ESPN.com - NFL/TRAININGCAMP00 - Reid wants linemen who thrive on being nasty

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 Tuesday, August 1
Nastiness the key element for Eagles' line
 
 By John Clayton
ESPN.com

CLEVELAND -- Lou Piniella had baseball's Nasty Boys when he sent Rob Dibble and Norm Charlton from the bullpen to the mound to attack batters with tight fastballs. Philadelphia Eagles coach Andy Reid wants to create the football equivalent.

Andy Reid
Philadelphia coach Andy Reid doesn't care about style when it comes to his linemen, he wants them to be aggressive, tough and mean.

These Nasty Boys don't hang out in bullpens until summoned. Reid, hired for his positive ways of dealing with quarterbacks, uses a split personality when it comes to finding offensive linemen. Nice guys finish last on his lines. Reid loves to unleash the nasty side of his line.

"I want aggressive, mean, tough guys up front because that's where you win football games," Reid said. "I like those types of players on both sides of the ball. I'll guarantee you, if you watch our seven-on-seven drills, we will complete every ball. Give me an offensive line that can hold people out for three seconds and I'll complete every ball. That's an attitude."

The endorsement to the philosophy came during the offseason when the Eagles made former Titans right tackle Jon Runyan one of the highest paid maulers in football. Runyan has an attitude. Take practice the other day.

Runyan was having trouble with the quickness of defensive end Mike Mamula. After being beaten for a couple of rushes, Runyan had enough. He threw Mamula to the ground. Unfortunately, he injured his back in the process, but Reid loved the thought. Over the past two seasons, Reid used the nasty meter when reshaping the Eagles line. He drafted guard Doug Brzezinski a year ago because of a perceived mean streak on the field.

"Doug doesn't look pretty at all on the field, but he'll fight you," Reid said. "He started concentrating on technique this offseason and it took a little bit of the fight out of him in minicamps. After a couple of plays in camp, he said the heck with that and started mauling people again."

Said Brzezinski, "You don't have to worry about screwing up because you just look forward to the next time you get to hit somebody."

Bubba Miller beat out former Eagle Steve Everitt because of his nasty nature. Not that he's trying, but he is usually counted on for one fight a practice, according to Reid. In games, Miller isn't satisfied with hand-to-hand contact. He loves to fly into unattended opponents.

"You try to get to the point where it's an attitude if you see a guy on a pile, then you just go clean the pile out for them," Miller said.

The attitude has become so infectious that Tra Thomas, once the pacifist in the crowd, is getting nasty. Before he let his mouth do the intimidating, shouting out a few sayings to irritate defenders.

"We have to go out and just dominate a guy you are playing against," Thomas said. "I'm one of those players who chooses to talk on the field. That's part of my game. Now, I'm into it physically and mentally."

To think, these are the blockers from the City of Brotherly Love. No wonder the Liberty Bell is cracked.


 



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