D'Brick & Mangold named to NFL all-rookie team

Discussion in 'New York Jets' started by wildthing202, Jan 17, 2007.

  1. wildthing202

    wildthing202 Active Member

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    http://www.newyorkjets.com/news/art...-and-mangold-named-to-the-nfl-all-rookie-team

    Both New York Jets’ left tackle D’Brickashaw Ferguson and center Nick Mangold were named to the NFL All-Rookie team as selected by Pro Football Weekly and the Pro Football Writers of America. Ferguson, the fourth overall selection in last April’s draft, and Mangold, also selected in the first round at #29 overall, started every game for the Jets during the 2006 season.

    Ferguson, a 6’6”, 312-pound Virginia product and Freeport, New York native, returned home to help protect the blind-side of Chad Pennington. Each week, Ferguson was challenged by another team’s top pass rusher.

    “I don’t know if I could put a grade on the year, but I did learn a lot. I had the opportunity to play against a lot of the top defenders in the league,” he said. “It built more confidence in myself, and I know the things I need to improve upon. I’ve gained experience and that’s so valuable; I just hope I can use this for the betterment of the team next year.”

    Late in the season, Jets head coach Eric Mangini praised Ferguson for his development off the field.

    “Brick has made real progress. One area where Brick has improved significantly is - he's always been very conscientious, but his attention to detail is improving. Not that it was bad, but I think it's getting better,” he said of Ferguson.

    Often throughout the season, Mangini would create pop quizzes for his players. Ferguson was up to the challenge, meeting his Coach’s expectation level for preparation.

    “It's getting to that thing we talked about, being a pro and your approach. A lot of times I'll start on Wednesdays. I let him (Ferguson) kick the day off with some questions,” Mangini said. “Very rarely does he get things wrong. I'm pleased with that. That's all part of the maturing process for those guys.”

    Mangold, a 6’4”, 300-pound former co-captain at Ohio State, anchored the line like a 10-year veteran. He did a nice job calling out the protections at the line of scrimmage and held up well against some huge nose tackles.

    “As he sees something and is exposed to it, he does a nice job of being able adjust to it,” Mangini said of Mangold. “He'll get better with that. He started a lot of games in college and high school. He has been the starter for a long time. That's where he is comfortable being.”


    Taking a humble approach from day one, Mangold soaked in all of the knowledge he could from the veterans along the line. Even Trey Teague, who signed last offseason to compete with Mangold but never took the field due to injury, helped with Mangold’s transition process.

    “Being in my position, I never feel like I know enough and I never feel comfortable where I’m at, which keeps me working,” Mangold said. “Pete Kendall, Anthony Clement, Brandon Moore, and Trey Teague have done a great job of making me feel comfortable out there, but it still feels kind of weird.”

    Kendall, the veteran left guard stationed between the two talented rookies, has played center at various points during his career. The 33-year-old veteran was impressed with the cerebral Mangold.

    “It didn't take me long to figure out that Nick was fairly well up the learning curve,' Kendall said. “Sometimes people come in and play center and it's more because their skill set is such that they're not really a tackle and maybe they're too athletic to be a guard or something like that. But mentally you can usually tell that they're a few years away from understanding schemes and concepts. But with Nick, physically he's a good center, but mentally he understands offensive football immensely.”

    Now with a year under their respective belts, both Ferguson and Mangold should only improve in year two. The Jets struck rich in the draft with two building blocks along the line, and their ongoing progress makes the future look even that much brighter.
     
    #1 wildthing202, Jan 17, 2007
    Last edited: Jan 17, 2007
  2. BlairThomas#1

    BlairThomas#1 New Member

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    I can't find a list of the team. Did D'Brick make it over McNeil or do they just pick 5 OL at any position or 2 T regardless of side?
     
  3. Murrell2878

    Murrell2878 Lets go JETS!
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    Mangold so clearly deserved this. In fact he probably should have been voted to the Pro Bowl. Brick...maybe not.
     
  4. Italian Seafood

    Italian Seafood New Member

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    Good thing they didn't listen to champ on draft day. :grin:

    Nice that we're building the O-line first. One more big piece and we'll set it up for any future RBs and QBs to have success here for a while.
     
  5. A.C.E.S

    A.C.E.S New Member

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    I don't think Brick is the starter tho...

    Is he ?
     
  6. DaBallhawk

    DaBallhawk Well-Known Member

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    there is no starter. there are 2 OLB, 2 safeties (no SS or FS) etc. but mcneill being a pro bowler im pretty sure he was their first choice..
     
  7. brightfuture

    brightfuture New Member

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    Mangold legitamately could have been a pro bowler he was unbelievable the whole year. Hopefully D'Brick can catch up to him in the offseason and we add another solid fat guy in the draft.
     
  8. Jonathan_Vilma

    Jonathan_Vilma Well-Known Member

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  9. Kentucky Jet

    Kentucky Jet Active Member

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    McNeill is much better in the run game then BRICK. he has stenosis in his back and that scared off some teams. they were wqrong! he is excellent! Brick will be too!
     
  10. The U

    The U Member

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    Well deserved for both guys, the o line is set for years to come. What a draft.
     
  11. Richiebsweet

    Richiebsweet Active Member

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    Read the article from Len P. from ESPN he already see's the stars that are Marcus McNeill and Nick Mangold. D'Brick after this offseason, I can include you in the conversation but you didn't make the PRO-BOWL yet like Marcus McNeill.
     
  12. Duk Dodgers

    Duk Dodgers Active Member

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    I looks like the site says he let up 5 sacks...not .5.
     
  13. DaBallhawk

    DaBallhawk Well-Known Member

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  14. Coach K

    Coach K New Member

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    omg its no debate McNeils better, but we have what we have and hes pretty good.


    now 312 lbs.........AHAHAHAHHA we could only wish.
     
  15. thedonger

    thedonger Active Member

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    that is exactly why teams didn't draft him. if not for that, he could've very well been the 1st LT taken in the draft. what teams want to see in an OL is his potential longevity at the position, especailly when it's center or LT. stenosis is unfortunately a degeneratvie condition that will only get worse with the consistent pounding especially a LT takes. although he's better now, let's see who's still playing at the same level and not missing games 5-10years or so down the road.
    as great a LT mcneil is, i suspect his playing career may not be very long. spinal stenosis is a condition usually seen in people twice his age.
     
  16. ROCKJET

    ROCKJET New Member

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    big -fat- solid -huge m'effers are a good thing :)
     
  17. Jonathan_Vilma

    Jonathan_Vilma Well-Known Member

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    Blah, I was talking about Nick Mangold and his half a sack allowed, not McNeill.
     
  18. PRPitbull

    PRPitbull Active Member

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    awesome, you never miss an opportunity to bash D'Brickashaw. Im pretty sure half your post count comes from shittin on D'Brick
     
  19. sec314

    sec314 Well-Known Member

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    2006 draft

    Man, what a draft we had. Imagine we draft DL version of these guys. That's what we need
     
  20. DROB63Cmart28

    DROB63Cmart28 Banned

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    Does it occur to you that Marcus Mcneil did not go up against any elite DE's when D'Brick was going up against elite DE's almost every week.
     

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