Guys, I'd like someone to go over Ra'Shede Hageman with a fine toothed comb. Maybe you glanced at him before. But right now with the Wilfork situation and with the fact that we have Revis in the fold, I believe that DL need escalates even further than before. The other guy I considered was Tuitt, but most mocks have him as an early 2nd round value.
So draftniks, look him over again and report back in, is Hageman worth our pick at #29 or should we trade down and get Tuitt or ASJ?
Hageman:
profile
Ra'Shede Hageman Draft Profile ? NFL.com
video
Ra'Shede Hageman - 2014 NFL Draft profile - YouTube
Tuitt:
profile
Stephon Tuitt Draft Profile ? NFL.com
injury risk?
2014 NFL Draft: Stephon Tuitt's Foot Fracture Explained - Battle Red Blog
I'm a huge Ra'Shede Hageman fan, he was my first binky of this draft season (along with Trey Millard). I would have no hesitation drafting him at 29 because even though he is a risk, he is raw and has bust potential, we simply don't get a chance to draft players with his potential at the end of the 1st round very often. I have no doubt he has the highest ceiling of any defensive player in this draft not named Jadaveon Clowney.
He is certainly raw, but when you look at his background its easy to understand why. He was recruited as a TE, moved to DE early on at Minnesota and has only been playing DT for 3 years. But that doesn't begin to tell half of his story.
If it wasn't for Michael Oher they would be making a movie about Ra'Shede Hageman. While they have similar stories, Hageman has arguably faced even more challenges trying to make it not just in the NFL, make make something out of his life. John Rosengren had a great piece about him in November chronicling Hageman's childhood and path to the NFL. It really gives great insight into his troubled childhood, issues and anger growing up, learning disabilities and obstacles he has had to overcome.
Ra?Shede?s Road: The improbable path that took Ra?Shede Hageman from foster child to a top NFL prospect - SBNation.com
While looking at his background may bring up some red flags for him as a prospect, understanding his past gives me more confidence that New England is the perfect environment for him to thrive. He has a history of anger issues and learning disabilities, but he has also show that he will work hard to get where he needs to be to achieve his goals. He responded well to the tough, structured environment coach Kill implemented for him, likely a similar one he would see in New England. I think putting him in a professional environment with guidance, professional coaching and a single focus could really give him a chance to flourish. Having him focus on only football instead of all of the other issues he has had to face in his life could quickly take him from the raw, physical specimen to the elite, disruptive force his potential suggests he could be.
I'm no expert by any means but I'll give you my impressions of Hageman after watching him. He's a guy you would draft at 29 based on upside not current production. With work he has the potential to be a game changing defensive lineman.
However his best position may be as a 3-4 DE. He makes impact plays, mostly against the pass. He has surprising athleticism for a guy his size. Has a good burst and is quick off the line. However, he's inconsistent, goes missing for long stretches of plays at times. He also gets washed out against the run quite often and plays too high. I'd worry about plugging him in at DT straight away and he's certainly no Wilfork replacement.
I understand he also didn't play all the time for Minnesota so may have conditioing issues?
With some work in the Pats system he could be a beast, think in the Mo Wilkerson mould. Someone's probably going to take him in the 1st round, not sure its us though.
I completely agree that you would draft him on upside because we just don't get a chance to draft guys with this kind of potential. I think Mo Wilkerson is a great comparison for the type of player he could be and its one I've used before. He can play anywhere along the defensive line in any scheme and offer amazing versatility.
He certainly has some technique and consistency issues he has to work on. Fortunately I think these are things that are fixable with good coaching, and like I said above I think he could develop quickly in an environment like New England. You just can't teach 6'6" 315lbs with great athleticism and freakish explosion. I think Tommy Kelly would be a perfect guy for him to learn from here, not only how to be a great defensive tackle, but how to be a professional.
The conditioning thing is somewhat of a concern but I also think its something that has been a bit overblown. Minnesota substitutes their defensive lineman a lot, whether its Hageman or anyone else. I think some people mistake that for him having a lack of conditioning and not being able to play hard. He also faced constant double teams and there is only so much a DT can do in that situation. In the end as fans we only have a limited amount of information to go off. From what we know about Hageman I would be willing to take a chance on him at #29 because as you said, he has the potential to be a game changer on the defensive line.