|
Post by Fletch842 on Mar 1, 2024 7:34:45 GMT -5
I heard Dallas Turner and Chop Robinson conquered today. Top 2 pass rushers. I have Turner ranked at 13 and Robinson at 39 I think Chop may find his way into the first, in a light defensive draft.
|
|
|
Post by Analyst on Mar 1, 2024 7:40:13 GMT -5
I heard Dallas Turner and Chop Robinson conquered today. Top 2 pass rushers. I have Turner ranked at 13 and Robinson at 39 I think you have them too low, especially Chop. That dude is going to be legit IMO.
|
|
|
Post by TEM on Mar 1, 2024 7:44:24 GMT -5
I have Turner ranked at 13 and Robinson at 39 I think you have them too low, especially Chop. That dude is going to be legit IMO. I do not think I do. This is ranking, not draft order. I will have a better idea of draft order after FA cools down last week of March beginning of April.
|
|
|
Post by TEM on Mar 1, 2024 7:49:47 GMT -5
I have Turner ranked at 13 and Robinson at 39 I think Chop may find his way into the first, in a light defensive draft. He may.
|
|
|
Post by Analyst on Mar 1, 2024 7:58:27 GMT -5
I think you have them too low, especially Chop. That dude is going to be legit IMO. I do not think I do. This is ranking, not draft order. I will have a better idea of draft order after FA cools down last week of March beginning of April. I guess its kinda hard to rank different positions, but Chop IMO is going to be a stud pass rusher in the NFL (on the right team of course). I could see him being a top 15-20 player overall in this draft when its all said and done. But again, hard to rank a pass rusher vs a QB or WR or OLman... How do you compare their relative values?
|
|
|
Post by bavarobeast on Mar 1, 2024 8:30:51 GMT -5
Chop Robinson he was listed as a loser after his combine measurements. Arm length and wing span among lowest recorded since 1999.
|
|
|
Post by Rangers13 on Mar 1, 2024 8:50:09 GMT -5
Imo, what he’s describing is what the combine is really all about.
|
|
Aris
Special Teams
Posts: 498
|
Post by Aris on Mar 1, 2024 9:04:43 GMT -5
Joe Milton III is going to put on a show and probably raise his draft stock. 80 yard bombs. Great speed. Prototypical size at 6'5" 230lbs. Pair him with Hyatt and that would be fun. Not sure about the short intermediate stuff though lol He is a lot like Allen coming out I remember watching some of Allens college tape he couldln't hit the broad side of a barn but could throw the ball though it lol he was raw didn't look like a NFL player. Something that if it's there Accuracy anticipation timing it can be fixed with a great work ethic and better coaching from his private coach first of all then his QB coach when at the facility. Josh Allen was not as wild a college passer as his stats made you believe. His receivers were below average with many drops of his lasers, and he was projected top 10 if you were able to teach him to layer his throws more consistently ….which they have. He threw outside the numbers as well as any QB of that year of the, QB… If you can find it, watch his combine throws…he was the easy pick at 2 vs Barkley. Milton and Allen were and are not on the same page in scouts eyes. The media just took a while to “discover” the Allen hype as he came from a zero star recruit to a WTH, that linebacker sized kid can sling it …on tape and the combine. At this stage, Allen was an easy top of the 1st round pick from tape alone….while Milton might go not drafted or at best mid rounds.
|
|
Aris
Special Teams
Posts: 498
|
Post by Aris on Mar 1, 2024 9:15:21 GMT -5
I do not think I do. This is ranking, not draft order. I will have a better idea of draft order after FA cools down last week of March beginning of April. I guess its kinda hard to rank different positions, but Chop IMO is going to be a stud pass rusher in the NFL (on the right team of course). I could see him being a top 15-20 player overall in this draft when its all said and done. But again, hard to rank a pass rusher vs a QB or WR or OLman... How do you compare their relative values? www.nfl.com/news/2024-nfl-scouting-combine-stock-up-stock-down-day-1-braden-fiske-dallas-turner-sizzleHe has the potential, but not sure he goes top 15. Stock up according to Chad Reuter ….but I worry more about his production in college and if he can get more going against the best of the best in the NFL?
