Film room: Chargers CB Asante Samuel Jr. primed for breakout campaign

Chargers CB Asante Samuel Jr. is set to take it up a notch in Year 2.

In his rookie season, Chargers cornerback Asante Samuel Jr. showed immense promise as a dependable outside cover agent who could blossom into one of the top players at his position.

That may just become a reality in 2022.

Two concussions limited the former Florida State standout to 12 games last year. When he was healthy, Samuel impressed with 43 tackles, 11 pass breakups, and two interceptions. It would not be a stretch to tab him as one of the team’s best overall defenders in just his first season. However, that is just what the box score shows.

On tape, Samuel is everything head coach Brandon Staley hoped he would be when the Chargers selected him in the second round with the No. 47 overall pick in the 2021 NFL draft.

Staley’s defensive philosophy is well-known by now. The second-year head coach prioritizes athleticism over size, instincts over measurables, and brains over brawn. Samuel, who stands at 5-10 and 180 pounds, was tabbed by analysts during the pre-draft process as a cornerback who would need to transition into a full-time slot role in the league. But, once inducted into Staley’s system, that was never the case.

Samuel’s success is rooted in his movement skills. He is a fluid cornerback with an explosive lower body who keeps a low center of gravity, allowing him to slide across the field easily and snap to the area of action. Samuel rarely is ever caught upright with poor technique. Instead, he plays in control and does not take chances, placing supreme confidence in his talent and real-time processing to execute his assignment.

It did not take long for production when defending the pass to transpire. Samuel stamped his passport to trail the league’s top receivers when he went toe-to-toe against the Dallas Cowboys in Week 2. He was tested early and quickly proved his worth.

Backed up in scoring territory, the Chargers rotated from a two-high into what looks like Cover 3. With Derwin James fulfilling his strong safety duties in the box, providing assistance to the run, Dak Prescott realized that Samuel would be in a clear-cut one-on-one matchup.

Samuel displayed good spatial awareness of how deep he was in the end zone and how much room he could allow himself underneath. He recognized the type of cut ran by Cooper was rounded, as opposed to a sharper turn, which meant Samuel could attack the lagging shoulder instead of the leading.

Then, Samuel timed his arm strike when Cooper’s hands were most vulnerable (outstretched, away from the body) and chopped violently with his right arm as the ball arrived. If the first attempt failed, Samuel had his left arm primed from the other side to snake under Cooper’s shoulder for another prod at the ball. The ball ended up dislodged before Nasir Adderley provided extra insurance with his crack from the centerfield position.

The play showcases Samuel’s lower-body quickness, measured reactions, and strength at the catch point.

Samuel was not done. His next exceptional highlight occurred on a play where he was not even the defensive back targeted. On the Cowboys’ next drive, Prescott wanted CeeDee Lamb on a deep post route but ended up with too much loft on his pass. As a result, the ball sailed into the back half of the secondary.

For this play, Samuel is in bail technique against Cooper. Bail is usually a strategy for off-coverage where cornerbacks turn their hips immediately from the snap. The cornerback in bail is tasked with multitasking between the receiver and activity in the pocket. It gives the cornerback a chance to analyze the play’s development and determine the quarterback’s progression at the cost of being late to defend underneath throws and routes that return back to face the passer.

Samuel is outstanding at bail technique because he played a ton of it as an outside cornerback at Florida State. During his time with the Seminoles, Samuel grew comfortable defending receivers in that fashion while keeping a hawkeye on the quarterback. This is where his enhanced sense of spatial awareness and opportunistic playstyle stem from. Samuel is excellent at reading the body language of his target simultaneously as he determines the offense’s intentions.

Samuel’s comfort level in just his second career game defending one of the NFL’s top routemen was insane. Yet, he exhibited a nonchalant pedal, refusing to bite on the Corner fake that Cooper deployed to turn Samuel’s hips. Samuel trusted his eyes and did not fall victim to the veteran’s route-running tricks.

So when Prescott overthrew Lamb, Samuel was already breaking away from Cooper to put himself in position for the interception. He saw the entire play because he received a head-start on the throw trajectory, and then he reacted. He stops trailing Cooper on a dime and hops back to the ball to pick off Prescott.

Samuel also gained over 20 yards on the return to set Justin Herbert and the Chargers’ offense with good field position to work with. This also did not happen by accident. Samuel’s early reaction allowed him to start his interception return before other players on the field launched into their blocks.

The moment the ball arrives, Samuel is primed to receive the ball like a kick returner. Other defensive backs, perhaps if they took one more step while guarding Cooper, would be forced to whip around and contort themselves to stretch for the ball. The momentum would have, at the very least, stalled them momentarily.

