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2007 Rookie Draft / RUNNINGBACKS (1 Viewer)

Ron_Mexico

I Love Doggies
Looking into 2007,

what can we expect

from the incoming RB draft class

from a dynasty perspective ?

Adrian Peterson, OK

Marshawn Lynch, CAL

Kenny Irons, AUB

Antonio Pittman OSU

Michael Bush, LOU

discuss.

:popcorn:

 
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Ill be covering this in depth this offseason, but here's my basic tiers:

Uberstuds: Peterson, Lynch

RB2 in the right offense: Irons, Hart, Pittman

Competent NFL backup types, but not starter quality: Hunt, Darby, Wynn. KSmith

Novelty/Role players: Bush, Wolfe, Booker

 
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Novelty/Role players: Bush
:eek:I repectfully disagree 110%
Bush has the potential to be a solid NFL RB. His size/speed combo is outstanding. However, I haven't seen him run as physical as he's going to need to be in the NFL. The Louisville spread offense disguised that Eric Shelton was overrated, and I think it's doing the same to Bush. Now, Bush could learn how to use his size to his advantage - put his shoulder down and run through guys, run low, and so on, but I havent seen it yet. Until then, I see him as a novelty/role player, despite his possible status as a first round pick.
 
Call me a nut, but I still think the jury

is out on Eric Shelton. He's been injured,

and to this day has not been given a full shot to

produce on the NFL level.

 
Ill be covering this in depth this offseason, but here's my basic tiers:Uberstuds: Peterson, LynchRB2 in the right offense: Irons, Hart, PittmanCompetent NFL backup types, but not starter quality: Hunt, Darby, Wynn. KSmithNovelty/Role players: Bush, Wolfe, Booker
I happened to have made a pre-season trade that turned into the 1.01 Rookie pick... This will be of high interest for me. I see the recovery (collar bone) of A Peterson and where he lands as the only limiting factor of him not landing on my roster come draft time. Lynch would depend on the offense more from what limited play I have seen of his. I am very glad to see Kenny Irons in your listings. I have seen him hurt alot of solid Defenses in the SEC. More maturity could go a long ways with his productivity and work ethic. Side note: I am looking at Ark Soph Darren McFadden as a future dynasty RB to monitor.
 
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Call me a nut, but I still think the juryis out on Eric Shelton. He's been injured,and to this day has not been given a full shot to produce on the NFL level.
I know that he has not gotten a chance on the field, but the Panthers have1- Signed a RB to a long term contract2- Drafted another in the first round3- given more carries to mediocore talents like Goings and HooverIt looks like the Panthers don't think too much of him.
 
Adrian Peterson, OK

Broken collarbone would worry me for someone who is going to be lowering their shoulder a whole lot. Durability aside, his style (minus some gearth, plus some speed) and #s could rival Shaun Alexander's

Marshawn Lynch, CAL

Overrated I'd say, but he could very well be the 2nd RB taken which is more likely to be an instant starting job (GB, DEN, HOU?). Shifty and quick enough to avoid becoming the next J.J. Arrington, but I'm weary of any Pac 10 RB being able to handle NFL defenses*

Antonio Pittman OSU

Tough to gauge RBs from OSU and FSU since they aren't usually getting a full-work load, but I would say he's got the most potential to become a solid 3rd down NFL back.

Kenny Irons, AUB

Has drawn comparisons to Tiki Barber, but that's not saying much without the intagibles that Tiki has. Measurables similar to Tiki maybe, but more like Chestor Taylor IMO.

Michael Bush, LOU

I've seen this guy play alot and Ronnie Brown sounds about right to me.

*Jones-Drew would be a solid exception, but he certainly helped himself alot by working hard in tryouts and getting himself into freakishly good lower-body shape.

 
Call me a nut, but I still think the juryis out on Eric Shelton. He's been injured,and to this day has not been given a full shot to produce on the NFL level.
Exactly my thoughts because Bush is a similar back, I will admit, thought Bush is much more athletic.Similarly, the only question in my mind is durability.
 