|
|
|
Post by Analyst on Mar 1, 2024 9:36:28 GMT -5
He is a lot like Allen coming out I remember watching some of Allens college tape he couldln't hit the broad side of a barn but could throw the ball though it lol he was raw didn't look like a NFL player. Something that if it's there Accuracy anticipation timing it can be fixed with a great work ethic and better coaching from his private coach first of all then his QB coach when at the facility. Josh Allen was not as wild a college passer as his stats made you believe. His receivers were below average with many drops of his lasers, and he was projected top 10 if you were able to teach him to layer his throws more consistently ….which they have. He threw outside the numbers as well as any QB of that year of the, QB… If you can find it, watch his combine throws…he was the easy pick at 2 vs Barkley. Milton and Allen were and are not on the same page in scouts eyes. The media just took a while to “discover” the Allen hype as he came from a zero star recruit to a WTH, that linebacker sized kid can sling it …on tape and the combine. At this stage, Allen was an easy top of the 1st round pick from tape alone….while Milton might go not drafted or at best mid rounds. Miltons receivers were below average as well. Not sure thats a good measuring point on accuracy. Josh Allen was inaccurate, but got much better AFTER his first year or 2 in the NFL. He learned how to throw the ball better. He always had a cannon and could throw outside the the numbers for sure, due to his arm strength. Watching some more of Miltons highlights, he has some solid ball placement down field. He obviously has the arm strength to make any throw. The negatives I see in his game are he does tend to overthrow or throw worm burners on the shorter stuff which is concerning. He needs to develop more touch. Alos, his post snap defensive reading might be lacking. He is also going to be 24 at the draft. Thats why he isnt a top shelf 1st round QB. Everything else makes him a fantastic projection. The thing I have an issue with is, I saw the same thing with an Anthony Richardson who went #3 and was all the hype. I see these 2 QBs as very similar QBs in college. Great big athletes with arm strength for days and fast wheels. Both were and should be criticized with their short/mid game accuracy and decision making.
|
|
|
Post by Analyst on Mar 1, 2024 9:38:05 GMT -5
I guess its kinda hard to rank different positions, but Chop IMO is going to be a stud pass rusher in the NFL (on the right team of course). I could see him being a top 15-20 player overall in this draft when its all said and done. But again, hard to rank a pass rusher vs a QB or WR or OLman... How do you compare their relative values? www.nfl.com/news/2024-nfl-scouting-combine-stock-up-stock-down-day-1-braden-fiske-dallas-turner-sizzleHe has the potential, but not sure he goes top 15. Stock up according to Chad Reuter ….but I worry more about his production in college and if he can get more going against the best of the best in the NFL? Cant measure heart. His is huge. None stop motor. Put him on the Eagles or 49ers and he s golden. Not sure he goes top 15 either. I see him sliding to the back half of the 1st round.
