2024 Chargers Draft Superthread - Prospect Discussion - Draft Has Started

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  • Boltnut
    Registered Charger Fan
    • Feb 2019
    • 6807
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    Originally posted by blueman View Post

    I know you’re sold on the Viks trade down, but those two firsts alone ain’t gonna do it for Horitz. Just not “attractive” enough lol.
    Allegedly, the Vikings already told the Cardinals that #11 and #23 should be enough... and that's @#4.
    Now maybe that's just a lie. Maybe that's just negotiating... but if I'm not mistaken they have no 2nd or 3rd rounder for this year to trade.
    And they already traded next year's 2nd rounder away to move up to #23. If you were the Vikings, would you trade three first rounders?

    The #11 and #23 picks are worth 310 more than the #5 pick. That's good value. That's equivalent to a 2nd rounder...
    For what...? Moving back to a position, and taking a player, you were probably going to take @#5 anyways... (RT Fuaga)?
    IMO, that #23 pick is very attractive. Imagine if Byron Murphy, Kool-Aid McKinstry, or Edgerrin Cooper is sitting there @#23

    IMO, the Vikings are not giving up their 2025 1st round pick. If they were... the deal up to #4 would already be done.
    So, I have to ask myself... is next year's 3rd round pick worth Byron Murphy, Kool-Aid McKinstry, or Edgerrin Cooper...?

    No man... no way. The only reason this deal hasn't been done yet... is that the Cardinals are holding this trade up. The Cardinals are waiting to see if they can get something better than #11 and #23 from another team. They're waiting to see if someone will give them this year's 1st rounder and next year's 1st round pick, IMO. Why shouldn't they?

    Whatever they can steal from someone this year... it will have to be big. It will have to be bigger than MHJ... because that's who they want. That's who they need (much more than us even). And we've let them know... you screw us on this #5 for #11 and #23 deal... we will take your boy Harrison Junior. And it will take a lot to get you back into the #5 spot... because everybody knows who the real #1 player in the draft is. If Chicago, Washington, and New England weren't so desperate for QB... MHJ would be going #1 overall.

    I'm 95% sure we're trading back with Minnesota. And I'm 75% sure that #11 and #23 should get it done. Vikings cupboard is empty. You can't get blood out of a stone. Don't look a Gift Horse in the mouth... and a hundred other cliche's. It comes down to getting another 1st round pick... for simply moving back 6 spots. For me... it's a no-brainer.

    Of course, I come from a unique spot... I believe there's no way the Cardinals can pass on MHJ. And I believe the Chargers best move would be to get a real RT in the 1st round.
    OLineCentric

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    • jox g
      Registered Charger Fan
      • Oct 2020
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      Check out J.J. McCarthy's College Stats, School, Draft, Gamelog, Splits and More College Stats at Sports-Reference.com


      Check out Justin Herbert's College Stats, School, Draft, Gamelog, Splits and More College Stats at Sports-Reference.com


      Head to head college. McCarthy wins in the MAJOR categories. (QBR, completion percentage, Yards Per Pass.) JJM has a higher QBR than Herbert, Mahomes. Even Yards Per Carry. PLUS add 2 1st rounders, a former 1st Rd pick in OT Darrisaw (so like 3 1st rounders!), AND a conditional 2nd round in 2025 pick for Herbert?! No brainer. Do it.Just win baby.

      JH knows JJM. JH knows QB's. Says he's an assassin during crunch time, then believe it. How has Herbert been in crunch time?

      This feels and looks like getting a Patrick Mahomes + 3 1st rounders I mentioned above and a 2nd rounder in 2025.

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      • richpjr
        Registered Charger Fan
        • Jun 2013
        • 22483
        • Nashville
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        Originally posted by Bolt-O View Post

        You also have to convince JH10 to allow the trade. He has a no-trade clause. This rumor is more of a prank, no attachment to reality.
        And the fact the Vikings have no 2nd round draft pick next year along with the massive cap hit we'd take if we traded him. But they certainly are persistent:



        I can't tell if they are a satire site, though it kinda looks like it. Satire sites usually are at least a tiny bit funny.

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        • Boltnut
          Registered Charger Fan
          • Feb 2019
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          Originally posted by dmac_bolt View Post

          Lol, good one. Vikings med staff performed a physical on Herbie. It must be true
          LOL. I thought the Vikings traded away 2025's 2nd round pick as part of their trade up to #23....
          I guess the conditional 2nd round pick has only one condition... you have to imagine that it exists, even though it doesn't.