Ill be covering this in depth this offseason, but here's my basic tiers:Uberstuds: Peterson, LynchRB2 in the right offense: Irons, Hart, PittmanCompetent NFL backup types, but not starter quality: Hunt, Darby, Wynn. KSmithNovelty/Role players: Bush, Wolfe, Booker
I happened to have made a pre-season trade that turned into the 1.01 Rookie pick... This will be of high interest for me. I see the recovery (collar bone) of A Peterson and where he lands as the only limiting factor of him not landing on my roster come draft time. Lynch would depend on the offense more from what limited play I have seen of his. I am very glad to see Kenny Irons in your listings. I have seen him hurt alot of solid Defenses in the SEC. More maturity could go a long ways with his productivity and work ethic. Side note: I am looking at Ark Soph Darren McFadden as a future dynasty RB to monitor.
If McFadden were to make the jump to the NFL,I would place him either 2nd or 3rd in the 2007 RB draft class at this time..... he's THAT good.
 
ronnie brown ran a 4.4...

will bush run anywhere near that?

if he is a substantially slower ronnie brown... i'm not sure what that means...

does bush have a cut, chiselled physique like brown?

just wondering if there are better comp players...

* edit/add - is his change of direction as good as brown's (not saying brown is barry sanders, but he has pretty good movement skills for a guy that is 230... or is it 240?)

 
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Novelty/Role players: Bush
:eek:I repectfully disagree 110%
Bush has the potential to be a solid NFL RB. His size/speed combo is outstanding. However, I haven't seen him run as physical as he's going to need to be in the NFL. The Louisville spread offense disguised that Eric Shelton was overrated, and I think it's doing the same to Bush. Now, Bush could learn how to use his size to his advantage - put his shoulder down and run through guys, run low, and so on, but I havent seen it yet. Until then, I see him as a novelty/role player, despite his possible status as a first round pick.
:goodposting: I think people are overrating Bush a little bit. What about Dwayne White?
 
I know that he has not gotten a chance on the field, but the Panthers have1- Signed a RB to a long term contract2- Drafted another in the first round3- given more carries to mediocore talents like Goings and HooverIt looks like the Panthers don't think too much of him.
No they dont. However he wasnt nearly as regarded by the majority of NFL scouts as he was by fantasy owners when he went to a team with a need to fill in the second round. Had he gone to another team in the third round (a very strong possiblity if Carolina doesnt make that pick), he wouldnt have been regarded so highly by fantasy players. Bush has more potential than Shelton. Not many large RBs are being used on third downs anymore in the NFL, so I'm not in total disagreement. I'm just not thrilled with the Shelton comparison.
 
I think Michael Bush compares closer to a Brandon Jacobs rather than Ronnie Brown.
and Jacobs wasn't very good until he started running lower and more physical. If Bush undergoes a Jacobs-like transformation, then I'll be happy to say I was wrong about him, just like I was wrong about Jacobs in my 05 rookie rankings.
 
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the problem with projecting bush is he is a listed 6'3" 250...

how many RBs have ever starred at that position with that kind of stature?

chrsitian okoye (i don't have his exact height & weight, but clearly he was a big dude) comes to mind, but he was a freak of nature that was the nigerian national champ in 100 (yards or meters?) AND the shot put!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

thats the kind of freaky deaky you don't want to freak out with... :) and even with all his physical prowess, his career was over about as quickly or more so than earl campbell, because he was so tall it hard for him to get low, he ran upright and took some HELLACIOUS killshots to the body (i remember some... it hurts just thinking about it)...

bettis was about 250 at end of his career, but i think he was closer to 230 when his career started... he had a pudgy, softer body than ronnie brown, but he had a low center of gravity and was a bowling ball, and he had crazy leg strength, tremendous contact balance, and underrated & deceptive feet quickness, shiftiness and make-you-miss ability in the hole (as did emmit smith)... probably best feet i ever saw for a guy that big...

if jacobs makes it as feature RB, he will break the trend, but it is precisely questions like those above (EBF really harped on this last draft in regards to jacobs, & he made some compelling points... historically, RBs that tall & big that have succeeded as feature RBs in the NFL ARE rare), that make jacobs a question mark until he proves it... and even then, he has to prove it over time... will he be able to withstand 20 carries a game if he runs high and absorbs the kind of punishment he will with that kind of workload, given his running style...

