Michael Thomas is succeeding by making everything seem 'the same'
People like to use that phrase, "the same," when discussing the things about him that make the Saints wide receiver great and unique. And it’s not meant that he does everything the same as everyone else. It’s about the level of consistency and evenness to his attitude and level of play.
His intensity during a walkthrough is the same as it is during a game, and his detailed approach to playing the position never lets up.
So when Thomas sends out some tweets like the one he did this week, it doesn’t surprise anyone.
“Game Week!” he wrote. “Y’all going to have to stop playing me after this season (too). I promise.
He kept going, adding in another tweet, “All the friendly (expletive) over. I’m telling you now.”
It comes off like an announcement about how Thomas is going to take his game to a new level. And maybe he is, but it sounds like that is just Mike being Mike.
This is the same guy who wanted to play hard in Pro Bowl practices and brings it every single day during training camp. While that might sound like an announcement about how he’s going to turn it on for the season, those close to Thomas see him already operating at a 10.
“That is the one thing about him — his preparation, his focus, everything, it is consistent,” Payton said. “It’s hard for Mike to have a walk-through just because he’s so wired into his assignment, what he’s doing, how to improve.”
Being the same is the reason he has so much success on the field. Thomas’ intense attention to detail and preparation has allowed him to quickly figure out how to disguise his routes and keep his intentions concealed.
Because he knows defensive backs are trained to look at where the receiver is lined up on every route and glance at his feet to help determine his route, Thomas, who along with former LSU receiver Odell Beckham Jr. are the only players to start their NFL careers with two seasons of 90 catches and 1,000 yards, tries to hide the details and uses his previous routes to set up the next ones.
“Mike doesn’t try to make himself so predictable,” quarterback Drew Brees said. “Mike goes out there and is able to change things up enough and develop fundamentals with each route to where he’s the one dictating to the DB what he’s going to do versus the other way around.”
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