|
|
|
Post by imgrate on Mar 1, 2024 10:08:46 GMT -5
Josh Allen was not as wild a college passer as his stats made you believe. His receivers were below average with many drops of his lasers, and he was projected top 10 if you were able to teach him to layer his throws more consistently ….which they have. He threw outside the numbers as well as any QB of that year of the, QB… If you can find it, watch his combine throws…he was the easy pick at 2 vs Barkley. Milton and Allen were and are not on the same page in scouts eyes. The media just took a while to “discover” the Allen hype as he came from a zero star recruit to a WTH, that linebacker sized kid can sling it …on tape and the combine. At this stage, Allen was an easy top of the 1st round pick from tape alone….while Milton might go not drafted or at best mid rounds. Miltons receivers were below average as well. Not sure thats a good measuring point on accuracy. Josh Allen was inaccurate, but got much better AFTER his first year or 2 in the NFL. He learned how to throw the ball better. He always had a cannon and could throw outside the the numbers for sure, due to his arm strength. Watching some more of Miltons highlights, he has some solid ball placement down field. He obviously has the arm strength to make any throw. The negatives I see in his game are he does tend to overthrow or throw worm burners on the shorter stuff which is concerning. He needs to develop more touch. Alos, his post snap defensive reading might be lacking. He is also going to be 24 at the draft. Thats why he isnt a top shelf 1st round QB. Everything else makes him a fantastic projection. The thing I have an issue with is, I saw the same thing with an Anthony Richardson who went #3 and was all the hype. I see these 2 QBs as very similar QBs in college. Great big athletes with arm strength for days and fast wheels. Both were and should be criticized with their short/mid game accuracy and decision making. Kinda to your point - Richardson is still only 21yrs old
|
|
|
Post by BigBlueDog42 on Mar 1, 2024 10:26:54 GMT -5
He is a lot like Allen coming out I remember watching some of Allens college tape he couldln't hit the broad side of a barn but could throw the ball though it lol he was raw didn't look like a NFL player. Something that if it's there Accuracy anticipation timing it can be fixed with a great work ethic and better coaching from his private coach first of all then his QB coach when at the facility. Josh Allen was not as wild a college passer as his stats made you believe. His receivers were below average with many drops of his lasers, and he was projected top 10 if you were able to teach him to layer his throws more consistently ….which they have. He threw outside the numbers as well as any QB of that year of the, QB… If you can find it, watch his combine throws…he was the easy pick at 2 vs Barkley. Milton and Allen were and are not on the same page in scouts eyes. The media just took a while to “discover” the Allen hype as he came from a zero star recruit to a WTH, that linebacker sized kid can sling it …on tape and the combine. At this stage, Allen was an easy top of the 1st round pick from tape alone….while Milton might go not drafted or at best mid rounds. No doubt he came to the combine ready to throw, now I didn't watch a lot of him because it was hard to find it but when he started getting hyped there was some out there he was rough in college they might have dropped a lot but he was wild. He was consensus top 10 guy by draft time. You really have to give a ton of credit to him he was fearless with the ball he needed to get his mechanics right that was done away from the facility with who ever his private coach was. Daboll deserves some credit yes, but this kid had to put in years of work his first year he was running around was a mess his 2nd he was better but still not accurate. Actually the media in Buffalo and national were starting to feel if he didn't get it going in year 3 he might bust. A lot of who he is as a player and a passer goes to him for the grinding that he did to become an excellent passer player. have a lot of respect for him his rookie year was ugly when he tried to innovate and run sometimes it was ok more times than not he would run into trouble or throw a crazy pass he learned how to escape how to throw accurately on the run that takes a lot. I had 0 faith in our staff to harness and develop a raw talent like him or Lamar for that matter I believed more in the players then our coaches and staff to handle that type of player and get the most out of them.
|
|
Aris
Special Teams
Posts: 498
|
Post by Aris on Mar 1, 2024 13:32:14 GMT -5
Josh Allen was not as wild a college passer as his stats made you believe. His receivers were below average with many drops of his lasers, and he was projected top 10 if you were able to teach him to layer his throws more consistently ….which they have. He threw outside the numbers as well as any QB of that year of the, QB… If you can find it, watch his combine throws…he was the easy pick at 2 vs Barkley. Milton and Allen were and are not on the same page in scouts eyes. The media just took a while to “discover” the Allen hype as he came from a zero star recruit to a WTH, that linebacker sized kid can sling it …on tape and the combine. At this stage, Allen was an easy top of the 1st round pick from tape alone….while Milton might go not drafted or at best mid rounds. No doubt he came to the combine ready to throw, now I didn't watch a lot of him because it was hard to find it but when he started getting hyped there was some out there he was rough in college they might have dropped a lot but he was wild. He was consensus top 10 guy by draft time. You