
Stadium, having both been members of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2009 and 2011. While we talked about playing in London, the conversation soon shifted to Miller's time with the Bucs - I'm a Bucs fan, what do you expect? - and Roy was very open and forthcoming about his time in Tampa. Among the topics we talked about were Roy's opinion of the NFL's London project and the city itself, being reunited with a former Bucs coach at Jacksonville, Josh Freeman, Greg Schiano and the perceived turbulence at his former team, and even some Xs and Os. Hit the jump for our exclusive interview with Roy Miller.
Photo courtesy of SBMedia. Special thanks to Ryan Robinson and Mike Farnham of the Jaguars' PR department.
The Pulling Linemen: On Sunday, you and Geno Hayes will become the first players in NFL
history to have played three 'home' games at Wembley Stadium. How does that
make you feel?
Roy Miller: It feels good, man. It's a great place to come to, I just love the
atmosphere, the fans. Just being in this place, the culture, it's always good
to come here.
TPL: The Bucs took two different approaches with their two London games, arriving less than 48 hours before kick off the first
time, and coming for the whole week the second time. Obviously the team lost both times,
but which approach worked better in your opinion?
RM: I think coming here early is the right thing to do. A lot of guys want
to come out here, do some things, you come here early and you give guys a
chance to go out, do a few things and get it out of your head, so you can focus
on what we've come out here to do. It's definitely exciting for us, coming to
London, it's an exciting thing! But we have to focus on what we have to do, so
it's good to come here early, guys can get that 'tourist'-type mentality out of
their minds, and just focus. So I think it's a good thing to come out early.
TPL: Having done this twice before, you've got insight into how the
travelling affects you, not just for this game but for the rest of the season.
The Wembley game in 2011 was the start of the Bucs' 10-game losing streak; do
you think that the travelling can affect you for the rest of the season?
RM: I don't think it's a bad thing, I just think that in our line of duty,
you have to be able to respond and react pretty often to sudden change and all
kinds of things, so I don't think it's too big to deal with. You just go home,
get some rest and get back to it.
TPL: It's good to hear that the effects game doesn't carry on through the
rest of the season, as obviously the NFL is putting more and more focus on
London. Do you think there could be a full-time franchise here?
RM: I think so. They call it the National Football League but you've got to
include everybody, all the countries should get a shot. Come out here, have a
franchise here, I think it'd be great. I think the more we expand around the
world, there's no telling [what could happen]. I mean, I watch rugby all the
time, you see guys that, who knows? You watch them across the street (Pennyhill
Park and Spa, where the Jaguars were staying, is also the official hotel of the
English national rugby team) and they could have been the next great star in
the NFL. I think it's a great opportunity for the league to expand.
TPL: Your first trip over, fourth quarter, Josh Freeman's first regular
season snaps in the NFL. You tweeted the other day that you thought it was
really sad he would be wearing a different jersey at this stage of his career,
so I'm guessing you two are good friends. So, when he was released, did you go
to coaches and say to them that he should be given a shot in Jacksonville?
RM: I try to stay away from that! I got a bunch of buddies, it's
unfortunate when it's a guy who you like leaves a team... I believe in the
coaches, I believe they do a great job here, but Freeman's a good buddy fo
mine, it's hard to believe because he was a franchise quarterback and I never
thought I'd see him leave, so for me it was just hard to take in, but he's
found a job.
TPL: I'd like to ask you some questions about the Bucs. Greg Schiano last
year said that you were "custom-made" for his defense. Did that make
it that much harder when the team chose not to re-sign you?
RM: It was rough. I don't think it had a lot to do with the coaches. I just
knew I was going to be re-signed and I'd be back, but it worked out for me and
I'm excited to be part of this team. I never thought I'd be leaving Tampa, but
it happens, you have to move on.
TPL: Coach Schiano is under a lot of fire at the moment, between the Bucs
not doing well and all the stories of the media, would you like to make any
statements about Coach Schiano? He obviously came in after a very different
regime under Raheem Morris, how do you compare the two coaches?
RM: It was definitely a culture change. Coach Rah, he was a lot different.
Coach Schiano came in and everybody appreciated it a lot, just hard work, the
details and everything, we all appreciated it. It was a good thing for us, we
needed it. I think at his heart, Coach Schiano just wants to win. He's willing
to do anything he can to win for his team, he cares about his team, he's a
great guy. I really don't know what's going on [at the Bucs], I hear a lot of
things about this player, that player, there's two sides, it's hard to tell.
