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#171 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 513
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Thanked 57 Times in 48 Posts
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2012 Senior Bowl
North Carolina DE Quinton Coples: The top-ranked player in Mobile built on a dominant week of practice with a solid performance in the game. Came off the snap with authority, used his long arms and upper-body strength to consistently knock blockers off balance and showed nice closing speed; also went hard all afternoon and was just as effective stopping the run as rushing the passer. Only knock may have been that Coples was a little over aggressive at times and tended to run himself out of plays on occasion. Marshall DE Vinny Curry: After a somewhat inconsistent week of practice, Curry was a pain in the butt for the South offensive line most of the afternoon as he showed an explosive get-off at the snap, kept his pads low and his feet active and was very disruptive when he got leverage and finished the day with a couple of sacks and a couple more hurries, although he still needs to develop some secondary pass-rush moves and appeared to give up on a few plays if he didn‘t get early penetration. Arizona WR Juron Criner: Probably lacks the real deep speed NFL teams covet, but ran nice routes, showed the ability to find the soft spots in coverage and used his big body very effectively to screen DBs away from the ball. Did have one pass go through his hands, but snatched everything else coming his way. Arkansas WR Joe Adams: Didn’t run the most polished routes, but was incredibly quick and elusive after the catch; indeed, made almost Houdini-like escapes from a couple of would-be tacklers and raced for big gainers. Ohio State OT Mike Adams: Got caught reaching too often during the week of practice, but was textbook solid during the game; was very quick setting up, used his length to cut off the edge and was able to re-anchor against cut-back moves. Cincinnati RB Isaiah Pead: Created some buzz for himself with a couple of explosive punt returns; also had a couple more dynamic runs as he accelerated through the hole and broke tackles on the way up field; tended to be indecisive, though, when he couldn’t find a seam and also had a couple of minus runs. Boise State RB Doug Martin: Only carried the ball four times, but showed good vision, a nice burst, and the power to make yards after contact; got bonus points for a nice KO return and chipped in a nice block downfield to spring Gerell Robinson free for a 41-yard TD. Mississippi State RB Vick Ballard: Isn’t going to break many big plays, but consistently showed good patience and vision finding a crease, kept his pads low and square and ran with power. Utah State LB Bobby Wagner: Made two athletic plays when the ball was in the air getting off the ground to make a pick and then leaping to deflect a pass in the red zone that had TD written all over it; also showed some toughness inside as he did a nice job shedding blockers, finding the ball and wrapping up runners; in the end led all tacklers with 7 stops including one for loss. Vanderbilt CB Casey Hayward: Saturday’s game was not a great show case for the defensive backs few of whom had good days. The one exception was Vandy’s Hayward who was sticky in coverage all afternoon as he did a nice job reading and anticipating routes and consistently broke well on the ball and was rewarded with a pick in the end zone; may have even fooled the referees as he was called for two pass interference penalties, but both looked like just great coverage. Michigan DT Mike Martin: Was just a tough guy to block inside as he played low and was always moving and spinning. Washington DT Alameda Ta’amu. The jury is still out as to whether this guy can generate a consistent pass rush at the next level, but Saturday he was getting into gaps and powering up field; also showed a nice motor and ran down a couple of plays and made a nice read to blow up a screen pass. Illinois G/T Jeff Allen: Late addition to the roster (which partially explains the geographic issue of how Illinois ended up in the south), but opened some eyes once he arrived in Mobile and was very consistent in the game. Played with a solid base, moved his feet and showed a nice ability to change direction and re-anchor. Wisconsin OG Kevin Zeitler appeared to struggle at times earlier in the week, but had a solid game as he was very light on his feet, displayed a solid base and was technically sound getting good arm extension as he spent the afternoon mirroring frustrated South DTs at the line of scrimmage. Tennessee DE Malik Jackson: Another late game addition who really took advantage of the opportunity; Jackson showed a quick first step, an effective punch and a nice swim move. That fact that he could both bull-rush as well as force his away around people had opposing OTs really off-balance and unsure of what was coming.<> Alabama TE Brad Smelley: Doesn’t impress physically and isn’t a dominating drive blocker, but was effective all afternoon sealing defenders off from the ball. Played hard to the whistle. Also made a nice catch of an under thrown ball. |
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#172 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 513
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Thanked 57 Times in 48 Posts
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One guy who could be a tough call if he fell to 19 is the Stanford OG, David DeCastro.
