**Official Canes in NFL Camps Thread**

dammit mane my dawg....

Pack Nation ‏@GBPackNationGB Aug 3
With Sam Shields struggling thus far in camp..young guys Randall, Rollins and Gunter have a chance to keep making some noise
 
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2. The Colts defense won the night practice but the best individual effort came from rookie Phillip Dorsett. The first-round pick hauled in a deep touchdown early on in practice, over fellow rookie D’Joun Smith.

Dorsett has been very consistent through the early part of camp and the big play finally came on Wednesday night. We saw Dorsett receive more and more first-team work on Wednesday, too. Under the lights on Wednesday, it was no surprise Dorsett was a bright spot.
 
The full pads were on Wednesday night for the first time in the 2015 Training Camp and the running game was clearly an emphasis (along with red zone work). The defensive line was stout on several occasions on Wednesday night. A Frank Gore touchdown run (with a beautiful cut back) did draw probably the loudest cheer from the more than 7,000 fans in attendance.
 
dammit mane my dawg....

Pack Nation ‏@GBPackNationGB Aug 3
With Sam Shields struggling thus far in camp..young guys Randall, Rollins and Gunter have a chance to keep making some noise

Whoever wrote that hasnt been at the practices. Sam is definitely not struggling. Him and LG have been making the most plays all camp.
 
Gunter will make the Packers team. That secondary is crowded, but McCarthy will find a place for him for sure.
 
@RobDemovsky: By my count, LaDarius Gunter becomes the first player with multiple picks of Rodgers this camp. Shields, Burnett and Randall each have one.
 
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George Bremer ‏@gmbremer 6h6 hours ago
Play of the day so far? Breakaway run for Frank Gore. Drew roar from crowd. #ColtsCamp15

Maurice Moton ‏@AuthorMoton Jul 27
Ray-Ray Armstrong has been a stud during the summer @JustinTuck said you'll know his name by the end of the season #Raiders stacked at LB

CLVYyGfUkAAFMIQ.jpg


Chris McClain ‏@ChrisMcClain Aug 1
Little pushing and shoving after the play between #Raiders rookie OL Jon Feliciano and a defender, looked like Neiron Ball.

Levi Damien ‏@LeviDamien Aug 3
Michael Dyer follows his blockers notably Jon Feliciano to plow in for a five yard touchdown. #Raiders

Ryan Wood ‏@ByRyanWood 11h11 hours ago
LaDarius Gunter even impressing on special teams. Coaches give #Packers CB kudos for big block to spring Micah Hyde kickoff return.

Michael Gehlken ‏@UTgehlken Aug 2
Only took 2 padded practices for McCoy to single out Denzel Perryman unprompted: "You saw 52 ... (make) some big collisions on lead blocks."

George Bremer ‏@gmbremer Aug 2
Rookie Phillip Dorsett continues to impress. Has made a couple nice grabs while draped by defenders. #ColtsCamp15

Chris Adamski ‏@C_AdamskiTrib Jul 31
Read into it what you wish: Tomlin, any time Chickillo was up next in backs-on-backers, would make sure he announced "Chickillo is up!"

Jeremy Fowler ‏@JFowlerESPN Jul 30
Anthony Chickillo with another good day at Steelers camp. He stands out. OLB coach Joey Porter consistently good-jobing him. #steelers

Mark Kaboly ‏@MarkKaboly_Trib Jul 30
Chickillo was the one who stood out today. Looks fast. Can't wait to see him in game situations.

Kevin Jones ‏@Mr_KevinJones Jul 31
RB Duke Johnson just beat CB Tramon Williams over the middle on a crisp route. Duke adds an entirely different element to this offense

Eric Edholm ‏@Eric_Edholm Jul 30 Ashwaubenon, WI
It's early but LaDarius Gunter catches the eye. #packers

Pete Prisco ‏@PriscoCBS Jul 30
Rookie corner Gunter with a **** of a pick of Rodgers. At 6-2, he looks the part

Ryan Wood ‏@ByRyanWood Jul 30
McCarthy on #Packers CB LaDarius Gunter: "He's done some good things. I think he's gone in there and competed well."

James C Wexell ‏@jimwexell Jul 30
I asked Tomlin for his take on Chickillo today, fully expecting nothing on a rookie, but Tomlin said "Good work." # Steelers.

Keep the updates coming. Good to know how Canes are doing in the NFL. For me, this is just as important an another National Championship.
 
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Every day at the Indianapolis Colts' training camp, receiver Phillip Dorsett looks a little more confident, a little more comfortable.