 
I wouldn't be surprised to see NFL teams a bit wary of Peterson. He had shoulder problems even before the collar bone break.

 
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ronnie brown ran a 4.4...will bush run anywhere near that?does bush have a cut, chiselled physique like brown?
Yes and yes.He might not be as skilled as a RB as he's only been a true tailback for 4 years. He migth run a little high (ala Jacobs), but these skills can be taught.I'm not saying he's the best RB in this draft, but he's top 4 for sure.
 
in fairness to okoye, he can't be blamed for not being a natural runner when he didn't take up the game until college while spotted/discovered training in track at azusa pacific (i think)... if he had been born in america, played since pee wee leagues and learned to run low, i would have feared for DBs trying to bring him down... & it is probably just as well he didn't, or he would have killed somebody...

the whole subject of physical prototypes for position is a fascinating one to me... & of course it can changes over time and usually in slow state of flux (no question linemen & LBs seem to be getting bigger compared to 2-3 decades ago)... sometimes it can be cyclical... WRs get bigger, so DBs get bigger in a kind of arms race escalation, & at some point smaller WRs can come into vogue again as they are quicker and can run rings around bigger, slower, more ponderous DBs...

where positional prototype size becomes interesting is at extreme bounds... there probably won't be a 90 lb feature RB any time soon... nor a 350 lb one... but more precisely, at what point is a RB too small or too big (& in the speed dimension, clearly you can be too slow, but it doesn't work both ways, hard to be too fast for a position... if a player is younger, a really fast TE or safety might be converted to WR or CB if they had requisite athleticism & movement skills)...

warrick dunn is probably pushing the envelope at 180, and he is an outlier & borderline case in that he hasn't been a traditional bell cow back most of his career...

guys like okoye & jacobs (still a question mark) probably near upper limit in other direction... and if you think about how extraordinary a physical specimen and once in a generation athlete okoye was, it is easy to see why convergences of that kind of size and NFL feature RB ability would be rare...

like anything else, slavish adherence to ANY measurable, whether speed, combine drills, etc, can be problematic & lead scouts astray... a holistic, big picture view is needed that incorporates as much information as we can... but the evidence of history is compelling with this prototypical size issue for RB position... it is safe to say that the odds are against backs like jacobs & bush... not stacked so high as to be impossible, but fearsomely high, and it would be reckless to entirely disregard them...

 
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I think Michael Bush compares closer to a Brandon Jacobs rather than Ronnie Brown.
and Jacobs wasn't very good until he started running lower and more physical. If Bush undergoes a Jacobs-like transformation, then I'll be happy to say I was wrong about him, just like I was wrong about Jacobs in my 05 rookie rankings.
I agree. If Michael Bush doesn't learn to run lower,he will have a very difficult time on the next level.Does anyone know about McFadden's futureplans, ie. leaving early for the NFL ?
 
ronnie brown ran a 4.4...will bush run anywhere near that?does bush have a cut, chiselled physique like brown?
Yes and yes.He might not be as skilled as a RB as he's only been a true tailback for 4 years. He migth run a little high (ala Jacobs), but these skills can be taught.I'm not saying he's the best RB in this draft, but he's top 4 for sure.
i can't always find documentation for my assertions, so if you can't, no problem, but where are you getting that about bush's speed, & if you could provide a link to a scouting or mock draft site that confirms that it would be appreciated... its possible... there have been 250 lb humans that have run a 4.4, but it is pretty rare... maybe he IS a much better prospect than jacobs (jacobs is closer to 260 i think, which is bigger than nearly all LBs and some DEs), but i'm pretty sure jacobs didn't run a 4.4, & may not have run a 4.5...i'll be stunned if bush runs a 4.4 in controlled environment like combine...* in some years, the 4th best RB could be a star... or a bust... the draft slot in itself doesn't mean that much... its all about how his skill set translates to next level...
 
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...from DraftAnalysis.com

Michael Bush

Position: RB

Ht: 6`3` - Wt: 247

Position Rank: 2

Overall Rank: 5

40 Time: 4.5

Compares to: Brandon Jacobs

PROS

He has great sized combined with solid field speed. His forty time does not do him justice, but his size definitely does. He plays big, smart and quick all at the same time. Last year he had 1,143 yards and 23 touchdown`s (shcool single season record), but this year he broke his leg early on and was out for the season.