Yes, he is a G, who you usually don't draft that high and who we have several decent ones of already. He is also the consensus best interior OL in the entire draft, one of the highest rated players at any position (8.5 grade which is almost unheard of), and more than one scout has identified him as being not just an NFL-ready starer from Day One, but a Pro Bowler. He has been compared favorably to Steve Hutchinson coming out and we all know how good he turned out to be. |
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#173 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 513
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Thanked 57 Times in 48 Posts
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LEFT TACKLES-Projected PICK
Ranked in order of how they should be picked. i.e.: Alex Hoffman (373) should be off the boards and be a F.A., never drafted. 1 (2) USC Matt Kalil Jr 6'6" 295 2 (7) Iowa Riley Reiff Jr 6'6" 300 3 (18) Ohio State Mike Adams Sr 6'6" 320 4 (20) Stanford Jonathan Martin Jr 6'6" 305 5 (48) Florida State Zebrie Sanders Sr 6'5" 307 6 (61) Auburn Brandon Mosley Sr 6'5" 305 7 (62) Oklahoma State Levy Adcock Sr 6'5" 322 8 (62) Florida State Andrew Datko Sr 6'6" 321 9 (98) Boise State Nate Potter Sr 6'6" 298 10 (110) UAB Matt McCants Sr 6'6" 295 11 (111) Utah Tony Bergstrom Sr 6'5" 315 12 (123) Clemson Landon Walker Sr 6'5" 302 13 (124) California Mitchell Schwartz Sr 6'5" 324 14 (128) South Dakota Tom Compton Sr 6'6" 312 15 (145) Illinois Jeff Allen Sr 6'5" 315 16 (172) Iowa Markus Zucevics Sr 6'5" 294 17 (180) BYU Matt Reynolds Sr 6'4" 305 18 (181) Mississippi State James Carmon Sr 6'7" 330 19 (222) Columbia Jeff Adams Sr 6'6" 305 20 (223) Troy James Brown Sr 6'4" 312 21 (248) Mississippi Bradley Sowell Sr 6'7" 315 22 (297) Oklahoma Donald Stephenson Sr 6'5" 307 23 (373) Cincinnati Alex Hoffman Sr 6'6" 296 Last edited by JackieJokeMan; 02-04-2012 at 12:02 AM. |
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#174 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
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I think if we sign FA WR Bowe and OG Nicks we can draft CB Dre Kirkpatrick or DE/OLB Ingram in Rd1 then get WR Quick in Rd2 then maybe C from OSU just my Mexican peso 's worth!
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#175 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
Wouldnt it be a pisser if he decided to keep Hanie and make him into somthing? |
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#176 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
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Bates was out of the league last season, but he worked well with Cutler as an assistant for three years in Denver. In Chicago, he will serve under new offensive coordinator Mike Tice.
Cutler had a strained relationship with former Bears offensive coordinator Ron Turner during their lone season together in 2009 and took a beating at times the past two seasons in Mike Martz's system. But in Denver, Bates played a key role in Cutler's development. "His history with Jay was a big thing," coach Lovie Smith told the teams official website "And not just history with Jay but a good history, a productive history with him helping Jay as a quarterback." Cutler said the Bears hired the right man. "He was very vital in my growth and my experience as a quarterback (in Denver)," Cutler told the team's website. "The last couple years he had full control of my development and our plays coming in. He's a grinder. He's a guy that's going to work extremely hard to find weaknesses in defenses and he's going to be able to present it to us in a way that we understand and will be able to make plays where we can take advantage of those weaknesses." Cutler enjoyed some his most productive seasons working with from 2006 to 2008 in Denver. He threw for a franchise-record 4,526 yards in 2008 and made the Pro Bowl. Bates was assistant head coach of the offense and quarterbacks coach at Southern California in 2009. He left with coach Pete Carroll to become Seattle's offensive coordinator but was fired after the 2010 season. Bates, who also has been an assistant with Tampa Bay (2002-04) and the New York Jets (2005), interviewed with Smith in Tampa last week. He then met with Tice at the team's headquarters. The Bears also interviewed former Tampa Bay offensive coordinator Greg Olson. |
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#177 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 513
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Thanked 57 Times in 48 Posts
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Stanford junior offensive tackle Jonathan Martin said he will enter the 2012 NFL Draft.
