maybe the pick if they trade down
maybe the pick if they trade down
steelers = 3 ring circus with tomlin being the head clown
I don't see him being any where near close to a Fitz. He had legendary work ethic and drive coming out of PITT. I don't get the same vibe with this dude; he seems more one trick pony to me. "I will run into the endzone and you throw it to me and I will catch it." If that is all he has, not worth taking in the 1st. I trust Evans much more.
I meant as far as being well rounded.
I want evans more too. I would just hope that he wouldnt be a one trick pony, hes so gifted physically and is a better route runner than he is given credit for. The fitz thing was as far as being able to run any route, high point the ball, and be successful without having top end speed
Let's just hope he's not a David Boston...
2013 MNF Executive Champion!
DeVille's Late-March Mock (In Progress)
1.20 - Jackson Powers-Johnson, C, Oregon
2.51 - "WR/DL/CB" (tbd)
3.84 - "WR/DL/CB" (tbd)
3.98 - "WR/DL/CB" (tbd)
4.117 - Jordan Travis, QB, FSU
6.178 -Travis Glover, OT, Ga State
6.195 - Isaac Guerendo, RB, Louisville
2013 MNF Executive Champion!
DeVille's Late-March Mock (In Progress)
1.20 - Jackson Powers-Johnson, C, Oregon
2.51 - "WR/DL/CB" (tbd)
3.84 - "WR/DL/CB" (tbd)
3.98 - "WR/DL/CB" (tbd)
4.117 - Jordan Travis, QB, FSU
6.178 -Travis Glover, OT, Ga State
6.195 - Isaac Guerendo, RB, Louisville
he general consensus is that Kelvin Benjamin was extremely impressive in his pro day work out.
[url]http://m.espn.go.com/general/blogs/b...15&src=desktop[/url]Following a dominant pro-day performance in position drills, undoubtedly far more teams are willing to overlook his 4.61 time in Indianapolis.
FSU's Kelvin Benjamin might not be the fastest WR, but as Jimbo Fisher said, "You don't want to play against that guy."
“I really wish he ran, but he has such a unique skill set with his ball skills and catch radius,” one NFC scout said.
While running routes, Benjamin showcased his ability to catch the football at its highest point and make the types of catches most NFL receivers can't. On one throw toward the boundary, NFL coaches cleared as the ball’s flight plan descended toward a coaching cluster. Benjamin hauled in the pass -- easily -- and on the next throw he reached behind to catch an underthrown and off-target toss.
And for those who still question his speed?
“I can open up that stride and stride all day,” he said. “You got a guy who can run 4.3, he’s going to get tired and not keep up with the stride all day.”
Noles coach Jimbo Fisher will be terse with NFL coaches asking if Benjamin is worth a first-round payday.
"You don't want to play against him. That's the ultimate thing,” he said. “I'm telling you this: You don't want to play against that guy. He changes the game.”
Tomlin: Let's unleash hell and "mop the floor" with the competition.
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