Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

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  • NJ-STEELER
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 12563

    #31
    Re: Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

    Originally posted by ramblinjim
    if the draft pans out that we take Odrick, that would give us two young guys at DE that look pretty darn good for the future. We could finally let Eason or Kirschke walk and maybe keep Sonny Harris around if he looks like he could become a player.

    That would make keeping big Snack around for a bit just about a necessity.

    It's hard to go Corner that early because we really need to see if Lewis and Burnett can play before dropping more early round picks on Corners. Would we take Mays in the second if the draft fell like this and he dropped to us?
    do we really want to rely on what amounts to a 4th and 5th rounder and see if they can become good. there is a reason why they didn't get drafted higher plus they barely played last year

    i dont get the "more early round picks at CB"

    the highest drafted CB on our roster is the guy we just signed that didn't play in the league last year. before him it was K lewis who was the last pick of round 3 (before comp selections) last year

    Comment

    • hawaiiansteel
      Legend
      • May 2008
      • 35649

      #32
      Re: Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

      Interview: Jared Odrick
      Draft Daddy 2/14/10




      Versatility is the word that comes to mind when I watch Jared Odrick play. Odrick showed throughout his career at Penn State that he can be a disruptive force along the defensive line and he displayed the ability to line up as a 4-3 defensive tackle or 3-4 defensive end while at the Senior Bowl. Jared and I talked about where he fits in best in the NFL and how he found out about his Senior Bowl invitation. Read below for the transcript of our conversation.


      Spencer: So far, how’s your Senior Bowl experience been?


      Odrick: It’s been good. Busy. With all the testing, interviews and practice. But it’s been an experience so far.


      Spencer: Have you had a chance to sit down with any NFL teams yet?


      Odrick: Yeah, yeah. Quite a few.


      Spencer: What’s the oddest thing the scouts have asked you so far?


      Odrick: I really haven’t been asked anything out of the ordinary yet, but I know they’re coming. I know those questions are coming.


      Spencer: When you were invited to come play at the Senior Bowl, was there ever a doubt in your mind that you’d participate? Or was it something you had to give a lot of thought to?


      Odrick: In terms of an invitation, I’d go to my d-line coach, Coach Johnson. I’d go up to him and ask him, ‘Hey, I’ve got something from other all-star games. Should I respond, should I give an answer, what should I do?’ There was a time where he was like ‘we’ll have our talk, we’ll have our talk,’ and he kept pushing it off. I think he was withholding the invitation that I got, I think because he wanted me to work for it like I did in my Senior year. I think that’s the way it came off, but I never asked. I think he received it, he just never told me about it. He just wanted to wait for the right time. But the day I got it was the day I responded.


      Spencer: Who’s the toughest lineman you’ve had to face so far this week?


      Odrick: Toughest? There was a pretty tough double team I had to face today between [Mike] Iupati and Sam Young. I pride myself in handling double teams and facing them head on and either trying to split them or hold them. But it was pretty tough today. I lost my footing and those two guys got the best of me.


      Spencer: Turning to your side of the ball, who have you been playing beside that has really stood out to you?


      Odrick: Cal, [Tyson] Alualu. He’s really good with his hands. Very good with his hands, shedding people. I’ve watched him a few times on TV but I was more impressed here in person. But I’ve been playing beside Cam Thomas of North Carolina, so I can’t really watch him. But I’ve been watching Alualu and been really impressed.


      Spencer: What would you say is the strongest aspect of your game that you’d bring to an NFL team?


      Odrick: It’s hard to talk about yourself because I always think that I have so much to work on.


      Spencer: Well look at it this way. If a team was watching you on film, how would they game plan against you?


      Odrick: Double team me. I think that’s one thing. I’m the type of player that commands a double team. I guess that’s one thing I would write down if I was a scout. There’s not many times throughout a game that I’m not double team. There wasn’t many times throughout my whole Senior season. I think I’m the type of player that left in single blocking, I’m gonna disrupt plays or go make a play. So I’d probably have to say that.


      Spencer: Where do you think you’d fit in best in the NFL? A one gap defensive tackle or a 5 technique in a 3-4 defense?


      Odrick: I’d say a 3 or a 5 technique. I think I can play in multiple schemes, to tell you the truth, and I’ve been hearing the same thing from NFL teams. So it will be interesting to see where I eventually land.

      Comment

      • Shawn
        Legend
        • Mar 2008
        • 15131

        #33
        Re: Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

        Taking on double teams is what we need from a 3-4 DE. I like Odrick. I like him alot.
        Trolls are people too.