          I sure do like "Darri-soft" though... he's turned out ok...
          OLineCentric

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          • eaterfan
            Registered Charger Fan
            • Oct 2020
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            Originally posted by richpjr View Post

            And the fact the Vikings have no 2nd round draft pick next year along with the massive cap hit we'd take if we traded him. But they certainly are persistent:



            I can't tell if they are a satire site, though it kinda looks like it. Satire sites usually are at least a tiny bit funny.
            Beyond any opinion based reason for not trading Herbert, his cap hit would be $130 million this season. It would be impossible to field a 53 man roster. These rumors are the dumbest thing I've ever read on an internet message board and im not being hyperbolic.

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            • JOJAX85
              Registered Charger Fan
              • Sep 2018
              • 2005
              • Irmo, SC
              • Send PM

              Originally posted by eaterfan View Post

              Beyond any opinion based reason for not trading Herbert, his cap hit would be $130 million this season. It would be impossible to field a 53 man roster. These rumors are the dumbest thing I've ever read on an internet message board and im not being hyperbolic.
              Agreed. Harbaugh goes somewhere else if Herbert isn't here. IF that was even financially possible I think it might be the dumbest trade in team sports history and I probably get these lightning bolt tatts covered up. That's also not being hyperbolic.

              Comment

              • Boltjolt
                Dont let the PBs fool ya
                • Jun 2013
                • 28857
                • Henderson, NV
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                Originally posted by DerwinBosa View Post
                I think this is an overrated group of quarterbacks this year. I think Caleb Williams and Drake Maye will be very good or great. I'll probably root for Maye in the NFL, as long as he's not playing for an AFC team. His arm talent reminds me of Herbert's, and I think he's a stand-up guy.

                The rest who could go in the first round? I don't like their games. I want to thank Harbaugh for turning J.J. McCarthy into a top ten, maybe top five prospect. It may result in us getting a huge haul of picks in a trade-back. I'm not sure McCarthy will be anything more than Colt McCoy in the NFL. I don't like Jayden Daniels, Michael Penix, or Bo Nix as prospects, either. I wouldn't draft any of them in the first two rounds.

                I'm interested in Spencer Rattler and Michael Pratt as potential backups. I wouldn't mind seeing us use a Day 3 pick on one of them, although I don't think Rattler will last that long. Maybe Harbaugh can make Easton Stick a good backup. Harbaugh did turn Alex Smith's career around, and he got to a Super Bowl and two NFC Championship Games with Colin Kaepernick as his starter. Stick definitely needs competition, though.

                Here is what some scouts and executives said about the quarterbacks in this draft:

                1. CALEB WILLIAMS, Southern Cal (6-1, 217, no 40, 1): His career passer rating of 118.9 using the NFL scale was the best of this class. “I think Caleb has the best chance to bust but also has the best chance to be freakin’ special,” one scout said. “I think he’s boom or bust. There are plays he makes that are fantastic where he scrambles and throws 50 yards downfield for a touchdown. Then you look at that play and there are simpler options that he doesn’t see or ignored.” Replaced Spencer Rattler and started the final seven games of his freshman season at Oklahoma. “Obviously, it’s very similar to how (Patrick) Mahomes played at Texas Tech,” a second scout said. “He constantly is trying to hit the grand slam against just taking the single or the double. I have a hard time believing you can’t coach that out of him. Caleb is the most natural thrower of the four. Seventy yards in the air, arched on a dime. Effortless. Throwing moving to his right from his hip 25 yards downfield on a line. My biggest concern will be his height. It does look at times he struggles to see in the pocket. That’s why he likes to move. He just does things other guys can’t do. Blend that in with being able to play on time and he’s going to be outstanding.” Declined to take a medical exam or test at the combine. “The biggest chance for bust is if Caleb Williams goes to Chicago,” a third scout said. “It’s going to be a lot tougher than people think. He’s got a lot of talent but, wow, he’s had red carpet treatment since the 9th grade. This is getting ready to be a whole different deal. It’s the Chicago media, then the comparison. If (Justin) Fields goes and does anything in Pittsburgh it won’t play well. And the pressure … he ended up in the stands (clutching his mother at the Coliseum Nov. 4 after a loss to Washington) crying like a baby. For a lot of scouts that was a disqualifier. Then you got the painted fingernails, the cars, special treatment. He knows one offense, which you can write on one piece of paper, with Lincoln Riley. Of all those OU quarterbacks he’s the most gifted but none of them have really done it in the league. And Williams’ workout (at pro day) wasn’t godawful but just mediocre.” According to one club official, his father, Carl, told him “it’s too windy in Chicago. Why should we go to Chicago when the open-air stadium is not a place Caleb will like?” Said the official: “You talk about self-serving, vicariously live through your son b.s. He needs to get away from his old man. … I like the kid. He gets a little caught up in the LA bullshit, but once he gets with somebody strong he’ll be fine. Because Lincoln Riley’s not a strong guy, either.” Three of his five interceptions in 2023 came at South Bend in a 48-20 loss to Notre Dame. “I’m going Jayden Daniels because I can’t get the f--king Notre Dame game out of my head,” a fifth scout said. “A lot of Caleb is when he’s just running around kind of being playground. He’s also kind of making it about myself.” One of the scouts said Williams, who posted a 23-10 record as a starter, shouldn’t be thrust into the lineup immediately. “You better have the right offensive coordinator for him and do not rush him into the NFL,” he said. “In today’s football everybody wants to rush guys. Let him sit for a while. Let him process.” An executive with an established quarterback has followed Williams from afar. “He just comes out with these things that are kind of spoiled and demanding,” he said. “I don’t know if it’s the people around him or what it is. Whether this is the case with him or not, when you get a guy that in his mind feels like you’re fortunate he’s there, it can come off that way and rub teammates the wrong way. I don’t know if he’s got that but he can’t come in with that. People are going to have to jell with him immediately. Because if they don’t, it might be an issue from a leadership standpoint.” From Washington, D.C. Hands were 9 ¾ inches.

