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Kelvin Benjamin interview on WFNZ


MHS831

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No kidding. Adding somne TE who will split reps with our other good TE is not the approach to take.

We need another weapon on the perimeter. Smith still has worth but could be vicious from the slot and Ginn in that same position is up and down.

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LOLOLOLOLOLOL.

http://www.rotoworld.com/artic...k-wr-metrics-20

 

How Are Their Hands?

 

Here are the drop rates for each of the WRs. I defined drops as balls that were easy receptions and likely bounced off the hands of a WR, not passes that a WR ‘could have caught’ with an acrobatic play.

 

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- There’s not a whole lot of bad to see in this group. Anything below 6 or 7% is just about normal for NCAA wide receivers.

 

- The biggest player to watch out for here is Jordan Matthews who has a slightly above-average drop rate of 7.69%. There were a few 50/50 drops that I hedged on Matthews’ side for. He could realistically be anywhere between 7-11%. If you’re watching Matthews intently, keep an eye on his hands.

 

- I only have 2 dropped balls for Landry all season, that’s incredible.

 

 

 

Where Did They Catch the Ball?

 

The table below represents the percentage of catches in each zone, it is color-coded so that an above-average number of receptions is greener and a below-average number is redder.

 

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- You can’t get more average in terms of receptions than Brandin Cooks.  Aside from some slight variation, Cooks has a strong distribution across all the zones showing that he isn’t a one trick pony.

 

Jordan Matthews’ map of completions is very similar to that of Sammy Watkins. They both caught around 50% of their receptions behind the line of scrimmage with limited experience downfield. Whereas the average WR caught 35% of their passes deeper than 10 yards, Matthews only caught approximately 24%

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Incredible potential. Big game experience. Good producer. Has so far demonstrated good character. Would have the best position coach in the game along with a HoF mentor.

I don't understand the "DO NOT WANT" sentiment.

Stop being scared of greatness. BPA doesn't mean "Safest Player Avaliable." It's okay to take a chance.

 

The other thing is: You're not going to get a receiver that big, who's going to/supposed to be that good at # 28 (as someone said after your post), with out any question marks. Otherwise, he'd be drafted in the top 5. 

 

This is where the good GM's, organizations make their names (or get lucky). 

 

Many times the best players that we say "WTFug happened, why were they were drafted so low"; were because of questions, suspicions or misconceptions about them in the first place. "Only if they knew". But the NFL doesn't re-do drafts. Lol. Duh indeed!

 

And we'll see about Benjamin, and/or any one else with the Panthers soon enough?

 

Now, I'll finish reading through the thread (from page 2). Lol

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If kevin has a good combine/pro-day hes a top 26 near lock, if he has a SUPERSTAR one....... top 10 isnt out of the question. shaky, hit and miss, drop passes, alittle slow, well panthers have a shot. 

 

If he runs a 4.39, well thats worth millions. stupid as it may be combine/pro-days have the most effect on WRs. old saying all it takes is ONE team to fall in love.

 

My question is whats ricky proehls' true opinion of his game and potential?  my guess he will have a great pro day with a couple mehs and someone in the top 20 will draft him. All of his numbers(height, 40 time etc etc) along the upside he has, well thats what teams spend early draft picks on in a passing league.

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