        Comment

        • Chadman
          Legend
          • May 2008
          • 6537

          #34
          Re: Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

          Originally posted by Shawn
          Taking on double teams is what we need from a 3-4 DE. I like Odrick. I like him alot.
          Fair enough....but the guy Odrick gives a wrap to- Alualu- isn't half bad either- and could be had in the late 2nd early 3rd region, instead of #18.
          The people that are trying to make the world worse never take a day off, why should I?

          Light up the darkness.

          Comment

          • ramblinjim
            Pro Bowler
            • Jun 2008
            • 1278

            #35
            Re: Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

            Originally posted by NJ-STEELER
            Originally posted by ramblinjim
            if the draft pans out that we take Odrick, that would give us two young guys at DE that look pretty darn good for the future. We could finally let Eason or Kirschke walk and maybe keep Sonny Harris around if he looks like he could become a player.

            That would make keeping big Snack around for a bit just about a necessity.

            It's hard to go Corner that early because we really need to see if Lewis and Burnett can play before dropping more early round picks on Corners. Would we take Mays in the second if the draft fell like this and he dropped to us?
            do we really want to rely on what amounts to a 4th and 5th rounder and see if they can become good. there is a reason why they didn't get drafted higher plus they barely played last year

            i dont get the "more early round picks at CB"

            the highest drafted CB on our roster is the guy we just signed that didn't play in the league last year. before him it was K lewis who was the last pick of round 3 (before comp selections) last year

            Well assuming the top guy in the draft doesn't fall to us, who's worth a second round pick?
            go to [URL]http://www.thebreastcancersite.com[/URL] to donate a free mammogram a day to women without health insurance.

            Comment

            • RuthlessBurgher
              Legend
              • May 2008
              • 33208

              #36
              Re: Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

              Originally posted by ramblinjim
              Originally posted by NJ-STEELER
              Originally posted by ramblinjim
              if the draft pans out that we take Odrick, that would give us two young guys at DE that look pretty darn good for the future. We could finally let Eason or Kirschke walk and maybe keep Sonny Harris around if he looks like he could become a player.

              That would make keeping big Snack around for a bit just about a necessity.

              It's hard to go Corner that early because we really need to see if Lewis and Burnett can play before dropping more early round picks on Corners. Would we take Mays in the second if the draft fell like this and he dropped to us?
              do we really want to rely on what amounts to a 4th and 5th rounder and see if they can become good. there is a reason why they didn't get drafted higher plus they barely played last year

              i dont get the "more early round picks at CB"

              the highest drafted CB on our roster is the guy we just signed that didn't play in the league last year. before him it was K lewis who was the last pick of round 3 (before comp selections) last year

              Well assuming the top guy in the draft doesn't fall to us, who's worth a second round pick?
              While Haden is the only CB worthy of going in the top half of the first round, I think there are a dozen other corners who merit consideration on day two of the draft (remember, since the draft will now be held over the course of three days...Thursday through Saturday...the first round is on day one, the second and third rounds are on day two, and rounds four through seven are on day three).

              Although one or two of these guys may sneak into the late first, and one or two of these guys may fall into day three of the draftI think they are are worthy of consideration on Friday, 4-23-10, during round 2 or 3...Donovan Warren, Brandon Ghee, Kyle Wilson, Perrish Cox, Devin McCourty, Patrick Robinson, Dominique Franks, Kareem Jackson, Akwasi Owusu-Ansah, Jerome Murphy, Amari Spievey, and Javier Arenas.
              Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

              Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

              We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

              We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

              Comment

              • hawaiiansteel
                Legend
                • May 2008
                • 35649

                #37
                Re: Pigskin Paul's mock draft - we take DE Jared Odrick

                Originally posted by Chadman
                Originally posted by Shawn
                Taking on double teams is what we need from a 3-4 DE. I like Odrick. I like him alot.
                Fair enough....but the guy Odrick gives a wrap to- Alualu- isn't half bad either- and could be had in the late 2nd early 3rd region, instead of #18.


                Tyson Alualu played high school football here in Hawaii, that alone makes him a stud


                Senior Defensive Lineman Tyson Alualu -- Strong in so Many Ways
                by Kyle McCrae
                Nov. 11, 2009


                Cal senior Tyson Alualu is a strong man.

                His strength on the field is obvious -- just ask any opposing offensive lineman that he's moved out of the way on his path to some of the most impressive numbers posted by a defensive lineman in Cal history. Opposing quarterbacks and running backs who have been smashed to the ground by the 6-3, 290-pounder would certainly agree.

                His skills make most NFL teams eager to acquire his services when he becomes available in the NFL Draft next April. Although Alualu looks forward to that day next spring when he learns where his new home will be, the one he's made for himself at Cal is going to be difficult to leave.

                It hasn't always been that way. In fact, there was a time when all Alualu could think about was leaving.