                2. JAYDEN DANIELS, Louisiana State (6-3 ½, 210, no 40, 1): His NFL passer rating jumped from 101.9 in 2022 to 145.3 in ’23. “I’m assuming Chicago is taking Williams but they were at that workout and Williams’ was mediocre and Jayden’s was pretty good,” one scout said. “I wouldn’t be stunned if that happened (the Bears pick Daniels). I have a little more appreciation for what Jayden did this year. He had a spectacular year, no doubt about it. There’s a lot of momentum for him but it doesn’t come without some concerns.” Daniels rushed for 3,307 yards in five seasons compared to 966 for Williams in three. His aggressive style of running, however, raises durability issues. “He was 185 at Arizona State (in 2021),” one scout said. “At that point in time there was so much concern over his physical body weight. He was putting up stats in every game but don’t trust him to win the big game, which you saw this year. With Jayden, you’re going to see a lot of running very early on. He doesn’t have the poise, the processing to hang in there and find a receiver like a lot of guys can do. (Scrambling) isn’t the worst thing in the world. A lot of guys have made a good living doing it. Jayden has that instant speed. I’d estimate he’d run 4.45. Justin Fields has more build-long speed. Jayden takes off and it’s full speed quick, which is a huge benefit for him. It’ll come down to can he stay healthy. I think you’re going to see a lot of flaws in his game that everyone saw the first four years he was playing college football and aren’t even being talked about now.” The Tigers, ranked fifth at the start of last season, ended up 12th after going 10-3. Daniels’ record for LSU against top-20 teams was 3-5. “Athletic freak,” another scout said. “Still going to have to learn the nuances of an NFL defense and read coverages a little bit better. He was surrounded by really good, skilled athletes at receiver. The question is, can he overcome that? He’s got a lot of gifts and a lot of savvy and has played a lot of football.” Several scouts worried that his mother, Regina, might have an adverse effect on his career. “She pushed him to leave school after the (2022) season,” said one. “She will show up to the facility at times. She will probably move to wherever he goes.” His career passer rating was 109.1. His record was 37-18. His hands were 9 3/8. “I just didn’t see consistency from a condensed pocket,” one scout said. “When it’s clean, he’s really good. He has rhythm and had really good playmakers on the outside. But in gotta-have-it, pressure situations, when it looked more like an NFL game, I thought his accuracy declined. I’m somewhat nitpicking. At the college level, you can see an off-placement throw and it’s a catch. At our level, some of those limitations are magnified. I thought he’d struggle a little bit playing with a lot more (pressure) in the pocket.” From San Bernardino, Calif.

