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LB A.J. Hawk (2x All-American, Lombardi Trophy, National Champion, Super Bowl Champion)

After 10% to his agent, that's $5,625,000 a year before taxes. Not too bad for a 3-star LB who should've been a fullback... :biggrin:

And that doesn't count endorsements, appearance fees, product commissions (i.e. his number/name on jersey), and sales of autographed stuff, etc.

Hawk will be in Packers camp with six-year contract

Posted: Friday July
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -- The Green Bay Packers have agreed in principle to a six-year deal with first-round draft pick A.J. Hawk.
Hawk's agent, Mike McCartney, said the two sides were still working out final details of the contract, meaning Hawk was likely to miss Friday night's first training camp practice but could have a deal finalized in time to practice on Saturday.

"A.J.'s ecstatic, and it's going to be great to see his impact as a Packer," McCartney said.
A person familiar with the contract, who requested anonymity because the deal was not yet complete, said the deal was worth $37.5 million but could be worth up to $40 million under a contract clause that could boost his sixth-year salary if the league's franchise tag hits a pre-determined threshold.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/football/nfl/07/28/bc.fbn.packers.hawk.ap/index.html
 
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Packers' Hawk agrees to deal, set to soar

By TOM SILVERSTEIN
[email protected]


Posted: July 28, 2006

Green Bay - A.J. Hawk is soon to be a rich man. And a busy one, too.
The Green Bay Packers' first-round draft choice agreed to terms on a six-year contract late Friday afternoon, ending any concern on the team's part that he would miss a significant part of training camp.
Agent Mike McCartney would not reveal specifics of the contract, but a source familiar with the deal said it was worth $37.5 million and consisted of more than $15 million in guarantees. Specifics of the deal were still being worked out so Hawk was not allowed to take part in the Packers' opening practice Friday evening.
Joining Hawk in reaching contract terms Friday was third-round linebacker Abdul Hodge, who signed a four-year contract. Hawk and Hodge were the remaining members of the 12-man draft class who were unsigned going into Friday.
Hawk, of course, is the big fish and the coaches were counting on him showing up on time.
"Just the conversations I've had with everybody involved, things are moving along so we're hopeful that we'll have him here tomorrow," coach Mike McCarthy said after practice.
Once Hawk signs the papers and steps on the field, his status as a multi-millionaire will be all but ignored. The focus will be on getting the No. 5 pick overall ready to be a starter at weak-side linebacker.
"We'll treat him like everyone else," defensive coordinator Bob Sanders said. "He's that caliber of individual as far as instincts, attention to detail and learning. We don't distinguish him from anyone else. He's a very talented guy and we'll move along as we would with the rest of the defense."
The Packers drafted the 6-foot-1, 246-pound Hawk with the intent of making him the centerpiece of the defense and as a result they weren't about to let him ruin his rookie season with a holdout. In turn, Hawk seemed amenable to a contract structure that will pay him less up front but more in the long term.
McCartney acknowledged that the deal was complicated but said he and Packers vice president of finance Andrew Brandt worked well together.
"I give Andrew Brandt a ton of credit," McCartney said. "Andrew did a great job. The Packers have a great cap guy."
Hawk agreed to forgo the big signing bonus that normally goes with first-round contracts. Instead, he will receive a roster bonus of $1.91 million next week and a modest base salary. His big payday will come next March, when he receives an option bonus of $11.85 million, which is guaranteed against injury, skill or salary cap.
The structure McCartney and Brandt agreed upon is similar to what other top picks in the National Football League draft such as Houston's Mario Williams and the New York Jets' D'Brickashaw Ferguson had in their contracts. It allowed the two sides to avoid salary cap limitations that would have prevented the deal from being as lucrative as it is.
Though Hawk's deal is six years in length, it might have to be redone after the fifth year because of an escalator that would require a balloon payment in the sixth year. If Hawk plays just 35% of the defensive snaps this season or slightly more in succeeding years, the escalator kicks in.
Once he hits the playing time incentive, his salary in the sixth year will be either $10 million or the equivalent of the franchise tender for linebackers at that time, whichever is more. The franchise figure for linebackers this year was $7.169 million; by the time Hawk hits his sixth year it could as much as $13 million.
The Packers won't want to pay him that amount because of salary-cap restrictions and, provided Hawk fulfills his potential, they will try to sign him to another long-term deal that is both cap-friendly to the Packers and lucrative for Hawk. Thus, after five years he could be looking at another big payday.
"He got paid real good," fellow Packers linebacker Nick Barnett said. "But I don't think he's even thinking about how much that is. I don't think the money will affect him one bit. He loves football. That's what he's about."
Hawk's yearly average ranks him seventh in the NFL among linebackers despite the fact he hasn't played a down. But that's the advantage of being a top-five pick who is a two-time All-American and led Ohio State last year in tackles (121), tackles for loss (16½) and sacks (9½).
Hawk was considered one of the most NFL-ready players in the draft but he must prove that he is more than just a great college player and handle the intense scrutiny he will face this season.
Hodge, meanwhile, said he was relieved to complete his contract Friday morning. The third-round pick from Iowa said he told his agent he did not want to be late for camp because he didn't want to fall behind the rest of the defense.
"It's a good situation for myself," Hodge said. "It gives me a chance to get off on the right foot. I was here for all the minicamps and OTAs (organized team activities) and so the transition is that big."
The Packers were allotted more room under the rookie salary cap in which to sign rookies than any other team in the NFL and they used almost every penny. Their total allotment was $6,647,633, which could be used both on draft choices and undrafted free agents.
 
