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Big Turk

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Everything posted by Big Turk

  1. Called it!!! Beane trading assets for a round up next year....brilliant. Likely went up about 40-45 picks next year in the 4th round since the Bears aren't likely to be great
  2. I think fans think it far more than the Bills do.
  3. Curtis Samuel runs in the mid 4.3s and Shakir runs a 4.42. Can you please know what you actually are talking about about before posting nonsense?
  4. I mean Beane loves his mid round RBs. Seems like a decent enough player but really is there any difference between what you can get in round 4 and round 6 or 7 these days? They are a dime a dozen. Don't hate the player but hate the position and the Bills insistence on using mid round picks on RBs.
  5. Yeah Ed Oliver sucks and so does James Cook apparently even tho he was 4th in the NFL in rushing and 6th in the NFL in yards from scrimmage. Do you even bother paying attention to what you write or just post whatever?
  6. That was another NFL comparison for Coleman...Cortland Sutton and Drake London are the two most common ones I am seeing.
  7. He is not fast enough to be a man coverage player in the NFL.
  8. TJ Tampa coming up...if still there. NFL comparison Rasul Douglas and is suited for zone heavy scheme. https://www.nfl.com/prospects/t.j.-tampa/32005441-4d52-3098-6c60-07c674275129
  9. TJ Tampa coming up if he is still there... NFL Comparison Rasul Douglas and zone heavy CB. https://www.nfl.com/prospects/t.j.-tampa/32005441-4d52-3098-6c60-07c674275129
  10. It's not a rebuild, it's a reload. Now I wonder if a team ever started a strategy to start taking a pick each year and swapping it for a round higher next year until they took a 5th or 6th one year and turned it into a 1st 5 years later...that might be an interesting study.
  11. The part about speed and separation is very similar Amon Ra St Brown. The highest paid WR in NFL history. Speed isn't the end all be all for WRs. Amon Ra St Brown
  12. The other thing they could do is trade a 5th today for a 4th next year to gain an extra pick next year at a premium.
  13. Well...this scouting report looks very similar in a lot of areas to Keon Coleman's: Weaknesses Play strength might need upgrade against physical cornerbacks. Press rides on him for early stages of the route. Has had issues securing catchable throws underneath. Very average foot quickness and long speed. Could struggle to knock athletic corners out of route phase. Below-average separation burst out of breaks. Drifts into route turns at times. Lacks stride to open up and find a second gear. Very little grit in his run blocking. Anyone care to guess what WR scouting report this was for?
  14. Probably the same was being said about the highest paid WR in NFL history now Amon Ra St Brown when he went in the.... 4th.
  15. It doesn't matter until we see him play and how they will use him. Everything else is speculation that in all honesty is meaningless.
  16. You've got all those 5th round picks...no way 10 rookies are making this team. Figure out a way to package one or two to go up and get Franklin.
  17. Know who had the highest yards per target of anyone with 45 or more targets? Khalil Shakir. Aiyuk was 2nd. Don't sleep on Shakir...expecting big things this year and he is going to catch a lot of people sleeping
  18. If we don't then Green Bay ASSUREDLY doesn't.
  19. Shakir is going to be much more than a role player. The advanced metrics on him are spectacular and are screaming to give him the ball more.
  20. Who knows? All the teams did the same thing to Amon-Ra St Brown when he was drafted in the 4th round and now he is the highest paid WR in NFL history
  21. Well...there is no guarantee they are right either. Plenty of round 4 WRs end up as really good players that would have been taken in the first round of there was a "do over" 4 years later. I guess we would have to revisit it in 4 years to know, just like we would any pick really.
  22. That's fair but if they plan on using him down on fade routes and as a big Red Zone target, that wouldn't be too important since he would be going up to get it like he was back playing basketball and boxing out the DB.
  23. The one thing that stands out is that Coleman reached the top speed of any WR in the last 2 years in the gauntlet drill at 20.36 mph. That's situational speed which is more important than 40 times. 40 times are so dependant on your start and with bigger guys sometimes they don't have the right technique. That can cost them .1-.2 seconds right there. Look at Josh Allen...he didn't have a great 40 time but he runs away from DBs in the open field. The dude is fast...not just fast for a big QB, fast period. UPDATE: Just as I thought... Coleman's technique coming out of the starting blocks is among the worst I've ever seen. He almost stands straight up and kind of lunges which slows him down and almost gives him a weird hitch before he gets going. You are supposed to stay low and drive your lower body coming out of the blocks and Coleman doesn't do this at all... If you want to see terrible technique on how to run a 40, watch this video over and over again... Now, compare that to Xavier Worthy and watch how he basically uses the start to accelerate thru to an upright position gaining speed...Coleman LOSES speed while going upright and has to restart from zero almost after 2 steps while Worthy is already halfway to top speed...
  24. Coleman doesn't look slow when you see him play. People don't understand that 40 times and play speed are two different things. You have guys that run great 40 times that play a lot slower on the field and then you have guys that don't run great 40 times that play a lot faster on the field. Allen didn't run a great 40 time but how many DBs does he run away from in the open field? The dude is moving out there. Coleman is the latter. 40 times come down to technique quite a bit...if you don't get a good start you can lose .2 seconds right off the bat with no real way to make up the time. Coleman reached 20.36 mph in the gauntlet drill which was the fastest speed of any of the WRs over the last 2 seasons. That doesn't seem slow to me. Coleman's 4.61 40-yard dash doesn't necessarily jump off the charts, but in the gauntlet drill at the NFL Combine, Coleman reached a top speed of 20.36 miles per hour – the fastest speed by a receiver over the last two seasons. "The 40 is no longer the most effective way to determine a player's speed," wrote ESPN’s Marcel Louis-Jacques earlier this year. "The value it once had to teams has diminished in its 80-year existence, as clubs turn toward other means – such as GPS tracking and analytical data – to fully understand how fast a player can move in football specific situations."
  25. I'm wondering if they start trading some of those picks for a round up next year and turn a few of those 5ths into 4ths for next year's draft? Would be a nice way to add capital for next year and gain a round since there is no way 10 rookies are making this roster. Why draft players just to showcase them for other teams?
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