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Chargers say they grasp ?D? better


As the offense left the field, Ron Rivera gathered the Chargers defense around him earlier this month and for several minutes let them know he was not pleased with the execution in a certain period of that day's practice.

Nor was the defensive coordinator pleased with how he and his staff prepared for or reacted to that period.

?We weren't clear on what had to be done,? Rivera said later. ?I told them it's as much a reflection on me and the coaches as it is on them ? so they understand we're all in this together.?

The new sheriff is rounding up his defense with a message of accountability and preparedness.

Yes, the plan is for last year's disappointing defense to be turned around with the return of Shawne Merriman and the arrival of Larry English and Kevin Burnett.

But moreover, clarification, simplification and attention to detail are marking the beginning of the Rivera era.

Sure, Rivera has implemented a more aggressive approach, has tweaked alignments and play-calling philosophy. But what he did to the playbook, and how he and his staff are coaching on the field and in meeting rooms is as important (perhaps more) than any of those things.

?It doesn't matter what I call, as along as we execute it properly, we've got a chance,? Rivera said. ?If we can make sure the guys understand things and we're detailed in what we do while we're practicing, we should have success.?

Football happens fast. Things don't always go according to plan. It can get confusing if you don't know what you're doing, and know it like the alphabet.

?Football is 80 percent mental, 20 percent physical,? linebacker Stephen Cooper said. ? . . . A lot of things we were doing last year, there was a lot of uncertainty on the whole group. This year we're applying what we're learning in the classroom on the field.?

Most Chargers starters are expected to play the first half of tonight's exhibition game at Arizona. In that time, the defense will measure itself against a Cardinals offense that, even in the preseason, gives a lot of looks. It will be a decent test for a defense that has so far looked sharp in practice and (in a dumbed-down version of itself) the preseason opener last week.


Gone is the finger-pointing and shrugging that characterized the 2008 defense, a unit that allowed the sixth-most touches, ninth-most yards and second-most passing yards and got itself a new coordinator midseason when Ted Cottrell was fired after the team's dreadful trip to Buffalo and London.

?There is a lot of gray area taken out,? safety Clinton Hart said. ?That has been the problem in the past with certain calls and ways you play things. It really cleaned things up and simplified it for us.?

After a year-and-a-half as linebackers coach and half-season as coordinator, Rivera was able to evaluate each player's strengths and weaknesses and what they were able to do collectively.

When the defensive staff went through the playbook this offseason, it threw out some things and added some others. And even the existing parts got a remodel. Each play has a sort of appendix, where every conceivable variable is covered. That's the way it is taught on the field, as well, so that players don't have excuses.

This is by no means D light, but it is, by the way it's taught, simpler.

?They're putting a lot more stuff in; they're putting a lot on us,? safety Eric Weddle said. ?But they're giving us every explanation. Every question that we have, it's already given. . . . Whether it was coaching, whether it was us, we just weren't on the same page (last year). Now, if there's a mistake or the coverage isn't right, it's on us.?

To try to avoid that, the repetition is relentless.

?It's different for us, so sometimes you get annoyed at it,? cornerback Quentin Jammer said. ? . . . Over and over and over and over and over. But you hear it and hear it, and all of a sudden you just get it and it carries over to the practice field.

?I think it's exactly what we need. There are a lot of different personalities on this defense. This is what we need to be to get us where we need to be, to be an elite defense.?

Union-Tribune
 

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Cardinals WRs to test secondary


he Chargers defensive backs will get a preliminary test of their ?31st to first? credo tonight.

Three 1,000-yard receivers await them in Arizona.

?It's going to be a good challenge for us,? cornerback Antonio Cromartie said. ?(Quentin Jammer) and I feel like we're two of the best corners in the NFL. It'll be fun.?

The Chargers defense ranked 31st against the pass in 2008. Training camp has seemed to reveal a more disciplined, better secondary. But with the Chargers unlikely to blitz much tonight, the Cardinals will give the DBs a truer measure.

Additionally, the Cardinals went somewhere after last season the Chargers would like to go.

?We know they were in the Super Bowl last year,? safety Clinton Hart said. ?Why not try to go out and beat them up a little bit and show we're that type of team, that we're a Super Bowl-caliber team??



Another try

Charlie Whitehurst won't get as many snaps tonight as he did in the preseason opener, as the Chargers starters are expected to go the entire first half. But the work the No. 3 quarterback gets will enable him to keep moving on from last week's two quarters of frustration.


Whitehurst threw 29 passes, completing just 15, was intercepted twice and fumbled once against the Seahawks. He did complete 9-of-12 passes over a two-series span late and made several good throws under pressure.

