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03-24-2016, 09:02 AM | #16 |
Living Legend
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: VA
Age: 41
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
yeah, those make a good case for doctson, shepard, treadwell, and higgins... possibly miller too.
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03-24-2016, 09:34 AM | #17 | |
Warpath Hall of Fame
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Posts: 33,923
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
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Will Fuller and Michael Thomas (OSU) look to be 2nd tier types too. 30gut rank your top 10 WR for the draft please
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03-24-2016, 09:26 PM | #18 |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,323
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
Below is the PFF draft profile for Boston College’s Steven Daniels, which incorporates PFF’s college grades and scouting intel from our team of analysts. To see all of PFF’s 2016 scouting reports,*click here.
Position fit: Two-down, run-stopping inside or middle linebacker Stats to know: Top grade in the nation against the run (+29.2) in 2015 after ranking ninth in 2014 (+18.0). What he does best: • Pure thumper; destroys blocks working downhill in the running game. • Excellent play recognition in the run game—reads pulling guards instantly and gets to the right spot. • Didn’t test well athletically, but short area quickness on the football field looks good. • Rarely fooled by counter-action. Even when teams try to disguise with motion and fakes, Daniels still beats blockers to the spot against counter. • Makes up for his lack of speed by taking good angles to the ball when running sideline to sideline. • Will never be confused with a coverage linebacker, but made a few strong plays while isolated in the flat. • Reads and attacks the screen game well. • Can bull-rush as a pass-rusher and also uses his hands well to shed blocks. Had some success against college offensive tackles when rushing the passer. Biggest concern: • Got caught on blocks on cutbacks against inside zone. If he has to “slow-play,” can get engulfed by blocks. • Lacks the athleticism to be trusted in man-to-man coverage against running backs and tight ends. • Many of his strengths looked like weaknesses against Syracuse. Just a bad game? Player comparison: Brandon Spikes.*Spikes was a throwback to old-school football, a two-down “thumper” that would destroy any blockers in his path while setting up his teammates to clean up with tackles. Spikes was also a limited athlete and rarely on the field in passing situations, and Daniels looks like a similar player from both a style and production standpoint. Bottom line: Daniels is simply playing in the wrong era, as his tough, downhill style would have been coveted in the old run-heavy days of the NFL, but his style of linebacker is becoming less valuable in the spread-offense era. Still, there’s value in a strong interior presence against the run, and Daniels would fit in well with any team looking to improve their early-down run defense. Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G890A using Tapatalk |
03-24-2016, 09:32 PM | #19 |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,323
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
Below is the PFF draft profile for West Virginia’s Nick Kwiatkoski, which incorporates PFF’s college grades and scouting intel from our team of analysts. To see all of PFF’s 2016 scouting reports,*click here.
Position fit: Best fit is inside linebacker in a 3-4 scheme or strong linebacker in certain 4-3 schemes. Stats to know: Finished fourth in the nation amongst linebackers against the run (+21.7 run defense grade) and sixth in coverage (+9.0 coverage grade). What he does best: • Strong “flipper” when attacking blocks in the run game. Packs a punch working downhill against blockers. • Uses same style to push the pocket as a blitzer. • Had success when playing head-up on tight ends in the run game, set a strong edge. • Makes lead blockers play when taking them on. • Does a nice job of sifting through the trash to find the ball carrier when left unblocked. • Graded well on both the front and back side of running plays. Biggest concern: • While he’s good at attacking blockers, he struggles to shed if he doesn’t win on initial contact. • Will lose sight of the ball at times in the run game. • Can get caught attacking the run with the wrong shoulder. • Had a few bad missed tackles in space. • Can be slow to react in coverage, gets sucked in by play-action. • Lacks depth in zones at times and lacks the recovery speed to make up for it. • Isn’t great in man-coverage against tight ends* Bottom line: There’s nothing exceptional about Kwiatkoski’s game, but he’s productive in all phases. He can be a disruptor in the run game while making the routine plays in coverage. He may be limited to early downs, and he could be a useful “thumper” in a 3-4 scheme, taking on blocks and setting up his teammates to make plays Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G890A using Tapatalk |
03-25-2016, 05:57 PM | #20 | ||
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,323
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
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Here are my top 5s tho: Quote:
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03-29-2016, 12:27 PM | #21 | |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,323
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
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FOOTBALL OUTSIDERS: Innovative Statistics, Intelligent Analysis | Playmaker Score 2016 |
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04-03-2016, 04:39 PM | #22 |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,323
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
Boykin shows off arm, Doctson is outstanding at TCU's pro day - NFL.com
Quarterback Trevone Boykin -- 6-foot-0 1/8, 213 pounds -- completed 35 of 38 passes at the pro day. He also ran eight pass routes as a receiver and looked pretty good doing that, too. Boykin has a strong arm, but a negative to that is he doesn't quite know how to take something off the ball. |
04-12-2016, 11:48 AM | #23 |
Warpath Hall of Fame
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 33,923
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
Scot McCloughan Q&A: The Philosophy and Tools of a Successful NFL GM | Bleacher Report
good McC interview here by bleacher report and Jason Cole. My favorite part: B/R: But you can’t miss in the first round. SM: You can’t, and you shouldn’t if you do enough work. Everybody said Brandon Scherff was taken too high. He’s a guard now, and he’s the fifth pick in the draft. I said, "Are you kidding me?" He played every snap in the season but one. The only reason he missed one is because his shoe fell off, and to this day, he yells at me about it. That’s the only snap he missed all year. He would have played the whole season, every snap. He’s not the most flashy guy, he’s not the prettiest guy, but he’s a football player, and that’s what I’m talking about with a red. Now, he might be a blue in two years, three years. Who knows? But right now, he’s a red. He’s a core guy, and, all of sudden, guys walk in next year and see him, they’ll be like, "OK, that’s how we act. That’s how we lift weights. That’s how we condition. That’s how we go to meetings. That’s how we practice." Guys walk in, and they’re scared of him. Trent Williams is scared of him, and he’s a Pro Bowler. Trent said, "I don’t want to mess with that guy." And [Scherff] is a rookie, but that’s what starts building a culture. He’s a red. You wait and see who we take at 21 in the draft this year. He’s a red. B/R: You already know who it’s going to be. SM: (smiling) Yeah, I think. Hopefully he’s not gone. But I’m adding the same kind of guy. Toughness, smarts, competitiveness, team. The whole thing.
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My pronouns: King/Your ruler He Gets Us |
04-12-2016, 08:29 PM | #24 | |
Impact Rookie
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Pa
Posts: 697
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
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04-13-2016, 08:41 PM | #25 |
Special Teams
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Dublin, Ohio
Posts: 327
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
So does anyone have a guess as to who this "tough, smart, competitive" guy is?
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04-13-2016, 10:09 PM | #26 |
Playmaker
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,323
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Re: Draft Prospects "Watch" List and Draft Board
Taylor Decker
Reggie Ragland Corey Coleman Mackenzie Alexander Andrew Billings Jarran Reed Emmanuel Ogbah |
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