Bengals Booth Podcast: Right Down The Line - podcast episode cover

Bengals Booth Podcast: Right Down The Line

Jan 27, 202527 min
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Episode description

Dan Hoard introduces us to new defensive line coach and run game coordinator Jerry Montgomery.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

I get everybody on dan Hord and thanks for downloading The Bengals Booth Podcast. The Right Down b Line. Addition, as we get to know the Bengals new defensive line coach Jerry Montgomery. The Bengals Booth Podcast is brought to you by pay Corps, Proud to be the Bengals official HR software provider, by Alta Fiber, future proof fiber Internet designed to elevate your home, business, and community to a new level, and by Kettering Health, the best care for

the best fans. Kettering Health is the official healthcare provider of the Bengals. Now here's a quick reminder that you can have the latest edition of this podcast delivered right to your phone, tablet, or computer by subscribing wherever you get your podcasts. It's the greatest thing since a Super

Bowl in New Orleans. We're all sad that the Bengals didn't make it back to the Super Bowl this year, and I am a little extra sad because I consider New Orleans to be the greatest city in the world to host a big sporting event, and I speak from experience. For starters, everything is within walking distance the Hotel's Bourbon Street, the French Quarter, the Superdome, live music, tremendous restaurants, in

great sightseeing. Before our son was born, the Big Easy was the number one place that my wife and I love to go for short vacations, and it's ideal for a big sporting event because nearly all of the fans congregate in the French Quarter every day and night wearing their team gear. You'll see everybody you know that made the trip and will undoubtedly run into friends you haven't

seen in years. Additionally, you'll see the opposing teams fans every day, and in New Orleans, where the perpetual vibe is to relax and have a good time, the interaction stays friendly. My first taste of all of this was in March of nineteen eighty seven when I covered the Final Four for the Syracuse Radio Network and sat almost directly behind Bobby Knight when Keith Smart's last second shot gave Indiana one point win over Syracuse for the national championship.

And speaking of first tastes, that trip marked my introduction to the Hurricane, the unofficial cocktail of New Orleans that is as sweet as kool aid but packs a lethal punch. Fortunately, I was given valuable advice by a local taxi driver who said a hurricane is like a woman's bosom. One is not enough, but three are too many. That advice has served me well. I returned to New Orleans nine months later for the Sugar Bowl between Syracuse and Auburn, and years later did the play by play of another

Sugar Bowl when Cincinnati faced Florida. Attending a Sugar Bowl gives you the chance to ring in the new year in a city where last Call doesn't exist. I vividly remember doing the countdown to midnight in five time zones on Bourbon Street. In other words, five four three two one, Happy New Year in New York, New Orleans, Denver, Los Angeles, Anchorage, Honolulu. I was tucked away in bed by the time they got to Auckland. This will be the eleventh Super Bowl

in New Orleans, and I've covered one of them. The nineteen ninety seven matchup between Green Bay and New England. Packers quarterback Brett Farv was the big story all week because he was from nearby Kill, Mississippi. Like nearly every reporter covering that Super Bowl, I dutifully made the trip to Kill to do the Farv's hometown Angle. While there, I ran into a fledgling musician named Stevie t who had written a tribute song to Farv called Brett's on

a Quest. These priceless lyrics are forever seared into my brain. Daddy was a coach, showed him the way train fight win. That's the form you lehy, not exactly Lennon and McCartney. My best New Orleans experience came as a fan, as my wife and I attended the two thousand and three Final Four to see our alma mater, Syracuse beat Kansas

for the national championship. It was like a college reunion set in the Big Easy as most of our closest friends from schools showed up unannounced for the weekend, and best of all, our team won. I was hoping to experience that again in a couple of weeks, but it wasn't meant to be. I guess we'll all have to settle for Levi Stadium in Santa Clara, California next February. Now let's get to my guest. The Bengals announced the

hiring of two defensive coaches on Monday. Linebackers coach Mike Hodges, who spent the last eight years with the Saints, and defensive line coach and run game coordinator Jerry Montgomery, who was with the Patriots last year after spending the previous nine seasons with the Green Bay Packers. Montgomery is forty five years old, and we'll look to elevate a position group that must perform better for the Bengals to make

significant improvement on defense. I spoke to them via zoom on Monday, Jelly, I was amused by your Twitter profile because it says husband, father, and love. Teaching fundamentals. Is that your strength as a defensive line coach, you know what.

