Broncos Journal: Kareem Jackson’s technique — hit hard, but hit clean

Twelve things about the Bron­cos enter­ing Sunday’s game at Atlanta, one for every fum­ble this year:

1. The Bron­cos should run more no-hud­dle offense to solve their first-half woes, right? “That’s a com­mon nar­ra­tive,” offen­sive coor­di­na­tor Pat Shur­mur said. “We have plays that we use strate­gi­cal­ly (like) we have no-hud­dle plays or fast-from-the-hud­dle plays. There are times, where if you’re stalled out a lit­tle bit, maybe that’s a way to kind of jump-start things. … There are prob­a­bly times when it would make sense, but there are also oth­er times where you got to just do things bet­ter ear­ly in the game not to be put in that (come-from-behind) situation.”

2. I’ll meet Shur­mur in the mid­dle: Try the no-hud­dle after the offense gets the ini­tial first down of a dri­ve. That elim­i­nates a three-and-out and send­ing the defense right back out there. And, of course, Shur­mur has to choose his spots. No-hud­dle after the Bron­cos defense was on the field for 10 plays — not a good time. To start the sec­ond half — a good time.

3. A sign of inside line­backer Josey Jewell’s emer­gence on the defense hap­pens after the team stretch in prac­tice. Dur­ing spe­cial teams drills, Jew­ell is stand­ing on the side with John­son, safeties Kareem Jack­son and Justin Sim­mons and cor­ner­backs A.J. Bouye and Bryce Calla­han. He’s grad­u­at­ed to defense-only work. “That puts you in a dif­fer­ent state of mind,” Jew­ell said. “You have to be ready at the begin­ning of prac­tice, but for the first 15 min­utes, depend­ing on what day it is, it’s dif­fer­ent. Usu­al­ly you’re prac­tic­ing and get­ting reps, but you’re stand­ing there watch­ing and play­ing men­tal games.”

4. Anoth­er mind­set adjust­ment for Jew­ell is meet­ing vir­tu­al­ly. “Def­i­nite­ly,” he said. “Some­times, you start day-dream­ing a lit­tle bit because you’re not actu­al­ly in the meet­ing (room). This off­sea­son, you’re in a meet­ing and all of a sud­den, you’re like, ‘What am I think­ing about? It’s not foot­ball,’ and you have to get your­self back into it. It was def­i­nite­ly some­thing to get used to and some­thing we’ve done a good job of adjust­ing to.”

5. Bron­cos right tack­le Demar Dot­son and Fal­cons defen­sive end Dante Fowler won’t need an intro­duc­tion. In August 2016, Dot­son was with Tam­pa Bay and Fowler with Jack­sonville for joint prac­tices. Dot­son was so dom­i­nant, Fowler want­ed to slug it out and was eject­ed from prac­tice. In August 2017, the two met again dur­ing joint prac­tices with­out incident.

6. “He wasn’t as much of a hot­head (as 2016),” Dot­son told me that day after the kind of Flori­da late-morn­ing prac­tice that feels like it was held in a boil­er room. “I threw him down the one time and he didn’t com­plain. He got up and went back to the hud­dle. He was a man out there try­ing to go about his business.”

7. The Bron­cos signed Dot­son after Ja’Wuan James opt­ed out of the sea­son and he replaced Eli­jah Wilkin­son (leg injury) in Week 4. Accord­ing to my game chart­ing, Dot­son has been booked for two “bad” run plays, 1/2 quar­ter­back knock­down and two quar­ter­back pres­sures. Sunday’s game will be his 111th career start.

8. “I like Demar, but I like expe­ri­enced guys,” Shur­mur said. “He’s calm and steady. He’s been there, he’s done that and with­out them even men­tion­ing it, I’m sure some of the younger guys can draw some con­fi­dence from that. I like the way he’s been play­ing — he plays hard, he’s a tough guy and he’s been help­ing us in the last month for sure.”

9.  Before Bouye was knocked out of the game by team­mate Jack­son, the Charg­ers went right after him in man cov­er­age. Per my chart­ing, quar­ter­back Justin Her­bert was 7‑of-11 pass­ing for 82 yards (24-yard touch­down) doing so.

10. Jack­son deliv­ered two thun­der­ous hits in the sec­ond half — one apiece on Bouye (who didn’t return) and Charg­ers run­ning back Troy­maine Pope (who did). “He’s good at it,” coach Vic Fan­gio said of the big hits. “He’s grown up in this league where these rules have been insti­tut­ed and con­stant­ly scaled back. He’s man­aged to under­stand what is and what isn’t allowed and he’s done a good job of tack­ling legal­ly with good hits.”

11. The Charg­ers were busy tar­get­ing Bouye, but Calla­han is get­ting respect from oppo­nents after mov­ing inside to cov­er the slot at half­time of Week 4. The Charg­ers tar­get­ed him only four times (one com­ple­tion for three yards and an inter­cep­tion). That inter­cep­tion, which came in the end zone, pro­duced this analy­sis from Fan­gio: “I told him that his inter­cep­tion was prob­a­bly the best play in his career and I’ve seen every play in his career.”

12. A quick note on last week’s game. Charg­ers defen­sive coor­di­na­tor Gus Bradley told reporters on Thurs­day that Phillip Lindsay’s 55-yard touch­down run was, “on me. I ran a pres­sure and put an inex­pe­ri­enced play­er in posi­tion to make the play and we hadn’t real­ly shown that play in prac­tice to that set.”

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