CONS

Like all running backs, Bush can workon his pass proctection, perhaps on his hands out of the backfield as well. Although he is quick side-to-side, he does not have the breakaway like osme backs in the NFL. He also broke his leg this season, and some scouts may be wary on his status coming into draft day.

UPSIDE

Stud. Rare combination of size, speed and athleticism; the complete package for and NFL running back.

.

 
I think Michael Bush compares closer to a Brandon Jacobs rather than Ronnie Brown.
and Jacobs wasn't very good until he started running lower and more physical. If Bush undergoes a Jacobs-like transformation, then I'll be happy to say I was wrong about him, just like I was wrong about Jacobs in my 05 rookie rankings.
I agree. If Michael Bush doesn't learn to run lower,he will have a very difficult time on the next level.Does anyone know about McFadden's futureplans, ie. leaving early for the NFL ?
Most players keep it under wraps until the last minute.We still don't know for sure if Hart is coming out, plus Michael Bush might even use a medical redshirt and come back for one more year.McFadden is not draft-eligible this year as he's only a true Sophmore. PLayers have to be 3 years out of H.S. to be eligible and this he is not.I would say if he is productive enough next year to become a top 5 pick, then he's going to come out (as a Junior)... especially after seeing what happened to Peterson and Bush.
 
Bush has the potential to be a solid NFL RB. His size/speed combo is outstanding. However, I haven't seen him run as physical as he's going to need to be in the NFL. The Louisville spread offense disguised that Eric Shelton was overrated, and I think it's doing the same to Bush. Now, Bush could learn how to use his size to his advantage - put his shoulder down and run through guys, run low, and so on, but I havent seen it yet. Until then, I see him as a novelty/role player, despite his possible status as a first round pick.
I agree, Bush has an amazing size/speed ratio but his ability to break tackles is horrible, add in the fact that he's tall, runs high and is out right now with a broken leg, I forsee a lot of injury problems to his legs. Tons of people will fall in love with his size and speed but I would do my homework on Bush before putting all my money on him.If I was an NFL GM I would strongly consider taking the running back that sat behind Bush before him, named Kolby Smith. Smith looks to me like he could be something special in the NFL, excellent speed, know's how to get low and finish runs with great power, Kolby compares a lot better to Ronnie Brown then Bush IMO.Marshawn Lynch is an outstanding player and the most complete back in the draft if he declares, he's got everything you for in a back and then some. Fast, Strong, excellent hands and he's also got some of the best agility I've seen since Barry Sanders. He could be the #1 rookie pick if he goes to a better situation then AP.I think Tony Hunt could be a gem if he goes to a good situation, he's not the fastest, not the strongest but he knows how to run with power and get the job done, he's also probably the best blocker in the draft which some coaches will fall in love with.Adrian PetersonMarshawn LynchKenny IronsTony HuntMike HartAntonio PittmanMichael BushKolby SmithSelvin YoungGermaine Raceis my current top 10.
 
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...from DraftAnalysis.com Michael BushPosition: RBHt: 6`3` - Wt: 247Position Rank: 2Overall Rank: 540 Time: 4.5Compares to: Brandon JacobsPROSHe has great sized combined with solid field speed. His forty time does not do him justice, but his size definitely does. He plays big, smart and quick all at the same time. Last year he had 1,143 yards and 23 touchdown`s (shcool single season record), but this year he broke his leg early on and was out for the season.CONSLike all running backs, Bush can workon his pass proctection, perhaps on his hands out of the backfield as well. Although he is quick side-to-side, he does not have the breakaway like osme backs in the NFL. He also broke his leg this season, and some scouts may be wary on his status coming into draft day.UPSIDEStud. Rare combination of size, speed and athleticism; the complete package for and NFL running back..
The leg will be be trouble, not so much for the long-term but the .40 time during draft combines/workouts, I would think can be easily improved by a tenth of a second just by Bush losing a few pounds. No way he can't time with the likes of Vernon Davis (didn't he have a 4.4?)
 