really have to give a ton of credit to him he was fearless with the ball he needed to get his mechanics right that was done away from the facility with who ever his private coach was. Daboll deserves some credit yes, but this kid had to put in years of work his first year he was running around was a mess his 2nd he was better but still not accurate. Actually the media in Buffalo and national were starting to feel if he didn't get it going in year 3 he might bust. A lot of who he is as a player and a passer goes to him for the grinding that he did to become an excellent passer player. have a lot of respect for him his rookie year was ugly when he tried to innovate and run sometimes it was ok more times than not he would run into trouble or throw a crazy pass he learned how to escape how to throw accurately on the run that takes a lot. I had 0 faith in our staff to harness and develop a raw talent like him or Lamar for that matter I believed more in the players then our coaches and staff to handle that type of player and get the most out of them. Gonna have to agree to disagree. Allen was able to throw on the run in college and was always a tough sack.... always kept his eyes downfield as he was scrambling. To analyst.... with regards to throwing outside the numbers, I was referring to accuracy in college and the combine, senior bowl. Obviously any canon arms can get it there. As far as Allen vs Milton...I find comparisons of the two silly. Allen was a top ten pick and Milton might not get drafted at all. We can agree to disagree big time there. Allen progressed nicely in Buffalo after the fumbles and learning the offense, but his overall skill set was worlds apart from Milton at the draft stage. Funny thing about that QB class....the most pro ready QB was one of The Beach Boys...Josh Rosen. Giants should have taken ANY QB over Barkley that year...they were in a perfect world of let the QB sit a year or two. They are at that stage this year as well....as long as it aint Milton we take.
|
|
|
Post by TCHOF on Mar 1, 2024 14:02:40 GMT -5
All the skills except that he can't hit the broad side of a barn ... horribly inaccurate If anything, he's a TE in the NFL He looks a lot like Allen did coming out now no one knows wether he could correct all of that but if he can he will be a greta QB 4th or 5th round he can sit for a couple years and learn. Don’t see it at all
|
|
|
Post by Analyst on Mar 1, 2024 14:14:55 GMT -5
No doubt he came to the combine ready to throw, now I didn't watch a lot of him because it was hard to find it but when he started getting hyped there was some out there he was rough in college they might have dropped a lot but he was wild. He was consensus top 10 guy by draft time. You really have to give a ton of credit to him he was fearless with the ball he needed to get his mechanics right that was done away from the facility with who ever his private coach was. Daboll deserves some credit yes, but this kid had to put in years of work his first year he was running around was a mess his 2nd he was better but still not accurate. Actually the media in Buffalo and national were starting to feel if he didn't get it going in year 3 he might bust. A lot of who he is as a player and a passer goes to him for the grinding that he did to become an excellent passer player. have a lot of respect for him his rookie year was ugly when he tried to innovate and run sometimes it was ok more times than not he would run into trouble or throw a crazy pass he learned how to escape how to throw accurately on the run that takes a lot. I had 0 faith in our staff to harness and develop a raw talent like him or Lamar for that matter I believed more in the players then our coaches and staff to handle that type of player and get the most out of them. Gonna have to agree to disagree. Allen was able to throw on the run in college and was always a tough sack.... always kept his eyes downfield as he was scrambling. To analyst.... with regards to throwing outside the numbers, I was referring to accuracy in college and the combine, senior bowl. Obviously any canon arms can get it there. As far as Allen vs Milton...I find comparisons of the two silly. Allen was a top ten pick and Milton might not get drafted at all. We can agree to disagree big time there. Allen progressed nicely in Buffalo after the fumbles and learning the offense, but his overall skill set was worlds apart from Milton at the draft stage. Funny thing about that QB class....the most pro ready QB was one of The Beach Boys...Josh Rosen. Giants should have taken ANY QB over Barkley that year...they were in a perfect world of let the QB sit a year or two. They are at that stage this year as well....as long as it aint Milton we take. Well, we wont know where Milton goes until he goes. All it takes is one GM.... is the saying. It happened with Dave and Daniel. Anyways, I dont think draft slot really matters in the comparison, or at least where they are projected. I remember seeing Josh Allen in college, and not liking a lot of what he did. It was a while back so Id have to dust off the memory box, but I do think I remember him not having any touch or "feel" for his passes. His decision making was also a question. If Josh Allen goes to the Jets, he ends up like Sam Darnold IMO. Going to Buffalo was huge for him. They let him develop. They coached him up to his peak. Again, this is not me saying he is the next Josh Allen, that is a very tough task for any QB, but I do like the comparison in the strengths and tendencies. I still dont know what the Colts saw in Richardson that they would see in Milton, as far as projections. Maybe the only difference is the age factor. IMO, both have big risks and big rewards.
