The Big Babinski

During the three months I’ve been doing this bloggifying, I’ve made little secret of the fact that I am pro-Jason Babin. (Don’t believe me? See here. Don’t ever doubt me.)

So, with that in mind, I was happy to see how well J-Bab1 played last Saturday. He wasn’t just impressive–he turned in not-so-arguably the best defensive lineman performance of the night for either team. Kubiak certainly noticed in the post game press conference.

[W]hen you look at the second group, there were some guys that really stood out. Jason Babin being number one, played extremely well.

Yesterday, Kubiak was again asked about Babin’s progress throughout camp. The message was still positive.

I said this many of times. We’ve had a lot of conversations about Travis [Johnson] and Jerome [Mathis] at this camp, but Jason needs to get into that conversation because he’s really dedicated himself to our program, to Dan [Riley], to what Jethro [Franklin] and Frank [Bush] are trying to do and it shows. He stood out last week as much as any guy we had up front so I’m looking forward to Jason having a good year (emphasis added)

For Kubiak, that damn near qualifies as gushing.

Anyway, considering how unlikely it seemed even a month ago that the words “Jason” and “Babin” and “extremely well” would be uttered in some sort of succession, it’s probably not surprising that the Chronic would run with the story, taking the “change of coaching is responsible” angle.

Franklin has worked on improving Babin’s technique and his mental approach.

‘That’s the thing about it, this game is so mental,’ Franklin said. ‘Mentally, he was probably all over the place. Hopefully now, he’s a little more focused on himself and not other people around him. He’s more focused on his body in terms of body mechanics.

‘I give them things they can hang their hat on. That’s what I try to give them. Try to get them some tools. If you give them some tools, hopefully they can build you a strong bridge.’

All of this is well and good; to a certain extent, I’m sure that new, simplified coaching has helped Babin. However, just as important–and mentioned only ever so slightly–is that Jason has matured professionally to the point where the initial expectations for him are now becoming reasonable.

Very few defensive ends go from being a good college player to a good professional in one year.2 The ones that do are usually the freaks of nature like Dwight Freeney and Julius Peppers (13 and 12 sacks, respectively, as rookies). More common, even with guys like Jason Taylor (5 sacks as a rookie) who go on to become great pass rushers, is a learning curve of at least one year. Taylor, for instance, went from 5 to 9.5, but then dropped to 2.5 his third year. Leonard Little played in 6 games each of his first two season–due to that pesky prison term for vehicular manslaughter–and recorded no sacks in either. Michael Strahan recorded 1 in 9 games as a rookie, followed by 4.5 in 15 games in year 2. Aaron Kampman notched 2.5 total in his first 24 games. The list goes on and on. Point is, it was ridiculous to expect a kid from a small directional Michigan school to jump right to the NFL and become a dominant pass rusher.

Of course, the old regime decided to up the difficulty for Babin by moving him from DE–where he was just asked to go forward–to outside linebacker in the 3-4–where he was expected to work in space, move in all directions, and cover the occasional TE. Funny thing is, Babin performed reasonably well in this role, notching 4 sacks and 4 passes defensed while starting all 16 games as a rookie. By 2005, he’d lost his starting gig, but he put up another 4 sacks as the words “bust” started being bandied about. Last year, with a new (read: non-retarded) coach, Babin was moved back to DE and in spot starts had 5 sacks.

That’s 13 sacks in three seasons, only one year as a full-time starter, which is more than Strahan or Kampman (and more consistent than Taylor). Now, of course, I am not suggesting that Babin will ever become Jason Taylor (or Michael Strahan); rather, I am just pointing out that at one point, no one thought Jason Taylor would become Jason Taylor.

All of that said, I think it’s pretty clear that I am nothing but thrilled with the “sudden” emergence of Babin this summer. Two plays last Saturday hinted that he might be on the verge of becoming the other pass rushing DE–first, when he came off the weakside edge, flew down the line, and brought down Cedric Benson from behind, and, second, when he powered through the strongside double team and made the play. (Ironically, both of those plays were against the run, though the knock on Babin is that he is a liability in run defense.)

So, where does that leave us in terms of a starting D-line? Assuming Anthony Weaver is not ready to go week 1, which seems a safer assumption by the day, I think you still have to pencil ND Kalu in as the starter at LDE, at least for now. Kalu is no spring chicken, though, so I think a pretty heavy dose of Babin might be involved there as well. Also, much like last year, there is talk that Weaver will move to DT on obvious passing downs, clearing the way for Kalu or Babin at times even after Weavs returns.

It wouldn’t surprise me at all to see the line change depending on how “obvious” the passing down is and, more importantly, how long the yardage is (i.e. how long the play will take to develop). On 3rd and 10 or more, a pure speed line of Mario, Babin, Amobi, and Weaver (unless you wanted to try Kalu on the inside) could be amazingly effective. In shorter situations, either Babin or Kalu at one end, with a bigger middle (Maddox/TJ, perhaps?) probably makes more sense.3

Regardless of the rotation, having Jason Babin continue to play like he has so far this season would go a looooooong way toward developing that front-four pass rush that our defense (most notably our secondary) so desperately needs. Even better, it will start to make the first-round pick of Babin make sense. “It’s about time,” you say? I agree… that’s EXACTLY what it’s about.

1 No? How about The Babinator? I like that one.
2 Something to keep in mind regarding Mario, too, I suppose.
3 The one thing I don’t want to see, but that I have seen others advocating, is moving Mario inside on these passing downs, with Kalu and Babin on the edges. Ignoring how such a move would make the anti-Mario contingent even louder, it removes Mario’s primary asset (speed) and makes little to no sense in my mind. Plus, Baldinger would run his mouth again.

One Response to “The Big Babinski”

  1. Mark
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