anyone care to compare the top RB's of this class to '06? I know alot depends on where they land, but how do they compare value wise right now? Maroney = Peterson value? Lendale = Irons? Deangelo = Lynch?

 
anyone care to compare the top RB's of this class to '06? I know alot depends on where they land, but how do they compare value wise right now? Maroney = Peterson value? Lendale = Irons? Deangelo = Lynch?
Yes (if not higher), No (because LenDale is/will be a bust IMO), yes.Irons = Maurice Jones Drew (in a pure fantasy potential viewpoint)
 
anyone care to compare the top RB's of this class to '06? I know alot depends on where they land, but how do they compare value wise right now? Maroney = Peterson value? Lendale = Irons? Deangelo = Lynch?
As of this moment:BushPetersonLynchMaroneyDeAngeloAddaiMJDNorwoodHartIronsBush
 
It's hard not to agree with Bloom's

current rankings. I might bump

Irons a couple of notches, but

I can't really argue this list at all.

 
It's hard not to agree with Bloom'scurrent rankings. I might bumpIrons a couple of notches, but I can't really argue this list at all.
Hart and Irons are below MJD and Norwood mainly because of the uncertainty around their destination. Talent wise, I would rank them MJD, Irons, Norwood, Hart, but Norwood is in the perfect situation. If Hart goes to Houston or Denver, his ranking will skyrocket. Lynch vs. Maroney is really hard. I am going Lynch right now just because we know he's a great receiver and a true feature back, but destination could instantly knock Lynch below Maroney, especially if the Pats don't keep Dillon.
 
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...from DraftAnalysis.com Michael BushPosition: RBHt: 6`3` - Wt: 247Position Rank: 2Overall Rank: 540 Time: 4.5Compares to: Brandon JacobsPROSHe has great sized combined with solid field speed. His forty time does not do him justice, but his size definitely does. He plays big, smart and quick all at the same time. Last year he had 1,143 yards and 23 touchdown`s (shcool single season record), but this year he broke his leg early on and was out for the season.CONSLike all running backs, Bush can workon his pass proctection, perhaps on his hands out of the backfield as well. Although he is quick side-to-side, he does not have the breakaway like osme backs in the NFL. He also broke his leg this season, and some scouts may be wary on his status coming into draft day.UPSIDEStud. Rare combination of size, speed and athleticism; the complete package for and NFL running back..
The leg will be be trouble, not so much for the long-term but the .40 time during draft combines/workouts, I would think can be easily improved by a tenth of a second just by Bush losing a few pounds. No way he can't time with the likes of Vernon Davis (didn't he have a 4.4?)
does bush have the kind of body that he can lose 20-30 lbs... not everybody does... not sure he would want to...just for the record... vernon davis was called by some scouts the most physically gifted TE in the history of the draft (i thought i read report he ran sub-4.4 in workouts, though i don't think he did better than 4.4 at combine)... also because of freakish vertical jump which demonstrated absurd explosivenss for such a big dude (listed 6'3" 250, same as bush)... anyway, it was a really big deal that davis ran that fast, so i wouldn't assume bush could do it by shaving off a few pounds...i admit to not seeing bush a lot except in highlights around time of leg break... but based on what i saw of him moving in the open field, he didn't move like matt jones as far as relatively big fast guy (jones is a physical specimen & freak who also engendered heated discussion on this board on whether he was a glorified TE prospect or a legit potential star at WR... i thought latter & still do if injuries don't derail; his career... so i can be down with exceptions to rule that don't neatly fit positional physical prototype scouting conventions & folk wisdom... :) )... so partly based on that observation & comparison, i don't think bush runs a 4.4... 4.5 maybe...i think this could be splitting hairs, because many other factors in a constellation of traits will ultimately be bigger determinants of his success or failure (or somewhere in between), ability to be a feature RB or specialty, situational, luxury back...in other words, if he proves to be a 4.5 guy, but has great feet quickness in hole, contact balance, tackle breaking power & functional playing strength, elusiveness (not all RBs have to have elusivenss of sanders, but they can't be statues, either), ability to get low and square his shoulders, etc...that would be way more important, & make him better overall prospect ON BALANCE, than if he ran 4.4 but was severely lacking in one or several of the other traits & attributes...don't know if i ever viewed it this way before, but severe lack of even one of these could be big problemm... if RB is slow, or lacking in quickness, or isn't elusive, or doesn't have good balance, or break tackles well... they could be catastrophic problems and deal breakers & difference between starring & being mediocre...no wonder it is rare to be an NFL feature RB, & even rarer to be a star... just a few guys like that on the planet like LT, LJ & SA at any given point in time, that are so well rounded & seemingly have no gaping holes in their game (alexander may not be best blocker, but i meant in terms of pure running skills)...no wonder scouting is such an inexact science, when it can be hard to delineate all these separate skill sets, and discern where amongst so many skills they have to have, they may sometimes come up short in a key area, but it gets blurred in a mountain of other data & observations...& often times critcal gaps in skill set that are latent in college don't become manifest until tested against greater level of competition & superior athleticism & talent of NFL, adding to the complexity & compounding the problem & dilemna faced by scouts in trying to project from one level to another...
 
