Commanders DC Jack Del Rio was in mid-season form Thursday

Jack Del Rio discussed the state of Washington’s defense Thursday.

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Jack Del Rio met with the media Thursday, and he never took any of the bait.

Time after time, the Commanders’ defensive coordinator was asked questions that were specific in nature. Time after time, Del Rio responded in a manner that was not unkind or rude, yet, managed to effectively not convey more than he felt he should.

It may be overlooked, but Del Rio is quite experienced with interaction with the local media. The former USC Trojan played both football and baseball at USC. He then started at linebacker for the New Orleans Saints (1985-87), Dallas Cowboys (1989-91) and Minnesota Vikings (1992-95).

Following his retirement as a player, Del Rio served on staff for the Saints and Ravens (linebackers). After being a defensive coordinator for the Panthers, Del Rio was named head coach of the Jaguars, where he served nine seasons.

Next came the Broncos (defensive coordinator for three seasons), then the Raiders (head coach for three seasons), and here in Washington.

He’s not mean; he’s simply skillful at being measured. He is not going to give you anything he doesn’t feel he should. He even joked around Thursday when asked about working now with Eric Bieniemy, “It’s been good. I wish he would express himself a little bit, come out of his shell. Nah, he’s great. He has a lot of energy. He’s bringing an accountability to the unit.”

When asked about Ron Rivera? “Ron’s been great. With me for four years, it hasn’t changed a great deal. He lets us (coaches) share when we want to and, for the most part, lets us do our thing.”

Regarding the Chase Young and Montez Sweat questions that were raised? Del Rio was not biting, stating simply it is voluntary this time of year, but he did offer he appreciates all of the guys who did choose to come and put in some work for the team.

It was classic Del Rio: “Don’t say what you shouldn’t and still manage to praise the guys who did “volunteer” to come and put in some work.”

When pressed/asked further about Young and Sweat, he simply offered that Young, when coming in, could put in the work and that Sweat could learn to finish better (words he spoke of Daron Payne last offseason). Del Rio then declared it would add zeros to Sweat’s paycheck.

He did offer perhaps only one surprising element when he volunteered that linebacker Khaleke Hudson had a good final 2022 game, gained some confidence, and has looked good in the offseason.

Have we overreacted about the Commanders absent from OTA’s?

Is it a big deal that Young, Sweat and Leno are not at OTAs?

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By now, all our readers are well aware that Chase Young, Montez Sweat and Charles Leno are determined to not attend the Commanders’ OTAs.

Is the reaction a DMV reaction? Is it related to the Commanders not having a winning season since the 2015 and 2016 seasons?

Well, did you catch Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson at the Ravens’ OTAs?

Jackson was asked by Baltimore media regarding Ravens’ fans who had speculated Jackson would not attend the OTAs. Jackson responded that he ignored it and thought it was funny.

His head coach John Harbaugh added that he knew Jackson was going to come in and participate in their OTAs. Harbaugh then added, “He (Jackson) was into it, into the meetings. He was locked in the last two days, completely locked in.”

Harbaugh was also willing to say what many coaches won’t say because the NFLPA will report them if they say anything close to saying the players should be in attendance.

“I think it’s important. I’m a coach, you know. I want everybody here. You know, I want every player here all the time, doing everything they can. Now, is that necessarily the best thing? I don’t know. Everybody’s got their own circumstance.”

The NFL CBA says coaches are prohibited from saying anything that communicates that the OTAs are strictly voluntary. So, we will see soon enough if the NFL considers what Harbaugh said to be over the line.

Leno, Sweat and Young have chosen to not participate. Young was recently refused a 5th-year option for the former second-overall selection of the 2020 draft. Sweat not appearing? Might he be displaying his support for Young not attending? No idea. Leno? Well, he played in Matt Nagy’s offense when with the Bears. So the offense is not entirely new to him. Yet, his play did fall off last season in the closing games.

Then there is LB Jamin Davis. Davis is entering his third season, being drafted in the first round of the 2021 draft. Davis has had a lingering issue with a knee injury since the completion of the 2022 season. Davis needed a cleanup procedure on his knee. But there was Davis in attendance, learning in the meetings and even walking through some things on the field.