I would be tempted to take Meachem over Jarrett.speedkilz88;1440251 said:I don't think anyone is saying he shouldn't be taken in the second round. Just that their are better prospects at the same position available at 22 like Bowe and Meachem. The only other WR I would be interested in the second round would be Hill.
Aikbach;1440252 said:I would be tempted to take Meachem over Jarrett.
Aikbach;1440245 said:If I'm not mistaken Michael Irvin ran between a 4.6 and a 4.7 and Keyshawn Johnson has never been a speedster himself.
Frankly it doesn't concern me much.
If he fell to the second and dallas took him that would be a steal and a half however!
BigDave95;1440203 said:Forget workout numbers. This is all you need to know:
2004 - 55 receptions, 849 yards, 15.4 Avg, 13 TD
2005 - 91 receptions, 1274 yards, 14.0 Avg, 16 TD
2006 - 70 receptions, 1015 yards, 14.5 Avg, 12 TD
compared to Ted Ginn:
2004 - 25 receptions, 359 yards, 14.4 Avg, 2 TD
2005 - 51 receptions, 803 yards, 15.7 Avg, 4 TD
2006 - 59 receptions, 781 yards, 13.2 Avg, 9 TD
MichaelWinicki;1440414 said:Don't get so gung-ho about college stats either...
A lot of wide-outs put up big numbers in Andre Ware and David Klingler run offenses too.
BigDave95;1440437 said:Don't see how that's relevant here. Both Ginn and Jarrett played in pro-style offenses with Heisman trophy winning QB's throwing to them. They both had solid running games and good complimentary receivers on the other side.
dbair1967;1440478 said:the USC offense is much more similar to a prostyle set than Ohio States is
David
MichaelWinicki;1440561 said:Exactly.
I'm not saying Jarret is trash but a 4.60+ 40 doesn't excite me. Even a 4.60+ guy is still going to have the speed advantage over many college corners and most safeties. Hell there aren't too many corners in the NFL that run slower than a 4.60. And many safeties are faster than that too.
If I'm selecting a WR with my 22nd pick then I want a guy that can be the #1 receiver on my team-- and I don't think Jarrett is it. I see a "Keyshawn" type receiver here-- and that's in the best light... certainly not a "TO" or an "Irvin".
Bizwah;1440620 said:I don't know....What's the difference between a 4.4 and a 4.6 on the field?
One or two steps?
How many times do you see an NFL WR beating the socks off a corner? Not often when you think about it. On most deep plays, the WR and the DB are right together. The difference is where the QB places the ball, and how the WR plays the ball.
Irvin rarely blew by a CB. He ran great routes, and knew how to set up a CB. He had good hands, and a great QB who knew how to place the ball. He could not be knocked off his routes by smaller CBs. He also knew how to "block out" the defender (yes, a basketball term).
Jarrett is a strong receiver.....if a CB tries to jam him, he'll just shrug them off. He has good hands...now, route running for a rookie is always spotty, but if he runs disciplined routes, then there's no reason for him to not get separation.
His 36 inch vert tells me there is some explosion in his step. So, his first couple of steps should be pretty fast. Couple his vertical with his 6-5 frame, and he makes an attractive redzone target.
MichaelWinicki;1440624 said:OK, so why not consider someone that runs a 4.8? Heck, that's not a big difference from 4.6?
Where's the cutoff?
Irvin was faster than this guy.
I wish everyone would drop the Irvin comparison.
Yellow Lab;1440219 said:He's the guy I want too!
smarta5150;1440632 said:I wish people would stop putting the 40 time on a freakin' pedestal.
If a kid can play the game he can play the game, there is a ton of speed out there which results in nothing.
Not everyone needs to be a burner, some guys have other abilities that make up for a lack of speed such as route running, hands, physicality, and so on.
The 40 time is quickly becoming the most over-hyped, overrated measurable out there.