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I wouldn't be surprised to see NFL teams a bit wary of Peterson. He had shoulder problems even before the collar bone break.
I don't follow the college game enough to know much about Peterson's previous shoulder issues but unless he ends up in a very small subset of folks who need surgical intervention for a collarbone fracture (and it appears that he wasn't and won't), that specific injury shouldn't be an issue at all leading up to the draft.What kind of shoulder problems has he had? ETA: Surgery in 2004 after two separate shoulder dislocations. I didn't find any other notes and as far as I can tell, he's had no further problems with that shoulder. The clavicle fracture is a totally separate injury and isn't related to the surgery to strengthen his shoulder joint.
 
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anyone care to compare the top RB's of this class to '06? I know alot depends on where they land, but how do they compare value wise right now? Maroney = Peterson value? Lendale = Irons? Deangelo = Lynch?
As of this moment:BushPetersonLynchMaroneyDeAngeloAddaiMJDNorwoodHartIronsBush
Curious - even after what you have seen so far this year, you think Reggie Bush is still the top dog in this list? I was a big Reggie Bush fan in college and thought he had the type of skills that would translate well into the NFL (and still do) However, after seeing both guys play in the NFL this year, Maroney sure looks much more explosive than Reggie does and seems to have adapated to the NFL better.
 
I wouldn't be surprised to see NFL teams a bit wary of Peterson. He had shoulder problems even before the collar bone break.
I don't follow the college game enough to know much about Peterson's previous shoulder issues but unless he ends up in a very small subset of folks who need surgical intervention for a collarbone fracture (and it appears that he wasn't and won't), that specific injury shouldn't be an issue at all leading up to the draft.What kind of shoulder problems has he had?
As far as I know this is the first shoulder injury for AP.
 
Curious - even after what you have seen so far this year, you think Reggie Bush is still the top dog in this list? I was a big Reggie Bush fan in college and thought he had the type of skills that would translate well into the NFL (and still do) However, after seeing both guys play in the NFL this year, Maroney sure looks much more explosive than Reggie does and seems to have adapated to the NFL better.
Bush is learning the hard way that what worked in college won't work in the pros. He's showing signs of turning the corner (by not always trying to turn the corner). Deuce's continued presence may cap his fantsay value for the next few years, so I would bump Maroney ahead of him if Dillon is gone from NE, but Deuce is not gone from NO. Bush's talent is still off the charts, and for now that is the determining factor. The gap between the two has narrowed since the year began, and will close completely if Maroney is a sole feature back and Bush is not.
 
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I wouldn't be surprised to see NFL teams a bit wary of Peterson. He had shoulder problems even before the collar bone break.
I don't follow the college game enough to know much about Peterson's previous shoulder issues but unless he ends up in a very small subset of folks who need surgical intervention for a collarbone fracture (and it appears that he wasn't and won't), that specific injury shouldn't be an issue at all leading up to the draft.What kind of shoulder problems has he had?
As far as I know this is the first shoulder injury for AP.
Edited my last post to reflect some googling. Peterson had issues with shoulder dislocations in 2004 (at least two) and had surgery to tighten the capsule -- haven't found the details of how extensive the surgery was yet. And I haven't seen any indication that it's hindered him since. Haven't delved much deeper than that yet.
 