|
|
|
Post by BigBlueDog42 on Mar 1, 2024 14:26:18 GMT -5
He looks a lot like Allen did coming out now no one knows wether he could correct all of that but if he can he will be a greta QB 4th or 5th round he can sit for a couple years and learn. Don’t see it at all There's a lot of time I don't see it with players and it happens I'm just going on the physical part thats why 4 through 7 would be ok with me guys like this don't work out more then they do. It might be worth the risk he has some things that you have to be born with.
|
|
Aris
Special Teams
Posts: 498
|
Post by Aris on Mar 1, 2024 14:38:36 GMT -5
Gonna have to agree to disagree. Allen was able to throw on the run in college and was always a tough sack.... always kept his eyes downfield as he was scrambling. To analyst.... with regards to throwing outside the numbers, I was referring to accuracy in college and the combine, senior bowl. Obviously any canon arms can get it there. As far as Allen vs Milton...I find comparisons of the two silly. Allen was a top ten pick and Milton might not get drafted at all. We can agree to disagree big time there. Allen progressed nicely in Buffalo after the fumbles and learning the offense, but his overall skill set was worlds apart from Milton at the draft stage. Funny thing about that QB class....the most pro ready QB was one of The Beach Boys...Josh Rosen. Giants should have taken ANY QB over Barkley that year...they were in a perfect world of let the QB sit a year or two. They are at that stage this year as well....as long as it aint Milton we take. Well, we wont know where Milton goes until he goes. All it takes is one GM.... is the saying. It happened with Dave and Daniel. Anyways, I dont think draft slot really matters in the comparison, or at least where they are projected. I remember seeing Josh Allen in college, and not liking a lot of what he did. It was a while back so Id have to dust off the memory box, but I do think I remember him not having any touch or "feel" for his passes. His decision making was also a question. If Josh Allen goes to the Jets, he ends up like Sam Darnold IMO. Going to Buffalo was huge for him. They let him develop. They coached him up to his peak. Again, this is not me saying he is the next Josh Allen, that is a very tough task for any QB, but I do like the comparison in the strengths and tendencies. I still dont know what the Colts saw in Richardson that they would see in Milton, as far as projections. Maybe the only difference is the age factor. IMO, both have big risks and big rewards. I’m just saying the entire scouting community had Allen a first round talent while the scouts, and I’m not talking media heads…the actual scouts who get paid to be right or wrong, all have Milton as at the very best a 3 - 4 round pick….. to free agent. I love guys with canons, but I’m not sold at all on Milton. Hey, who knows…maybe you broke his film down differently…I just don’t see him a NFL QB…but yeah, his arm is sick strong. It’s okay, I can agree to disagree without 5000 posts and having to be right. All good Analyst
|
|
|
Post by BigBlueDog42 on Mar 1, 2024 14:42:01 GMT -5
No doubt he came to the combine ready to throw, now I didn't watch a lot of him because it was hard to find it but when he started getting hyped there was some out there he was rough in college they might have dropped a lot but he was wild. He was consensus top 10 guy by draft time. You really have to give a ton of credit to him he was fearless with the ball he needed to get his mechanics right that was done away from the facility with who ever his private coach was. Daboll deserves some credit yes, but this kid had to put in years of work his first year he was running around was a mess his 2nd he was better but still not accurate. Actually the media in Buffalo and national were starting to feel if he didn't get it going in year 3 he might bust. A lot of who he is as a player and a passer goes to him for the grinding that he did to become an excellent passer player. have a lot of respect for him his rookie year was ugly when he tried to innovate and run sometimes it was ok more times than not he would run into trouble or throw a crazy pass he learned how to escape how to throw accurately on the run that takes a lot. I had 0 faith in our staff to harness and develop a raw talent like him or Lamar for that matter I believed more