• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
The Leader

The Leader

Tipton County's Newspaper since 1886

  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Churches
    • Courts
    • Education
    • Election 2024
    • Events
    • Local Government
    • Local Politics
    • Military
    • Public Records
    • Public Safety
  • Sports
    • All
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Cross Country
    • Fishing
    • Football
    • Golf
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • Volleyball
    • Wrestling
  • E-Editions
  • Public Notices
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact Us
    • Submit News
    • Advertise With Us
  • Where to Buy

Underestimate Packers wide receiver Jake Kumerow at your own risk

By The Leader on August 12, 2019

5d4b90f569a6a.preview

GREEN BAY — Jaire Alexander’s guilty smile said it all.

The Green Bay Packers ultra-confident second-year cornerback sat atop a locker-room table earlier this week, making proclamations — about how good his defense is going to be (“Defense wins championships — I’ve always said that!”); about how his guys dominated the Houston Texans offense during their joint practices (“We smashed ‘em … We killed ‘em); about how he expects defensive coordinator Mike Pettine’s crew to dominate in late-game situations (“We want to hold the standard that we own 2-minute”).

Keep in mind, of course, that Alexander is the same cocky fellow who during the offseason who predicted he’d be an All-Pro and Pro Bowl pick this season.

But then the conversation turned to Jake Kumerow, the second-year wide receiver who has impressed throughout training camp — just as he did last year — entering Thursday night’s preseason opener against the Houston Texans at Lambeau Field. Quarterback Aaron Rodgers had posited that defenders frequently underestimated the former UW-Whitewater star, and Alexander was asked if he’d ever done so.

His answer came quickly.

“For sure. Yeah. He comes out here with that long hair, that nice smile — nobody’s taking that stuff seriously,” Alexander confessed. “And then he goes deep on you and you’re like, ‘Oh, all right, OK, I’ve got to put some respect on him.’ For sure.”

Alexander wanted to make clear that he hadn’t underestimated Kumerow during last Friday’s Family Night practice, when Kumerow beat him up the right sideline and made a terrific one-armed 37-yard catch on a Rodgers throw, even with Alexander clinging to Kumerow’s left arm.

“Jake Kumerow, he’s a beast,” Alexander continued. “Cool. Cool guy, a competitor, I really like his hands, his routes. He’s real good. He’s one of those sleeper kind of receivers, (where) you don’t really expect it. Shoot. He’s definitely good.”

It’s worth noting that it was Alexander saying these things instead of Rodgers, who has been the unofficial president of the Whitewater Jesus Fan Club since last summer

The first week of training camp, Rodgers acknowledged he was running out of superlatives for Kumerow — “I don’t need to say anything else about Jake; you guys know how I feel about him,” he said — but when asked in what ways he’d seen Kumerow develop from last year’s camp to this year’s, he had plenty to say.

“He just looks even more comfortable. He’s always been a very smooth route runner; he’s just even more comfortable,” Rodgers said. “The thing I look for, (like) the throw I hit him on in Family Night against Jaire, was his ‘late hands.’ That’s just something that’s hard to teach. The trust to wait ‘til the last second to put your hands out there against a great defender who’s basically playing his hands and not seeing the football, you can’t teach that.

“The best guys we’ve had here over the years — from Greg (Jennings) to James (Jones) to Jordy (Nelson) to Randall (Cobb) — all could do that: To run full speed and at last second put their hands up. He’s just a very mature route runner. And I think he’s faster than a lot of guys who line up over him give him credit for, until they get beat on top.”

Rodgers then brought up a play that happened during the joint practices, when Kumerow whipped Texans’ two-time Pro Bowl cornerback Johnathan Joseph off the line of scrimmage but Rodgers threw the ball to the other side of the field.

“He’s just a very smart guy, cerebral guy,” Rodgers said. “And you guys know I love playing with those kind of guys.”

For his part, even after all that Rodgers has said and after coach Matt LaFleur’s effusive praise following Family Night — “It speaks to just what we’ve been saying all along: ‘You can always count on Jake,’” LaFleur had said – Kumerow continues to insist that nothing has changed for him.