Speaker 2

That's how I was brought up, because it doesn't matter what you'd call. At the end of the day, you can go back to any mistake that happens, unless it's a total bust and you don't know what you're supposed to be doing all right on any given play, all right. It starts with your hands, eyes, and feet, and if those things aren't right and what you're taught and fundamentally and you're making mistakes, it's usually because it starts with one of those two three one of those two or

three things. So that's how I was raised, and I was brought up with coach parents and Ron Ake and and spend some time with p Jink. It's also guys that are just fundamentally sound and base and it starts from there, and then from there, you know, we're going to challenge these guys to push them outside of their comfort zone as far as learning football.

Speaker 1

You know, I'm glad you mentioned some of your coaching influences because you played at a high level at Iowa. You got to look from the Saints in the NFL. What did your best coaches do for you in helping you become the player you became?

Speaker 3

Be great teachers. I can say this.

Speaker 2

I was lucky and I was fortunate to have good teachers, especially at the University of Iowa. And that's their program to this day is one of the most successful programs in college football with less talent than anybody else in the country. You put those kids at Alabama in front of coach parents, you know, you're talking about him like they're talking about Nick. But again, you take Nick, Bill and Kirk, they were all on one staff together, so you know they all come from the same tree, but

just a great foundation. And I was a sponge as a player, So when I got done playing. I knew right away, you know what I wanted to do. And it's crazy because I quit chasing the dream of playing. Just you know, you get cut enough, you're like all right, time to go to the world world. And I get a medical sales job. And then ron Ake and my D line coach, calls me, says, hey, what are you doing. I just told myself I just took a job on

it make some real money, he says. He goes, there's a junior college job at North Iowa Area Community College, which no longer has football. He goes, hey, you can go be the D line coach there. They're looking for a young college guy that just graduated. And he goes, you can get you know, a fifteen hundred dollars stipend, free room and board. And I said, oh, coach, you know. He goes, No, that's what you need to do. So

I had to go tell my wife. My coach says, hey, this is who I am, this is what I need to do. And that's what I did, and so and then just never looked back. How long were you in medical sales? Never started the job, never started the job. So accepted the offer and then literally the phone call happened the next you know, the next day, and then I took the the d line job at Nayak.

Speaker 1

Were visiting with Jerry Montgomery. You played tackle. How much difference is there between coaching tackles and coaching ends? If there is a.

Speaker 2

Difference, fundamentally, there's a little more space for ends when you're on edges, but you know, the there's a lot more blocked you can receive in things inside with the interior tackles compared to the things that you have to work with the guys on the edges. And again from a passer standpoint, there's a slight difference. And you know how fast you have to work or move on the inside compared to the outside. All right, So other than that,

it's it's all the same. And you know, I look forward to working with the group that we have there and you know, possibly some of the new faces that we'll have next year.

Speaker 1

Also, your title in Cincinnati includes run game coordinator. I think we've all heard that with offensive line coaches. I'm not sure I've heard it with defensive line coaches. Explain run game coordinator from a defensive perspective.

Speaker 2

At the end of the day, you know Al is going to call it, but I hope to make his job a lot easier. If he's got questions about anything that happens within that run game, I should be able to have answers. If there's issues on the field, I should be able to have answers and solutions to those problems and how we want to fix them in game adjustment. So my job is just to make his job a lot easier when it comes to the run game. And you know, that's got to be something that I'm mastering that.

You know I did that. I had the same title in Green Bay. But ultimately, you know, Al's gonna call the defense, but I'll have a heavy influence on you know, what we're seeing, how we want to attack it, and then run that by Al. And so that's kind of how it goes.

Speaker 1

What do you know about Al And did you follow his defense as at Notre Dame over the last few years.

Speaker 2

Well, you know, I love college football. I've got a son that's a red shirt sophomore at the University of Iowa. So we're watching college football every weekend. Every Saturday. We watched the whole playoff run, watch their national championship run. There and you know, he's done a tremendous job wherever he's been, when he was the head coach at Temple to his time at Miami, and just everybody I've talked to has a ton of respect for him as a

coach and as a person. And you know, that's what I'm most excited about, is just being around another good coach and teacher, somebody I can learn from and grow from.

