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!

     

Tetairoa McMillan


micnificent28
 Share

Recommended Posts

17 minutes ago, LinvilleGorge said:

Poor QB play and obviously being by far and away his team's offensive #1 threat definitely meant good opposing defenses could dedicate a lot of resources towards him.

Honestly, I'm not even stumping for drafting the guy. I'm just saying he's a significantly better prospect than the Drake London comp. If you want to say he's lesser than Mike Williams, I'm cool with that. Honestly, yeah I'd have him ranked below him as a prospect myself. I just think he's closer to Williams as a prospect than London.

Thank you

People can say what they want about him as a prospect, opinions vary and I take no issue with that.  It's when people ignore things like this when talking about statistics that get to me.

Arizona's leading recieving yards this year after T-Mac were... 323, 245, 217, 196, 196, 172, and 109 with 2 of the 3 guys over 200 yards being a TE and RB as is.

Texas A&M's other leading receiving yards in Evans final year... 818, 658, 626, 240, and 210, with all 5 of them being WRs to take defensive attention away from Evans.

There was not only zero fear by other teams about the other weapons, they straight up dared Arizona to beat them by leaving them open to double and triple team T-Mac constantly.  And even then, those players, the QB, and play calling was so poor that they not only couldn't take advantage of that, but T-Mac was still good enough to finish 4th in the nation in yards (prior to bowl games) and I think only fell one or two spots if you just entirely removed his 300 yard game anyways.

Edited by tukafan21
  • Pie 1
  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

55 minutes ago, jfra78 said:

I don't care what his 40 says, he looks slow when he plays and Evans doesn't 

Oh yea, I also forgot about this one I posted a few days ago.

If Evans plays fast but T-Mac doesn't, why is the fastest Evans' has been clocked at in a game 20.6 MPH while T-Mac has been clocked at 21.8 MPH?

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

45 minutes ago, jfra78 said:

Broken plays and bad coverage vs weak opponents

Burden played against a handful of weak opponents too. I don’t see him going for 300+. T-Mac just has the “it” factor. It’s hard to explain. I felt the exact opposite about XL last draft and it’s turning out to be true. 

Edited by flagfootballcoach28
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, jfra78 said:

Broken plays and bad coverage vs weak opponents

That was honestly a big part of Mike Williams' gaudy stats his final year. Johnny Football back there doing Johnny Football things running around like a madman extending plays and turning practically every passing play into a scramble drill. Good luck covering Mike Williams with college DBs in that situation.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, LinvilleGorge said:

That was honestly a big part of Mike Williams' gaudy stats his final year. Johnny Football back there doing Johnny Football things running around like a madman extending plays and turning practically every passing play into a scramble drill. Good luck covering Mike Williams with college DBs in that situation.

First, you keep saying Mike Williams... you mean Evans, lol

But second, if this is true, it would be really ironic given T-Mac also excelled on making plays on the scramble drill with his QB as they've played together since 8th grade, they do that well together.

The difference is those plays generally didn't end up in much YAC for T-Mac, as he was either coming back to the ball to find a hole in the traffic to make the catch and go down for the first, or they were throws towards the sideline where he was making the play while just keeping his feet in bounds.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Verge said:

Carter 
Hunter 
Graham 
Walker 
Johnson 

I would like to know if Walker is going to market himself as an edge or hybrid ILB? It is easy to say Micah Parsons and move on, but we are talking Evero here--has anyone heard anything or are we assuming Walker is a LB who can move to edge etc. like MP?  It is hard to give him value if we don't really know where he will play--he is small for an edge, imo, but that is his best spot--any opinions?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, MHS831 said:

I would like to know if Walker is going to market himself as an edge or hybrid ILB? It is easy to say Micah Parsons and move on, but we are talking Evero here--has anyone heard anything or are we assuming Walker is a LB who can move to edge etc. like MP?  It is hard to give him value if we don't really know where he will play--he is small for an edge, imo, but that is his best spot--any opinions?

