Winslow. “You’re going to
get the ball, but you’re not going to get it all
the time because it’s a team game.”
(westlifenews.com)