the scoop Browns' Joe Thomas is drawing raves from experts
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
BY Steve Doerschuk
REPOSITORY SPORTS WRITER
The Browns are expecting a big year from Joe Thomas. To that, Anthony Muñoz says, why shouldn't they?
Muñoz, a Hall of Fame left tackle who was in Canton over the weekend, says Thomas was "fun to watch" as a rookie left tackle for the 2007 Browns.
"He's 6-foot-6 or so," Muñoz said, "but he's not one of those guys who carries 350 pounds but doesn't have any flexibility and just drops guys.
"He's lean, and he has great balance and flexibility. Watch him bend his knees. He moves out in space very well."
Muñoz said he enjoyed getting to know Thomas after they arranged to spend a day together. Like Muñoz in 1980 (Bengals), Thomas was a No. 3 overall draft pick by an Ohio team.
"Not only is he an excellent player," Muñoz said, "but he's a pretty good young man. He's the type of guy I enjoy watching."
When Thomas toured the Hall of Fame with Browns rookies last June, he came right out and said his aim is joining Muñoz on enshrinees row.
"So far, he's gone to a Pro Bowl, and he earned it," Muñoz said. "I think he's gonna have a long career."
Thomas' position will be represented at the enshrinement ceremony Aug. 2, when Gary Zimmerman enters the Hall of Fame.
"For a young guy like (Thomas), the difference between being a good left tackle and great one is the mental aspect," said Zimmerman, whose pro career began shortly after Muñoz's.
General Manager Phil Savage gives Thomas elite grades for intelligence, quick thinking and mental toughness.
Zimmerman, the left tackle on Denver's first Super Bowl champion, was a quiet young mnan who was hard even for teammates to read. Thomas is an outgoing fellow who will be a team captain early in his career.
The common thread between Zimmerman and Thomas is film study.
Whereas everyone knows Thomas prepares exhaustively, Zimmernan's position coach in Denver, Alex Gibbs, didn't grasp that about his guy at first. He began to notice Zimmerman using tricks that not even he as a line guru had imagined. He began asking Zimmerman to let the team in on his secrets.
Now coaching with the Houston Texans, Gibbs says Muñoz and Zimmerman easily were the greatest left tackles to play in the 1980s through the early 1990s.
"There are more great-looking left tackles than there were," Gibbs said. "Jonathan Ogden came along. Joe Thomas, who of course is younger, is in that category.
"It was easy to spot Thomas in college because he was so far ahead of everybody. ... But there are more and more athletic left tackles who have a chance to be really good. There were six or seven in this year's draft who have a chance to be very good."
Gibbs suggests Thomas was a key to quarterback Derek Anderson's unexpected breakout.
What happens if a team doesn't have a good left tackle protecting the passer's blind side?
"The quarterback will not be very good," Gibbs said. "He doesn't have a chance."
Reach Repository sports writer Steve Doerschuk at (330) 580-8347 or e-mail: steve.doerschuk@cantonrep.com