I don't see him as elite. Very good but not elite. If we're taking him to play edge I'd rather Pearce Jnr or Green 

  • Pie 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

38 minutes ago, Aussie Tank said:

I don't see him as elite. Very good but not elite. If we're taking him to play edge I'd rather Pearce Jnr or Green 

I can always count on you being up, Aussie, when nobody else is here!!  Yeah, that is my problem--a tweener for a first round pick and a system that may not know how to use him. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, Aussie Tank said:

I don't see him as elite. Very good but not elite. If we're taking him to play edge I'd rather Pearce Jnr or Green 

 

1 minute ago, MHS831 said:

I can always count on you being up, Aussie, when nobody else is here!!  Yeah, that is my problem--a tweener for a first round pick and a system that may not know how to use him. 

I agree with both these takes.. walker doesn't have the production nor the solidified position to be talked about as a blue chip prospect in this draft. He's a very good player.. but elite? Why? Where?

  • Pie 1
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

    • Here is how Morgan is strategic-He re-signs Scott because he was not going S in round 1--he had the chance, and he did not.  He saw the top of the draft at T and knew none of them would be ready to start day 1, so he signs a veteran to a one-year deal, giving his tackle selection a chance to learn and prepare for what might be LT or RT.  Those two moves suggested, perhaps ironically because they contradict each other, what he was going to do, based on the talent pool.  He never brought in a Robinson replacement at DE/NT, and then moves up to draft one.   I almost wonder if the intent was to draft DT/DE all along at some point, maybe with a trade back, but then Freeling dropped to them.   Of course, we felt that they were looking WR, and wonder if the plan was to draft a WR in round 2 if you traded back in round 1.  However, when Freeling was there, the trade back fell apart.  Then we traded up for Hunter.  We could stick with XL and hope Metchie steps up, so we sat still in round three and took Brazell II, a 1000 yard speedster and perfect Z WR.  What a break. At that time, CB and Center were our biggest needs, and with several possible centers on the board and a good fit for our defense at CB, we grabbed Will Lee III.  Lee and Thornton have people in front of them, but I think Morgan knew we needed a guy who can play the outside and press--and probably step in as Jackson's replacement in 2027.    After making trades to get back into the fifth round, where we grabbed one of the best centers in the draft.  This is significant because we signed Fortner to a one-year deal; maybe Morgan saw what some of us saw--the center position is strong in this draft--on day 3, and day 3 players need a year, in most cases.  Moments later, a safety they had been talking to whose skill set matched what we are looking for in a FS.  As stated, Scott was signed,  but the fact that the Panthers were talking to Wheatley and not Theiemann means that they might have known they were not going FS early, but would need a developmental FS later--which explains why we signed Scott.  So if you pay attention to the one-year, vet deals, you can tell where we planned to sign later-round, developmental players.  What positions did we draft early that did not have 1-year veterans signed in front of them:  DL (Hunter) and WR (I don't count Metchie because I count starting-level players). I would not be surprised to learn later that the plan was DT and WR in rounds 1 and 2--then Freeling fell.  Notice that Freeling--from Mt Pleasant SC, did not come in for a visit.  Most of the other OT candidates had short arms or were certain to be gone. I don't think Freeling was in their plans.  I think a trade back and Hunter and maybe Boston was the vision.  I am guessing that CB was also high on their list.   So in this draft, we got 
    • This is one area I think that is not getting enough exposure in the midst of all the optimism. I like Chuba a great deal from a personal standpoint but he has largely proven nothing on a consistent basis yet. He's had the one season of production but before that most people pegged us as moving on. And last year injuries or not he just did not have that juice. The rest of the guys are completely unproven. I don't see anyone among the group having a game or a handful of games worth of high level production the way Rico Dowdle did last year. And yeah he dropped off and yeah he got an attitude about our incompetent handling of the touches which was honestly justified on his part and he moved on but he did legitimately save our season. That's what it is going to take to seize control of the NFC South. We all know that we will not be passing all over defenses. It is what it is. So who amongst this RB group is capable of doing that? And if we are struggling to run the ball AND pass are we going to revert to making excuses for our coach and QB again? That is definitely getting old.
×
×
  • Create New...