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Dispatch

7/30/06

Hawk signs, then hits practice field

Ex-Buckeye glad to finally join team

Sunday, July 30, 2006

Chris Jenkins
ASSOCIATED PRESS

20060730-Pc-D8-0700.jpg

MIKE ROEMER ASSOCIATED PRESS New Packers linebacker A.J. Hawk was Green Bay’s top pick, and the fifth overall, in this year’s NFL draft.


GREEN BAY — First came his wedding. Then all the "lawyer stuff."
Now first-round pick A.J. Hawk can concentrate on football.
The former Ohio State linebacker signed a six-year deal with the Green Bay Packers yesterday morning and participated in his first training camp practice later in the day.
Hawk’s agent, Mike McCartney, and the Packers agreed in principle to a six-year deal Friday, but it wasn’t finalized in time for Hawk to practice that night. A person familiar with the deal, who requested anonymity because it had not been completed, said Friday that it was worth $37.5 million.
"I’m really excited to get it done, just because it seemed like they said they were ‘close’ forever and it just took a little longer than expected to get the language worked out and to get all the lawyer stuff that they need to after they agreed on the terms," Hawk said.
Hawk asked McCartney on Friday whether he should be getting ready to practice. But once he realized he wasn’t going to be able to join his new team then, he decided to stay home.
"I didn’t come over and watch," Hawk said. "I don’t know what the rules were exactly about that. It was a tough day at home, you know.
"My parents are actually in town right now. I worked out at home, just tried to keep myself busy and (my) mind off of it."
The completed contract capped a whirlwind week for the former Ohio State star.
Hawk and his fiancee, Laura — the sister of Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn — were married in a civil ceremony earlier last week, something the couple tried unsuccessfully to keep quiet.
"Yeah, that kind of got out," Hawk said. "We felt like it was the right thing to do at the time, and it was; we’re still happy about it. We’re still going to have our big celebration next March. It’s good to get all this stuff in line before, now I can come in here and just play football."
Because NFL rules limit the amount of time a college draft pick can practice with his team while classes are still going on at his school, Hawk missed more of the team’s voluntary workouts than he wanted.
Hawk isn’t worried that he has fallen behind, but he is eager to start practicing.
"I wanted to make sure that I could get into camp on time and (that) I was here for pretty much everything," Hawk said.
He is listed as the starting weak-side linebacker. "I just want to come in and try to have an impact somehow, somewhere," Hawk said-."Whether that could be playing the (weak side) or playing special teams, whatever it is, I want to ... show ... the team that I’m going to come out and play hard."
 
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Go AJ!

That's completely awesome!

Compare his numbers to some of the others.

I've found the number 6 pick's contract, d-brickshaws contract (number 4) has yet to leak at all despite being signed a few days ago. Hawk seems to have received a pretty fair deal, the pick after him has 1 less year on his contract and tightend is simply a low paying position. I think due to the top 3 salaries his number 5 salary may come off as a bit weak, but this was a unique draft.