?I want to be consistent,? said Whitehurst, who hasn't played in a regular-season game since September 2006. ?Maybe I'm a little rusty. But you've got to be able to make things happen.?






Nuts 'n' Bolts

? Louis Vasquez will start for Kynan Forney at right guard tonight. Forney (neck) will not play.

? Jacques Cesaire (calf), Larry English (hamstring) and Vincent Jackson (finger) will not play.

Union-Tribune
 

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Cards juggle preseason risk-reward


Managing veterans' preseason playing time is a tricky proposition for NFL coaches. They want players to break a sweat but not a body part, and deciding who plays and how much requires planning and breath-holding.

Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner wants to play against San Diego on Saturday night at University of Phoenix Stadium
just long enough to get in a rhythm. Receiver Anquan Boldin would just as soon stand and watch.

Other players, such as defensive end Calais Campbell and receiver Jerheme Urban, will take all the snaps they can get.

Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt
plans to play his starters well into the second quarter, with maybe the exception of Warner, who will leave earlier if the offense is successful.

Playing well makes Whisenhunt's decisions about playing time easy. It's when a team struggles in the preseason that coaches start to second-guess themselves, he said.

"You're worrying about the continuity of both your offense and your defense," Whisenhunt said, "and you have a tendency to want to play them longer.

"Then when the game is over, and they've played 25 to 30 snaps, you want to smack yourself upside the head because that's not what you want to do."

Different strokes

To Warner, the preseason is a necessary evil. He is 38 and in his 12th NFL season, so the preseason isn't going to teach him anything. The value of preseason games, Warner said, is in seeing a different defensive look from what he sees in practice.

"Knowing what your defense does, plays come out the same time and time again," he said. "Sometimes, I find myself in practice saying, 'Well, I know that's open, but I'm going to read it a different way just to go through things.'

"That's the fun about preseason, you're going against different teams that give different looks and do different things. Some of these plays you've run a number of times in training camp come out completely different."

Defensive players feel the same way about practice.

"Sooner or later, it gets like 'Groundhog Day,' " safety Adrian Wilson said of practice. "Every day is the same thing."

That's just fine with many players, including Boldin, who would like to skip the entire preseason.

"I can do without it, honestly," he said. "In college you don't get preseason games. You do your little team scrimmage thing, but when Week 1 comes you're ready. I'm not too big on the whole preseason."

While Boldin, who has made three Pro Bowls in six seasons, might not need preseason games, other key players do. Campbell, for instance, is starting for the first time and needs all the snaps he can get.

That's how Urban views things, too. As the Cardinals' fourth receiver, he might not see the ball in some regular-season games, so he needs the preseason to prepare.

"Last year when everybody was healthy, I didn't get a ball thrown to me until Jets week, Week 4," he said. "The hardest part of my job is not knowing when my opportunities are going to come.

"Larry (Fitzgerald) and those guys can get in a rhythm because they get balls from the get-go. I need these preseason games to get where I need to be."

Running questions

Deciding how many snaps to play someone like running back Tim Hightower is difficult for Whisenhunt. Improving a running game that ranked last in the NFL last year is a priority, so Hightower, in his second year, needs to get a feel for running behind this offensive line.

"You can practice as fast you want to and you can practice as hard as you want to," Hightower said, "but you can't simulate game speed. For a running back, getting in there and getting a feel for your cuts and your reads, you can't really trade that."

Chargers running back LaDainian Tomlinson played in the Chargers' preseason opener, his first exhibition appearance since 2005. He'll probably get four or five carries Saturday and exit.

It's a long season. After 20 games last year, even a youngster such as Hightower, who is 23, was worn down, so coaches don't want him beaten up in the preseason.

Whisenhunt designs his training camp to keep his team fresh. He had only five days of twice-daily practices in Flagstaff, and contact drills were limited and controlled. Players had plenty of down time to rest.

In preseason games, Whisenhunt and other coaches walk a fine line between preparing for the season and risking injury.

"I think it's always a balancing act," he said. "I think that's why we go into it with a plan and we try to stick to that plan."
 

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Cards-Chargers: 3 areas to watch


Three areas for Cardinals fans to watch on Saturday night against the Chargers:

Running game: The Cardinals had only 16 attempts against the Steelers, so they might make more of a commitment to it. Rookie Beanie Wells could get a few snaps, and coaches will take a long look at LaRod Stephens-Howling, a seventh-round pick.

Pressure packages: The Cardinals blitzed early and often last week as coordinator Bill Davis uses the preseason to evaluate what works and what doesn't. No reason to dial it back.

The receiving battle: Forget the top four spots. They are taken. But Sean Morey, Early Doucet, Lance Long and Onrea Jones are competing for the other two positions. Doucet is coming off a shoulder injury.
 
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