What's new
Fantasy Football - Footballguys Forums

Welcome to Our Forums. Once you've registered and logged in, you're primed to talk football, among other topics, with the sharpest and most experienced fantasy players on the internet.

Know any teams that could use a 6'4 400 lb rb (still in HS) (1 Viewer)

Wilfredo Ledezma

Footballguy
I imagine this guy converts pretty good in short yardage. :eek: at being a HS LB and seeing him come through the hole.

http://nypost.com/2013/11/17/next-big-thing-high-school-rb-weighs-400-lbs/

He’s a force, a 6-foot-4, 400-pound man-child.

But you won’t see Tony Picard battling in the trenches. The Washington prep star, known by friends as “Big Tone,” is a converted fullback, and he’s thriving at his new position.

The White Swan High School senior began his career as a lineman. He still plays nose tackle, but the agile and surprisingly quick for his size big man has become a factor out of the backfield, running for more than 500 yards and eight touchdowns this season, according to BustedCoverage.com.

“I just love carrying [the ball] and hitting people,” he told The Post in a phone interview Saturday night. “I’ve enjoyed it. I love playing on a line, I enjoy running the ball. I do what coach asks.”

Early in Picard’s sophomore year, White Swan coach Andrew Bush told him he was going to start running the ball, which caught Picard off guard.

“I was kind of shocked,” said Picard, who is also the center on the White Swan basketball team. “I just did what I was told. I had no problem as long as I’m still playing.”

“When I was younger, I always looked at running backs as fast, skill guys. I looked at [myself] being big and blocking for them.”

Picard led his team to a 9-1 record during the regular season. White Swan, however, lost in the opening round of the state tournament, 22-14, to Colfax High School. Picard is Native American, part Umatilla-Nez Perce Indian and part Sioux.

Bush told Indian Country Today Media Network at a football camp a few years ago he noticed the big man from Yakima, Wash., playing pickup basketball, holding his own against his smaller teammates, and the idea came to mind.

“He was so agile and making shots from way out there,” Bush recalled. “I said, ‘I’ve got to use this somehow.’

“It’s so much fun to have him go out [on the field] as a captain and see him shaking hands before the game. They’re just kind of staring, like ‘Oh my gosh, you’ve got to be kidding me!’ ”

Picard said he has heard comparisons to former Chicago Bears defensive tackle William “The Refrigerator” Perry, who ran the ball on occasions, a parallel he enjoys.

“It puts me out there,” he said.

Picard became nationally known on Friday when ESPN’s Brock Huard tweeted a photo of him in the open field about to run over a defensive back. Soon, video of him went viral. Clips spread of the mammoth running back trampling over and through defenders, almost all of whom tiny by comparison, even knocking over his own offensive linemen on occasion. Picard said the notoriety hasn’t all been positive, and he doesn’t necessarily like his newfound celebrity.

“I don’t really care much about the attention,” he said. “There is a lot of people that kind of dislike it, disagree, agree [with his running the ball]. I’m just playing because I love the sport. I could care less what people think.”

Picard started playing football in middle school, primarily as an offensive and defensive lineman. He began running the ball as a sophomore and scored a touchdown in the third game of his junior year before breaking his foot during a game and fracturing his arm in a car accident that ended his season.

Picard, a fan favorite according to his coach, told the Washington paper he gets his size from his mother’s side. She is 5-foot-11 and her brother was 6-foot-5 and 275 pounds in high school. He is uncommitted for next year, and Picard thinks he probably will end up playing on the line in college, though the coach said: “There’s always the chance that he’ll get his chance to carry the ball on those short touchdown runs. It’s tough to stop 400 pounds!”

Picard said he has talked to coaches from Idaho, Eastern Oregon and Central Washington, but he is still without a scholarship offer. He doesn’t have a preference what position he plays at the next level.

“I honestly don’t,” he said. “As long as I’m on the field playing, that’s all that matters.”

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I'm sure this has been brought up before but why doesn't some nfl team grab a 7'0 tall basketball player and convert him into a TE? Just for red zone plays. The dude could have 30 TD catches.