                3. DRAKE MAYE, North Carolina (6-4 ½, 227, no 40, 1): Backed up Sam Howell in 2021 and then went 17-9 as the starter in 2022-’23. “Andrew Luck was further along than Drake Maye but the talent level is somewhat similar,” said one scout. “His pro day was really good. He throws a great deep ball for a guy that’s not supposed to have an elite arm. His accuracy and touch are his secret sauce. That’s what he’s really good at.” Finished with a passer rating of 106.3. Rushed for 1,209. “He’s the Jared Goff clone with his mobility,” a second scout said. “Goff ran 4.82. I’d say he’s 4.75.” Hands were 9 1/8. “I see a gifted athlete who can make all the passes,” a third scout said. “In the ’23 season he had a really bad offensive line and got exposed a little bit. There was a degree of inconsistency with his throwing motion and his throwing accuracy. I still think there’s upside with this guy, and he’s young (will be 22 in August). I do see him as a Pro Bowl starter.” Comes from an enormously athletic family. “He’s gotten close to Philip Rivers, who’s a little bit of a hillbilly from Alabama who went to NC State,” a fourth scout said. “Maye is from Charlotte and went to Carolina. So you think this guy’s going to have some polish. He walked in the room and he sounded like Jethro Bodine on the Beverly Hillbillies. We just went, ‘Who is this guy?’ Watching the tape, all this animation. This kid is sort of wound tight trying to be something he’s not … I thought his tape was kind of average, to be honest. He needs a year to just sit, and I don’t know if the teams that are going to take him can do that. I think it’s going to be real hard. He is not explosive with his arm. He’s a good athlete, but you see very few plays where he just rips the ball into a tight window. One thing I noticed was that all his takeoffs were into the boundary, the short side of the field. Any time he threw to the field (side) was to the slot (receiver) down the hashmark. I kind of thought they even recognized that there were some arm strength issues there. I thought I was going to turn on the tape, sit back and watch the show. After about five throws I went, ‘Are you kidding me? All this hype over this guy?’” His family lives in Huntersville, N.C. “He’s got all the physical tools,” a fifth scout said. “Sometimes there’s some wiring … there’s some Daniel Jones in there. Sometimes when it gets a little hairy, what’s he wired like?”

                4. J.J. McCARTHY, Michigan (6-2 ½, 215, no 40, 1): Of the top four quarterbacks only McCarthy truly elevated his team. “He’s got major weaknesses but there’s something about that kid that is absolutely special,” one scout said. “He completely changed that rivalry (Ohio State-Michigan). He singlehandedly won both of those games. The one in Columbus (in 2022), people don’t realize some of those throws he made in that game. Then his ability to never get off the field and extend plays is uncanny. All this talk that Michigan built him and it was (Jim) Harbaugh and the O-line. Their O-line sucked this year … The 9-inch hand and the way he throws the ball really scares me. It’s one speed. He has no ability to layer balls in between defenders. Everything’s a fastball. His deep balls are line drives, which is very unfriendly to receivers especially when he gets to this level and it’s contested and not just wide open. But there’s magic. There are these guys that seem to always do this and it always works. The throws by Mahomes early in his career when he’d throw into coverage and it somehow landed in the lap of the Kansas City guy. I don’t know if he’s got this magic to him or if it’s just luck. You’re drafting a guy whose character has been so overhyped you’re neglecting some of these holes. It’s somewhere in between.” Third-year junior won the job in Game 2 of 2022 from Cade McNamara. “I don’t think he’ll fail,” a second scout said. “I saw him as a Kirk Cousins type player.” Finished with a passer rating of 111.3. Rushed for 632. “I like him as a short-to-intermediate passer,” said a third scout. “He’s smart. He’ll distribute the ball. But I don’t see him as a guy who will win a game for you on his own.” His record was 27-1. “He’s better than Harbaugh was,” a fourth scout said. “It’s difficult to have a personality like Harbaugh but he might be close. He does some different things. Meditation, all this he does. He’s got feet. He’s at least a 4.5 guy. He’s got a strong arm. But everything about this guy is development. He won’t make as big an impact maybe as the three above him at first but he can overtake Caleb Williams and Maye. If you play for Jim Harbaugh and win a national championship, you’re good.” In October, Michigan’s athletic department released a 3-minute video in which McCarthy discussed the “big depression” he fell into as a senior in high school and the value of meditation. “He has championed the mental health stuff,” said a fifth scout. “But in the NFL, those fans aren’t going to be the same. You’re going to do that at Arrowhead? Foxborough? Those fans are going to destroy this poor kid if he’s out there sitting under the goal post an hour and a half before the game. It’s part of his resume. You got to make sure you understand that and that’s going to be something you’re going to be involved in with him. How do you replicate the cockpit and the nest he was in at Michigan. It’s hard.” Averaged 22.1 pass attempts in the Wolverines’ 15-0 title season. “He still doesn’t have much experience because he hasn’t thrown the ball very much,” said a sixth scout. “There’s a level of immaturity that he’s going to have to work through. He’s a good kid (but) he doesn’t know what he doesn’t know. It’s kind of buyer beware.” From La Grange Park, Ill.