Davis, the sixth overall NFL draft pick from Maryland, becomes the highest-paid tight end in the league, signing a five-year deal worth in excess of $23 million and possibly close to around $25 million, according to ESPN.com.
 
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At home with the Hawks: A conversation with Wisconsin's hottest couple
By Drew Olson
Senior Editor

Published Aug. 1, 2006 at 5:42 a.m.

GREEN BAY -- For all of his triumphs on the football field -- the national championship he won at Ohio State and the national awards that followed -- A.J. Hawk still is haunted by one day when he walked off the field with his shoulders slumped, head down and eyes watery.

It was Jack Murphy (now Qualcomm) Stadium in San Diego.

A.J. Hawk was 10 years old, and he had just lost in the national Punt, Pass and Kick competition sponsored by the National Football League.

"I shanked my kick," says Hawk, now 22 and in his first week of training camp as a rookie linebacker for the Green Bay Packers. "I did Punt Pass and Kick for awhile and it was fun. I used to get to go on the field at halftime of the Bengals' games in Cincinnati. That was great.

"I made it to San Diego and I totally shanked my kick. It was terrible. I still haven't gotten over that. I almost won, even with a horrible kick. It still bugs me, to this day."

As Hawk relives the painful memory, his wife, Laura, smiles; it's a smile of love and understanding, not mockery. Sitting next to her husband on a leather coach in the family room of their new home, which overlooks a golf course in a new subdivision located about a 15-minute drive from Lambeau Field, Laura finds it amusing and endearing that her hulk of a husband -- a two-time All-American, Lombardi Award winner, the fifth player taken in the first round of the National Football League Draft and a man who at the time of the interview was on the verge of signing a $37.5 million contract with the Packers -- still gets upset about an errant kick from more than a decade ago.

"That's him," Laura says. "He doesn't like to lose."

When asked if that attitude carries over into the non-football aspects of her husband's life, such as a friendly game of Scrabble, the vivacious Laura smiles again.

"We're really competitive, but we don't ever play board games," she says. "We play real sports. When we play basketball, it's the most physical thing. He never lets up on me. I'm like a person he doesn't know."

With his older brother, Ryan, working out in the nearby dining room, which has been converted to an exercise area, A.J. begins to mount a half-hearted defense.

"It's not just me," he says, his protest part husband and part little brother.

"If we had a referee, she'd get called for a lot of fouls. I always have to hit three (-pointers) in her face, because every time I drive, she tries to knock me down."

Laura's competitive streak comes out on the golf course, too. When dusk falls on the neighborhood, she and A.J., a skilled player who carded a double eagle, sometimes venture out to play the hole that abuts their back yard.

"I'm pretty terrible at golf," Laura says. "I usually start throwing clubs and walk off after my first shot."

When the games end, the fun continues for the Hawks.

"A.J. will make a competition out of who can walk up the stairs quicker or who can get to the door first," says Laura, 23. "It's physicality all the time with him. I don't even know we're racing half the time and he's already, in his mind, won. That's the way we both are. It's kind of sad, really."

For the Packers and their rabid fans, who are a decade removed from a Super Bowl triumph and still stinging from a 4-12 record last season, that obsession with winning is hardly a sad circumstance. They expect big things from Hawk, who was the highest-rated defensive player in the draft, and they expect them quickly.

"Just watch him play," Packers head coach Mike McCarthy said the night Hawk was drafted. "I think it speaks for itself. He's been consistent throughout his career at Ohio State. He's a very level-headed young man. He grew up in the Midwest (Centerville, Ohio), and we just feel he's a great fit for the Green Bay Packers."

Though he's still finding his way around his new town, A.J. feels like Green Bay will be a good fit for him. The life-in-a-fishbowl existence that Packers players experience isn't daunting for him for two big reasons.

For starters, he and Laura don't like to go out that much.

"We're pretty much homebodies," Laura says, adding that the couple spends free time working out together or watching favorite TV shows like "Entourage," "Desperate Housewives," and -- a guilty pleasure -- the MTV show "The Hills."