Samuel’s confidence never wavered throughout the game. He was not going to let NFL receivers bully him just because of his label as a rookie. While guarding a deep curl by Cooper, Samuel demonstrated a good understanding of what a cornerback can get away with.

Due to the mutual contact with Amari Cooper, Samuel does not worry about a pass interference call as he pulls slightly on Cooper’s shoulder pad. After all, Cooper extended his arm first and initiated the push-off to create separation. Samuel refused to make it easy for Cooper to position his body between him and the ball. Instead, Samuel zippered the short-lived separation with some contact of his own and swarmed the catch point.

 

A week later, against the Chiefs, Samuel emphasized the need for quarterbacks to play football around him or they would pay the price. That included Patrick Mahomes, who Samuel picked off midway through the first quarter. The interception was off a bullet pass that glanced off the hands of the receiver and careened high into the air. Samuel was able to dive under the ball and secure the turnover.

Here’s the thing: the Chiefs do a great job in scheming the middle of the field open. The Chargers bracket Tyreek Hill, and tight end Travis Kelce runs a good post route that occupies Adderley. Samuel is also drawn to the route, trusting the linebackers to stick with the underneath routes.

Mahomes steps up in the pocket as one of the underneath moves behind the line of linebackers into free space. It had all the makings of a big play, but Mahomes fired high and behind his target. Once again, Samuel kept his eyes up and made a play. He immediately located the ball and his athleticism took over from there.

Later in the game, Samuel forced Mahomes to burn a play halfway through his throwing motion because otherwise there was a good chance it would have been another pick.

 

Mecole Hardman and Tyreek Hill, the two receivers to the field side, mess up their route depth. Hardman was supposed to go under Hill’s stop route to create a roadblock for Samuel to work around on his pursuit to the throw. But even with the conceptual hiccup, the play could have worked.

What truly busts this play is Samuel’s closing speed. He arrives so fast that Mahomes decided during his windup that it was better not to risk it, seeing as Samuel had already picked him off earlier in the game. He wasted no steps and hardly looks strained coming downhill.

Aspects from the previous games repeated themselves later down the road against the Houston Texans in Week 16. On an outside dig at the sticks, Samuel repeated his undaunted approach to patrolling the catch point. He understood that the cornerback has an equal opportunity to the ball as the receiver and confirmed his eagerness to jostle for control of the catch point angle.

 

Later, in the same game, Samuel forced an incompletion due to his sheer violence at the catch point. Despite his status as an undersized outside cornerback, Samuel’s play strength is far from lacking, and he competes with maximum intensity on every rep. He is magnetic to the ball and never takes a snap off.

Staley selected Samuel to be his version of Jalen Ramsey, the cornerback he coached as defensive coordinator for the Los Angeles Rams. Ramsey is unique because, along with his elite coverage skills in both man and zone coverage, he can transfer his talents to the slot. Ramsey can contribute at the same caliber despite the quickness and change of direction skills required to play as the nickel cornerback.

Samuel is expected to be the same switch-hitter for the Chargers. Although the team brought Bryce Callahan to play on downs out of the base defense set, Samuel allows Staley the flexibility and versatility greatly desired in football’s modern-day fortification. By flexing Samuel to the slot, Staley can be more creative with his safeties and blitz packages. Pressure will be able to materialize from any direction.

The poise of Samuel is also a big reason he is primed for a breakout in his second year. He does not gamble in coverage and commits a small number of mental errors. Yet, he can be trusted to hold his own without safety help. That is how Florida State operated with Samuel in the lineup by the end of his career in Tallahassee. Eventually, the Chargers will also give him more isolation opportunities so the defense can accelerate the clocks of quarterbacks with James and Adderley.

With a clean slate ahead of him, expect a healthy Samuel to cement himself as a bonafide playmaker for the Chargers and his rare combination of athleticism and instincts to become a weekly terror for quarterbacks to throw against.

LSU defensive tackle Maason Smith out for the season with torn ACL

LSU will have to move forward without one of its best players the rest of the way.

LSU’s worst fears were realized on Monday when an MRI confirmed that starting defensive tackle [autotag]Maason Smith[/autotag] has torn his ACL and will miss the remainder of the season.

Smith left Sunday night’s 24-23 loss to Florida State on the opening drive when it appeared he injured his knee while celebrating. Smith went to the locker room and emerged in the second half wearing street clothes. He was on crutches and wearing a knee brace.

It goes without saying that this is a massive loss for the defense. Smith, a former five-star recruit who made four starts in nine appearances as a true freshman last fall, appeared poised for a breakout. Now, LSU’s vaunted defensive line appears concerningly thin on the interior.