You've got the GM. You've got the head coach. You've got the owners, and
they're all making their decisions. But like I said, Coach Schiano, at heart
he's a great guy. He just wants to win. I truly believe the decisions he makes
are for the best of the team, but like I said, as far as personnel and all
that, I can't speak a lot a whole deal about that.
TPL: There was a reported incident between Raheem Morris and Aqib Talib
during your first trip over. Are you able to shed any light on exactly what
happened there?
RM: Really? I never knew anything about that!
TPL: You're now reunited with (Jaguars and former Buccaneers defensive line
coach) Todd Wash. What's it like playing under Coach Wash again?
RM: It's great, I really like the scheme, mixing up 3-4 and 4-3, just
looking forward to getting healthy (Roy was limited in practice throughout last
week) and getting out there and playing in a great scheme. He's a great coach,
like you said I had him in Tampa, he's been around the best and I think he's
one of the best coaches in the NFL. I knew he was here, I talked to Gus
[Bradley, Jaguars' HC] and I was like, "I've got to come here". Coach
Gus is the most positive guy I've ever been around, all the time. He doesn't
just say it, he truly is always walking around with a smile on his face, happy,
always positive. Being around those guys, and Wash, I thought "man, I've
got to come here".
TPL: Last year the Bucs signed Carl Nicks. What was it like going against
him, in training and when he was with the Saints?
RM: Oh man, I definitley believe he's one of the top two guards in the
league. That guy, he's big, he's strong, he can pass block, he can do
everything. It was rough going against him in training camp, but you knew in
the back of your mind you had to focus on how he was going to make us better in
the long run. Going against him and Davin and Zuttah, if we just kept going
[against them] then the game will slow down for us, and it helped us out a lot.
TPL: You play 1-tech in the four-front, which is quite a selfless position
since your job is more to occupy the blockers to let the 3-tech and the ends
make plays. What kind of mentality do you need to play the 1-tech?
RM: You've got to be selfless. A lot of times you're asked to chase the
center, and a lot of times you take yourself out of the play. You know the play
might be going the other way, but you've got take out that guy for the sake of
the 3-tech. You've just got to be accountable, have respect for the defense and
do what you have to do. You've got to be tough, hard-nosed, and sacrfice every
play for the team. It's a tough gig, but just like you do your job, I felt I
was made to do mine. It's just who you are.
TPL: Who would you see is the best player you've ever played alongside, at
college or the NFL.
RM: I've played with so many.
TPL: You can give a top three if you want?
RM: I don't want to leave anybody out! Brian Orakpo, Henry Melton, he's
another Pro Bowler. Gerald McCoy, definitely. There's some more, but that's
three right there. Gerald's a beast, man. He needs a little help down there,
he's winning consistently and it's kind of hard to watch, because you see him,
he's coming in and the quarterback just runs away.
TPL: Talking about needing to get Gerald McCoy help, that's not helped by
all the stunting that the Bucs have done under Schiano, could you talk about
the challenges you found with all the stunts?
RM: It's very difficult, because when you stunt a lot, you have to be
precise. You talk about taking away a guy from taking a double team to now
having a single blocker. When you stunt you become single-blocked so everybody
has to be accountable to their gap, and they have to work in blitzes behind
because if you don't, it leaves a big seam, and that's why Schiano was so tough
on us, "you've got to get to this gap, you've got to do this" because
we stunted so much. But like I said, you've got to be precise. It's something
that, it's kind of like a dance. Everybody has to be exactly where
they're supposed to be, or else the whole thing falls apart.
TPL: Final question - now that the Jags are coming over for the next few
years, what do you think about London as a city, is it somewhere you'd consider
spending time after your playing days?
RM: Man, I'm driving down town and I can see myself living out here. It's
kind of hard because you got your family back home, but i can see myself coming
out here and staying. It's a beautiful city, I love the countryside (Pennyhill
Park is situated on the rural outskirts of London), it's a wonderful place.
You've got down town and it's booming, all different types of cultures and
people, all different types of food and restaurants, it's a wonderful place. I
think that I wouldn't mind coming back here and living here.
- Gur Samuel (@FredTheGur)
- The Pulling Linemen
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