The Hawk's house, still awaiting landscaping outdoors, is uncluttered and immaculate inside. (Laura says they are both compulsively tidy and A.J. even helps unload the dishwasher). It could pass for a Parade of Homes model and will definitely provide some much-needed solitude during the season.

Says A.J., "That's pretty much why I wanted to buy this house and get settled right away. I wanted a nice place, where I could get established and feel comfortable.

"I'm lucky that I've got (Laura) here. If I was here by myself, I'd probably get pretty bored."

The other big reason A.J. isn't very worried about living in the spotlight is that he's used to it. In many ways, Ohio State football players are as revered in Columbus as Packers players are in Green Bay.

"There is a hockey team (the NHL's Blue Jackets) in Columbus, but Ohio State football is pretty much the biggest thing in town there," A.J. says. "The short time I've been here, I can definitely see some similarities. There are other things going on, but it's the biggest thing in town."

College is supposed to prepare students for life in the "real world." College football is supposed to prepare players for the NFL, and Ohio State did a great job of that. ("I've noticed a few things at practice that were a little different than what I'm used to, some terminology and things, but it's still football," A.J. says).

Off the field, nothing prepares you for how to act when you're a role model and an overnight millionaire. Nothing could have prepared the Hawks for the media blitz that accompanied the public unveiling of their relationship. If you missed that episode, you obviously didn't watch the Fiesta Bowl.

Shortly before A.J. helped the Buckeyes to a 34-20 victory over Notre Dame, the story hit the papers that he was dating Laura, whose brother, Brady, happens to be the starting quarterback for the Fighting Irish.

The relationship was mentioned in wire stories and mentioned the pregame show leading up the game, during which ABC announcer Brent Musberger talked relationship so much -- with constant cutaway shots of Laura -- that many viewers were left screaming "Enough already!"Asked about the half-and-half jersey she wore that night, Laura says: "I think it's still at my parents' house in Ohio."

Though A.J. sacked Brady twice in the game and his team won, there is no lingering ill will between the two. Brady Quinn, already being tabbed as a leading candidate for the Heisman Trophy and the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft -- spent time with the couple in Green Bay this summer and his sister noticed some similarities between her baby brother and her husband.

"A.J. and Brady get along great," says Laura, whose younger sister, Kelly, is a standout soccer player at the University of Virginia. "They're both kind of perfectionists. Every day of their lives, they're eating right, working out and doing what they need to be better for their sport. They have a focus. They're determined. They're positive a lot. That's a good mentality to hang around."

Although they first met at a Christmas party two years ago, the Hawks didn't start hanging around together until last fall. Laura, who was attending school in California in pursuit of a broadcasting career, bumped into A.J. following a Buckeyes game.

"We exchanged numbers that night," Laura says. "I was getting ready to go back to school in California, so I went over to his house and we watched the Florida State-Miami game." Laura says. "We just sort of knew."

A.J. said the first official date came at a Mongolian barbecue restaurant in Columbus. "She had, like, three bowls of chicken," he said. "I knew from then, we were right."

He was kidding about the gluttony, of course. Laura, who is taking classes at UW-Green Bay to prepare for a broadcasting career, likes working out so much that she made sure that her honeymoon hotel had a gym. "That was a big deal for us," she says. "Working out is something that we like to do together."

Though the couple was planning a big wedding for St. Patrick's Day in Columbus, they decided to make it official with a civil ceremony in a lawyer's office in Green Bay just days before A.J. signed his contract. That led to instant speculation that Laura was pregnant or that A.J. wanted her to be eligible for the NFL's insurance and tuition reimbursement programs.

A.J.'s father, Keith, told his local newspaper it was simpler than that.

"He didn't want to be living together as boyfriend and girlfriend," Keith Hawk told the Dayton Daily News. "He wanted to be living together as man and wife. He's old-school in everything he does, including this."

Keith and Judy Hawk's three sons all played football. Matt, who is 27, was followed by Ryan, a quarterback who transferred from Miami of Ohio to Ohio University when he realized that he wasn't going to take playing time away from his roommate, Ben Roethlisberger. Ryan Hawk spent time with the Birmingham Steeldogs of AFL2, a minor league for arena football.

"Other than my parents and my high school coaches, my brothers had the biggest influence on my life," A.J.says.