Mekhi Wingo will now assume a starting role at defensive tackle. A transfer from Missouri, Wingo appeared in 11 games as a true freshman last fall and earned Freshman All-SEC honors.

Losing Smith puts even more pressure on edge rusher [autotag]BJ Ojulari[/autotag], who is seen as the leader of the defense. He’s considered one of the nation’s best edge defenders, but LSU struggled to get much of a pass rush outside of him against FSU.

Despite the near-comeback, not much went well for the Tigers in coach Brian Kelly’s debut, and they’ll have to move forward without one of their top players.

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Brian Kelly breaks down Jayden Daniels’ first start, Kayshon Boutte’s quiet night

Kelly discussed the disappointing offensive performance in the opener.

Heading into Sunday’s opener against Florida State, there was a lot of excitement for LSU’s new-look offense.

Coach [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] brought in [autotag]Mike Denbrock[/autotag] as his play-caller after Denbrock led Cincinnati to a CFP appearance and produced an NFL passer in Desmond Ridder. As expected, Arizona State transfer [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] got the nod, but it wasn’t the best showing for the offense in a 24-23 loss.

Daniels was effective on the ground with 16 carries for 114 yards, but his play in the passing game left a bit to be desired. He finished 26 of 35 for 209 yards and two touchdowns, with most of that coming in the second half.

“It’s an opener and you saw a better rhythm,” Kelly said after the game. “You know, we had some dropped passes and we didn’t protect as well.

“You know, that’s a good team. Florida State played well. That’s why I congratulated them at the very beginning. They, for four quarters they played better football, quite frankly. But, yeah, we got into a better rhythm, certainly in the second half. Jayden did. He’s a threat, but we don’t want to rely on him having to go back there and when he does sit in the pocket, we saw his ability to find open receivers, show the patience, and in particular, on the last touchdown he stayed in the pocket, showed great patience, and found Jaray Jenkins in the back of the end zone.”

Kelly added that the run game from Daniels wasn’t as much a part of the gameplan as it was a response to what the Seminoles were doing defensively.

“We didn’t want him, those weren’t–those were scrambles that he was smart there,” he said. “There was a lot of man coverage. So, you know, we’re telling our quarterback, we’ve got a lot of bear up front. We got a lot of pressure fronts and that was a gameplan that we hadn’t seen from them. And, you know, if he didn’t feel like there was somebody open that’s the dimension that he brings and that’s running the football.

“So, that’s the one thing you’re going to give up if you get guys turning their backs and running we took advantage of that.”

While Daniels’ legs do open up another dimension of the offense, it was clear that the passing game was limited. How much of that can be blamed on Daniels vs. poor offensive line play is debatable, but the result was an off night for one of the nation’s best playmakers.

Kayshon Boutte finished with a relatively pedestrian two catches for 20 yards. He was targeted six times and was credited with a drop.

“You know, I think it’s like anything else. Here’s a great player trying to make plays, maybe trying to do a little too much, try to catch the ball before he had it,” Kelly said of Boutte. “I wouldn’t read too much into it. I think he learned tonight that he’s just got to let the game come to him. There’s going to be some nights where he doesn’t get all the balls. There’s so much – that young man has so much on his shoulders. We just got to get to him and tell him to let the game come to him, he’s going to get his catches and not to press as much.”

LSU has to go back to the drawing board when it comes to most aspects of the game after a poor performance on Sunday night. But perhaps nothing will be more crucial in the coming weeks than figuring out the offense and how to get the ball in the hands of its playmakers.

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Paul Finebaum takes a shot at Brian Kelly’s decision to kick extra point at the end of loss to FSU

Finebaum was not a fan of the decision to kick the extra point.

LSU didn’t play very well in Sunday night’s 24-23 loss to Florida State, but it still had the chance to win at the end.

The Tigers put together what appeared to be a last-minute, game-tying scoring drive. Quarterback [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] found receiver Jaray Jenkins in the back of the end zone as time expired, and it looked like we were heading for overtime.

But despite the fact that LSU had the offensive momentum and had made several special teams snafus earlier in the game — a blocked field goal and two muffed punts — coach [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] opted for the conservative move and kicked the extra point.

Damian Ramos’ kick was blocked, and the Seminoles celebrated a one-point victory in New Orleans. After the game, SEC Network host Paul Finebaum (who had high praise for Kelly this offseason) went scorched earth on the Tigers coach after his debut.

