Last published at August 5, 2009 at 11:02 PM
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Seahawks' Ray Willis puts up a good fight
Offensive lineman started seven games at right tackle, three at right guard last season
Seattle Times staff reporter

Ray Willis is father of twins, likes hot yoga.

Ray Willis started 10 games for the Seahawks last season. He's entering his fifth pro season.
RENTON — Ray Willis is not smiling, which constitutes a possible problem.
This is 315 pounds of potential malice we're talking about here, and he has just been asked why so many people tend to fight him in practice. The big man is not amused by this line of questioning. Not even a little bit.
"I don't know," says Willis, an offensive tackle. "It's just that coach Jim Mora runs a tough camp, and I think that sometimes tempers just kind of run a little high."
Well, sure, that's probably true, but it doesn't answer why Willis is the one Seahawk who tends to cause those tempers to boil over more than any other. In fact, Mora forecast that Willis would be involved in the first skirmish of training camp.
"I predicted to the team that Ray Willis would certainly be in the first fight," Mora said. "I just didn't know it would be the first day."
It was. First practice, in fact. Defensive end Lawrence Jackson was locked up with Willis in a one-on-one drill Friday, and Willis held on a little too long for Jackson's taste. That elicited an openhanded smack from Jackson, and just like that, it was on. The two had to be separated.
"It happens," Willis says. "It's football. It's a man's game."
Still no smile.
OK. So let's try asking someone else. Why does it seem that everybody wants to fight Willis in practice?
"Well, I don't think they want to fight him," said center Chris Spencer, his teammate on the offensive line. "I think they just fall into it. They wake the demon up in him, and then they've got no choice."
Willis is a fifth-year player, a social-science major from Florida State and the father of twins who practices hot yoga twice a week in the offseason. Put him in cleats and a helmet, though, and he's got some menace to him.
"When he gets on the field, everything else just shuts off," Spencer said.
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Willis is the mean streak in Seattle's offensive line. He plays like he's got a burr in his britches and doesn't care so much if that rubs someone else the wrong way.
"You gotta love him," Seahawks defensive tackle Craig Terrill said. "It's his fifth year now; usually a guy is a little calmer at practice. But it's like it's his first training camp."
The Seahawks drafted Willis in the fourth round in 2005, the year Sean Locklear established himself as the starting right tackle. That left Willis waiting his turn in line. That came last year after injuries opened the way for him to start seven games at right tackle, three at right guard.
He played well enough that many expected the Seahawks to lose him in free agency over the offseason. He visited the Raiders, but teams weren't spending money this year like they had in previous years, which made it possible for the Seahawks to re-sign Willis to a two-year deal.
Now Willis is a consideration as Seattle tries to configure its offensive line with a new blocking scheme. Left tackle Walter Jones has practiced only once so far in training camp so Locklear has moved to the left side, leaving Willis to play right tackle with the first string. Willis gets time off every couple days to rest his knee, too.
But when Willis practices, he doesn't hold anything back. In fact, he usually cinches in a block and refuses to let go.
"Sometimes, it gets on your nerves a little bit is a nice way to put it when you're on his team and he's doing it in camp," Terrill said.
"But on Sundays during the season, you like that he's out there doing it to his opposing team."
Danny O'Neil: 206-464-2364 or doneil@seattletimes.com
Copyright © The Seattle Times Company
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