Antonio Gibson turns a few yard loss to a 2-yard gain… he is impressing me…đ¤đ¤đ¤ #SeniorBowl
pic.twitter.com/uqemusalbt— Christopher Reiss (@ReissReport) January 25, 2020
DF: Letâs start with this run in the Senior Bowl. You hit right up the middle and youâve got nothing but defense there, and itâs always interesting when you watch running backs go through their process. Talk to me about your read here — youâre bouncing off this guy and then youâve got another potential tackler. Walk me through what youâre seeing, what youâre running into, and how you eluded your way out of it.
AG: The downhill play, I hit it as hard as I could and it got closed up real quick, so I bounced back and took a view of everything. There was nothing going back inside or nowhere I could get north seeing the outside, nobody was out there. In my head, I was like, âJust let me get something out of this.â So I bounced outside, kept my balance there then when I thought there was no more sideline thatâs when I was like, let me get north. Put my head down and get two yards.
DF: It was two yards, but it was a pretty amazing two yards. You have to have a really incredible peripheral sense. Is that awareness something you work on, or is it just something that is just there?
AG: My vision? Thatâs just natural, because if you were asking me how I was working on that I couldnât tell you. but I feel like itâs just natural. With all the sports Ive played, like baseball and basketball, youâve got to see the ball in all sports. I feel that helped me out.
DF: Because youâre twisting out of that and that potential tackler, heâs right on you. And somehow you see it and somehow you just respond. Thatâs just an inherent gift you have?
AG: Yes sir, I would say so.
DF: Play No. 2 is this touchdown run against SMU. Are you diagnosing the front pre-snap and looking at what the defense is doing?
AG: On this run, I know I already have a lead blocker, and the two receivers out here should take up the corner and the safety over the top. We call him the adjuster most of the time. Iâm reading the defensive end. Heâs down, but if heâs lined up outside you know he should be able to get reached so Iâd hit inside. But if not, Iâm hitting outside and my lead blocker should know that, too. Iâm following him, basically.
DF: So, you have the defensive end as your second read?
AG: Yes, sir. As you could see, he came right down and beat the lead blocker. Thereâs nothing I could do there. I was just running, and he grabbed me with his arms and fell to the side before he even wrapped me up. I just kept moving my legs.They kept falling before they pulled me down. They had no power in their legs, and I just bent off of that one too. After that I made a cut on one defender, and after that it was off to the races
DF: Well, number 2, I think youâre being charitable. Youâre carrying him for three yards like heâs a high school player. That leg drive I mean, lets talk about contact balance for a minute. You familiar with Zack Moss, the running back from Utah?
AG: Yes, sir.
DF: I watched tape with Zack a while back, and he has that same thing — the churning legs and the contact balance — because itâs not just that you break tackles. You drag people. How are you able to do that?
AG: Just that power. I feel like Iâve got a lot of upper strength and definitely in my legs. My lower body is just so strong, and Iâve got thick thighs. So like when you try to hold on and I keep them moving, itâs hard for [defenders] to keep their arms wrapped around you and arm tackles just arenât going to stop that. On this play right here, you can see the second defender tried to get my legs. I just open strided it and he couldnât wrap up. So after that, it was just a wrap and the strength in there he just couldnât do it, and it was over with.
DF: And especially in the end zone replay, youâve got number two, you bounce off the second guy and then you have two other aspects to your running game which I find fascinating. First, the ability to accelerate in a short area — you go from second to third gear. And I want to talk about these jump cuts which really show up in the run against Cincinnati. How do you develop these jump cuts where itâs like youâre there and youâre going straight ahead, and then all of a sudden, bang itâs so quick, and youâre two yards outside or youâre two yards inside.
AG: I do this thing, and I honestly didnât realize it until an NFL scout told me about it. He was like, âThis hop cut youâre doing right here, what is it? Is it because you canât cut?â Then I  realized I was doing it but I just felt like I could get out of my cut quicker and you know, I also had Alfred Morris say, heâs like you good with jump cuts but its  short like you said at the Cincinnati game I did it once, I think I did it like three times, like I hop cut three times and I  bounced outside and I just feel like itâs a quick stop like itâs like a âbop bopâ so when you patch a cu? There they explode out of it instead of like jump cutting all the way to one side and then having to push off your leg I just feel like it was quicker for me and I started right here on this play like I did it and I was able to accelerate âsnapsâ just like that.
DF: So you had a scout ask that in a negative sense?
AG: I think he thought that at first, but when I told him why, he was like âYeah, I thought so.â I could cut if I wanted to cut like that, like plant and go. I could, but I just feel like it was I was able to be able to see everything that was going on too when I was turning my whole body so I could just cut and see everything, I want to say, oh in the Cincinnati one, he was like so why did you do this right here but I was just cutting it also just being on the whole field seeing where I wanted to run then I took of so now he understood, he was just asking me why.
DF: So, with a standard jump cut, youâre not able to see the field in front of you as easily?
