Zach Allen has already earned the kind of respect most defensive linemen spend years chasing. Around the league, his work has drawn praise from coaches, teammates and even J.J.
Watt, who singled out Allen for what he did late last year. But the Broncos defensive tackle is still operating like a player with something to prove.
That mindset is part of what Denver defensive coordinator Vance Joseph sees as the hardest part of reaching the top.
“That’s the toughest thing for players when they have success,” said Joseph, who also coached Allen during his time with the Arizona Cardinals. “Can they go back to the drawing board and improve?
Again, that’s human nature: ‘Hey, man, I’m already a Pro Bowler. What’s next?’
But you have to improve. If you’re not improving in this league, people are going to catch you.”
Allen’s answer has been to change how he studies the game. Film work is no longer just a box to check; he’s turned it into a more active, layered process, and that approach is already rubbing off on younger linemen like second-year defensive tackle Sai’vion Jones.
“Honestly, when I started practicing, I always thought it was, ‘Here’s what you do in practice and then that’s it,'” Jones said. “Zach opened my eyes to the fact that it ain’t nothing to grab an offensive lineman and go the side after practice and work on more stuff. Whether it’s asking them questions or getting more pass-rush reps, he opened my eyes to all the things that you can do after practice.”
Allen said one of the biggest influences on his film habits was Peyton Manning. The lesson he took from Manning was simple but important: there’s a difference between watching tape and actually taking it in.
“He was saying there’s a difference between just watching the film and actually absorbing the film,” Allen said. “From that video I learned how to really process. When you watch film, and I tell guys, you’re always supposed to be writing notes.
“I’m a pen-and-paper guy, but if I’m watching in the cold tub, I’ll write notes on my phone. My photo app has videos of rushes I like from around the league. You get new ideas and pick new things up and the best way to learn is just to see it.”
That approach started long before Allen became one of Denver’s defensive standouts. He said the groundwork was laid at Boston College under coach Paul Pasqualoni, who also coached Watt and others with the Houston Texans. Pasqualoni kept feeding Allen new clips and different ways to attack offensive linemen.
“I had access to NFL film and basically any game I wanted to watch in the college and NFL space and that was the first time I really learned how to watch film,” Allen said.
For Allen, the work clearly isn’t done. The recognition is there, but so is the appetite to keep sharpening every edge.
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