DMN: Bob Sturm’s NFL draft series: Elite safety play critical, but this draft has only one who fits

jobberone

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Bob Sturm’s NFL draft series: Elite safety play critical, but this draft has only one who fits the bill
http://0.gravatar.com/avatar/286352bc9856fe9417829a62da61e5b9?s=52&d=http%3A%2F%2Fres.***BANNED-URL***%2Fresources%2Fimages%2FSD-logo-50.jpg%3Fs%3D52&r=G
Bob Sturm Follow @sportssturm Email sturm1310@me.com
Published: April 17, 2015 9:27 pm
http://cowboysblog.***BANNED-URL***/files/2015/04/SUGAR_BOWL_FOOTBALL_41506877.jpg
Alabama safety Landon Collins (AP Photo)

Each year, we see the value of elite safety play. Earl Thomas makes the Seattle defense as much as any player, following in the footsteps of Ed Reed, Troy Polamalu and Darren Woodson. The 2014 draft was the time to grab a safety. Seven safeties were taken in the first 100 selections. This year, however, the cupboard is quite bare with only one safety believed to be worthy of Rounds 1 and 2.

Spotlight player

Eric Rowe, Utah

Rowe projects as both a top corner and a top safety. Aside from his versatility, Rowe is clearly the type of defensive back who wants to hit and set a physical tone. He gets in the backfield and causes havoc, and with his size, speed and leaping, he is a formidable piece wherever teams wish to use him. Rowe excels more as a zone corner, but when he presses, his talent shines through. He had 250 tackles with the Utes. Many observers prefer him as a safety, but the Cowboys might like his corner skills as well. Doesn’t having a guy who can do both only add to his intrigue? He is confident and does not seem to be swayed by occasional poor play. He battles for the ball in the air. With 4.45 speed and the ability to help a team such as Dallas at both secondary spots and special teams, Rowe seems to be one of those players who can help in numerous ways early in his career until he grows into a regular.

Sturm’s top five

Click on the highlighted names for Bob Sturm’s individual analysis of players or here for his complete list of 2015 NFL draft profiles.

Rk., PlayerCollegeNoteworthy
1. Landon CollinsAlabama6-0228Clearly the best of a small class of prospects
2. Eric RoweUtah6-1205Corner/safety can do both well
3. Ifo Ekpre OlomuOregon5-9192Injured corner with free safety tools
4. James SampleLouisville6-2209Tackling machine with great motor
5. DeMarious RandallArizona State5-11196Combination of good/bad traits


The Best

Landon Collins, Alabama

Collins makes people who want him to be a cover safety nervous because of his range limitations. He is better than some say, but it is clear he would be best used the way Arizona used Deone Bucannon last year — an early-down safety, late-down linebacker. The positives outweigh the negatives, but teams should play to those strengths to get the most out of him. He is a ball hawk and a special teams star, as well as a play-making safety.

Sleeper

James Sample, Louisville

Sample played one year at Louisville and was not on any radar when last season began. But through several performances that demonstrated an ability to tackle in the open field, cover the middle of the field and in man situations, Sample has stolen the spotlight from Gerod Holliman, his fellow Louisville safety prospect. Sample is a tackling machine and a physical presence who has crept into the mix for Top 100 status.

Best of Texas

Chris Hackett, TCU

Hackett is another prospect out of Fort Worth who is appealing to NFL teams because of his approach to football. He is a highly productive player who is looking for the big moment to impact games, and he would often do just that in the Big 12. He blitzes, he hits and he finds interceptions, but questions about his judgment (he’s a bit reckless in center field) and reliability as a last line of defense are what has critics wondering about his upside.

http://cowboysblog.***BANNED-URL***...is-draft-has-only-one-who-fits-the-bill.html/

His series schedule is also in the article for those who follow.

Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Bryce Petty, QB, Baylor
  • Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Brett Hundley, QB, UCLA
  • Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Devin Smith, WR, Ohio State
  • Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Dorial Green-Beckham, WR, Missouri
 

reddyuta

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Rowe is one of my pet cats,he is on my list at guys who we will target at 27.
 

visionary

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If a top DL prospect like Dupree is not there and our scouts/coaches feel Rowe can start at FS sometime this season I would not blink of we took him at 27

Would prefer 60 but doubt he will be there
 

Oh_Canada

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Love's Sturm's stuff as usual, Sample is a nice player, he's a top three safety for me as well.
 

xwalker

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CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
Bob Sturm’s NFL draft series: Elite safety play critical, but this draft has only one who fits the bill
http://0.gravatar.com/avatar/286352bc9856fe9417829a62da61e5b9?s=52&d=http%3A%2F%2Fres.***BANNED-URL***%2Fresources%2Fimages%2FSD-logo-50.jpg%3Fs%3D52&r=G
Bob Sturm Follow @sportssturm Email sturm1310@me.com
Published: April 17, 2015 9:27 pm
http://cowboysblog.***BANNED-URL***/files/2015/04/SUGAR_BOWL_FOOTBALL_41506877.jpg
Alabama safety Landon Collins (AP Photo)

Each year, we see the value of elite safety play. Earl Thomas makes the Seattle defense as much as any player, following in the footsteps of Ed Reed, Troy Polamalu and Darren Woodson. The 2014 draft was the time to grab a safety. Seven safeties were taken in the first 100 selections. This year, however, the cupboard is quite bare with only one safety believed to be worthy of Rounds 1 and 2.