“LSU paid $10 million for that, Greeny? That was my takeaway last night because it makes perfect sense to go for two,” Finebaum told Mike Greenberg on ESPN’s “Get Up” on Monday. “He just went 99 yards. It was a perfectly executed drive and Florida State’s defense is, forget on their heels, they’re on their back. And you want to keep playing when you’ve played that poorly? No.

“And you don’t want to put in the hands of the special teams because you’ve already had two muffed punts, you had a blocked field goal. Of course you go for two. I think it’s the simplest call in the world. Brian Kelly being somewhat conservative, he immediately put up the one. Brian, you’re not in the NFL. This is college football. Put the dagger in.”

Kelly defended the decision in his postgame press conference.

“[I] felt like, in that situation, that it was the prudent and percentage-wise that we were gonna be able to execute it,” Kelly said.

Kelly and his team will head back to Baton Rouge to prepare for the home opener next week against Southern. They will have a short week to process the disappointing loss, which came in heartbreaking fashion to add insult to injury.

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What the wild result from the LSU-FSU game means to the Gators

After watching the ending to that FSU-LSU game, Florida has to feel pretty good about their chances against both teams.

Florida fans might have had a tough time deciding who they wanted to win Sunday night’s contest between the Florida State Seminoles and LSU Tigers.

Both teams are among the Gators’ top rivals, and the easy answer for most UF fans would be for both of them to lose if it were possible. Someone had to win, though, and that ended up being FSU by the slimmest of margins.

If you missed the game, here’s a recap of the ridiculous sequence of events that occurred. FSU had a 14-point lead with 9:04 left on the clock in the fourth quarter, but LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels led a 75-yard drive down the field to make it a one-score game. The Tigers forced the Seminoles to punt the ball away and give them a shot at tying things, but a muffed punt gave FSU the ball in the red zone.

At the one-yard line and with 1:20 on the clock, it seemed impossible for the ‘Noles to blow it. But then Mike Norvell made one of the most bewildering play calls imaginable, given the situation. He called for a pitch play, and Treshaun Ward fumbled the ball away at the goal line. LSU still needed to go the entire length of the field, but there was a chance.

The Tigers took the ball all the way down to the two-yard line before a review left them with one second on the clock to score the tying touchdown, pending an extra point. After a long delay — the review took some time and Norvell called a timeout — Daniels found Jaray Jenkins to complete the comeback… or so they thought.

FSU’s special teams unit came up huge, blocking the extra point and securing the most intense victory of the weekend. But why should Gators fans care? Well, Florida plays LSU on October 15 and FSU on November 25. Sure, it’s the first game of the year, but an ongoing scouting report on future opponents can come in handy and neither of those teams looks as good as UF did against Utah.

It’s not just about gloating, though. Beating LSU and FSU is necessary for Florida to accomplish what it wants to after upsetting the No. 7 team in the nation. The Georgia and Texas A&M games will be tough, and a team at the same level as either team that played Sunday night won’t stand a chance.

Watching Brian Kelly on the sidelines was like reliving the worst moments of Dan Mullen‘s reign in Gainesville. From an apathetic halftime interview to poor play-calling, things looked bad for the Tigers, and it still took every ounce of fight the Seminoles had to beat them.

Both teams could straighten up their act by the time Florida comes around the schedule, but Gators fans have to be fairly optimistic about those matchups after seeing the results from week one.

Florida and Utah looked like two well-coached teams trying to win a ball game, and FSU-LSU looked like two badly coached teams trying to give one away. Add in the fact that LSU had Billy Napier in their own backyard, and it really can’t seem like more of a win for UF right out of the gate.

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PHOTOS: LSU falls to Florida State in Brian Kelly’s debut

The best shots from a disappointing game.

There was a lot of excitement for a new era of LSU football, but after Sunday night, it’s clear that there will be a lot of growing pains under [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag].

The Tigers lost Kelly’s debut 24-23 against Florida State in New Orleans in a game where they struggled mightily across the board but still had a chance to win at the end. A late Seminoles fumble gave them one last drive, and they took advantage with a touchdown as time expired.

A blocked extra-point from Damian Ramos ended any hope of sending the game to overtime, however, as FSU walked away victorious in what was a huge game for coach Mike Norvell. Kelly, meanwhile, will have to wait until next week against Southern in the home opener to try to get his first win.

Here were some of the best shots from the season-opening nailbiter.

Social media reacts to LSU’s stunning 24-23 loss to Florida State

It was not an ideal way for the Brian Kelly era to begin in Baton Rouge.

Brian Kelly walked into Baton Rouge as the most accomplished coach the program had ever hired. But after his first game at LSU, the veteran coach will have to go back to the drawing board.