Speaker 1

Jerry Montgomery, as our guest, you essentially became a free agent when the Patriots decided to change head coaches. Was there competition for your services? Did the Bengals have to beat others out in order to lure you to Cincinnati?

Speaker 2

You know, I'll keep you know the names in house, but yeah, I mean there were other opportunities to go to multiple different places, but you know one this one is means, you know, it's important to us in our family. It's close to the Midwest. My wife is you know, grew up on a farm in Dyersville, Isowa. So we're

six hours or something like that from home. She can watch a high school game Friday night of our son who's a freshman who'll be a sophomore next year, and be able to get in a car and get to Iowa City to watch our one son that plays and our other son who's a freshman there as a student assistant in the football office. So so that was important to us. And hell, like what was Zach has done

here has been you know, pretty damn special. And so you know, I'm excited about being around you know, Hall of Fame quarterback and having the opportunity to to fix any issues we have on defense and making it as good as we can. So yeah, so I'm excited about that.

Speaker 1

Is Dyersville the site of the Field of Dreams field.

Speaker 2

It is it is her farm is I would say her farm is exactly like two and a half miles from the Field of Dreams farm, so they she grew up on a dairy farm. My father in law has has since sold his cows and he's just you know, crop farms now and and it has some corns and bean beans and things like that.

Speaker 3

So we're back there all the time.

Speaker 1

If you build it with a defensive line, the Super Bowl can come.

Speaker 3

There you go, there, you go. Aut.

Speaker 1

Jerry Montgomery is our guest. You're part of Matt Lafloor's staff for several years. In Green Bay and Mike Holmgrin before that. Matt obviously hasn't tied to Zach Taylor from their time together with the Rams. Did that have anything to do with this connection and winding up in Cincinnati.

Speaker 2

You know what, it didn't. I didn't know anybody, you know what, I take that back. I didn't know anybody on the staff other than Jordan Kovac. So Jordan we coached at the University of Michigan when I was a D line coach there. He was our start and safety, so and I know he's a bright young star in his profession, smart, smart kid like he was player. But I didn't have any connections or ties to the staff.

Speaker 3

I was.

Speaker 2

Down the road with the team and I got a text Thursday morning that they put in my slipt and had an opportunity to visit with Zach, and then it just kind of happened quickly, and so I was excited when the opportunity came, But no, there was there was no connections. Knew of people on the staff Zach and knew about and so on and so forth, and obviously playing them first game of the season last year, and knew some of the guys that were there from the previous staff that it is.

Speaker 3

No longer with it.

Speaker 1

I think, I said Mike Hombgrin, I met Mike McCarthys before you coach a batt lafleur. Let's discuss some of the personnel that's under contract for the upcoming season, Beginning with Trey Hendrickson. He led the NFL with seventeen and a half sacks. He had seventeen and a half the year before. He's averaged fourteen plus in his four years with the Bengals. How do you describe Trey and what's it mean to begin with that building block as you try to put together an elite defensive line.

Speaker 2

Yeah, man, to have a guy that's been that productive, you know, there's not a whole lot that's going to have to change. You know, we'll teach him the scheme and what we want to do. But when it gets down to, you know, affecting the quarterback, it looks like he's doing a hell of a job as it so, I mean, those type of numbers are awesome. Now, what you'd like to have is a couple other guys on that front, especially on the inside, be able to affect

the quarterback. You know, you're not gonna have somebody inside other than Aaron Donald having seventeen. But you'd like to be able to affect the quarterback, and that was one thing in Green Bay we were able to do with the front four is be able to affect it from the inside out. So when you can be able to push the pocket from the inside, those guys on the edge, it makes their job a lot easier. So that quarterback is spinning out to the level of the rushers on

the edge. So you know, look forward to adding to the group. But man, it's a good start to have him, that's for sure.

Speaker 1

More with Jerry on, Miles Murphy, Sam Hubbard and much more. But first, here's a quick reminder that the Bengals Booth podcast is brought to you by pay Corps, proud to be the Bengals official HR software provider, by Alta Fiber future proof fiber Internet designed to elevate your home, business and community to a new level, and by Kettering Health the best care for the best fans. Kettering Health is the official healthcare provider of the Bengals. The Bengals drafted

a couple of defensive tackles last year. Chris Jenkins in the second round, McKinley Jackson in the third. Did you study those guys prior to last year's draft and what do you think of them?

