"He told me how to watch film," Kelce said Wednesday. "Every single time we've watched film in the past, it's been, throw on a game, watch the guy play for a little bit, try to figure out --- all right, he's a big, strong guy, he likes to bullrush. [Saturday felt that] guys I've struggled with in 3-4s, like [Dallas noseguard] Jay Ratliff, don't just study about what type of player he is, diagnose everything, down and distancewise. A lot of defenses will be in situations, down and distance, that will give away tendencies for a pass rush. Study their stances ... if you can study the little details about a defensive player [you'll be prepared]. He said, 'I'd rather play Jay Ratliff, a guy I've watched 16 games on, than him get hurt and a see guy come in who hasn't played ever before in the NFL and you've got no film of him.' He studies it that much, to where he gets comfortable. Come gametime, it doesn't matter how good the guy is, he already knows everything about him."