Family was also a big influence on Laura, the oldest of Ty and Robin Quinn's three kids from Dublin, Ohio. Brady, the middle child, is on pace to graduate from Notre Dame in 3 ½ years with dual degrees in finance and political science and Kelly also excels in the classroom.

"We're all different, but kind of the same," Laura says of her siblings. "Kelly is a great athlete and a strong personality, she kind of puts me in check. My brother is kind of like my dad. He's like a father figure. My dad is a lot of fun and he's not as pressuring as Brady seems to be. I'd say my brother and sister have had a huge influence on my life."

Outside of the obvious and quickly-resolved Ohio State -- Notre Dame conflict, the melding of the Hawk and Quinn families and friends networks has been smooth.

"A.J.'s family is awesome," Laura says. "I met them all the same day, after one of his games, and they couldn't have been nicer to me. We hit it off right away and they were very welcoming. His family is awesome."

Beginning with the Family Night scrimmage Friday night, the first regular-season game in September and throughout the next few years, A.J. and Laura will be welcomed into one of the biggest families in sports -- the one that lives, eats, sleeps and breathes Packers football.

"I think it's going to be a good fit," A.J. says. "I can't wait to get started."

http://onmilwaukee.com/sports/articles/ajlaurahawk.html?9335
 
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(Paul Posluszny) was in such a friendly mood, in fact, that when I mentioned all the E-mails I got from furious Ohio State fans when he won the Butkus over A.J. Hawk, Posluszny replied, "I agree with them. If I was voting, I would have voted for A.J. He was the best linebacker in the country last year."

Stewart Mandel @ SI.com

8/2
 
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Hawk slowly taking flight in training camp
Rookie linebacker still feeling his way around
By BOB McGINN
[email protected]
Posted: Aug. 3, 2006

Green Bay - Anybody thinking that rookie linebacker A.J. Hawk was going to walk in and take the Green Bay Packers' training camp by storm would be disappointed.
Not only has Hawk yet to show the punishing big-play capability that led the Packers to make him the No. 5 pick in the draft but he hasn't had any more impact than fellow all-Big Ten linebacker Abdul Hodge, a third-round selection.

Of course, Hawk hasn't even been asked to make his first tackle in the National Football League. An eighth day of limited contact drills will give way to a semblance of the real thing Saturday night during the intrasquad scrimmage at Lambeau Field.

"Any time you get a game-type atmosphere it helps, especially for a rookie like me," Hawk said Thursday. "I need to have that game-type experience."

Part of the problem trying to evaluate Hawk is the hype associated with him. As the NFL's highest-drafted linebacker since LaVar Arrington went No. 2 in 2000, Hawk and impending greatness have become almost one and the same in the minds of some fans.

But as practices stack up, Hawk has done little to distinguish himself as the starting linebacker on the weak side.

"I think the guy's really done a good job," coach Mike McCarthy said. "He's shown toughness and his ability. But he's made rookie mistakes. He still is a rookie."

As for Hodge, McCarthy said, "I like the way he's playing. He's very aggressive against the run. As far as running sideline-to-sideline, that's something he's going to have to work on."

There's little doubt that Hawk's decision to marry his fiancée, Laura Quinn, in a civil ceremony 10 days ago might still be on his mind. Given the unexpected nature of the wedding, the couple undoubtedly had to do some long-distance explaining with family members who were caught completely off-guard.

Then came contract negotiations. They were completed last Friday afternoon when Hawk agreed to a six-year, $37.5 million deal. Becoming an instant millionaire takes some getting used to as well.

On the field, Hawk appears to be feeling his way through Week 1 of pro football in a defense that is much different from Ohio State's.

"It's something that's pretty new so it takes a little longer to get comfortable with it," Hawk said. "I'm learning every day. Watching the older guys. Just listening to my coaches."

Taking on the strong-side counter play in college football basically is the same as taking it on in the NFL. Because there hasn't been any live tackling, it's almost impossible even to begin judging how effective Hawk will be against the run.

Even before drafting Hawk, linebackers coach Winston Moss indicated that the Packers were well aware that he would need extensive work in pass coverage. Ohio State played mostly zone whereas the Packers generally employ a matchup scheme in which defenders are assigned to a zone but have responsibility for a man once he declares himself in their area.