“I’m trying to make the team this year,” Kumerow said. “That’s my plan, trying to make the team like I always do every year.”

Kumerow did just that last summer, when he worked his way into first-team reps with Rodgers early in camp and caught six passes for 190 yards and two touchdowns in preseason play, including an 82-yarder against Pittsburgh at the end of which he dove into the end zone, injuring his shoulder. That sidelined him for the first three months of the season, but he was activated off injured reserve in time to catch eight passes for 103 yards (including a 49-yard touchdown from Rodgers in the Packers’ comeback win over the New York Jets on Dec. 23) in the final five games.

The 27-year-old Kumerow appears to be solidly at the No. 4 spot in the receiver pecking order, behind Davante Adams, Geronimo Allison and Marquez Valdes-Scantling, although that could chance over the next four games.

Kumerow, who suffered an injury to his left pinkie finger during Family Night and was wearing a metal splint afterward, was on the No. 1 kickoff coverage unit in addition to his receiver duties. Continuing to improve on special teams would certain help solidify his roster spot — the one he refuses to take for granted.

“I don’t think my approach has changed. You always need big plays out there in situations that are when the lights are on and the crowd’s out there,” Kumerow said. “Before, I’d be getting in the huddle with Rodgers and with some of the 1s and I’d be excited, but (in awe). Now, I’m excited still, to get in there with them, but now it’s feeling more normal because I’m doing it more and more. Getting more reps with them, I feel like I’ve grown in that part. Because I hop in the huddle and it’s just, ‘OK, here we go.’”

“I just try to do me every time, try not to be any different. I don’t think anything’s changed. Maybe I’m getting more reps here with the 1s than I have in the past, but the rep count is the same. It just depends on who you’re getting them with. It’s not like I’m getting more plays than previous camps, they just might be with different quarterbacks. So my mentality’s the same – trying to make the team.“

MORE NFL HEADLINES

After struggles, Packers J’Mon Moore hopes ‘best practice he’s had all year’ just the beginning

After struggles, Packers J’Mon Moore hopes ‘best practice he’s had all year’ just the beginning

With Oren Burks out, Packers linebacker Curtis Bolton vows not to waste his shot

With Oren Burks out, Packers linebacker Curtis Bolton vows not to waste his shot

More Stories »

Related Articles:

5d49f16e41c8f.imageWhat we learned visiting with Bears defensive assistant coaches 5cd044dd78bc5.imageDramatic rally lands Brighton baseball in title game tonight 5d4db831565af.previewLane Taylor knows starting spot on the line following Packers’ preseason opener 5d4d0524eb7ee.previewTom Oates: Matt LaFleur takes calculated risk resting Aaron Rodgers in preseason opener

Posted Under: Sports

Primary Sidebar

Search

Featured News

Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

April 8, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

A man known in these … [Continue Reading...] about Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

April 1, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

Brighton senior J … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

March 11, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

In this day and age, … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

March 6, 2025 By The Leader

Munford High School … [Continue Reading...] about Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

Tags

auvic white black history braxton sharp brighton baseball brighton basketball brighton football brighton high school city of covington City of Munford coronavirus covid-19 covington Covington Baseball covington basketball Covington football covington high school Covington HS covington police covington police station Election 2020 events homicide J.R. Kirby Jalen Fayne Jamarion Dowell jeff huffman john edwards Jordan Bell JR Kirby Munford basketball munford football munford high school murder ronnie gorton sex crimes shooting Slade Calhoun tcso Tipton-Rosemark Academy Tipton County Museum tipton county schools tipton county sheriff's office town of atoka town of mason TRA basketball

Footer

The Leader is a weekly newspaper, published on Thursdays, serving Tipton County, Tenn. since 1886.

Contact us: news@covingtonleader.com

Editor’s Choice

Here’s how Home Depot and a team of volunteers helped make over CIAA

December 5, 2019 By Echo Day

Black History Month: Mason’s John W. Boyd went from slavery to the statehouse

February 7, 2020 By The Leader

Search

Copyright © 2025 · The Leader | Legacy Media · Log in