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Louis Rees-Zammit leaves defender in the dust on camera

Louis Rees-Zammit beats a defender one on one before catching the football.

Former Welsh rugby star turned NFL hopeful Louis Rees-Zammit has made an ‘extremely impressive’ play during a Kansas City Chiefs practice session.

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The training camp took place in St Joseph, Missouri, as the team continues to prepare for the upcoming season following their consecutive Super Bowl victories.

In the clip in question, Rees-Zammit can be seen breaking down the right flank under pressure from a would-be defender in what looked like a wide receiver drill.

After beating his man LRZ managed to catch the ball mid-air – a feat that won a round of applause from the crowd of spectators in attendance at the open training session.

The incident was captured on video and was posted to X by Arrowhead Live [via neilreynoldsnfl on Instagram], who described the play as “an extremely impressive 1v1 rep for LRZ”.

Indeed coaches and teammates have lauded Rees-Zammit for his work ethic and eagerness to learn, qualities that have contributed to a decent performance in camp on offence.

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Yet while elements of his offensive work have looked very impressive, his ‘pass protection’ drills have left a bit to be desired.

The 23-year-old looked at times a little awkward during the drills – understandable given there is no like-for-like action in rugby union.

Of course, it’s still very early days on this front for the Welshman, with pundits seeming to suggest that latter videos coming out of camp showed a marked improvement in these specific drills throughout the training camp.

“I think it’s just learning all the plays. It’s so different from what I’m used to. Obviously, in rugby, you don’t have to learn as much, but I think physically, I’m in good shape,” LRZ told reporters last month. “I think rugby really prepared me for this, with the conditioning and being in good physical shape. The biggest difference is just mental, staying on top of things, staying on top of the playbook and making no mistakes.”

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Comments

2 Comments
S
SadersMan 348 days ago

Newsflash: Louis Rees-Zammit farted.

B
Bull Shark 348 days ago

Yawn

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TWAS 31 minutes ago
How the Lions will heap pressure upon Australia's million-dollar man

I’m sorry but this just seems like incredibly selective analysis attempting to blame all team failures on JAS.


Looking through the examples:


Example 1 - long place by JAS, all support overruns the ruck. Pilfer also achieved by a player resting his arms on JAS - so should be a penalty for of his feet anyway. No failure by JAS there failing to secure the ball. By his team mates, yes.


Example 2 - a knock on punched out by the first defender who’s tackle he initially beat, from behind. An error by JAS absolutely. But every player makes the odd handling error.


Example 3 - JAS just beaten to the ruck because defender shoots to make a good tackle He passes and immediately follows. Potentially should have been a penalty to Aus because the tackler had not released and swung around into JAS’s path preventing him securing the ball, and had not released when the jackal went for the pilfer. Tackler prevented a clean release by Potter and if there was any failure, it was the ball carrier who got into a horrible position.


I am struggling how you try and blame 1 on JAS and not support, but then blame JAS when the tackler fails to make a good placement.


Example 4 - JAS flies into this ruck out of nowhere, seemingly runs past the 12 to get there. Also did you miss McReight and Williams just jogging and letting JAS run past them? Anyway he busts a get to get there but was beaten to the contest. Any failure here is on the supporting players, McReight and Williams and JAS showed great instinct to charge in to try and secure.


Example 5 - JAS is following the lead of players inside him. How this is his fault I don’t know what you are thinking


Example 6 - Gleeson misses a tackle so JAS has to drift in off his man to take the ball carrier, leaving a larger overlap when he offloads. Failure by Gleeson not JAS


Examples 7 and 8 - Wallabies defensive line isn’t aggressive. But noting to do with JAS. Fisher has actually said he is not coaching a fast line speed. To try and blame JAS is again selective.


Seems like an agenda in this rather than the genuine, quality analysis I’ve come to expect from the author.

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