Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

At number 6 the Carolina Panthers select...Charles Cross???


PanthersGOATFan336
 Share

Recommended Posts

6. Carolina Panthers: OT Charles Cross, Mississippi State

2322c78175d3fb4330c466199ca52081_crop_exact.jpg

How would the huddle feel about this pick I think we do this to set up a QB pick next year...

The Carolina Panthers don't have a solution at quarterback, yet they're staring down a draft class without a legitimate standout option at the position. 

The organization could reach for one if those within the front office and coaching staff believe in a certain prospect. Inevitably, some team is going to pull the trigger much sooner than expected because of the position's importance. 

In this case, the more prudent approach is building a better cockpit for whoever starts behind center in 2022. The Panthers chose to move forward with Cam Erving as their starting left tackle. Unsurprisingly, he didn't fare particularly well. Maybe Brady Christensen will move into the role full time, but a better option exists in Mississippi State's Charles Cross, who's the class' best pure pass blocker, with Christensen sliding inside to guard. 

"Cross should be in consideration for being the best tackle in the draft because of how technically proficient he is as a pass-blocker despite being extremely young and inexperienced," Thorn said. "With a rare level of refinement in his pass sets and hands, Cross uses outstanding balance, quickness and length to thrive on an island. This is exactly what the Panthers have been desperately in need of, and adding Cross would give them a high-, high-upside player who fills a major need.

"Cross is always under control as a run-blocker with the right demeanor and above-average play strength to be an asset there as well.

  • Pie 4
  • Beer 1
  • Flames 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

HEIGHT: 6'5"

WEIGHT: 310
 

POSITIVES

— Glides in his pass set with excellent range to get to his landmarks balanced and under control to frame up rushers.

— Plays with tremendous weight distribution and balance to consistently stay centered on defenders from snap to finish.

— Refined, potent hands to find the sweet spot on rushers to gain control of their frame while being nimble enough to reset and stay attached when needed.

— Alert on stunts to pass off penetrators and pick up loopers.

— Above-average play strength and uses his length well as a run-blocker to steer defenders off the spot with the placement to sustain at a high level.

NEGATIVES

— Can get broken down and opened up against rushers who use stutters to set up inside counters.

— Has gotten wide with his aiming points on the front side of outside zone to allow immediate post-snap movement to cross his face and get penetration.

— Doesn’t have a lot of reps as a run-blocker playing in the Air Raid system.

NOTES

— Former 5-star recruit and top prospect in the state of Mississippi.

— 22 career starts at left tackle.

— 2020 freshman All-SEC by the coaches.

— Will be 21 years old in Week 1 of the 2022 NFL season.
 

OVERALL

Charles Cross came to Mississippi State as a 5-star prospect and is a two year starter in Mike Leach’s Air Raid, zone-based run scheme with 22 starts at left tackle.

Cross has the rare combination of being an explosive and smooth mover with tremendous balance to consistently stay on his feet and in front of defenders. He uses expert-level hand placement to latch into the armpit area of defenders, with the dexterity to reset if his latch is broken.

GRADE: 8.6 (Impact Player - 1st Round)

OVERALL RANK: 11

POSITION RANK: OT3

PRO COMPARISON: Ryan Clady

  • Pie 6
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, PanthersGOATFan336 said:

I mean I just copied and pasted but I do think OT is the best way to go. Build the line then find QB not the other way around

If the panthers had done it the other way around last draft, if they had taken the QB presented to them despite it being deemed a “weak class,” the panthers would have the most important position on the field solidified and an open venue of top picks to select from

you could take a LT, you could also take a premiere edge rusher who can actually set the edge and not have to overpay Hassan reddick, or you could’ve taken the CB now

You never pass on a top QB prospects when you have a need a QB. You only delay your ability to properly assess where your roster is.

it would be great to be talking one of these guys-one of these “can’t miss” tackles will certainly be there past pick #12 or so-but you can’t keep doubling down on the same mistake.

 

it’s time to draft a QB.

Edited by Growl
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I hate seeing this. I'm not sure he was ever going to make it in the NFL without the injury but that injury knocked FSU out of the college football playoffs and cost him and them and opportunity on the biggest stage in college sports. The injuries are the worst part of this game.
    • I don't know what Texas A&M was doing with their edge rushers. They had two freaks in Scourton and Shemar Stewart and yet instead of turning them loose they asked them to play 20 lbs overweight and just set the edge. That's full-on coaching malpractice at any level. Much was made about Shemar Stewart's lack of sack production, but while he wasn't my favorite prospect this year a lot of that was clearly what they were asking him to do. The good news with Scourton is that, unlike Stewart, did manage to be a huge factor as a pass rusher despite this and despite playing 20 lbs overweight. If he can stay around 260-265 it should help him re-gain some of that explosiveness from his Purdue days.
    • I did, but again we're aware of the practice in college of inflating height/weight as well as what is considered normal and his freshman weight tells a lot. There was a recent Raw Room episode where at one point they were discussing putting on their "big boy weight" when they go to the pros. It's common for guys to have to slap on 20lbs over the summer, but King Dunlap mentioned having to put on 30 and how much of a toll that took on his body. That makes the idea of putting on 50 at the college level even harder to believe. I've got experience with cutting weight and that type of drop sounds just awful... and that's even if doing it healthy and not just turning yourself into a piece of human jerky. Having to add 50? Noooooo thank yoooou. I can understand wanting to take Scourton at face value, but we didn't take Bryce at face value either (and for good reason!). Give the recently posted videos a shot. I watched the one you linked even though I've already seen it, so why not extend the same courtesy? I think you'll find yourself getting more excited about his Purdue tape than you will being irritated by what you believe are false narratives being pushed. 😄
×
×
  • Create New...