buffalonews.com

Ryan O'Halloran: Working smart key for Bills cornerback Ja'Marcus Ingram establishing role

Two players remained on the practice field earlier this month following a Buffalo Bills workout, going through drills for nearly 30 minutes under the midafternoon sun.

That extra work has helped turn cornerback Christian Benford from sixth-round pick to starter and a contract extension and cornerback Ja’Marcus Ingram from practice squad player to solid contributor.

Buffalo Bills OTA (copy)

A regular scene at Buffalo Bills practice is reserve cornerback Ja’Marcus Ingram, right, working with starting cornerback Christian Benford. Derek Gee, Buffalo News

The Bills know what they have in Benford (top corner) and they should enter camp next month in Pittsford knowing what they have in Ingram (versatile and reliable reserve).

“Just finding something every day we feel like we could have gotten better at,” Ingram said. “(That day), it was press (coverage) footwork at the top of the route and low hippin’ and slippin’.”

Low hippin’ and slippin’?

People are also reading…

“It’s basically, if we’re in man (coverage), is staying (in position) and being able to slip underneath the route to make the play,” Ingram said.

Ingram has taken a circuitous route to the Bills. He played at Utah State (two years), Texas Tech (two years) and the University at Buffalo (one year), and didn’t join the Bills until Aug. 31 of his rookie season in 2022.

Ingram played only five games (all regular season) for the Bills in 2022-23, totaling 52 defensive snaps and 48 special teams plays. Last year was a breakthrough.

Games: All 20 (17 regular season/three playoffs).

Defensive snaps: Combined 215.

Special teams snaps: Combined 344.

Tackles: Combined 28.

Nickel back Taron Johnson broke his forearm in Week 1, moving dime defender Cam Lewis into the role at Miami. Ingram stepped into Lewis’ spot and played 23 snaps and intercepted two passes (including a 31-yard touchdown).

Later in the season, against New England in Week 16, the Bills were without cornerback Rasul Douglas and safety Damar Hamlin, and Ingram played 18 snaps.

During the completed offseason program, Ingram said he would be at the Bills’ facility from 7 a.m. until 3:30 or 4 p.m.

Did he enter the NFL thinking he had a good work ethic?

“It went to a new level,” he said. “My work ethic coming in was crazy – I had to go hard all the time. Now it’s putting in the same amount of work, but working smarter.”

Smarter means doing post-practice on-field work and studying extra practice video. Ingram has the same undrafted free agent mindset.

“Every year, I’m trying to improve and outdo myself,” he said. “I want to elevate each season and prove my worth.”

Quick kicks

1. Snapping to Allen. An injury kept center Connor McGovern out of minicamp and provided an opportunity for second-year player Sedrick Van Pran-Granger to get first-team reps with quarterback Josh Allen.

“Quintessential to my growth,” Van Pran-Granger said of snapping to Allen. “It is truly amazing to be able to share the field with (Allen), learn from him and having (left guard) David (Edwards) next to me and seeing how they think about the game. It is something I’ll be able to apply to my growth going forward and just understanding how to work with Josh and what he likes and doesn’t like.”

010625-buf-spts-bills

Bills center Sedrick Van Pran-Granger, blocking against the Patriots last season, got some first-team reps with quarterback Josh Allen during minicamp. Harry Scull Jr., Buffalo News

Van Pran-Granger agreed it’s human nature to sharpen one’s focus when elevated to play with the starters.

“For sure – you don’t want to let those guys down,” he said. “Everybody depends on me and it’s important to make sure I’m on par with those guys.”

How excited was Van Pran-Granger to watch the practice tape on Tuesday?

“I’ll be watching it before I even shower,” he said with a laugh.

2. Big picture view. Middle linebacker Terrel Bernard said it was beneficial for him to take selected first-team snaps off and watch from the sideline.

“It’s hard to see everything happening when you’re in the mix, so to have the opportunity to see the full picture live is cool,” he said.

Joe Andreessen has generally taken the first-team reps in Bernard’s place.

“He’s been making a ton of plays and is continuing to grow and improve,” Bernard said. “He’s been fun to watch.”

3. Cincinnati debacle. Bengals first-round pick Shemar Stewart left mandatory minicamp Thursday to dispute the nature of contract talks. Other unsigned first-rounders Travis Hunter (Jacksonville), Jahdae Barron (Denver) and Maxwell Hairston (Bills) were with their teams all week. Hairston signed on Friday.

So what is the Bengals’ motivation? Seems like they don’t want to fully guarantee Stewart’s four-year contract at the slotted value of $18,969,276. Is Stewart getting bad advice or no advice by leaving camp? Possibly.

I side with the player here. If the Bengals had concerns about Stewart, they shouldn’t have drafted him.

4. Dawson departs. Bills senior executive Lake Dawson recently left the organization to become senior assistant general manager at Oklahoma. Dawson was hired by the Bills in 2017 and served as assistant college scouting director for six years before the title change. It is the first time the Bills have lost a scout/executive to the college personnel game.

5. Extra points. NBC Sports’ Chris Simms completed his annual quarterback rankings and slotted Allen second for the second consecutive year. “He’s got it all and I don’t think there’s really a more valuable player to their team,” Simms wrote. Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson was first, followed by Allen, Cincinnati’s Joe Burrow, Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes (last year’s No. 1-ranked passer by Simms) and Washington’s Jayden Daniels. … Allen ranked sixth among all players in officially licensed products sold, according to the NFLPA during the span of March 1, 2024-Feb. 28, 2025, up 10 spots from the previous season. Philadelphia running back Saquon Barkley was No. 1. … As of Thursday night, only two of the league’s 32 second-round picks had signed. Cleveland linebacker Carson Schwesinger and Houston receiver Jayden Higgins were the first two selections of the round and received fully guaranteed contracts, which has put the rest of the signings in halt mode.

0 Comments

Get in the game with our Prep Sports Newsletter

Sent weekly directly to your inbox!

Read full news in source page