Lions-Jaguars joint practice notebook from the first day of action

The notebook from the first day of joint practices between the Detroit Lions and Jacksonville Jaguars from Lions Wire’s Jeff Risdon

The first joint practice between the Detroit Lions and Jacksonville Jaguars kicked off on a sun-soaked Wednesday morning in Allen Park. The stands were nearly full from the onset of the drills, with fans eager to watch the two cats claw at one another.

The teams did not disappoint. Both teams had great wins and humbling losses throughout the day. It was reflective of two teams that are emerging contenders and know it.

Here’s some of what made the notebook from Wednesday’s practice between the Lions and Jaguars.

6 Lions I’ll be watching closely in joint practices vs. the Jaguars

6 Detroit Lions I’ll be watching closely in joint practices vs. the Jacksonville Jaguars

Joint practices fire up once again in Allen Park this week. The Jacksonville Jaguars come to town for joint practice sessions on Wednesday and Thursday in advance of Saturday’s preseason game between the two teams at Ford Field.

Much like last week when the New York Giants practiced with the Lions, it’s a great opportunity to see Dan Campbell’s Detroit team do what they do against different opponents. It’s a critical proving ground and a chance to try out ideas or techniques in game-style action without worry of losing or failure.

Here are six Lions I’ll be focused on in the joint practices this week.

 

What to watch for during Packers’ joint practices with Patriots

The Packers and Patriots will practice together on Wednesday and Thursday. Here’s what we’ll be watching out for during the practices.

The Green Bay Packers and New England Patriots will get together for a pair of joint practices starting on Wednesday and extending into Thursday. The two teams are scheduled to be at Ray Nitschke Field both days before a preseason game at Lambeau Field on Saturday night.

So, what things are worth watching for the Packers during the joint practices with Bill Belichick’s Patriots?

Our staff made their picks:

Zulgad’s four-and-out: Vikings’ joint practices against Titans unlikely to be a reminder of brawl-filled sessions

After having two joint practices last season, Kevin O’Connell scheduled four of them this year due to the value of them writes @jzulgad

Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell saw so much value in his team’s two joint practices with the San Francisco 49ers last summer at TCO Performance Center that he locked into four more days of joint sessions at the team’s facility this year.

The first will take place on Wednesday and Thursday as the Tennessee Titans and Vikings practice against each other before playing a Saturday night preseason game at U.S. Bank Stadium. The Vikings will repeat this next week when the Arizona Cardinals spend two days at TCO before the teams play their preseason finale on Aug. 26.

“It will give us a tremendous opportunity to have four days of really good competition,” O’Connell said this spring in announcing the joint sessions. “I know both (Titans coach Mike) Vrabel and (Cardinals coach Jonathan) Gannon. Both of those guys, I have personal relationships with and know what kind of leaders they are. I know what kind of teams they’ll be bring here, ready to make sure we get some great work.”

The Vikings are no stranger to joint practices. These sessions go back many years, but have never been this popular and there was a time when the Vikings stopped participating in them.

So what’s happened?

Updated look at Packers positional battles before big week with Patriots

Taking a look at where the Packers’ positional battles stand going into joint practices against the Patriots.

Heading into an important week of practices for the Green Bay Packers, here is an updated look at where each positional battle currently stands.

No final decisions will be made this week when it comes to the positional battles taking place for the Packers in training camp, but the next five days, which include two joint practices with New England and a preseason game, will carry a lot of weight in determining those outcomes.

“This is going to be a big week for our guys,” said coach Matt LaFleur, “in terms of this just being the most exhausting week of the preseason for these guys. We got practice today (Sunday), practice tomorrow, walkthrough on Tuesday, and we will get two practices versus the Patriots, and we got two more games. I think we got a long way to go yet.”

Based on what I’ve seen at each of the training camp practices, here is where I feel each of the key positional battles stand before the Packers begin a big week with New England.

Ron Rivera explains the benefit of joint practices

The Commanders and Ravens are scheduled for two days of joint practices this week.

The Washington Commanders and Baltimore Ravens are scheduled for a pair of joint practices this week at the Ravens’ complex in Owings Mills, Md.

