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Jarryd Hayne

DC_fan

Coach
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11,980
Jarryd Hayne 49ers: San Francisco beat writer Cam Inman assess how former rugby league star is faring in NFL

CAM Inman is the 49ers beat writer for the Bay Area News Group. He assesses how Jarryd Hayne rates among typical NFL players after the completion of the 49ers’ mini-camps and OTAs.
JARRYD HAYNE’S REPORT CARD

907645-87202884-1226-11e5-97cb-591a1d9825c0.jpg

Jarryd Hayne in action. Source: Getty Images





Running form: 4
story-fnp3ipqj-1227396907833

Receiving form: 8
Return ability: 9
Strength: 7
Vision: 8
Fitness: 9
Acceleration: 7
Ball security: 8
Blocking skills: 7
Playbook knowledge: 7
Camaraderie: 9

Jarryd Hayne’s No. 38 jersey finally can rest in the San Francisco 49ers locker room for the next five weeks.

His transformation from NRL star to NFL rookie is not done, however
Hayne has plenty to prove once he reports back for training camp in late July. Until then, he’ll spend the next few weeks home in Sydney, where one of his first tasks will be to undergo surgery Tuesday on a cyst in his right foot.

That ailment hasn’t slowed his daring attempt at an NFL career.

“He’s starting to get it,” 49ers coach Jim Tomsula said Wednesday at minicamp, the last stage of a two-month off-season program. “You’re seeing it again, especially catching punts. The guy is a world-class athlete.”

Hayne’s rugby-league fame wasn’t initially known to his 49ers teammates.
That all changed a few YouTube clicks later, or at least when several Australian reporters swarmed Hayne for his first interview April 29 at the 49ers’ facility in Santa Clara, some 45 minutes south of San Francisco.

Then, in a blink, Hayne retreated into the role of any roster hopeful, like dozens of other newcomers trying to last through final cuts on Sept. 5.

“From where I’ve come and all the advice I’ve been given, it’s all coming to the front now with reps and understanding,” Hayne, 27, said. “… The more time I get on the field and the more time I get training, I’ll understand the concepts and the routes a lot better.”

Two months ago, he was so puzzled by the 49ers playbook he would take notes onto the practice field and stuff them into his shorts. His late-night study sessions inside his team-issued hotel room have paid off, where he now is familiar with the schemes inside his iPad playbook.

However, he’s no expert, nor does he pretend to be. On the sideline, he’ll occasionally check with a low-level assistant on his assignment before being summoned onto the field by position coach Tom Rathman, a two-time Super Bowl champion as a 49ers running back from 1986-93.

Rathman, a no-nonsense but enthusiastic mentor, is as curious as anyone to see if Hayne emerges as a bona fide playmaker. Rathman treats all running backs equal, but he’s made sure to give Hayne tips along the way when a hiccup occurs.

“There’s been half-dozen times I’ve been called out with the wrong read or not seeing it a bit early,” Hayne said. “I don’t feel out of my depth learning that and it’s something I’ll get better at.”

Any novice observer, including beat reporters, can see that Hayne’s running style sets him apart, in a concerning way. The upper torso of his 6-foot-2 frame remains too high, rather than low to the ground so he can slither through the minuscule cracks past his linemen’s blocks.

“Obviously my running style is the biggest thing I have to change, being so high,” Hayne said. “We watched some video of where I was to where I am now, and it’s better, but obviously a lot more I need to improve.”

Tomsula agreed, and he recalled bluntly telling Hayne: “They’re could be a play where you come through there and you’re treetop tall, and 53 (linebacker NaVorro Bowman) is going to hit you in the chest. I’d like you to listen now before you get the wind knocked out of you.”

Hayne won’t experience his first contact until a few days into training camp, and then in the exhibition games, starting Aug. 15 at the Houston Texans.

“That’s probably the key indicator, when we get pads on,” Hayne said. “It’s one thing running routes with no pads, but it will be a different level when pads come on.”