                "I got really homesick," remembered Alualu, who is one of nine children raised in a Polynesian culture that centers on family. "I just wanted to be with my family. Anything that would happen to me here I would use as an excuse to want to go back home."

                And he did just that.

                After a standout prep career at St. Louis High School in Honolulu, Alualu came to Cal in the summer of 2005 as a highly coveted recruit but didn't stay long. Shortly after attending the school's summer bridge program, he decided to go back home to Hawaii. He spent the fall back in his home state, but decided to give Cal another shot and returned to enroll in school the following January.

                He didn't come back alone. This time, he brought a big part of home back with him.

                Alualu's wife, Desiré, had given birth to the couple's son, Tyreé, two months earlier and the young family returned to the mainland together.

                It would be easy to think that a 19-year-old student-athlete with the added responsibilities of marriage and fatherhood might have a tough time making a go of it, especially when he was thousands of miles away from home and even farther away from the culture he enjoyed so much.

                Just the opposite proved to be the case.

                Alualu admits that his affection for the school he now loves and will soon miss grew gradually during the first few months of his return, but his impact on the field was immediate.

                In 2006, his first year with the Bears, he played in all 13 games and even picked up his first career start. In the three seasons since, he has started all 33 games and been named by his teammates as Cal's top defensive lineman each of the past two years. If the first eight games of the 2009 campaign are any indication, he will make it a three-peat.

                "There is now doubt that Tyson is one of the very best players in the Pac-10," said head coach Jeff Tedford. "He is a guy that plays snap to whistle. He can run and is physical."

                The list of people Alualu thanks for helping him to find the strength to be successful at Cal is long, but he begins with God and is also quick to point out his immediate family, the Polynesian players on the team and his entire Cal football family.

                "In our culture, we put God first and then family comes right after that," said Alualu, who sports black strips under his eyes during games that read "God First".

                He quoted his favorite Bible verse -- Philippians 4:13: I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me-- when asked where he gets the strength to be one of the nation's best football players, a Cal student, a loving husband and devoted father.

                "That scripture can translate to the field," emphasized Alualu. "I can have no energy left during a game, but can look up and say, `God, give me the strength.' I know he can give me the strength to give it my all and make that one more play. I definitely feel the difference. If you really trust in Him, you feel refreshed, you feel new. A lot of scriptures in the Bible relate to being on the field. That's where I get my strength."

                The strength his family provides is also critical in his life.

                Now a family of four with the addition of daughter Deréon in July of 2008, the family lives in Cal's University Village in Albany. Desiré has been a stay-at-home mom for much of her husband's time in Berkeley, but is now back on the career track as a nursing student at Western Career College in Emeryville thanks to the help of her sister, Tita Pomele, who has moved to the Bay Area and assists in the care of Tyreé and Deréon.

                "I give props to my wife for what she does," said a proud Alualu with a big smile. "She was held back with her own stuff for a while with the kids, but now she's back doing what she's always wanted to do. I'm really proud of her. She's getting straight A's."

                Having his own family around makes his success at Cal that much sweeter.

                "It's really special after the game, when you have just given everything you've got on the field, that win or lose you can enjoy spending time with them," said Alualu. "They come down to the field and my son will run around a little bit. Just having them here to support me is really special."

                Now, he finds himself savoring his last several weeks as a Cal football player.

                "With the little time I have left here, I want to enjoy every day and have no regrets when I leave," said Alualu. "I love this place so much -- my teammates, my fellow defensive linemen and all the other great people I've met. I wish I had more years to come, but this is my last one, and I'm really going to miss it."

                But the NFL prospect and 22-year-old family man who is mature beyond his years has so much more to look forward to in the future.

                "I feel like I have to take care of the little things, and the big things will take care of themselves," analyzed a cautiously optimistic Alualu when asked about his football future. "I don't want to get ahead of myself, thinking about the NFL Combine or the Draft, and then mess up right now and not produce. But at the same time, I do think of the big picture. I've got to work hard to reach my goal. Hopefully, I can give my family a better life if I succeed in my dream of playing in the NFL."

                Still, life is pretty good right now and Alualu certainly appreciates what he has.

                "It's awesome," Alualu said as he lights up when talking about his family. "I enjoy being with my wife and having two kids, and at the same time going to college. It just gives me extra motivation to reach my goal to play at the next level."

                The spiritual Alualu has much bigger goals for himself and his family than the earthly riches of the NFL. "I want to do the same thing my father did for me," explained Alualu, whose father, Ta'avao, is a pastor at Solid Rock Christian Fellowship Church in Honolulu. "In the Bible, it says, `Train a child the way he should grow, so that when he does grow up, he'll never depart from it.' I strongly believe that's what happened to me and that's what I want to do for my kids."

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