It will be a good test for the Commanders, who are coming off a preseason-opening win over the Browns on Friday. Not only do players have a chance to compete against another team, but it’s also a chance to face one of the NFL’s best organizations. The Ravens are one of the NFL’s best teams annually and should give offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy an excellent chance to evaluate his side of the ball further.

In his Sunday press conference, Washington head coach Ron Rivera spoke on the importance of these joint practices.

“One of the things that the league has shared with us has been the analytics that they’ve gotten on the joint practices,” Rivera said. “They’ve found that teams that in the last few years have had joint practices, the injury rate weeks one through five in the regular season go down. They’ve had a lot fewer. That’s one of the things that stood out when we talked about it.”

That’s certainly an interesting perspective. Rivera further elaborated on his past with joint practices.

“I did do it in the past and did feel that coming out of the gate, we had a lot more intensity in terms of the way we approach things,” he said. “I just wanted to keep it that way. Knowing that, especially with the injury rate thing, I thought that’s real important.”

The injury rates provided by NFL research is excellent information. The true value of joint practices is it allows each side of the ball to test itself against another team in a structured manner. The coaching staff of each team works together to determine what each side wants from the practice sessions.

Rivera noted he spoke to Ravens coach John Harbaugh recently in anticipation of this week’s practices.

“You know, myself and Coach Harbaugh had a conversation about mapping out how practice should look, the different periods that we would have,” Rivera said. “Then, we had the coordinators reach out and go through those and discuss what they wanted to see in each one of those periods that we’ve mapped out for the offense and defenses and special teams for that matter as well.”

All eyes will be on Washington quarterback Sam Howell. Howell had an impressive preseason debut on Friday and gets a stiff test against the Ravens over two days of practice this week.

After two days of practice, the two teams will prepare to face one another in the second preseason game next Monday night at FedEx Field.

 

Raiders standouts on Day 2 of joint practices with 49ers

Raiders standouts on Day 2 of joint practices with 49ers

That’s a wrap for Raiders joint practices with the 49ers. It was an eventful couple days in some way. If by those ways you mean the Raiders defense which was getting their hands on the ball several times.

Here are the standouts from today’s practice:

LB Robert Spillane

The linebacker who has had all of one takeaway in his career, had a couple interceptions today. One came in 11-on-11s, the other in 7-on-7s.

CB Marcus Peters

The veteran former All Pro had interceptions on both days of the joint practices and his swagger is clearly rubbing off on the rest of the secondary.

WR Jakobi Meyers

With Hunter Renfrow not practicing, and Davante Adams going down injured on the first play of team sessions, Meyers was the only starter left. He had a touchdown on a slant to finish off the first drive of team sessions.

All QB’s

All three Raiders quarterbacks showed well today. Jimmy Garoppollo led the first team to a touchdown to Jakobi Meyers and two-point conversion to DeAndre Carter. Then Brian Hoyer nearly had a three-play touchdown drive which began with consecutive long completions to Keelan Cole and ended with a deep ball to Phillip Dorsett who wasn’t able to keep both feet inbounds in the back of the end zone. Aidan O’Connell had the best long ball completion of the day to fellow rookie Tre Tucker.

DE Issac Rochell

On more than one rep in DL vs OL drills, Rochell got through to the QB. First, driving his man back and then putting on a swim move to get into the pocket. Then getting his man off balance and shucking him aside to get pressure.

DE Maxx Crosby

Crosby was lined up across from the 49ers right tackle Colton McKivitz for a rep in drills. He made mincemeat of him, first leading him upfield before spinning inside to crash the pocket.

DT Adam Butler

The best spin move from the inside came from Butler who was able to leave his man flat footed with the move to get pressure.

Raiders standouts on Day 1 of joint practices with 49ers

Raiders standouts on Day 1 of joint practices with 49ers

Finding the best performances in these joint practices was not easy from the media vantage point. Getting a view of anything requires a good set of binoculars and sometimes even that’s not enough because there are players lined up in the way of all team sessions.

That being said, there were a few standout performers on the Raiders on their first day lining up against an opponent and I will try my best to give them all a mention.

Marcus Peters

Had his third interception of camp, picking off 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy. Earlier in practice, he was getting in the face of a 49ers receiver. He then backed it up. Just what the Raiders want from him.