                5. MICHAEL PENIX, Washington (6-2, 216, 4.58, 1-2): While the top four quarterbacks along with Bo Nix, Michael Pratt and Devin Leary declined to run a 40, Penix blistered a 4.58 at pro day. One scout estimated he’d run 4.9; another guessed 4.75 to 4.8. “If he goes in the first round I wouldn’t be shocked,” said one scout. “If Tua (Tagovailoa) went top 10 (No. 5 in 2020), I don’t know why this guy can’t go top 10. He’s a better athlete. He throws it just as well. It’s all timing and rhythm. They’re both not great outside extending plays.” Went 12-5 as the starter at Indiana from 2019-’21; in ’20, the Hoosiers cracked the Top 10 for the first time since 1969. “He did a lot of stuff outside the pocket at Indiana,” a second scout said. “When I saw him at Washington I was shocked. He wasn’t the same guy. He stayed in the pocket and made good decisions. He was best throwing outside the numbers (in 2023). He can throw the back shoulders, the fades and ups.” His four seasons at IU ended with four season-ending injuries: two torn right ACLs, a right shoulder dislocation and a left shoulder dislocation. “I can’t get the damn Indiana tape out of my mind,” said a third scout. “It was real bad. Now give the kid credit. He changed scenery and kind of reinvented himself and had a hell of a team this year. He’s got arm strength, big hands and he can fling it, but he’s got like a weird sidearm short release. Accuracy’s up and down. I don’t know how tough this kid is. He shows you fringe starter talent and barely No. 3 talent. But there are so many quarterback gurus and experts that, ‘Oh, if I get my hands on him I can do this.’” Hands were 10 ½, largest at the position. “Penix is an incredible passer,” said a fourth scout. “He is a pure passer of the ball. He throws the best deep ball I’ve seen in 30 years. It’s an absolutely beautiful deep ball. But there are a lot of things with him that may not translate. The injury history. Been in the same system at Indiana and UW. How will that translate to new coaches, new system? As far as just going out there and throwing the football, he can do it.” The left-handed Penix posted his best passer rating in 2023 (106.8) to finish his career at 99.4. At Indiana, his rating was 87.9. “You saw him fall apart against Michigan (in the CFP title game),” said a fifth scout. “He’s been pretty fortunate. Good offensive line, quality receivers. He couldn’t get out of the pocket and scramble and get away. He’s had injuries in the past. I wouldn’t want to take him.” From Tampa, Fla.​

                6. BO NIX, Oregon (6-2, 217, no 40, 2-3): Auburn went 21-13 with him starting from 2019-’21. Oregon went 22-5 with him the past two years. “He truly had a transformation,” one scout said. “The kid played at an all-time high. Forty-five touchdowns, three picks (in 2023). He was absolutely on point the second year at Oregon. He’s dedicated, mature and all that. He’s also the oldest guy (turns 25 in February 2025). You pull him out of that situation and put him into the NFL, especially if he were to go as a first-rounder, the expectations, the pressure, now you’re right back to Auburn. And he went to the Senior Bowl and reverted back. He was bailing out backwards as soon as pressure showed, not as accurate. If you told me second or third round, great. Top 15 or top 25? God bless him. As a first-round pick with imminent pressure and expectations? You’re creating a circumstance where the kid has already failed once.” His father, Pat, quarterbacked Auburn from 1992-’95 and has coached football for years. “He completed 77.4% this year,” said a second scout. “Throws a lot of short and intermediate stuff but he still is accurate down the field. He’s been in two different systems and produced. I never thought he was that good at Auburn but at Oregon I was really impressed by his ability to process and get the ball down there. He’s got a good enough arm to get it intermediate and throw the long ball. He doesn’t throw the long ball as good as Penix but he can move and scramble. I’d like to have somebody better but if I had to have one I’d take him as my starter.” Finished with a passer rating of 104.3, including 86.2 at Auburn and 126.2 at Oregon. Also ran for 1,613 and 38 touchdowns. “Started more games in college football (61) than most,” a third scout said. “He had the opportunity to play in an offense (Oregon) that is not in sync with the NFL. But the guy is competitive. He’s a subtly good athlete. Better than you realize. He’s sneaky good in terms of moving, avoiding, extending and running if he has to. I just think he’ll be a quality backup.” Hands were 10 1/8. “He will bust,” a fourth scout said. “That (no 40) is an indication he doesn’t run well. He’s selling himself on his running. He can’t throw the ball. Got a noodle arm. He can’t push the ball down the field. If he went first round that would shock me. He’s last year’s Tennessee quarterback, Hendon Hooker. The hype.” From Pinson, Ala.