"We played some man but we played more of a spot-drop zone defense most of the time," Hawk said. "That was kind of the backbone of our defense. At Ohio State, you'd sit 10, 12 yards taking away your zone and then react to the pass instead of man-turning with guys and running with them all over."

Most first-year linebackers, including Hodge, must endure the trials and tribulations of NFL pass coverage before getting on the field. In Hawk's case, he is being asked to start as he learns.

"I wouldn't say he's gotten exposed," McCarthy said. "But there's so much running and recognition for a young guy. It is challenging. It's not spot drops."

The advantage Nick Barnett had entering the NFL in 2003 was his expertise in coverage. Although he moved from strong safety to linebacker after his freshman year, the Oregon State coaches continued using him extensively in coverage.

"Man (coverage) was pretty easy for me but it's still a lot of work," Barnett said. "In the NFL you just don't have tight ends that are slow. And the zone match scheme here was totally different than in college."

Thickly built and very strong, Hawk looks the part of a linebacker even though his height (6 feet 1 inches) was considered a slight negative by some scouts. As he thinks his way through situations, there have been precious few plays in which his outstanding speed has been noticeable.

In any event, Hawk should at least be able to outrun some of the mistakes that he makes in coverage early on.

"Everybody in this league is fast," defensive coordinator Bob Sanders said. "Hopefully, he won't be in position to have to use that speed. What we're trying to get is that he doesn't make those mistakes and get out of position. If he needs to get a head start, get a head start."

Barnett, who has had a strong camp, seems entrenched as the lone linebacker in the 4-1 dime defense. He was there Thursday morning when the Packers practiced 2-minute plays. The coaches then surprisingly waved in Hodge with the No. 2 defense, replacing Barnett. Later, Hawk took over for Hodge.
Unlike Hawk, Hodge played almost all man-to-man coverage at Iowa, assigned to a running back or the tight end. His job was to stuff the run, and he did it exceedingly well.

"I'm definitely going to have to cover," Hodge said. "I want to learn techniques to my advantage so I won't have to worry about chasing them all over the field. There's a lot of veteran quarterbacks and veteran receivers that can expose you. It's something I have to work on."

Hodge didn’t go higher than he did (third round, third pick) largely because of his pedestrian speed, borderline size and concerns about his ability to play in space.
As long as Hodge remains at middle linebacker, and Sanders doesn't appear the least bit inclined to move him to the strong side as a challenger for Ben Taylor, he figures to back up Barnett, maybe perform in the goal-line defense and scuffle for playing time in the nickel defense.

Camp is just a week old and already the Packers have an inkling that Hodge could start blowing people up when the rough stuff arrives.

"He had a hell of a day (Wednesday)," McCarthy said. "He stoned the fullback a couple times. I think the kid's really picked it up."

http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=479849
 
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Packers: Night of the butterflies
JASON WILDE
608-252-6176
[email protected]
GREEN BAY - It should not be a big deal.A.J. Hawk played in the national championship game as a freshman, for crying out loud, one of four bowl games - three Fiesta Bowls and an Alamo Bowl - he played in at Ohio State.
Not only that, he played his home games at "The Horseshoe," 101,568-seat Ohio Stadium when even the Buckeyes' spring game draws a crowd of more than 60,000.
So tonight's Family Night Scrimmage, a glorified practice inside Lambeau Field, should barely register on the rookie linebacker's nervous-o-meter.