Speaker 2

Yeah, you know, good size, productive, you know, guys that have played hard, been with some good programs, so good building blocks, you know. And one thing we're going to do and ask them to do is play extremely hard and play with technique fundamentals. So I look forward to working with those two.

Speaker 1

Also, how can you help Miles Murphy turn his immense physical gifts into more production on the field.

Speaker 2

I've said it two or three times already, you've brought it up. It's going to start with our fundamentals. Like that is everything, because at the end of the day, if we can get those young men to play with great technique fundamentals, they're going to have a chance to be productive. We're gonna teach them how to do things, how to play blocks, and that way, when they get something, they can play it the way we want them to

play it. And then if they do it the way we ask them to do it, they're going to be in position to make plays. We're not going to have to go chase plays. We're not going to have to create things to make plays. They're gonna make the plays that come to them, and that's that's what we're supposed to do, is de line.

Speaker 1

Sam Hubbard's been a key Bengal now for seven years. He's got a year left on his deal. He's approaching his thirtieth birthday. What have you thought of Sam Hubbard over the years?

Speaker 3

Steady, steady, Eddie, Consistent.

Speaker 2

I mean, you look at the Bengals defenses over the you know, the five to six five six years. Those guys have been staples in the leagues and you know, one plays on the left, one plays on the right, and they've done a good job and consistent. They play hard, So I mean, that's that's all you can ask for with guys is to play to the best of your ability week in and week out.

Speaker 3

And they've done that. They've showed that, and they're proven players.

Speaker 1

See line coach Jerry Montgomery is our guest, as I'm sure you know, assistant coaches in Cincinnati have a significant voice when it comes to the draft and when it comes to free agency. Has that been the case in your past and are you looking forward to that with the Bengals.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I'm excited about it because I think and again, every place is different, but I think there's times where you feel like you've invested a lot of time into evaluating these prospects and getting to know them, finding out what their football IQ is, how they're you know, how they're going to handle the things that you give them, how they process, and then you feel really good about somebody and then they're there at that spot we talked about taking them, and then you take somebody else that

you didn't necessarily love. And so I'm looking forward to being able to sit in there and you know, voice my opinion on things, and then whatever we decide to do, we decide to do. But yeah, I mean it's different everwhere you go. So I hear here you're heavily involved, which is awesome because I think sometimes as coaches, you know, that's what we complain about most is not having a lot of say in the guys that we get or that we take.

Speaker 1

What are the most important traits you look for?

Speaker 2

Well, again, you can have the most talented guy in the world, but you know we talk about in our d line room, toughness, effort, technique, and fundamentals. Those three things doesn't take talent. So if we're willing to buy into those things, we're gonna have a chance. But again, always I think it's important. You want guys that have talent, but you want guys that can process and learn and be able to take the game to the next level.

And my room, I'm gonna be very demanding on them to uh, you know, get out of their comfort zone and learning the game and seeing it the way a

coach Seeson. Not not everybody can handle that, but the guys that I've had in the past that have been able to do that, the Kenny Clarks, the Dean Lowry's you know, you know, there's a ton of guys that I work with that have been able to handle and process that, and they're extremely effective players on the field because they can take in the things that we're trying to teach them to grow so so that that that's one of the most important things. And too, you know,

you can look like Tarzan and play like Jane. You know, it's great to have size, and I love it, but you need to be able to play the game. So when you turn on that film, uh, it's got to be more than him just looking good. He's got to be able to play he's got to be productive. We took a guy in Green Bay by the name of Carl Brooks. All he did at b from Bowling green All he did was he played stand up outside backer. He played five technique, he played three technique, he played

nose tackle. And he was productive in all of those positions. And I love him. And you know, we got him as a rookie and guess what he did at this level. He was a productive player. He was able to affect a quarterback. He learned how to play the run the way we wanted to play the run, and you know, so that's you know, but again, is he walk in the building? Is he going to look like Tarzan? Probably not, But he definitely was a ballplayer when you snap that ball.

Speaker 1

You worked with Mike Daniels when he was a pro bowler in Green Bay. He finished his career with Cincinnati. He was part of the Super Bowl team in twenty twenty one. Have you talked to Mike since deciding to come to the Bengals and if so, what has he shared about being in Cincinnati.