It was a disastrous debut against the Florida State Seminoles on Sunday night. The Tigers were outplayed until the fourth quarter when a late push made things close and looked like it would send the game to overtime. LSU scored the potential game-tying touchdown as time expired, but a missed assignment allowed the extra-point attempt to be blocked.

FSU left the Superdome with a shocking 24-23 win, and Kelly had to answer for a supremely disappointing debut. Fans and national observers weren’t thrilled by the debut either. Here’s how the internet reacted.

Five takeaways from LSU’s loss to Florida State

Here’s what we learned from LSU’s disappointing performance in the opener.

It’s a new year, but it was the same story for LSU as the Tigers dropped their season opener to the Florida State Seminoles 24-23.

LSU came into the game as a slight favorite and had some success on their opening drive. A bad snap set the offense back, and LSU was forced to settle for a field goal, going up 3-0.

From that point on, Florida State found its footing as LSU struggled. Its offensive line didn’t offer much protection for [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] and the Tiger defense could not get off the field on third down.

LSU had some moments in the second half where it looked like LSU was figuring things out, but it was too little, too late. After it looked like a muffed punt was going to end the game, a Florida State fumble gave LSU the ball back, allowing the Tigers one more chance.

LSU marched all the way down the field, scoring a touchdown to pull within a point. Florida State blocked the extra point and that was that. A heartbreaking loss for LSU.

Here are five takeaways from the loss to FSU.

Instant Analysis: Blocked extra point leads to heartbreak against Florida State in Brian Kelly’s LSU debut

The Tigers are 0-1 after a gut-wrenching loss to spoil Kelly’s debut.

The Florida State Seminoles spoiled the first game of the [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] era in front of a Tigers-leaning crowd at the Caesar’s Superdome in New Orleans on Sunday night. LSU couldn’t overcome a laundry list of mistakes in a 24-23 loss that soured Kelly’s debut and gave Seminoles coach Mike Norvell a much-needed win.

The Tigers struggled in all aspects of the game, but they managed to stay in it until the end. After a pair of second-half touchdowns and a providential forced fumble at the goal line with 1:20 to play, it looked like they were going to overtime. Quarterback [autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] found [autotag]Jaray Jenkins[/autotag] in the end zone for a touchdown pass as time expired.

But the game-tying extra-point was blocked, and the Seminoles escaped with a win to stun LSU and Kelly.

This defense entered the year with high expectations, but it’s clear the unit still has a long way to go. It was dominated by FSU as quarterback Jordan Travis had one of the best games of his career. Travis completed 20 of 32 passes for 260 yards and two touchdowns through the air — both to top receiver Ontaria Wilson. The Seminoles also gashed the Tigers for 132 yards on the ground.

LSU lost two of the best players in its front seven as defensive tackle Maason Taylor left and didn’t return with a knee injury while edge rusher Ali Gaye was ejected on a targeting call and will miss the first half next week, as well. The new-look secondary disappointed as Travis, who is mostly known for his legs, did a lot of damage through the air.

Offensively, things weren’t much better. Daniels won the quarterback job, and though he made some plays on the ground, totaling 114 yards on 16 carries, he was less effective through the air.

He picked things up in the second half and finished with 209 yards and two touchdowns on 26 of 35 passing, but he was clearly limited in that regard and only found star receiver [autotag]Kayshon Boutte[/autotag] twice for 20 yards.

Of course, shoddy offensive line play didn’t give him much of a chance. He was sacked four times, giving a young unit a lot to work on as the Tigers try to move forward. There’s plenty to clean up outside of that, starting with special teams after two blocked kicks and two muffed punts from [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag].

It was about as disappointing a start as Kelly could have had, but LSU will hope to bounce back when it welcomes the Southern Jaguars to Tiger Stadium for the home opener next Saturday.

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Maason Smith on crutches, will not return against Florida State with knee injury

Smith’s season could be in jeopardy after a knee injury on Sunday night.

The first half of Brian Kelly’s LSU debut didn’t go as planned.

The Tigers were lucky to only trail 7-3 after a sloppy first half. But coming out of the locker room, LSU fans received some bad news. Sophomore defensive tackle [autotag]Maason Smith[/autotag], who exited the game the game in the first quarter with what looked like a knee injury sustained during a celebration, walked out in street clothes. He was on crutches and had a knee brace on.

Needless to say, a long-term injury for Smith would be a heavy blow to what was expected to be one of the SEC’s best front fours. As a highly outed true freshman last fall, he started four games and finished with 19 tackles (five for loss) and four sacks. He was thought to be in line for a breakout season.

We’ll keep you posted on any news regarding Smith’s status moving forward here on LSU Wire.

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