And yet Hawk, the Green Bay Packers' first-round pick and one of 53 rookies, first- and second-year players on the team's 89-man roster, is just like the rest of the youngsters: He cannot wait to run out of the tunnel at 6:30 and hear the sellout crowd cheer.
"That's what's great about Green Bay. It's a scrimmage and you sell out the stadium. I don't think that happens anywhere else in the NFL," said Hawk, the No. 5 overall pick in April's draft who'll experience it firsthand tonight with the other 26 rookies.
"Anytime you can get a game-type atmosphere like that, I think helps the whole team out, especially big-time for a rookie like me, who needs to be out there in the heat of the battle, with the crowd noise, with everything going on. I need to have that game-type experience."
Another thing Hawk can't wait to do: Tackle somebody. Although new coach Mike McCarthy had his players in full pads for seven of the first 10 practices of training camp, the team has yet to have a full-contact tackling period. Tonight, other than not being able to hit the quarterbacks and some special-teams situations, everything will be live.
McCarthy said that in the scrimmage portions of the practice, the No. 1 offense will go against the No. 2 defense first, followed by the No. 1 defense against the No. 2 offense, then a third live period for the third- and fourth-stringers. There also figures to be some scripted periods and a 2-minute drill or two.
"It's a game. It's really their first live action," said McCarthy, who's also a Family Night rookie, though he was the team's quarterbacks coach in 1999 when the scrimmage was reborn. "Particularly on defense, you want to see how your tackling is. That's the first time they really get to cut it loose.
"From an offensive standpoint, you want to see how your runners run, (and) obviously (for) our offensive line it'll be their first opportunity to cut (block). So there's just so many things you're not able to do in a practice environment that you get to do at live speed. It's clearly the most important phase of evaluation that we'll have had to this point."
And yet, the football is almost secondary to the experience itself because the truth is, the football isn't that different. It's essentially a glorified practice, gussied up with "game" introductions; the showing of the team's 2005 highlight video (a short film, to be sure); Native American dancers from the Oneida Nation dance troupe; and fireworks to conclude the night.
What matters more is getting the young players acclimated to the game atmosphere. Even McCarthy admitted that one of the tasks tonight will be practicing the pre-game routine in advance of the preseason opener a week from tonight at San Diego.
"For me, it is the kickoff to the season because it's my first chance to play in front of our home crowd and in Lambeau and against a defense going full speed," said starting left guard Daryn Colledge, a rookie second-round pick. "I'm going to be excited and hyped up like it is a game."
Unlike last year, when then-coach Mike Sherman brought the Buffalo Bills to town, there won't be another team competing against the Packers. That will allow McCarthy and his staff to control things a bit better than last year, when the Bills' defense employed a number of blitzes and defenses that, combined with poor execution by the Packers' offense, led to a few ugly moments for the home squad - particularly for then-rookie quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
"To me, it was (a big deal). I couldn't believe how many fans were there. That was the first thing that stood out," Rodgers recalled. "The night was electric ... and then I completed one pass.
"I'm looking forward to this. It's definitely a little different. The atmosphere, and the number of fans, I think changes the dynamic. It's going to be fun."
 
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http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/sports/index.php?ntid=93671&ntpid=2"That's what's great about Green Bay. It's a scrimmage and you sell out the stadium. I don't think that happens anywhere else in the NFL," said Hawk, the No. 5 overall pick in April's draft who'll experience it firsthand tonight with the other 26 rookies.
"Anytime you can get a game-type atmosphere like that, I think helps the whole team out, especially big-time for a rookie like me, who needs to be out there in the heat of the battle, with the crowd noise, with everything going on. I need to have that game-type experience."
Crowd noise, hmm? Guaranteed. :biggrin:
 
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MON., AUG 7, 2006 - 12:17 AM
Packers: Hawk's play hasn't lived up to hype
JASON WILDE 608-252-6176
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GREEN BAY - Rookie linebacker A.J. Hawk took off his sweat-soaked No. 50 jersey - so it could be raffled off along with several of his Green Bay Packers teammates' shirts following Saturday night's intrasquad scrimmage - and to the surprise of at least some folks in the record crowd of 62,701, there was in fact no "S" on Hawk's chest.

Apparently, some of the locals are disappointed the only place in Titletown to see "Superman Returns" is at the Bay Park Square cineplex, and not at Clarke Hinkle Field.

For after just 10 days of training camp, there are those who are already thinking Hawk, the No. 5 overall pick in April's draft, is overhyped and underperforming because he has been, in scouting parlance, "just a guy" through the first week and a half of practice.

"For right now, let's understand. Let's be realistic," linebackers coach Winston Moss said. "He's a young guy, he's learning a new scheme.