It’s one thing to put pads on for a half-dozen training sessions with a Sydney team. It’s another to suit up in true NFL armor, and atop his locker sits a fresh set of Riddell’s Power SPK shoulder pads.

“With the pads on, you learn to drop lower, everybody does,” fullback Bruce Miller said. “To be able to be where he is now and make that transition, I thought he’d be further behind.”

Hayne’s rugby-league experience in fielding balls and weaving through defenders will shine best on the 49ers’ special teams, and that is where he ultimately must earn a spot on the 53-man roster instead of the 10-man practice squad.

Bruce Ellington, last year’s return specialist, has missed the past two months of practice with a hamstring injury. But he is expected back in training camp, and he’ll offer stiff competition for Hayne, as well as 10th-year running back Reggie Bush.

Hayne must be more than a backup running back, behind Bush, Carlos Hyde (the projected starter), Kendall Hunter and rookie Mike Davis. Tomsula, a former coach in the now-defunct NFL Europe, has a soft spot in his heart of newcomers to the sport, however.

“He’s used to playing that wide open (rugby league) game,” Tomsula said. “Now it’s all crunched up. That’s where he’s got to get used to in the run game. He’s doing really well.”

Hayne is also thriving in the locker room. He offers a fresh face to a team that’s been devastated in recent months by retirements of four key players and departures of other mainstays to rival teams.

“He’s a cool guy, he’s doing real well and he gets along with everyone,” said Ellington, a second-year wide receiver whose locker is next to Hayne’s.

“He gave me some Australian chocolate, and, man, it was good.”

Hayne’s foot surgery will take place in Australia because, if 49ers doctors did it, he wouldn’t be allowed to fly for three weeks and wouldn’t be able to vacation in his native land. This way, he’ll be back in Australia, though unable to attend Origin II on Wednesday night in Melbourne.

Once Hayne goes back to the Bay Area, he’ll move out of the hotel room provided to him by the 49ers and find a new place to live. He’s finally procured a car, but not the perfect cup of coffee offering an Australian-like boost.

“I’m still searching for coffee,” Hayne said, “but there’s a good little spot in downtown San Jose.”

Hayne seemingly has a spot in the 49ers’ plans. But he has more days, weeks and months ahead to determine exactly what that role will be.

Improving in pass-protection drills is one way he’s boosted his self-confidence.

“Me being a playmaker in rugby league, part of that was reading body language,” Hayne said, “and that’s something Tom (Rathman) is really big on.”

To be continued: Hayne’s big adventure in America.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sp...is-faring-in-nfl/story-fnp3ipqj-1227396907833
 

zombie jesus

Moderator
Staff member
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9,752
I don't know about other teams but I read a lot about the Steelers heading off to various training facilities in this dead time before TC, Harrison in Arizona with a couple others, at least one guy is at a safety camp run by Ryan Clark, others working with Ike Taylor in Florida, Kelvin Beachum is at an o-line camp etc. But this Hayne guy is in Australia at origin? I know he needed surgery but there's no reason to come home to get it. It wasn't long ago he was taking cheat notes in to the huddle with him. I'm really not sure he gets it.
 

nick87

Coach
Messages
12,368
I don't know about other teams but I read a lot about the Steelers heading off to various training facilities in this dead time before TC, Harrison in Arizona with a couple others, at least one guy is at a safety camp run by Ryan Clark, others working with Ike Taylor in Florida, Kelvin Beachum is at an o-line camp etc. But this Hayne guy is in Australia at origin? I know he needed surgery but there's no reason to come home to get it. It wasn't long ago he was taking cheat notes in to the huddle with him. I'm really not sure he gets it.

agreed. He really needs to be knuckling down and focusing on the task at hand
 

zombie jesus

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
9,752
Danny Weidler on top of how an NFL preseason works.