AG: You can, but I feel like itâs just slowing you down. Like you just take two steps and you slide either left or right like youâre jumping. Itâs just natural, and you slow down, and you canât accelerate out of it. I feel it slows you down because you gotta jump all the way.
DF: Letâs go to this touchdown against Cincinnati because this is one of the craziest plays Iâve seen out of any draft prospect this year. So first of all thereâs one cut, thereâs another cut, itâs just crazy so tell me what youâre seeing pre-snap, tell me how this develops.
AG: Right here, it looks like I should be hitting outside with the way the defense is lined up
DF: No. 11 washes himself out here, then he tries to come back.
AG: Yeah, he gets wide. So automatically. I know Iâm going inside. My lead blocker goes inside, so itâs all set up good. This lin backer overflows — you canât see it from this view — but he overflows to where Iâm going inside. So, I hit straight up, and after that Iâm just staying close to my linemen. It ended up playing out for the best, but I ended up following my linemanâs butt as you can see — I stayed close to both of them. I made a cut on the big guy right here and I ended up having more blockers in front of me. Then after that, it was just speed.
DF: Are you throttling down when youâre in traffic? Because the acceleration when youâre in open space is pretty obvious
AG: For sure. I feel like patience, thatâs a big thing with me. I used to watch LeâVeon Bell, I donât slow down as much as him, but I feel like just slowing down and being able to move fast at the same time works for me. I donât know if you can notice but when I run my routes and when I catch the ball itâs a different type of speed and I feel like that just messes with DBâs heads because theyâre coming at me at a certain angle when you know Iâm in traffic and  got the speed Iâm like okay I got it but when I hit open field or I get in space I hit another gear and it just throws off their angles and thereâs no catching me after that.
DF: Thereâs a couple Penn State plays where you werenât the target, but I would watch you run routes and it was like you were almost slow playing them.
AG: Uh-huh.
DF: Letâs talk about this touchdown catch against Houston, where youâre jumping over this defender. So what is the route here?
AG: Itâs basically la flat screen, trying to get open real quick. From there, the story about this is that my mom is like right here in the stands right behind the end zone. I noticed it and there was one play earlier where I was wide open for the touchdown and [quarterback Brady White] took off running for a long run for a touchdown. And Iâm like, âMan, I wanted that one!â You know, shoutout to my mom. I wanted to get in the end zone bad and I ended up having another play right here. So when I got the ball and I saw the end zone and I saw everybody closing in, I was like, forget this — Iâm jumping.
DF: This points to a real competitive spirit because itâs not like youâre just bashing into a defender here, youâre jumping over him. This speaks to your âIâm not going downâ mentality.
AG:Yes, for sure — gotta get in the end zone, especially right here, especially for mom. Thatâs what you do.
DF: This next play is against SMU and it looks like a simple catch but itâs something I wanted to talk about because especially in the replay here youâre going over the middle. Is this a post?
AG: This right here, itâs usually under 1 over 2 and everybody got back [in coverage], so I couldnât go over 1. I kept gaining ground, and [the defender] played it like I was going on the outside. So, he faced his body towards the sideline. I gave him some outside [movement] and I pushed his body. After that, I stacked it to where I run my dig [route]. Of course, I knew the situation and I kept gaining ground because that safety was so far back and Brady put it where it needed to be. We ended up getting the first down, and that was actually a big play for us right there.
DF: Youâve got safeties deep, but youâve got three guys coming in on you. This is over the middle — you know youâre going to get hit and it doesnât seem to faze you at all
AG: Yeah, for sure.
DF: Is there one thing that different teams tell you that keeps coming up â things they like about you or things you need to work on>
AG: The one thing Iâm getting a lot from everything is pass pro. I did no pass pro at Memphis. If I was getting in the backfield there, I would be the lead blocker or running the ball. The only time I got experience with that was at the Senior Bowl, and that was when I was in practice, because in the game, they werenât allowed to blitz. But I feel like thatâs just a âwant -toâ thing, I can block. I donât mind blocking. Iâve been picking up on the schemes theyâve been giving me so itâs a learning process.
DF: Do NFL teams see you more as a running back or receiver?
AG: Itâs strictly running back now. You know, a lot of teams, theyâre not blind to my versatility. Itâs always, âWe will start you off as running back and once you get accustomed to things, weâll start motioning you out.â
DF: The team that drafts you â what is that team getting from Antonio Gibson as a person and as a player?
AG: A machine. Somebody whoâs selfless, you know. If itâs special teams they need me at, offense, running back, receiver, wherever. I wonât think twice to do it for the team, I always put the team first. I want to say thatâs what helped me a lot especially in Memphis, especially with that first year, you know I had to accept a different road than what Iâm accustomed to, I met the previous teams, I did special teams and all and I didnât think twice of it. I just put a chip on my shoulder, and Iâm going to always put the team first. Iâm going to work hard, and when I step on the field and get the ball in my hands itâs going to be incredible, so theyâre going to get a playmaker and somebody who is going to work.
The team that selects Antonio Gibson will also get the most explosive player in the 2020 draft class. The tape simply doesn’t lie.