"I have decided to forgo my final year of eligibility and enter the NFL draft," Martin tweeted. "Thank you to everyone who has loved and supported me." Martin is the No. 3-rated offensive tackle eligible for April's draft, Behind only fellow juniors Matt Kalil from Southern California and Iowa's Riley Reiff. At 6-feet-6 and 305 pounds, Martin is known for his athleticism and considered a good fit for a zone-blocking scheme. He was quarterback Andrew Luck's blind-side protector and has the skills to remain on the left side in the NFL. Luck and guard David DeCastro announced before the Fiesta Bowl that they intend to leave the Cardinal a year early for the NFL as well. Now we get into the meat and potaos of THE CHICAGO BEARS ... and we dont know where the fuck this is going yet. THE QUESTION : Is Emery a trade up or trade down kind of guy? |
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#178 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 305
Thanks: 118
Thanked 43 Times in 40 Posts
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I would be ecstatic if we signed FA's Bell, Seville, VJ & Manningham! Then the draft I would want Dre or Kechly in 1st rd then ...I woke up screaming and found out JA bout the Bears! B
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#179 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 513
Thanks: 221
Thanked 57 Times in 48 Posts
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Quote:
I know that Frisco is west coast but it stands to reason in the playoffs we are going to be bumping heads with them fucks. We better outperform them at WR. I think thats how football teams win games. Ask Jerry Rice. |
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#180 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 513
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Thanked 57 Times in 48 Posts
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SAFETYS
Mark Barron, SS, Alabama Height: 6-2. Weight: 215. Projected 40 Time: 4.61. Projected Round (2011): 1-2. 2011??? Robert Lester*, S, Alabama Height: 6-2. Weight: 210. Projected 40 Time: 4.51. Projected Round (2012): 2. Bacarri Rambo*, S, Georgia Height: 6-0. Weight: 218. Projected 40 Time: 4.57. Projected Round (2012): 2. Markelle Martin, S, Oklahoma State Height: 6-1. Weight: 203. Projected 40 Time: 4.58. Arm: 31 1/8. Hand: 8 1/2. Projected Round (2012): 2-3. Winston Guy Jr., S, Kentucky Height: 6-1. Weight: 210. Projected 40 Time: 4.49. Projected Round (2012): 3-4. Trumaine Johnson, FS/CB, Montana Height: 6-2. Weight: 197. Projected 40 Time: 4.54. Projected Round (2012): 3-4. Brandon Taylor, FS, LSU Height: 5-11. Weight: 202. Projected 40 Time: 4.51. Arm: 31 1/2. Hand: 9 1/8. Projected Round (2012): 3-4. Trenton Robinson, FS, Michigan State Height: 5-10. Weight: 193. Projected 40 Time: 4.53. Arm: 33 1/8. Hand: 9 3/4. Projected Round (2012): 3-4. Neiko Thorpe, FS, Auburn Height: 6-3. Weight: 191. Projected 40 Time: 4.52. Projected Round (2012): 3-4. Delano Howell, SS, Stanford Height: 5-11. Weight: 198. Projected 40 Time: 4.53. Projected Round (2012): 4-5. Eddie Whitley, FS, Virginia Tech Height: 6-1. Weight: 190. Projected 40 Time: 4.42. Projected Round (2012): 4-5. Aaron Henry, FS, Wisconsin Height: 6-0. Weight: 205. Projected 40 Time: 4.48. Projected Round (2012): 4-5. Tavon Wilson, SS, Illinois Height: 6-0. Weight: 205. Projected 40 Time: 4.51. Projected Round (2012): 4-5. Tony Dye, SS, UCLA Height: 5-11. Weight: 204. Projected 40 Time: 4.50. Projected Round (2012): 4-5. Blake Gideon, FS, Texas Height: 6-1. Weight: 200. Projected 40 Time: 4.54. Projected Round (2012): 4-5. Harrison Smith, S, Notre Dame Height: 6-2. Weight: 212. Projected 40 Time: 4.61. Arm: 31 1/8. Hand: 10 1/8. Projected Round (2012): 4-6. Rashard Hall*, FS, Clemson Height: 6-2. Weight: 195. Projected 40 Time: 4.48. Projected Round (2012): 5-6. Jerrell Young, FS, South Florida Height: 6-1. Weight: 205. Projected 40 Time: 4.53. Projected Round (2012): 5-6. Lance Mitchell, S, Oregon State Height: 6-2. Weight: 205. Projected 40 Time: 4.60. Projected Round (2012): 5-6. George Iloka, S, Boise State Height: 6-4. Weight: 222. Projected 40 Time: 4.58. Arm: 33 7/8. Hand: 9 5/8. Projected Round (2012): 6-7. Ok so its not that hell of a strong safety class ... we may have to pick a bone out of that bunch somwhere. |
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