                7. SPENCER RATTLER, South Carolina (6-0, 211, 4.95, 2-3): Fifth-year senior. “He’s the most intriguing guy of those that are left,” said one scout. “He’s got a big f--king arm. He’s almost like a minor-league version of Caleb Williams. He’s not a runner, but he can make plays with his feet. He’s not a real tall guy but he plays bigger than he is. He’s got pretty big hands (9 7/8). He’s tough. He’s done a good job of redeeming himself. There were questions about his makeup from high school. The guy basically got shamed — benched, lost his job — on national TV. He’s been through the ringer. They like him at South Carolina. He brought something to the program. If this guy is your No. 2 you’re through-the-roof happy. He will probably have a chance to start based on the shortage of quarterbacks. I like him better than Nix.” Redshirted at Oklahoma behind Jalen Hurts, he started in 2020 and was the favorite for the Heisman Trophy entering 2021. He was benched after six games in favor of Williams, and after the season escaped what he famously labeled a “toxic situation” for the SEC. “He had four intentional groundings in the first half this year against (Texas) A&M,” said a second scout. “He had one of the worst offensive lines I’ve ever seen in SEC history. But that little sum----- has excellent arm talent. He can make all the throws. He’s mobile and can run.” Finished with a passer rating of 102.9 (113.9 for the Sooners, 95.8 for the Gamecocks). Also ran for 416 and 16 TDs. MVP of the Senior Bowl. “He’s a cut below Nix and Penix but he’s good,” said a third scout. “Could be a starter. Depends how he develops. It’s not like he was a stiff at (Oklahoma). He was a good player there, too. And he revived the South Carolina program. He’s a 6-footer; that’s why he’s second round.” From Phoenix. “Little pocket passer,” a fourth scout said. “Makes one read, erratic thrower, panics when things break down. He guns everything. Doesn’t have much accuracy or touch. He’s got a little bit of moxie but he’s just a nut the way he plays. He just runs into sacks. Doesn’t feel stuff. It's not good.”

                8. MICHAEL PRATT, Tulane (6-2 ½, 217, no 40, 4-5): Four-year starter. “I like his size, his arm, his presence,” one scout said. “He’s been a pleasant surprise. He can end up being a starter in time. Like his ability to distribute from the pocket. From the down-the-line group he’ll be the one who will rise up. It’s because of how he sees the game and how efficient he is.” Finished with a passer rating of 101.8. Ran for 1,147 and 28 TDs. “I was really high on him after (2022),” said one scout. “He got hurt second game this year (knee) and did not play as well. Backup type. Physically gifted. Inconsistent decisions. I’d like to work with the guy. The negative this year was holding the ball. Nice athlete. Got a good arm.” Hands were 9 ¼. “The Raiders took Aidan O’Connell in the fourth last year,” a third scout said. “He’s not as good as Aidan O’Connell.” From Boca Raton, Fla.​
                Mayes arm isnt near Herberts. Herbert and Josh Allen have similar arms and in this draft the only one that compares is Milton, but Milton is inaccurate and probably is a career backup.
                Agree many of them are over rated but it happens every year and im all for it. Doubt we have a group of stars from it but its cool to fleece a team to get one.

                Comment

                • wu-dai clan
                  Smooth Operation
                  • May 2017
                  • 14798
                  • Send PM

                  Originally posted by JOJAX85 View Post

                  Agreed. Harbaugh goes somewhere else if Herbert isn't here. IF that was even financially possible I think it might be the dumbest trade in team sports history and I probably get these lightning bolt tatts covered up. That's also not being hyperbolic.
                  I know you have TE DNA.
                  Would you take Bowers, JOJAX85 ?
                  No qualifiers.
                  I do not give a shit who else is on the board or what trades are offered.
                  Interested in your take.
                  Is this a Gates pot of gold, or is it a trade up for Kellen Winslow Sr power move ???
                  Smashmouth.
                  Reinvented.