"Hayne will play his first game in the next few weeks. From the way it has been explained to me it will be the equivalent of a trial where a number of hopefuls will get a chance to show what they can do. There will be a separate trial match for the established stars."
 

kurt faulk

Coach
Messages
14,377
.

he's right in a way. the 1st and 4th quarters are completely different games.

seriously how hard is it to do a little research and report how it actually works.

.
 

kurt faulk

Coach
Messages
14,377
49ers rookie Hayne reiterates apology for offensive comments
By JANIE McCAULEY (AP Sports Writer)
22 minutes ago
AP - Sports


SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) -- On the opening day of his first NFL training camp, former Australian rugby league star Jarryd Hayne reiterated how sorry he is for offensive comments last month about Jews that drew criticism from the Anti-Defamation League and others.

''Obviously I addressed it and obviously deeply sad if I hurt anybody,'' Hayne said Saturday after previously apologizing while back home in July. ''The other way I addressed it was it's something I was very apologetic about.''

In two Tweets that were later deleted, Hayne wrote: ''Jesus wanted to help people but was killed by his own people,'' and, ''The Jews were the people who took him to the Romans n forced them to give the order because they couldn't.''

Hayne and the San Francisco 49ers were gearing up for a night practice Saturday at Levi's Stadium, their first under new coach Jim Tomsula. The rookie running back and kick returner is trying to win a spot on San Francisco's 53-man roster out of camp in what is sure to be a daunting transition to the pace and hard-hitting nature of the NFL.

The 27-year-old Hayne underwent minor foot surgery when he went back home after the team's mandatory June minicamp.

''It went really well. The surgeon in Australia did a great job,'' Hayne said. ''I think it was the recovery that hurt more than anything. It just put me on the ground for about three weeks.''

He hasn't even taken his first NFL hit yet. That will be next week once the pads are on.

''I'd rather get hit hard and learn from that,'' he said. ''For me it's not about making mistakes, it's about learning from them.''

Hayne spent the past nine years - from 2006-14 - with the Parramatta Eels of the Australian National Rugby League before giving up that career to chase a new, drastically different one across the globe.

He has already sought guidance from second-year running back and camp roommate Carlos Hyde about how to pick up a linebacker coming at him.

''Jarryd's a real cool guy,'' said Hyde, always eager to listen to Hayne's stories from back home. ''I'm nowhere as big as he is in Australia. I'm looking at Jarryd as if he's a superstar. ... All you hear about him is great things in Australia.''

Tomsula watched Hayne make strides during the offseason program, picking up his speed on the field after a slow start. There also has been lots of communication with running backs coach Tom Rathman.

''The guy's a, he's a world-class athlete,'' Tomsula said.

Hayne isn't about to predict where he might fit in on a team that missed the playoffs for the first time in four years at 8-8. He said his last goodbyes during his recent trip to Australia, not to mention having his last tastes of his favorite coffee he can't get here.

''I'm feeling great to be able to run with no pain,'' he said. ''I had to pretty much wear a massive pad under my foot for the last month of OTAs. Stepping and running wasn't that comfortable.''

From the other side of the ball, new Niners defensive coordinator Eric Mangini is rooting for Hayne.

''He's a rookie-plus, so every day he's learning,'' Mangini said. ''He is a determined human being.''
 

Parra

Referee
Messages
24,900
There is nothing to indicate Hillsong are anti-semetic at all. A rejection of the vatican ruling on the issue could be part of it - but Hayne did not go anywhere near that.

His comments aren't anti-jew. It's just that the comments could be offensive to Jewish people. You can't really be a christian and be anti-jew. Jesus was a jew.
 

nick87

Coach
Messages
12,368
Zero f**ks given about his religous views
I just want to see him put pads on and find out if he can play
 

abpanther

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
20,807
Hayne had his first padded practice today and seemed to go well. Held his own in one-on-one blocking drills with LB Nick Moody.

Caught a nice 15 yard TD also
 
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