Speaker 3

Yeah, you know, he.

Speaker 2

Reached out to me once he heard it. As a matter of fact, it's funny. I got a tech from him just a little while ago. He's excited for me to get the chance to get my hands on the guys in the building and mold them to the way that that you know, we see fit and how we want to play defense here. And uh so, yeah, I mean he's already coach, I want to come. I want to be at training camp. I want to be I want to see you work with these guys, you know.

So you know, Mike, Mike stamped up twenty four to seven. He's the same guy all the time. And that's a prime example. Mike Daniels was a guy that he played the game at a high, high, high level and may not always wound up taking the information that we wanted to give him. But he was like, Coach, I just want to beat the guy across from me. And I was like, you know what, Mike, I'm good with that. So, like, he was great at technique fundamentals and he was a

productive player because of that. So you know, but when he walked out there, he didn't look like Tarzan, did he He wasn't six five sixty six. But hey, I'll take those guys that if they got some good football IQ. But Mike Mike definitely, he loved his time there.

Speaker 1

Jerry, you got the several NFC championship games in your years in Green Bay, can get to a Super Bowl? How much does winning two more games and bringing home a Lombardi Trophy drive you?

Speaker 2

It's it's tough. I mean, you look at what happened last night and you just feel for those guys you get. You work so hard to get to that moment and then it just wasn't quite good enough or you know you will one snap away.

Speaker 1

And so.

Speaker 2

That's part of the reason in coming to Cincinnati is if you feel like you have a legit chance at you know, taking that step, and so absolutely, I mean it would mean everything to be able to win a championship. Look, there's there's only one team that ends a year happy, So I'd like to be in those shoes for once.

Speaker 1

That's what we were hoping for as well. I feel like this is a question I have to ask anybody that comes to Cincinnati, what do you think of Burrow?

Speaker 3

Hey, he's a Hall of Fame quarterback.

Speaker 2

So crazy story his dad almost offered me a job when he was a decordinator.

Speaker 4

At uh at at Ohio, So uh it goes way back when I was a young coach at Northern Iowa and uh, I get that phone call and uh, you know, I was, I was this.

Speaker 2

Close to getting the job, and for whatever reason, they had to go in another direction. But we've always stayed in close contact. So when I go, when he heard I got the job, he reached out to me. The old man did so. Uh yeah, but his son phenomenal and uh facing him in Green Bay, he's elite. He gets the ball out, he's athletic, he see, he sees coverages. Uh, he can put, he can spin the ball just about

anywhere you want it and how you want it. So it'll be neat to be be with a guy like Aaron and then get a chance to uh be with him.

Speaker 1

You and the Burroughs were meant to be together at some point.

Speaker 3

There.

Speaker 1

It is silent question for Jerry Montgomery, and I appreciate your time. I started with a question about your Twitter profile. I'm gonna end with one. It's kind of strange. In the picture, you're on a beach with your family. You're wearing a retro Cincinnati Royals jersey. Is there a story behind the retro Cincinnati Royals Jersey.

Speaker 3

You know what, No, there is it just coincidence.

Speaker 2

I you know, I enjoy my time out on the beach, so I've got all my my taktops are all throwback Jersey.

Speaker 3

So when we're out there, I always get questions, Oh, here, you're a fan. Here your fan here? All right. I probably could have made that sound a little bit better.

Speaker 1

But well, had you been wearing Oscar Robertson's number, I would have really wondered about the connection. But it's a Chris Webber throwback. I think that's not quite a full Cincinnati tie there. In any case, said Jerry, We're excited to have you in Cincinnati. I really appreciate your time today and I look forward to meeting doing person soon.

Speaker 3

Absolutely appreciate it. Enjoyed my time also.

Speaker 1

That's going to do it for this episode of the Bengals Booth podcast, brought to you by pay Core. Proud to be the Bengals Official HR software provider by Alta Fiber future Proof fiber Internet designed elevate your home, business and community to a new level, and by Kettering Health the best care for the best fans. Kettering Health is

the official healthcare provider of the Bengals. If you haven't done so already, please subscribe to this podcast and if you have a minute, give it a rating or share a comment that helps more Bengals fans find us. I'm Dan Hord and thank you for listening to the Bengals Booth podcast

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