                  Comment

                  • Boltjolt
                    Dont let the PBs fool ya
                    • Jun 2013
                    • 28857
                    • Henderson, NV
                    • Send PM

                    Originally posted by richpjr View Post

                    And the fact the Vikings have no 2nd round draft pick next year along with the massive cap hit we'd take if we traded him. But they certainly are persistent:



                    I can't tell if they are a satire site, though it kinda looks like it. Satire sites usually are at least a tiny bit funny.
                    That is a clown account. These type of posts are from conspiricists and think they out smart others because Harbaugh has spoken well of JJ. And it clearly works lol. It is funny to get other teams fans riled up but in the end they get the gut punch with the reality of trading up with us to get a hopeful.

                    Makes you wonder how that Twitter account has 93K followers with only 252 posts....since only January of this year.

                    Comment

                    • DerwinBosa
                      Registered Charger Fan
                      • Feb 2022
                      • 2728
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                      Some details on Byron Murphy and T'Vondre Sweat in a Bob McGinn article on Go Long:

                      Tale of two very different Texas big men

                      One draws Justin Madubuike comparisons from an NFL scout. One was completely taken off of a team's board. Byron Murphy and T’Vondre Sweat could both dominate but what a contrast.

                      By Bob McGinn

                      ​The University of Texas has a rich tradition of defensive tackles. Sixteen have been selected in the first three rounds since the NFL common draft originated in 1967, including four in the first.

                      On Thursday, there’s a chance that Byron Murphy will be the first player on defense to be picked. His Longhorns teammate inside for the last three years, T’Vondre Sweat, is a wild card with high-round ability.

                      The combination of Murphy, the hard-charging 3-technique, and the massive, talented, troubled Sweat is reminiscent of a generation ago when Texas produced its last pair of defensive tackles to land in the first two rounds.

                      That was 2001, when Casey Hampton went in the first (No. 19) to the Pittsburgh Steelers before Shaun Rogers was chosen late in the second (No. 61) by the Detroit Lions.

                      Hampton would go on to make five Pro Bowls, more than any other UT defensive tackle, and Rogers would make three. Hampton has been on the fringes of making the Hall of Fame for several years.

                      What links the Murphy-Sweat duo with Hampton & Rogers is the similarities in the two relationships.

                      Murphy, who graduated in three years, found it difficult playing with Sweat, who was forever overweight and out of shape as he bounced from party to party. Their relationship was strained, to say the least.

                      From 1997-’00, Hampton and Rogers were a tag team at Texas. An overachiever who always played hard, Hampton found dealing with Rogers more than just a slight challenge.

                      “Rogers has a weight problem and is a lazy ass,” an executive in personnel for an NFC team told me not long before the draft in 2001. “Not that he’s a bad kid. You just got to kick him in the ass a lot. Hampton kicked him in the ass.”

                      Hampton rubbed some people the wrong way with what scouts suggested was his cocky, overbearing approach. Murphy isn’t said to exhibit those qualities.

                      Rogers’ senior season in Austin was ruined by the high-ankle sprain that he suffered in late September. He played hurt, underwent surgery when tests showed the bones weren’t aligned properly and showed up at the combine in a wheelchair.

                      “There’s times it’s like a man playing with kids, he can dominate that much,” said Billy Devaney, the San Diego Chargers’ personnel director. “But his reputation is that he’s not a hard worker.”

                      Rogers (6-4 1/2, 318, 5.13) fit the classic profile of a talented defensive tackle who couldn’t always be counted on. “He’s a good kid, a bright kid,” said Jerry Angelo, Tampa Bay’s director of player personnel. “He’s an enigma. He has been an underachiever, or at least he has been inconsistent. That’s a concern, and stamina is a concern.”

                      Once Rogers got his ankle right, he was about all the Lions had going under Matt Millen, the worst general manager in NFL history. In 13 seasons he started 130 of 163 games and garnered 37 ½ sacks. On some Sundays he could be next to impossible to block.

                      Hampton (6-1, 321, 5.25) was the fulcrum at nose tackle on the Steelers’ rugged defenses for 12 years. His marginal sack total of nine might be the only thing keeping him from a bust in Canton.

