I mentioned it in another thread, but it deserves its own. I think this is the most interesting development to come out of training camp so far: Brandon Chillar played OLB on the right side in practice on Thursday, with Brad Jones backing him up. Clay Matthews played on the left side, with Poppinga backing him up. This could just be a temporary thing, to give the players experience on each side, but what makes it really interesting is that Chillar did great. Here's what Rob Demovsky of the Green Bay Press Gazette had to say about it:
http://packersnews.greenbaypressgazette.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100805/PKR01/308060091/Insider-Chillar-looks-good-but-punters-don-t Those who wanted to pooh-pooh Brandon Chillars switch to outside linebacker as just a stop-gap move while starter Brad Jones was out because of a back injury look a bit silly now.
Jones was full go for practice on Thursday after injuring his back in the first practice of camp, but he didnt have his starting job back. He worked with the second group.
Thats because the Packers have liked what theyve seen from the outside backer combination of Chillar on the right side and Clay Matthews on the left in both the base and nickel packages, and Chillar turned in a near dominant performance under the lights on Thursday evening.
It began during a blitz period in which Chillar recorded sacks (or near sacks because hitting the quarterback is not allowed) on three of the first six plays.
Chillar didnt take any one-on-one pass rushing reps, but in a combination blocking drill, he smoked rookie left tackle Bryan Bulaga on a stunt that would have yielded a sack or a pressure.
Then, during another team period he showed off his coverage skills by dropping and preventing Aaron Rodgers from throwing a deep cross to a tight end. That forced Rodgers to scramble.
Finally, during one of the last team periods of the night, Chillar, who was moving around and rushing from different sides, beat right tackle Mark Tauscher for a pressure of Rodgers, who had to get rid of the ball prematurely.