DeAngelo Hall sees a familiar kind of athletic upside in Sonny Styles, and he thinks the Commanders may have found a player who can help reshape the middle of their defense.
Washington knew replacing Bobby Wagner would not be a plug-and-play move. What Wagner gave the Commanders went beyond tackles and alignment.
He brought experience, preparation, and the kind of presence in the middle that a rookie does not just pick up overnight. That is the challenge facing Sonny Styles after Washington took him No. 7 overall.
Hall believes the rookie has the raw tools to eventually provide something similar in a different way.
“He is a freaky athlete,” Hall told Hard Rock Bet. “He is a guy who can just make all types of plays all over the field.”
Hall also said Washington would benefit from bringing Wagner back into the room. The team has left the door open publicly, but there are no signs a reunion is actually coming together.
The bigger point from Hall is that Styles can help replace Wagner’s physical traits, even if the mental side of the job takes time. Wagner’s feel for the position, his preparation, and his command of the defense are not things a young player picks up quickly.
Hall also connected Styles to the kind of flexibility Dan Quinn once used with Micah Parsons in Dallas. Parsons came into the league as an off-ball linebacker, but Quinn moved him around and expanded his role, especially after DeMarcus Lawrence was injured. Hall was not saying Styles is headed down the exact same path, but he clearly trusts Quinn to find ways to use a player with that kind of athletic profile.
There is no need for new defensive coordinator Daronte Jones to lock Styles into one label right away, either. He does not have to be only a middle linebacker, only a coverage player, or only a pressure option. Washington can let him play sideline to sideline and figure out where his best fit really is.
For now, Hall thinks the simplest assignment is the right one.
“His job will be to find the ball and go get it.”
That said, Styles is still a long way from matching what Wagner has been. He still has to prove he can read offenses, deal with handsy blockers, and turn his athleticism into steady production.
So the Wagner comparison is not about saying Styles is already there. It is about Washington swapping one of the league’s craftiest veteran linebackers for one of its most gifted young athletes, then trusting the staff to bring him along the right way.
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