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Hightower is the most physically imposing of the three, which makes sense since he has 15-20 pounds over the other guys. I don't think he has the range and covering skills that either of them had in their primes, but that's pretty much the inherent tradeoff and Hightower covers pretty well in his own right.
This is a tough one, I really dunno. Bruschi was one of the most instinctive players I've ever seen, so he kinda has to get an edge there, although it's hard to knock either Mayo or Hightower in that regard.
I think this is hard because all three are/were extremely versatile with no major flaws in their game. So you have to grade them on degrees of good rather than comparing the weaknesses that they basically didn't have. I think prime Bruschi is still #1 on the list for me, and I dunno who I'd take between Mayo and Hightower. There's a bit of variance in where they excelled, and Hightower's more likely to make a big play for you, but I'm also not sure that Hightower would get a chance to make many big plays if he was playing out his prime on the 2010-2012 defenses.
This is a tough one, I really dunno. Bruschi was one of the most instinctive players I've ever seen, so he kinda has to get an edge there, although it's hard to knock either Mayo or Hightower in that regard.
I think this is hard because all three are/were extremely versatile with no major flaws in their game. So you have to grade them on degrees of good rather than comparing the weaknesses that they basically didn't have. I think prime Bruschi is still #1 on the list for me, and I dunno who I'd take between Mayo and Hightower. There's a bit of variance in where they excelled, and Hightower's more likely to make a big play for you, but I'm also not sure that Hightower would get a chance to make many big plays if he was playing out his prime on the 2010-2012 defenses.