He's still studying the playbook, picking up tricks about getting open from Pro Bowl teammates T.Y. Hilton and Andre Johnson and developing a rapport with Andrew Luck. It's a perfect learning environment for a first-round draft pick with game-breaking speed -- even if coaches and defensive players occasionally struggle to find the rookie.

"You have to really focus on him because a lot of times he is running so fast it's hard to keep up with," offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton cracked after the shoulder pads went on Tuesday afternoon.

Coming out of college, the book on Dorsett read: Elite speed, great body control and incredible big-play potential. But the 5-foot-10, 185-pound Miami alum has proven there's a lot more to his game than what scouts found on film.

After Friday morning's walkthrough, Dorsett brushed up on his studies by sticking around to get in some extra work. Coaches rave about his football I.Q., his ability to make catches in traffic and, perhaps the most important trait of all, his underappreciated hands.

Dorsett's incredible show has been an even bigger hit on the road. He's already a fan favorite at training camp where thousands of fans roared Wednesday night after Dorsett found a crease in the secondary, split two defenders and caught a touchdown.

Off the field, he's been just as impressive.

"I'll have to give him a double thumbs up from that standpoint," Hamilton said when asked about Dorsett's ability to retain knowledge. "He's a guy that our quarterback is starting to trust even more. The more reps that he gets with Andrew, the more he will be able to contribute in our offense."

And the scarier this increasingly dynamic offense looks.

Hilton and second-year receiver Donte Moncrief both possess enough speed to stretch the field. The 34-year-old Johnson is big, experienced and crafty enough to thrive out of the slot. Tight ends Dwayne Allen and Coby Fleener create matchup problems for opponents, while veteran free agent Vincent Brown and former CFL star Duron Carter are trying to get in the mix, too.

Where does that put Dorsett? Nobody's saying yet.

"Everything right now is real generic, just going out there and running base plays and stuff," Dorsett said. "I don't really have a sense of where I'm going to line up officially during the season, but I have a pretty good sense in my head."

The two-time AFC South champs are now experimenting with ways to get Dorsett involved. Clearly, they want him on the field.

Dorsett averaged 17.6 yards per catch during his college career and led the Football Bowl Subdivision with 23.3 yards over his final two seasons. At the NFL combine, he caught the attention of NFL decision-makers by running the 40-yard dash in 4.33 seconds only to clock a 4.25 and 4.27 during his pro day.

With that kind of speed, Dorsett could make an impact in the return game. But after the Patriots' secondary smothered Indy's receivers in January's AFC championship game, the Colts see Dorsett as part of the solution.

"He's so smooth that he doesn't look like he's running until he's five yards past you," coach Chuck Pagano said in May.

All Dorsett has to do now is continue to learn and produce.

"There are a lot of things that I have improved on coming into this camp. It's basically just running the shorter routes," he said. "I know I've improved on things like that. Just the playbook basically. It's a lot of information, and I'm getting it down because I'm all over the place. Once it trims down during the season, I should be fine."

Colts' Dorsett starting to get foothold on receiver's job
 
All these locker room cancers sure seem to have changed their tunes. Poor Al can't catch a break.
 
Teammate on Dorsett: ‘He’s ready. He’s arrived.’

At first Mike Adams wasn’t buying. Fast? That’s all anyone talked about with this kid. He’s fast. Really fast. But Adams knows fast. He’s been an NFL safety for 11 years. He practices against T.Y. Hilton every day. This kid, this rookie out of Miami, that everyone was gushing over? Nothing special, Adams figured. Nothing he hadn’t seen before.

“When I first saw him on tape, I was like, ‘No, he’s not that fast,’” Adams said. “I honestly said that.”

Then he saw Phillip Dorsett run through a drill at practice. Then he changed his mind.

“I was like…” Adams says. Then he tells you turn off your recorder.

“When I saw him open up, I said, ‘(Expletive)!’ ”

Now Adams buys it. Now he sees the Colts’ first-round pick churning out that jaw-dropping, 4.2 speed every day in training camp. It’s what makes Phillip Dorsett another tantalizing talent in an already well-stocked offensive cupboard. As Dorsett likes to say, you can’t teach speed.

A sobering reminder: Dorsett is just a week into his NFL career. This is just the tip of the iceberg.

But talent is talent. All the wide receiver out of Miami has done since arriving in May as the Colts’ somewhat-stunning first-round pick (defensive line, anyone?) is impress.

He impressed in rookie camp. He impressed in minicamp. Now he’s impressing in training camp.

