ASHBURN, Va. |  For the last practice of training camp, LaRon Landry had a fashion  accessory dangling from his waist. It was a rolled up white towel  striped with black tape, resembling something like a large zebra-themed  nightstick. “I’ve got my own swag,” he said. Always a little  different. Never hard to miss. And certainly someone who leaves an  impression on unsuspecting receivers and running backs. Landry has  always been grouped with the words “hard-hitting” and “intense” since  the Redskins drafted him No. 6 overall in 2007, and this season he’s in a  new defense that will showcase his ferocity even more. “The 3-4 defense,” Landry said, “has enabled me as a player to go out and fly around and have fun.” Landry  is at home as a strong safety, playing close to the line of scrimmage  to stuff the run and helping out in coverage. But the shooting death of  Sean Taylor in November 2007 forced the Redskins to move him to free  safety, where he had to play with more caution and less abandon. He was  starting to get noticed more for giving up long touchdown passes over  the middle than for his bone-jawing hits, particularly last season as  the team struggled to a 4-12 record. The arrival of Jim Haslett has brought a defensive overhaul, with Landry back at his natural position. “Last  year it was ’Don’t let anything behind you, you’ve got to be safe,’”  Landry said. “This year, it’s more aggressive, let’s go get it. Read  your keys. Be smart about it, but get it.” The move was somewhat  of a gamble because the Redskins didn’t have an obvious candidate to  start at free safety. Three players were expected to contend for the job  at training camp, but third-year player Kareem Moore has had a superb  three weeks of practice and left Chris Horton and Reed Doughty far  behind. That means Landry can stay right where he is. Well, most  of the time. In this scheme, it might not be easy to tell. He leaped to  pick off a pass 20 yards downfield during Thursday’s practice. “Disguise  plays a major factor in this defense,” Landry said. “And we’re always  constantly moving and disguising things, and that makes it a lot of  fun.” Haslett called Landry a player “that can do almost anything he wants.” “He’s  a guy, 225 (pounds), that is probably the fastest guy I’ve been  around,” Haslett said. “He’s explosive and fast. He’s a good tackler.  He’s a good blitzer. He can play in the back end, but I think he prefers  to play closer. We’ll try to accommodate these guys and put them in the  best position to succeed and to help this football team.” Landry  doesn’t let up, even when going against high-profile teammates in  practice. It was an instant highlight when he sent tight end Chris  Cooley to the ground with a thud early on the second day of camp. “Most  guys just bump up against you when you have the ball,” Cooley said.  “LaRon likes to go into the full tackling mode. He’s in scrimmage mode  all the time. We talked about it in the locker room and he said, ’Why  are you giving me a hard time?’ I said ’You are the only one that  tackles.’ … He laughed. “You know what you’re getting out of  (No.) 30. He’s not making us worse; he’s making everyone better. He  loves playing the game, he’s an extreme competitor and you can’t ask for  more out of a guy.” Coach Mike Shanahan is just fine with  Landry’s practice intensity, as long as he’s not hitting below the waist  and risking injury to his teammates. “I don’t mind those hard  hits. We’re going to get those in games,” the coach said. “I’m excited  about him because hopefully we’ll put him in position to make a lot of  plays. We’re not going to hold him back. But at the same time, the game  has to slow down for you. You can’t just be running to run. There’s  times to run, there’s times to lay back. Hopefully, he’ll learn that.” Notes:  Shanahan said the starters will play about 30-35 plays Saturday night  against Baltimore, which should be most or all of the first half. …  Thursday marked the end of camp, which means the players can move out of  the team hotel. The schedule will have a regular season feel starting  next week, with a more compact workday of meetings and practice. …  While Shanahan isn’t into rookie hazing, he did lighten up the mood at  the nightly meetings by having players perform skits. “Basically what  they do is make fun of coaches,” Shanahan said. “To me, it kind of  loosens the guys up a little bit and kind of brings the team together.”  Did anyone make fun of the head coach? “There’s only one guy that did  that, and we cut him yesterday,” he said, joking.
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