Duke Shelley

Also had an interception, and it occurred right after the Peters jawing incident. So, clearly there’s an energy in this secondary and Shelley is feeding off of it.

Amik Robertson

Had a couple of pass breakups on the day, one of which came in the endzone to keep the 49ers from scoring to finish out a team session.

Chandler Jones

Worked over 49ers right tackle Colton McKivitz. Drove him up field and then put an inside spin move on him to get a straight shot at the quarterback.

Nesta Jade Silvera

Silvera showed great strength inside on the rush. And apparently I missed his best stuff while I was watching the other side, but he drew raves from several other members of the media independently. Worth watching the seventh round rookie.

Jimmy Garoppolo

No turnovers against his former team. And he connected with all his top receivers, spreading the ball around.

Austin Hooper

Garoppolo found Hooper in the back right corner of the end zone with defenders on each side of him for the touchdown.

Kyle Shanahan apologized to Maxx Crosby for treatment of him in 49ers pre-draft interview

Maxx Crosby got an apology from 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan today for how they treated him in a pre-draft interview

A lot of teams are kicking themselves these days for passing on Maxx Crosby in the 2019 draft. The Eastern Michigan product fell into the fourth round before the Raiders pulled the trigger on him.

Among the many teams who took a close look at Crosby was the 49ers. And apparently they weren’t all that nice or respectful to Crosby.

Enough so, apparently, that with the 49ers at the Raiders facility today for joint practices, 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan took the opportunity to apologize for their behavior toward Crosby in that meeting.

“That’s actually funny. I talked to him on the field,” Crosby said of Shanahan “It was after one of the plays. I made a play and I was hyped and talking shit to Kyle and he’s laughing at me. I went up to him after the play and he was like ‘yeah, man, I feel like an a–hole about our interview we had in 2019.’ And I remember it because [Kris] Kocurek was in there, John Lynch, and Shanahan. And I feel like, it’s nothing against them, I feel like every single team that I interviewed with didn’t take me seriously. I could name every damn team if I want, but I’m not going to do that.”

Shanahan said he apologized to Crosby for being “jerks” to him that day. And Crosby mentioned only that there was a lot of yelling, which Shanahan said was pretty much out of line.

“It was Kocurek’s first interview, and he’d been in other places where they liked to kind of attack the guys a little bit, see if you can rattle them,” said Shanahan. “That’s not totally our style. That was the first one up. John (Lynch) was trying to touch his leg, like: ‘Kris, chill out a little bit.’ Afterward, he was, ‘What, what did I do? Sorry. My last coach really wanted me to do it that way.’ And he did it to like the coolest dude. So we tell him that was all Kris, not us.”

Crosby laughed off the specific details of what was said in the meeting, even the yelling, noting that it was not angry yelling. While at the same time, he carries moments like that with him to this day.

“That’s the past, but I remember everything, trust me,” Crosby added. “I remember all those interviews, but that’s what makes me who I am today because at the end of the day, I carry every little scar. I won’t talk about a lot of it, but I keep everything noted. Literally everything.”

Crosby took the high road about it, going on to talk about how great of a coach Shanahan is and how much respect he has for the coach and the 49ers as a team. Which, I’m sure, is pretty easy when you’re in Crosby’s position having outplayed all of their expectations and became one of the league’s top edge rushers.

Watch: Detroit Lions Podcast joint practices breakdown

The latest episode of the Detroit Lions Podcast breaks down joint practices, Lions rookies, signing Teddy B and more

The latest episode of the Detroit Lions Podcast is now available to watch or download. In this episode, we broke down all that we saw and heard while we were at the joint practice sessions in Allen Park earlier this week.

In addition to the on-scene practice notes, there is also a breakdown of the Lions’ pending signing of veteran QB Teddy Bridgewater. What does Teddy offer, why are the Lions making the move, and what are the ripple effects of bringing in Bridgewater? We answer that and more, including his reported contract details.

There’s a lot of talk about the rookie class and how they’re progressing. A few Lions players are coming off injury-impacted seasons and their progress is discussed too. What are the national media coming through Allen Park saying behind the scenes about the Lions? We also recap our training camp party, which was a resounding success.

The audio-only version of the show is available from your favorite podcast provider or download it here.