Much like the University of Miami brethren he worked out with in the offseason, Andre Johnson and Frank Gore, Dorsett is a man of few words. (Wise move, rookie.) His play speaks louder. His speed speaks louder. He has future star written all over him.

“You have to really focus on him to see him,” Colts offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton says of Dorsett. “Because a lot of times he’s running so fast it’s hard to keep up with.”

Take Saturday afternoon. After slipping past cornerback D’Joun Smith and safety Dwight Lowery, Dorsett swiped a 60-yard bomb from quarterback Andrew Luck out of the sky, hauling in the football just over his shoulder. Colts fans are bound to see one or two — or three or four — of those types of plays this season. Count on it.

Why? It’s darn near impossible for a defender to keep Dorsett in front of him.

“He can fly,” defensive coordinator Greg Manusky said. “He can take the top off defenses.”

Adams knows. He saw that catch.

“The first thing I said was, ‘He’s ready. He’s arrived,’ ” Adams said.

This is Week 1, remember.

Adding Dorsett’s skill set to this Colts’ offense — tops in the league last year in passing yards — is akin to a car collector adding a Lamborghini to a garage that already includes a Maserati, a Porsche and two Bentleys. You can never have too many toys, it seems.

But painting Dorsett as T.Y. Hilton 2.0 — both are 5-9, 180-pound South Florida boys who can run like the wind — is ambitious at this stage. Hilton has earned his reputation as one of the league’s top wideouts. He’s a Pro Bowler with more receiving yards (3,289) in his first three seasons than any player in Colts history. That’s more than Marvin Harrison. That’s more than Reggie Wayne. That tells you something.

Dorsett, meanwhile, has yet to play an NFL game.

And to hear Adams tell it, there are differences in their game, subtle as they may be. He starts with their speed.

“When T.Y. runs fast, you can see it,” Adams said. “When Phillip runs, you can’t really see it. It’s a smooth fast. It’s effortless. It’s gliding. The way he gets out of his breaks, it’s so smooth. I haven’t seen that in a long time. I haven’t seen guys run routes like him in a while. I can’t even describe it.”

Dorsett’s speed being what it is — rare — he still has to learn the Colts’ playbook. He still has to master the complexities that come with the different receiver positions (a must in Hamilton’s system). He considers himself lucky, then, that he was drafted into a wide receiver’s room that already included the likes of Andre Johnson (13,597 career yards to his name), Hilton (a budding star) and Donte Moncrief (who is coming off a promising rookie campaign). Dorsett just makes them deeper.

He has listened and he has learned. He takes notes from Hilton (“How to be crafty out there,” Dorsett says) and from Johnson (“The way to work.”) He’ll undoubtedly absorb more as the seasons wear on.

There’s also Luck, now more veteran than NFL youngster. Dorsett’s good fortune took him from catching passes from a freshman quarterback his senior year at Miami to Indianapolis, home to a three-time Pro Bowler and the QB free agents are drooling to play with.

“Night and day,” Dorsett said, comparing the two. “Andrew has total control of the offense. He helps you. Doesn’t get on you too hard. If you mess up, he’ll correct you and you’ll get it right after practice.”

So far in training camp Hamilton has lined up Dorsett all over the offense — a peek into just how creative the coordinator might be with his new Lamborghini. While Dorsett’s skillset screams slot position (name a linebacker than can keep up with him), the Colts’ formations will be so fluid with personnel he could line up in any of three or four spots come Sundays.

What Dorsett must do now, amidst the dog days of training camp, is prove to Luck he knows where to be.

“He’s a guy that our quarterback is starting to trust,” Hamilton said. “The more and more reps that he gets with Andrew, the more he will be able to contribute in our offense.”

It’s a slow process for most rookies. Phillip Dorsett just likes doing things faster.
 
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Allen hurns has been balling once again for the jags. He is emerging as their #1 receiver. Has made some spectacular catches during camp
 
As a Pack fan, I'm rooting for him to make the team. I'd love to see him in the CB/S/LB role that Woodson played towards the end of his time with the Pack.
 
Comparing Kaaya to Luck

“Night and day,” Dorsett said, comparing the two. “Andrew has total control of the offense. He helps you. Doesn’t get on you too hard. If you mess up, he’ll correct you and you’ll get it right after practice.”
 
Comparing Kaaya to Luck

“Night and day,” Dorsett said, comparing the two. “Andrew has total control of the offense. He helps you. Doesn’t get on you too hard. If you mess up, he’ll correct you and you’ll get it right after practice.”

Lol, comparing a true freshmen to a third year vet in the league, makes sense!
 
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