"He's extremely talented, he's very serious about his job, he's going to make his share of plays. It's just going to be a process. He's a rookie. Obviously we expect him to be super-human, but for right now, I'm pleased with what he's been doing and the progress he's been making."•

Failure to perform Perhaps Packers fans are distressed because they're unaccustomed to having such a high draft pick on their roster - the Packers had picked 15th or later in 13 of the previous 16 drafts - and four of the team's last five top-10 picks, defensive end Jamal Reynolds (10th in 2001, cornerback Terrell Buckley (fifth in 1992), tackle Tony Mandarich (second in 1989) and running back Brent Fullwood (fourth in 1987) were busts. Only wide receiver Sterling Sharpe (seventh in 1988) lived up to his advance billing.

As a result, expectations of Hawk have been astronomical. The highest linebacker drafted since LaVar Arrington went second to Washington in 2000, Hawk needed to have an off-the-charts first week to match the hype about him. And he didn't do that.

"But that's fine. I want the expectation level to be high on me - and on the team as well," Hawk said. "That's what coach (Jim) Tressel used to tell us at Ohio State all the time. We want people to get mad if we're losing, if we're not playing well. You want people to demand that. So that's fine with me. They can think whatever they think. I don't feel any added pressure."

Hawk doesn't deny he's started camp slowly. He spent the July 28 opening-night practice at home, watching a local Packers' preseason special and waiting for his agent and the team to finish up his six-year, $37.5 million deal. And while that's the only practice Hawk has missed, it's clear he is playing catch-up after missing half of the organized team activity practices in June while Ohio State finished its academic year.

"It could always go better. There's mistakes I've made throughout practices, places where I took the wrong step or used the wrong technique or whatever," said Hawk, who was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year two years running and won the Lombardi Award as college football's top lineman or linebacker as a senior last year.

"But for the most part, I think every day I've felt more comfortable, and I think that's what I'm hoping for. I just hope as camp goes on and by the end of these preseason games I feel comfortable in the scheme so when we're playing for real, I'm ready to go." •

Big Ten rival shines It hasn't helped perceptions that rookie third-round pick Abdul Hodge, another highly regarded linebacker from Big Ten rival Iowa, has been something of a darling of camp with his hard hits and noticeable impact with the No. 2 defense at mike (middle) linebacker, behind starter Nick Barnett.

Hodge made a team-high nine tackles in the scrimmage and snuffed out a key third-and-short play when he stuffed halfback Samkon Gado. Hodge also had the hardest hit of camp when he bowled over Arliss Beach during a linebacker-running back blitz drill last week, a hit that left Beach with a concussion.

Hawk, meanwhile, had just three tackles Saturday night, despite "starting" at will (weak-side) linebacker with both the No. 1 and No. 2 defenses.

In his post-scrimmage assessment, coach Mike McCarthy said Hodge "definitely flashed" while Hawk "had a few mistakes he'll learn from," including what appeared to be a blown coverage on a fourth-down pass to tight end Donald Lee.

But Hodge, who was a tackling machine (453 tackles in four years) and was first-team all-Big Ten three years running, struggles even more in pass coverage than Hawk - so much so that the coaching staff appears reluctant to even consider moving him outside to sam (strong-side) linebacker.

With the staff saying it plans on playing the three best linebackers, Barnett would have to move to sam so the team could start Hodge at mike. Regardless, Hawk will start Saturday's preseason opener at San Diego and seems like a lock for the Sept. 10 opener against Chicago, barring injury.

"A.J.'s getting better and better," defensive coordinator Bob Sanders said. "He's very coachable, he studies, he does a great job in the meetings. He just has to continue to learn as he goes.

"The expectation level, we try to keep it high on everyone on defense. He's played at a high level, so I think he's used to it. And I think he'll do well."

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LB A.J. Hawk (official thread)

Hello All,

I'm new to the forum I'm a Green Bay Packer fan. As you know the Packers Drafted AJ Hawk with their fifth overall pick this year in the draft. I watched their scrimmage the other night and AJ Didn't really jump out at me. I'm sure you guys get this question a lot but here goes How do you think AJ Hawk will do as a pro football player? You guys know a hell of a lot more about him then I do. Thanks for reading my first post let me know what you think I will be glad to hear any more info I can get about AJ. Also the guy seems real classy saying how he hoped he was a packer and all that, but anyway I have rambled on:wink2: . Best of wishes to Ohio State this year :biggrin:
 
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