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Posted: Friday August 7, 2009 10:48AM; Updated: Friday August 7, 2009 10:48AM
Don Banks Don Banks >
INSIDE THE NFL

Spagnuolo has Rams on right track

Story Highlights

You can often learn a lot from watching the early days of a new regime

Steve Spagnuolo has been pitch perfect so far in his make-over efforts in St. Louis

The early 2009 schedule will make for a strong litmus test for the rookie coach

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The Rams are willing to listen to new coach Steve Spagnuolo (right) after last season's 2-14 effort.
AP
NFL Team Page

ST. LOUIS -- One of my favorite things to do on an NFL training camp tour is to visit a team that features a rookie head coach, as the Rams do this year after hiring ex-Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo this offseason. Though I'm usually blowing through camp in a day or so, you can often learn a lot from watching those early days of a new regime, seeing whether or not the veterans on that team are buying what the new guy is selling, and seeing a first-time coach in the process of finding out who he can and can't count on.

True, trying to take an accurate temperature reading of an organization's new program after interviewing a handful of players for a matter of minutes is your basic snap judgment, writ large. It's far from foolproof. But sometimes it can be dead on.

For example, after stops at both the Falcons and Ravens training camps last summer, I came away believing that rookie head coaches Mike Smith and John Harbaugh both had a pretty good handle on what it was going to take to turn Atlanta and Baltimore around, and that they had already put the wheels in motion. It's not that I saw 11-5 seasons coming for both, far from it. But I did see two teams that were in the process of fully buying into Smith and Harbaugh's approaches, and I sensed it would pay dividends at some point.

In an inverse way, the same was true for the 2007 Falcons, who I also paid a camp visit to, in order to discover what the new Bobby Petrino era was all about in Atlanta. One day there and I had the feeling trouble was on way for the Birds that season, thanks largely to the degree of skepticism I heard coming from key Atlanta veterans. And you know how that story turned out: Petrino's rookie season was his only NFL season, as his 13-game tenure was a debacle of epic proportion.

All that said, I'm ready to make the call that Spagnuolo seems like the right man for the job that faces his downtrodden Rams. While their NFL-worst 5-27 record the past two years breeds a certain amount of willingness to follow anyone with a plan, the Rams convinced me that Spagnuolo has been pitch perfect so far in his make-over efforts in St. Louis.

"I was talking to someone in the locker room two days ago, and I said, 'He hasn't told us a lie yet,' '' Rams second-year defensive end Chris Long told me Thursday afternoon, after another two-a-day practice was in the books. "Everything he's said has been on point. I thought we bought into Spags the minute he walked in the door. I had never heard him talk or seen him before, but I knew where he had been, and that resume spoke for itself. On top of that, he's a man who treats people with respect, and when he speaks, guys listen and really embrace his notion of respecting team.''

Watching Spagnuolo work a practice is like watching a bee pollinate an entire field, one flower at a time. With a yellow pencil tucked behind his right ear, a'la ex-Vikings coach Mike Tice, he's here, there and everywhere, teaching and instructing at all times. Calling him high energy really doesn't do his style justice. Spagnuolo really is a hands-on coach, and not in the clichéd way we usually throw that label around. He doesn't mind a bit putting his hands on players and showing them the point he's trying to convey.

"I do enjoy getting around and seeing everything,'' Spagnuolo said, taking a break in his upstairs office after the morning practice. "My mother was a teacher, and that's what coaching is, teaching. I don't know if I could stand around there (on the field) and not do some teaching. It'd be hard for me to do that.''

Maybe on some teams, Spagnuolo's up-tempo style wouldn't fly as well. But the Rams are ready and willing to listen after last season's 2-14 nightmare, and he has sold the team's most influential stars -- from running back Steven Jackson on down -- on the wisdom of his ways.

"They've embraced his energy and his style,'' Rams general manager Billy Devaney said. "He's got everybody buying in. The key guys. The building. The employees, the whole entire organization is buying what he's trying to do. Both the team and the whole building, we needed some juice. Throughout the locker room, and throughout (the team's front office), that's why he was the perfect guy.''

The Rams players knew for certain that there was a new sheriff in town right from the start of camp. Spagnuolo had them hitting in full pads, in 11-on-11 team drills on day two. Going "live'' that early in camp isn't exactly the NFL norm, but the rookie head coach followed it up with more of the same on day three, four, five and six. And not one Rams player has publicly grumbled, not even Jackson, the team's No. 1 offensive weapon who took a wicked hit at knee-level from second-year linebacker Chris Chamberlain on a screen pass in one recent "live'' drill.

"First of all, this team is hungry,'' said Rams center Jason Brown, the ex-Raven who was the centerpiece of St. Louis's efforts in free agency. "We only have one direction to go, and that's up. We have a new guy in front of our faces with brand new ideas, and he's full of enthusiasm.

"We're going to come out here and do whatever he says. To go live like this day after day? Some guys are not used to this at all. Maybe they usually went live two or three days out of the entire training camp. But my theory is when we go out there on game day, those other guys aren't going to be holding back. Why wouldn't we prepare for that in live situations?''

Brown lived through the first year of the Harbaugh era in Baltimore last year, and he saw the instant pay-off that the former Eagles special teams and secondary coach brought to the Ravens. Like Spagnuolo, who served as a defensive assistant with the Eagles from 199-2006 before joining the Giants in 2007, Harbaugh learned his commitment to physicality in practice from longtime Eagles head coach Andy Reid. That belief was buttressed, Spagnuolo said, by his two years with Giants head coach Tom Coughlin.

"It wasn't really a wake up for this team to practice like that, it's just how we believe we should do it,'' Spagnuolo said. "I've been used to Andy Reid and Tom Coughlin and I respect them. I think they're two of the best in the league. Why wouldn't you try and do what they do? I wouldn't try to create my own deal just to have my own deal. Andy always said that if you don't hit at this point in camp, when else are you going to do it? You lose the chance.

"I'm not trying to wear them out. Their response has been great. By the third day, when I was calling for 'thud,' which is not (full contact), they were like 'What do you mean, Coach? We're not going live?' Maybe they're trying to make me feel good, but they said it.''

As Devaney mentioned, the impact of the new Spagnuolo era has been felt almost as much throughout the Rams team complex as it has on the field. Losing organizations often develop sloppy habits across the board, and to say that some of St. Louis' ways of doing business internally were lax is an understatement. Spagnuolo, along with Devaney, has moved quickly to change the laissez-faire culture that had creeped into Rams Park since the team's most recent playoff appearance in 2004.

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