in the players then our coaches and staff to handle that type of player and get the most out of them. Gonna have to agree to disagree. Allen was able to throw on the run in college and was always a tough sack.... always kept his eyes downfield as he was scrambling. To analyst.... with regards to throwing outside the numbers, I was referring to accuracy in college and the combine, senior bowl. Obviously any canon arms can get it there. As far as Allen vs Milton...I find comparisons of the two silly. Allen was a top ten pick and Milton might not get drafted at all. We can agree to disagree big time there. Allen progressed nicely in Buffalo after the fumbles and learning the offense, but his overall skill set was worlds apart from Milton at the draft stage. Funny thing about that QB class....the most pro ready QB was one of The Beach Boys...Josh Rosen. Giants should have taken ANY QB over Barkley that year...they were in a perfect world of let the QB sit a year or two. They are at that stage this year as well....as long as it aint Milton we take. I get where your coming from you dig in a lot deeper than I do. The Other guy I see as a late round guy and most do not like is Rattler it might take a 3rd to get him tho this is all based on if they don't get one of the top 3 and don't want trade down to try to grab McCarthy / Nix / Pennix. Rattler has an NFL arm and the mobility to extend plays and can get it there off schedule from different arm slots / platforms seems he has put all the immaturity behind him.
|
|
|
Post by Fletch842 on Mar 1, 2024 15:03:43 GMT -5
Gonna have to agree to disagree. Allen was able to throw on the run in college and was always a tough sack.... always kept his eyes downfield as he was scrambling. To analyst.... with regards to throwing outside the numbers, I was referring to accuracy in college and the combine, senior bowl. Obviously any canon arms can get it there. As far as Allen vs Milton...I find comparisons of the two silly. Allen was a top ten pick and Milton might not get drafted at all. We can agree to disagree big time there. Allen progressed nicely in Buffalo after the fumbles and learning the offense, but his overall skill set was worlds apart from Milton at the draft stage. Funny thing about that QB class....the most pro ready QB was one of The Beach Boys...Josh Rosen. Giants should have taken ANY QB over Barkley that year...they were in a perfect world of let the QB sit a year or two. They are at that stage this year as well....as long as it aint Milton we take. I get where your coming from you dig in a lot deeper than I do. The Other guy I see as a late round guy and most do not like is Rattler it might take a 3rd to get him tho this is all based on if they don't get one of the top 3 and don't want trade down to try to grab McCarthy / Nix / Pennix. Rattler has an NFL arm and the mobility to extend plays and can get it there off schedule from different arm slots / platforms seems he has put all the immaturity behind him. I'd prefer Penix with our 2nd 2nd rounder, if he's still there over Rattler in the 3rd or 4th. Be really interesting to see whe Penix goes, he does throw a super nice deep ball, and has stayed healthy the better part of the last 2 seasons...
|
|
|
Post by BigBlueDog42 on Mar 1, 2024 15:21:16 GMT -5
I get where your coming from you dig in a lot deeper than I do. The Other guy I see as a late round guy and most do not like is Rattler it might take a 3rd to get him tho this is all based on if they don't get one of the top 3 and don't want trade down to try to grab McCarthy / Nix / Pennix. Rattler has an NFL arm and the mobility to extend plays and can get it there off schedule from different arm slots / platforms seems he has put all the immaturity behind him. I'd prefer Penix with our 2nd 2nd rounder, if he's still there over Rattler in the 3rd or 4th. Be really interesting to see whe Penix goes, he does throw a super nice deep ball, and has stayed healthy the better part of the last 2 seasons... I'm more concerned with his pocket presence he struggled mightily in the championship game it doesn't seem like he knew what to do when the walls starter closing in.
|
|
|
Post by BigBlueDog42 on Mar 1, 2024 15:24:39 GMT -5
I heard Dallas Turner and Chop Robinson conquered today. Top 2 pass rushers. Fiske also crushed on think he weighed in a 293 and was #1 in most f the drills.