Spotlight player

Eric Rowe, Utah

Rowe projects as both a top corner and a top safety. Aside from his versatility, Rowe is clearly the type of defensive back who wants to hit and set a physical tone. He gets in the backfield and causes havoc, and with his size, speed and leaping, he is a formidable piece wherever teams wish to use him. Rowe excels more as a zone corner, but when he presses, his talent shines through. He had 250 tackles with the Utes. Many observers prefer him as a safety, but the Cowboys might like his corner skills as well. Doesn’t having a guy who can do both only add to his intrigue? He is confident and does not seem to be swayed by occasional poor play. He battles for the ball in the air. With 4.45 speed and the ability to help a team such as Dallas at both secondary spots and special teams, Rowe seems to be one of those players who can help in numerous ways early in his career until he grows into a regular.

Sturm’s top five

Click on the highlighted names for Bob Sturm’s individual analysis of players or here for his complete list of 2015 NFL draft profiles.

Rk., PlayerCollegeNoteworthy
1. Landon CollinsAlabama6-0228Clearly the best of a small class of prospects
2. Eric RoweUtah6-1205Corner/safety can do both well
3. Ifo Ekpre OlomuOregon5-9192Injured corner with free safety tools
4. James SampleLouisville6-2209Tackling machine with great motor
5. DeMarious RandallArizona State5-11196Combination of good/bad traits


The Best

Landon Collins, Alabama

Collins makes people who want him to be a cover safety nervous because of his range limitations. He is better than some say, but it is clear he would be best used the way Arizona used Deone Bucannon last year — an early-down safety, late-down linebacker. The positives outweigh the negatives, but teams should play to those strengths to get the most out of him. He is a ball hawk and a special teams star, as well as a play-making safety.

Sleeper

James Sample, Louisville

Sample played one year at Louisville and was not on any radar when last season began. But through several performances that demonstrated an ability to tackle in the open field, cover the middle of the field and in man situations, Sample has stolen the spotlight from Gerod Holliman, his fellow Louisville safety prospect. Sample is a tackling machine and a physical presence who has crept into the mix for Top 100 status.

Best of Texas

Chris Hackett, TCU

Hackett is another prospect out of Fort Worth who is appealing to NFL teams because of his approach to football. He is a highly productive player who is looking for the big moment to impact games, and he would often do just that in the Big 12. He blitzes, he hits and he finds interceptions, but questions about his judgment (he’s a bit reckless in center field) and reliability as a last line of defense are what has critics wondering about his upside.

http://cowboysblog.***BANNED-URL***...is-draft-has-only-one-who-fits-the-bill.html/

His series schedule is also in the article for those who follow.

Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Bryce Petty, QB, Baylor
  • Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Brett Hundley, QB, UCLA
  • Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Devin Smith, WR, Ohio State
  • Bob Sturm’s 2015 NFL Draft profile: What I see in Dorial Green-Beckham, WR, Missouri

I think the eval on Rowe might be a little lacking because Sturm has indicated that he watched almost exclusively 2014 game footage; however, Rowe was playing CB in 2014 but projects best to FS. It seems the eval was all based on the CB game footage.
 

jobberone

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I think the eval on Rowe might be a little lacking because Sturm has indicated that he watched almost exclusively 2014 game footage; however, Rowe was playing CB in 2014 but projects best to FS. It seems the eval was all based on the CB game footage.

I believe he sees him as S and CB
 

JoeyBoy718

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I'm confused about Collins. I've seen people say he is a ball hawk and I've seen other people say he is a SS which is why we have no interest in him. Which one is it?
 

KingintheNorth

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We should had took a flyer on tyrann.

I'm probably one of the biggest Honey Badger fans on this board but people would have lost their minds if we drafted him. We would have had to take him at 47 (he went 69) instead of Gavin Escobar. He was gone before our next pick (Terrance Williams).

Although, considering many Cowboy fans disliked the Escobar pick, it might not have mattered anyway. In hindsight, if we took Tyran at 47, Williams at 74, we wouldn't have needed J.J. Wilcox at 80. Maybe we draft Jordan Reed there.

Tyran Mathieu & Jordan Reed versus Gavin Escobar & J.J Wilcox ?
 

cds99

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I'm probably one of the biggest Honey Badger fans on this board but people would have lost their minds if we drafted him. We would have had to take him at 47 (he went 69) instead of Gavin Escobar. He was gone before our next pick (Terrance Williams).

Although, considering many Cowboy fans disliked the Escobar pick, it might not have mattered anyway. In hindsight, if we took Tyran at 47, Williams at 74, we wouldn't have needed J.J. Wilcox at 80. Maybe we draft Jordan Reed there.

Tyran Mathieu & Jordan Reed versus Gavin Escobar & J.J Wilcox ?

No brainer right. Lol. Hahaahahahaha
 

Gaede

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I've been reading a bit about Sample as well. Very intrigued. And I still like Hackett as well.


Seems clear to me though that the team is looking for a CB/FS type that they could plug in at either spot and hopefully start. Rowe, Shaw, Jones--all big CBS with experience at safety.
 

XDez88BeastX

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I'm probably one of the biggest Honey Badger fans on this board but people would have lost their minds if we drafted him. We would have had to take him at 47 (he went 69) instead of Gavin Escobar. He was gone before our next pick (Terrance Williams).

Although, considering many Cowboy fans disliked the Escobar pick, it might not have mattered anyway. In hindsight, if we took Tyran at 47, Williams at 74, we wouldn't have needed J.J. Wilcox at 80. Maybe we draft Jordan Reed there.

Tyran Mathieu & Jordan Reed versus Gavin Escobar & J.J Wilcox ?

Im higher on wilcox than most but with that said, come on now, u know thats not even a real question lol. Mathieu is an absolute beast..... Even better maybe we would have simply just not drafted a TE lol
 

reddyuta

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Rowe is on my list if the top 2 RBs are gone, Randall is not the top safety prospect IMO.
 

TrailBlazer

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Landon Collins isn't a great cover guy. Go watch ole miss tape from last year. He got his team beat.
 
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