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Is Legette going to take football serious or just enjoy being a meme?


TheBigKat
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First year wide receiver. How about we let the young man develop. Once upon a time, Randy Moss was just some dude with a heavy accent that could catch a ball. (Okay, you might have to go back to his Marshall days but...).

Let XL get a couple of seasons under his belt before we label him, okay?

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12 hours ago, Carolina Cajun said:

Goes way too overlooked because people just go "Good player good"....IT. IS. ABOUT. SYSTEM! The amount of times that people have seen a good player go to a different team and look like ass is astounding.  The reason is its about getting players that match the system you're running.  Cam was a god damned monster, but as we saw when we tried running a pocket passing west coast with him, it DIDNT go well.  Do I think McConkey could have been good here, sure, but he's a Receiver in the style of Thielan.  Look at the offenses that Canales has been associated with (And idzik for that matter), Seattle with DK Metcalf, and Tampa with Mike Evans as the big bodied outside guy as the X.  We did not have one of those on the roster.  We drafted XL to eventually become that.  Its simply the system calls for it.  Its not always about just getting the most talented player, its about talent matching what we are trying to accomplish.  Will he live up to it?  Dunno, but itd be like saying "I was shopping for a truck" and even if you got a regular truck people are like "You could have had this way cooler car"...we werent shopping for a car though.

Ladd would 100% have been a better fit here.  

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10 hours ago, flagfootballcoach28 said:

I’m not the guy you’re responding to, but Xavier Legette is not a serious person. He’s the guy who thinks you’re laughing with him but everyone is actually laughing at him. No, he doesn’t have to live in the facility, but he should start with trying not to embarrass himself and the franchise on a regular basis.
 

Also, catch the damn ball. 

In interviews, it seems clear he knows people are laughing at him and his accent. He could ignore it, get offended by it, or laugh along with it. I appreciate that he chooses the latter.
 

Would you choose to be offended?

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Legette is who he is, they knew this before they drafted him. Many panthers fans were upset that Cam spent a ton of his off time at strip clubs smoking cigars but the difference was he delivered on Sunday most of the time. Legette just needs to improve next year (he was a rookie after all) and he will be fine. I couldn’t care less if he’s eating small game meat for fun, as long as he’s making catches. 

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These threads are beyond stupid. You have no idea what his work ethic is and by all accounts he has great work ethic. These guys are allowed to have lives outside of football. You probably poo post here while at work, right? Are you taking your job seriously? 
 

do better bro. 

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1 hour ago, jasonluckydog said:

I have eaten hundreds of squirrels and never got sick. Im sure some of you here have eaten off of thousands of cows and probably have gotten sick. Wild animals don't have any chemicals out into their feed. Squirrels eat nuts, berries and occasionally each other I just learned. Very healthy. 

Depending on where you live, squirrels are exposed to a range of chemicals, and they tend to have high loads of pathogens and other diseases (like most wild animals do).  But as long as you're preparing them right, meh, whatever. 

I don't care what XL does with his off season as long as next year it's clear he has improved.

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Sure, the FO was impressed by X's one-year feats during his senior season at South Carolina, but it was the NFL god, RAS (a.k.a. Raw Athletic Score), that had Dave Canales's and Dan Morgan's jaws dropping in amazement at the sight of X running around in underwear at the Combine...   "At 6-foot-3 and over 220 pounds, Legette brought rare athletic upside to the position. His breakout season at South Carolina showed flashes of dominance that NFL teams dream of. Projecting forward, many scouts compared his physical profile to D.K. Metcalf, and the Panthers clearly believed they could develop him into a true wide receiver 1 over time. The issue was never his talent. The issue was the timeline. Just a few picks later, the Chargers selected Ladd McConkey, a receiver who may have lacked Xavier Legette’s physical ceiling but entered the league far more technically refined. 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Eager seems to have helped the Panthers FO fine-tune their analytical progress, and, at least on paper, they acquired players with a lot of value during the last draft in regards to actually (what I'll refer to as) "underdrafting" talent relative to their position with value already built in.  Look at Chris Brazzell: He may be more of the quintessential project receiver who was arguably more or less just as raw as Legette was when he was drafted, and with a relatively high RAS as well. The notable difference is value, as Brazzell was a round three pick and Legette was a first rounder.    "Unlike the Xavier Legette situation, Carolina’s environment for Brazzell is completely different. "The Panthers are not asking a raw receiver prospect to stabilize this offense for Bryce Young. "Brazzell enters a much healthier developmental situation with far less pressure. With Tetairoa McMillan established as the primary target and Jalen Coker continuing to settle as the number 2 option...Xavier Legette, Metchie III, and Jimmy Horn Jr. are also still in this rotation, fighting for reps. "It gives Carolina something they failed to give Legette when they drafted him: A developmental runway. "Xavier Legette entered the league with expectations attached to a first-round pick and an offense desperate for answers. Brazzell enters a room where he can spend a year working on his route running, learning the playbook, and earning snaps gradually rather than being asked to become part of Bryce Young’s solution immediately. "And truthfully, Brazzell needs that time coming out of college. Despite his elite physical tools, many evaluators have several concerns about his overall polish as a receiver. "His route tree at Tennessee was viewed as fairly limited due to the type of offense that they run. The receivers are expected to run a lot of choice routes, which are dictated by the placement of the defenders. It doesn’t require technical route-running and an understanding of the playbook needed at the NFL level...   "Context changes significantly when expectations change. "The Panthers are not depending on Brazzell to save the offense. They can allow him to develop slowly, expand his route tree, improve his technical refinement, and learn behind a much more stable receiver room... "Traits become much easier to bet on when patience is built into the plan."   It's all about understanding your situation. I don't agree that it's an inherently difficult choice like the author is suggesting in the following excerpt. At the very least, I think that it should be easier as long as all parties involved stay levelheaded and true to their process.    "That is what makes these draft decisions so difficult. "Every front office believes it can find the next Metcalf, Owens, or Marshall. Sometimes they do. More often, they are betting on a development path that may take years to complete. "The challenge is understanding what your offense needs right now. "If a team has patience, stability, and a quarterback capable of carrying the offense while a receiver develops, betting on traits can make sense. But if a young quarterback needs immediate help, there is a strong argument for prioritizing the receiver who already knows how to separate, create throwing , and earn trust from day one. "That’s why the Xavier Legette-Ladd McConkey debate remains so fascinating. "It was never really a discussion about talent. It was a discussion about timing."   For me, Ladd McConkey was talented enough in his own right, that the gap--the upside--was never as big as people are suggesting between not only McConkey and Legette, but McConkey and other receivers drafted in the first round during that draft. 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