|
|
|
Post by Fletch842 on Mar 1, 2024 15:26:28 GMT -5
DB's are flying on the 40's. Dozen or so of them running under 4.40. Impressive!!
|
|
|
Post by ratbastich on Mar 1, 2024 15:29:15 GMT -5
By the way, just an FYI, Athlon's draft guide is already out. I picked one up today...they have us taking Nabers (1st), Kamari Lassiter CB-Georgia (2nd #39), and Bo Nix (2nd #47...the Leonard Williams trade). Although it came out pre-Combine, still a decent overall look at a lot of unknowns.
|
|
|
Post by Fletch842 on Mar 1, 2024 15:39:48 GMT -5
Wiggins ran a 4.29, but pulled his groin and is out for the rest of the workouts, had to be helped off, shame!!!
|
|
|
Post by Analyst on Mar 1, 2024 15:45:50 GMT -5
Wiggins ran a 4.29, but pulled his groin and is out for the rest of the workouts, had to be helped off, shame!!! Just saw that, heard something pop. Hopefully not the groin itself. I heard a pop once in my mid region and though groin, but was just a mild strain and it was the hip that popped. Wiggins is a legit CB in this draft.
|
|
|
Post by Analyst on Mar 1, 2024 15:46:35 GMT -5
Penn State EDGE Chop Robinson excels across the board. Robinson came into the week as the No. 21 overall prospect on our CBS Sports prospect rankings, and that'll be changing. Weighing in heavier than expected at 254 pounds and just under 6-foot-3, Robinson blistered the 40-yard dash with an official time of 4.48 seconds. He had a 10-foot-8 broad jump and a 34.5-inch vertical. Stock up.
Alabama EDGE Dallas Turner has legendary workout. Frankly, it's hard to find a historical comparison based on size, length and burst for what Turner did Thursday evening. At just under 6-foot-3 and 247 pounds, the former monster recruit had a 40.5-inch vertical jump, a 10-7 broad jump and ran a sizzling 4.46 seconds in the 40-yard dash. Stock UP.
UCLA EDGE Laiatu Latu disappoints. Our No. 12 overall prospect entering the combine didn't totally flop his workout, but he wasn't very close to Robinson and Turner, two of his fiercest competitors to be the first edge rusher off the board. At nearly 6-foot-4 and 259 pounds, Latu had a decent 40-yard dash of 4.64 seconds, but the jumps hinted at less explosive traits. His vertical was 32 inches and his broad was 9-foot-8
NC State's Payton Wilson steals the show among linebackers. Despite short arms, Wilson ran 4.43 at close to 6-4 and 233 pounds. He had the same vertical as Robinson -- 34.5 inches -- and a 9-11 broad jump.
Despite not many stellar or completely brutal workouts among the interior defensive linemen, Florida State's Braden Fiske was the finest performer of that group. At nearly 6-foot-6 and 292 pounds, he had the fastest 40-yard dash (4.78 seconds), the highest vertical (33.5 inches) and the longest broad jump (9-foot-9) at the position. His 4.37 short shuttle was insanely fast, too. Commence late first-round buzz for the former Western Michigan Bronco turned Florida State Seminole.
|
|
|
Post by Fletch842 on Mar 1, 2024 16:09:21 GMT -5
Wiggins ran a 4.29, but pulled his groin and is out for the rest of the workouts, had to be helped off, shame!!! Just saw that, heard something pop. Hopefully not the groin itself. I heard a pop once in my mid region and though groin, but was just a mild strain and it was the hip that popped. Wiggins is a legit CB in this draft. they're now saying it's a hip flexor, and he "should" be ok for the Clemson pro-day in April.
|
|
|
Post by lt56 on Mar 1, 2024 16:09:43 GMT -5
Chop and Dallas competing last night was great to see both was very impressive some excellent Freakishly Athletic Athletes for sure
|
|
|
Post by Fletch842 on Mar 1, 2024 16:15:06 GMT -5
Chop and Dallas competing last night was great to see both was very impressive some excellent Freakishly Athletic Athletes for sure Payton Wilson also looked really good, both his 40 time, and in the drills.
|
|