                      Murphy (6-0 ½, 306, 4.90) is small when compared to Rogers but their games in some ways were similar. Rogers was sudden enough to play into gaps, the style of play that marked Murphy’s three-year career at Texas.

                      In interviews with eight scouts, the names of Aaron Donald (6-1, 286, 4.66), Grady Jarrett (6-0 ½, 301, 5.08), Ed Oliver (6-2, 284, 4.73) and Justin Madubuike (6-2 ½, 293, 4.85) were presented as comparable players to Murphy.

                      “If I see a list where Byron Murphy is the fifth or sixth (best) guy on defense, I get it,” said one scout. “To me, he’ll impact the game more than anyone because of the position he plays. He’s the best collection of power, size, athleticism, production and instincts.”

                      In 2023, Murphy actually played nose tackle in defensive coordinator Pete Kwiatkowski’s four-man front because Sweat (6-4 ½, 367, 5.27) was so inconsistent taking on double-team blocks that he was stationed at 3-technique.

                      Much like Rogers, Sweat was able to “totally dominate things” in some games, according to one scout. Several weeks ago, two personnel men said they regarded him as a first-round draft choice.

                      Sweat’s weight probably will always be an issue. Personnel people weighed him at 346 in spring 2022 and at 355 in spring 2023. In mid-January 2024, about 10 days after Texas lost in the national semifinals, he weighed 393 upon checking in at ESOS Sports Performance Training Center in Dallas.

                      Three weeks later, Sweat was the only player that refused to stand on the scale at the Senior Bowl. In early March he was 366 at the combine. His last verified weight was 367 at pro day on March 21 in Austin.

                      Far worse for Sweat’s draft status was his arrest April 7 in Austin for driving while intoxicated. His blood-alcohol count was 0.105, more than 25% over the legal limit.

                      “That’s stupid,” an AFC executive said. “That (alcohol) was something that during the interview process he even brought up as something that he’s battled with early in his career and was over it. This was not good.”

                      How far will Sweat drop? One scout guessed a full round. Another estimated one-half of a round.

                      Of the aforementioned 16 Texas defensive tackles drafted in the three rounds since 1967, Sweat will be hoping to join, in chronological order, Doug English (four), Steve McMichael (two), Rogers (three) and Hampton (five) as Pro Bowlers. He will not want to join the list of busts, which includes Bill Atessis, Brad Shearer, Kenneth Sims (the first pick in 1982), Tommy Jeter, James Patton and Marcus Tubbs.

                      Some others could be categorized as solid pros: Shane Dronett, Cory Redding, Roy Miller, Malcom Brown and Jordan Elliott.

                      If anything distinguishes this class of defensive tackles, it might be the lack of height. “There’s a bunch of good players,” an AFC personnel man said, “but they’re all really short in stature.”

                      Sixteen scouts were asked to rank the defensive linemen on a 1-2-3-4-5 basis, with a first-place vote worth 5 points, a second worth 4 and so on.

                      Byron Murphy led with 11 firsts and 69 points. Following, in order, were Johnny Newton (47, two), Darius Robinson (30, two), Kris Jenkins (26, one), Braden Fiske (23), T’Vondre Sweat (16), Michael Hall (15), Maason Smith (six), Ruke Orhorhoro (three), Brandon Dorlus (two), Justin Eboigbe (one), Jordan Jefferson (one) and McKinnley Jackson (one).

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                      • JOJAX85
                        Registered Charger Fan
                        • Sep 2018
                        • 2005
                        • Irmo, SC
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                        Originally posted by wu-dai clan View Post

                        I know you have TE DNA.
                        Would you take Bowers, JOJAX85 ?
                        No qualifiers.
                        I do not give a shit who else is on the board or what trades are offered.
                        Interested in your take.
                        Is this a Gates pot of gold, or is it a trade up for Kellen Winslow Sr power move ???
                        I would 100%. I just think the kid is special.

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                        • Fouts2herbert
                          Charger Fan since 1978
                          • Sep 2021
                          • 5717
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                          Originally posted by Bolt-O View Post

                          You also have to convince JH10 to allow the trade. He has a no-trade clause. This rumor is more of a prank, no attachment to reality.
                          So viking's fans trolling other viking's fans? That just seems hella cruel to me...
                          "The author assumes no responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions in the content of this post. The information contained in this post is provided on an "as is" basis with no guarantees of completeness, accuracy, usefulness or timeliness..."​​

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