 
I'm sure this has been brought up before but why doesn't some nfl team grab a 7'0 tall basketball player and convert him into a TE? Just for red zone plays. The dude could have 30 TD catches.
Anyone athletic enough to get on an NFL field at that height is probably already getting paid to play basketball somewhere with far less risk than playing football, and a longer prospective career.

 
ConnSKINS26 said:
I'm sure this has been brought up before but why doesn't some nfl team grab a 7'0 tall basketball player and convert him into a TE? Just for red zone plays. The dude could have 30 TD catches.
Anyone athletic enough to get on an NFL field at that height is probably already getting paid to play basketball somewhere with far less risk than playing football, and a longer prospective career.
And ridiculous guaranteed contracts.

 
ConnSKINS26 said:
I'm sure this has been brought up before but why doesn't some nfl team grab a 7'0 tall basketball player and convert him into a TE? Just for red zone plays. The dude could have 30 TD catches.
Anyone athletic enough to get on an NFL field at that height is probably already getting paid to play basketball somewhere with far less risk than playing football, and a longer prospective career.
I'm not sure I agree. I mean we have had basketball players that were not good enough to make the NBA (or at least start) that have turned themselves into all pro players in the NFL.

Superstar nfl player > ride the pine NBA nobody

 
Just a feeling, but I think a 7 footer in the NFL has about a 99.9% chance of getting his knee blown out every year.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Just a feeling, but I think a 7 footer in the NFL has about a 99.9% chance of getting his knee blown out every year.
You wouldn't be asking him to run in between the tackles. Besides basketball players are probably more athletic than football players anyway. They might be less likely to get injuried.....

I'm trying to think of a specific player. I mean Shaq comes to mind but he wouldn't play in the nfl when he can excel in the nba. He would have been unstoppable in the red zone though.

 
So when he goes to catch a pass and a couple people dive at those huge targets between his shins and his thighs, you don't see that as any sort of increased injury risk?

I mean, they get hurt more than the other players in basketball, let alone football.

 
ConnSKINS26 said:
I'm sure this has been brought up before but why doesn't some nfl team grab a 7'0 tall basketball player and convert him into a TE? Just for red zone plays. The dude could have 30 TD catches.
Anyone athletic enough to get on an NFL field at that height is probably already getting paid to play basketball somewhere with far less risk than playing football, and a longer prospective career.
I'm not sure I agree. I mean we have had basketball players that were not good enough to make the NBA (or at least start) that have turned themselves into all pro players in the NFL.

Superstar nfl player > ride the pine NBA nobody
The NBA requires a highly specialized skillset while the NFL has 22 different positions for people to play. If you take a random athlete he's more likely to find a place on a football field than on a basketball court.

 
What is this reporter talking about? Surprising agility? He runs like a offenive lineman. Enough said.
:goodposting:

Actually goes down pretty damn easy for a guy of his size.

And :lol: at those suggesting that really tall guys be used as TE. See the current trend in NFL. Only 3 of every 1 million people are 7 feet tall. About 20pct of them are in the NBA... Pretty much any of them that can jog fast and handle a ball. One NBA scout was quoted as "I'll check up on anyone 7' who's breathing.

I'm not sure a 7' guy exists that could move well enough to be a TE, and if he did, he'd be making 20MM a year guaranteed in the NBA with much much less chance of getting hurt.

 
Newsflash, guys. 90% of 7 footers don't have the knees or the athleticism to jog on a treadmill, much less take a NFL pounding and remain healthy. Many can't jump well either.

Or, you know, have the coordination to CATCH A FOOTBALL. Which many TE's are required to do.

:lmao: @ those thinking they've just cracked the code of scoring TDs that NFL coaches must have completely overlooked for all these years

As for this 400lb fellow, he goes down like a ton of bricks at first contact in many of these "highlights". Just sweep the leg, Johnny.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
My favorite part of that video is when they feel a need to put a yellow circle around him. You know, in case you weren't able to pick him out.

 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top