Jones was the steal of the draft. 49ers will regret passing up on mac daddy. I like barmore hopefully he can cause disruption on the line.
will Jones make the bears regret trading up for fields?
Jones was the steal of the draft. 49ers will regret passing up on mac daddy. I like barmore hopefully he can cause disruption on the line.
will Jones make the bears regret trading up for fields?
will Jones make the bears regret trading up for fields?
Perhaps Sherman will beat out Herron; perhaps not.if I were a GM, I would move up and down the draft board to pick right after the Raiders. Those picks are statistically more likely to be HoF players.
I liked the draft top to bottom. I seem to be alone in thinking that the Sherman pick was solid. I don’t think he will be a starter but they will probably keep him as depth.
I liked our draft strategy this season. We didn’t get a defensive back reach in the second round. there were players I knew we’re actually good in college. I don’t know McGrone at all or the 7th round flyer, but the others are players that I noticed or heard good things about
Lol, I was just saying in another thread how bad the Raiders have been drafting since Gruden and Mayok have been there.if I were a GM, I would move up and down the draft board to pick right after the Raiders. Those picks are statistically more likely to be HoF players.
Nice article in The Athletic on McGrone. Patriots’ Cam McGrone has battled back from injury before. Can he do it again now at an NFL level?
Good combo of athleticism, football instincts, discipline, focus, and smarts. Some pieces:
He was also incredibly intelligent. After Bush turned pro, McGrone wasn’t afraid to assert himself with the coaches as a sophomore.
“He loves football,” Brown said. “You better have your **** together when you go in that meeting room because he’s going to have a couple good questions for you. He keeps you on your toes. That’s probably the thing I like about him the most.”
“He was so glued into what we did defensively that he was almost an extension of coach Brown on the installs and understanding the defense,” Jean-Mary said. “He was super, super smart and understood the defense as well as some coaches.”
At 6 feet and 235 pounds with 4.4 speed, McGrone displayed similar sideline-to-sideline ability as Bush. Brown, who coached Matt Milano at Boston College, compared McGrone to the current Buffalo Bills linebacker in terms of his penchant to target the ball off the snap.
McGrone was cerebral enough to diagnose conflicted runs – against the spread with zone reads, quarterback keepers and the like – while working off pulling linebackers and avoiding getting caught on pass options. He was capable in coverage because of his speed, and Brown called McGrone a prototypical modern-day linebacker due to that collection of traits.
“He is a legit player,” Brown said. “Just watch him run. It’s impressive. That’s the definer. His athleticism just jumped off the screen.”
McGrone was a leader in practice, too. Every rep mattered, his or otherwise. When a particular defender kept jumping offside in one period, McGrone lit him up to ensure everyone was mentally on task.
Then on Saturdays, he took over in games against Notre Dame, Iowa, Penn State and Illinois, and Brown got him going in blitz packages to deploy that athleticism. McGrone finished the season with 65 tackles, nine for loss, 3.5 sacks, one forced fumble and a pass breakup.
“Cam is flying,” Ross exclaimed. “Cam is fast as ****. He’s fast. Seriously, he’s fast.
Yeah, if he can stay consistently..STEALNice article in The Athletic on McGrone. Patriots’ Cam McGrone has battled back from injury before. Can he do it again now at an NFL level?
Good combo of athleticism, football instincts, discipline, focus, and smarts. Some pieces:
He was also incredibly intelligent. After Bush turned pro, McGrone wasn’t afraid to assert himself with the coaches as a sophomore.
“He loves football,” Brown said. “You better have your **** together when you go in that meeting room because he’s going to have a couple good questions for you. He keeps you on your toes. That’s probably the thing I like about him the most.”
“He was so glued into what we did defensively that he was almost an extension of coach Brown on the installs and understanding the defense,” Jean-Mary said. “He was super, super smart and understood the defense as well as some coaches.”
At 6 feet and 235 pounds with 4.4 speed, McGrone displayed similar sideline-to-sideline ability as Bush. Brown, who coached Matt Milano at Boston College, compared McGrone to the current Buffalo Bills linebacker in terms of his penchant to target the ball off the snap.
McGrone was cerebral enough to diagnose conflicted runs – against the spread with zone reads, quarterback keepers and the like – while working off pulling linebackers and avoiding getting caught on pass options. He was capable in coverage because of his speed, and Brown called McGrone a prototypical modern-day linebacker due to that collection of traits.
“He is a legit player,” Brown said. “Just watch him run. It’s impressive. That’s the definer. His athleticism just jumped off the screen.”
McGrone was a leader in practice, too. Every rep mattered, his or otherwise. When a particular defender kept jumping offside in one period, McGrone lit him up to ensure everyone was mentally on task.
Then on Saturdays, he took over in games against Notre Dame, Iowa, Penn State and Illinois, and Brown got him going in blitz packages to deploy that athleticism. McGrone finished the season with 65 tackles, nine for loss, 3.5 sacks, one forced fumble and a pass breakup.
“Cam is flying,” Ross exclaimed. “Cam is fast as ****. He’s fast. Seriously, he’s fast.
Agree that is why he is a 5th rounder, not a 2nd. Big difference - Barmore in the 2nd, McGrone in the 5th.Yeah, if he can stay consistently..STEAL
Consistent with typical BB drafting (i.e. Gronk) of swinging for the fences on post-first round with injury risk players.Agree that is why he is a 5th rounder, not a 2nd. Big difference - Barmore in the 2nd, McGrone in the 5th.
Yeah, if he can stay consistently...STEAL
The fact that he quickly recovered from his first ACL, on the other knee, and then actually improved his speed #'s, provides some optimism there.
The other injury seems to be routine, not an indication of prone-ness.
??What does the Patriot Draft have to do with being a butcher?B*tchers will be b*tchers. That’s the way this forum works for the perennial ones who scare away insightful posters and kill the collective IQ here. Yet somehow.. none of them in this thread have offered pick by pick insight on what supposed can’t miss guys they “should” have drafted instead during the middle and later rounds.