I just wanted to add that when looking at raw measurables such as 40 times, that it has been my experience when seeing early published numbers, they are ushualy lower (faster) than what players actualy clock at the combine. And players who do lose weight and work out with the sole purpose of improving thier clock speed (as they should) are not showing thier actual functional speed by doing so. Because after the combine they will likely regain the weight they lost for that purpose and return to thier actual ***tional playing size/speed.That said 40 times are not everything. I think agility drills and cone measurables are more important measurables for rbs. Because those numbers tell you how quick they can cut and pick thier way through traffic.I am skeptical of Michael Bush being a success at the NFL level more because I have not heard that he runs with great power and tackle breaking ability. And I have not heard people touting his intangible abilities such as vision balance ect.Craig Heyword was a bigger Rb who had success in the NFL for a short period of time by primarily being used in a spread offense with the Falcons. His only 1000 yard season.Craig "Ironhead" HaywardHt/Wt: 5-11, 260Born: 9/26/1966College: PittsburghDrafted: 1988, round 1, by the New Orleans Saints

+--------------------------+-------------------------+ | Rushing | Receiving |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+| Year TM | G | Att Yards Y/A TD | Rec Yards Y/R TD |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+| 1988 nor | 11 | 74 355 4.8 1 | 13 105 8.1 0 || 1989 nor | 16 | 49 183 3.7 1 | 13 69 5.3 0 || 1990 nor | 16 | 129 599 4.6 4 | 18 121 6.7 0 || 1991 nor | 7 | 76 260 3.4 4 | 4 34 8.5 1 || 1992 nor | 16 | 104 416 4.0 3 | 19 159 8.4 0 || 1993 chi | 16 | 68 206 3.0 0 | 16 132 8.2 0 || 1994 atl | 16 | 183 779 4.3 7 | 32 335 10.5 1 || 1995 atl | 16 | 236 1083 4.6 6 | 37 350 9.5 2 || 1996 atl | 15 | 72 321 4.5 3 | 16 168 10.5 0 || 1997 stl | 16 | 34 84 2.5 1 | 8 77 9.6 0 || 1998 ind | 4 | 6 15 2.5 0 | 1 9 9.0 0 |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+| TOTAL | 149 | 1031 4301 4.2 30 | 177 1559 8.8 4 |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+
 
Biabreakable said:
I just wanted to add that when looking at raw measurables such as 40 times, that it has been my experience when seeing early published numbers, they are ushualy lower (faster) than what players actualy clock at the combine. And players who do lose weight and work out with the sole purpose of improving thier clock speed (as they should) are not showing thier actual functional speed by doing so. Because after the combine they will likely regain the weight they lost for that purpose and return to thier actual ***tional playing size/speed.That said 40 times are not everything. I think agility drills and cone measurables are more important measurables for rbs. Because those numbers tell you how quick they can cut and pick thier way through traffic.I am skeptical of Michael Bush being a success at the NFL level more because I have not heard that he runs with great power and tackle breaking ability. And I have not heard people touting his intangible abilities such as vision balance ect.Craig Heyword was a bigger Rb who had success in the NFL for a short period of time by primarily being used in a spread offense with the Falcons. His only 1000 yard season.Craig "Ironhead" HaywardHt/Wt: 5-11, 260Born: 9/26/1966College: PittsburghDrafted: 1988, round 1, by the New Orleans Saints

+--------------------------+-------------------------+ | Rushing | Receiving |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+| Year TM | G | Att Yards Y/A TD | Rec Yards Y/R TD |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+| 1988 nor | 11 | 74 355 4.8 1 | 13 105 8.1 0 || 1989 nor | 16 | 49 183 3.7 1 | 13 69 5.3 0 || 1990 nor | 16 | 129 599 4.6 4 | 18 121 6.7 0 || 1991 nor | 7 | 76 260 3.4 4 | 4 34 8.5 1 || 1992 nor | 16 | 104 416 4.0 3 | 19 159 8.4 0 || 1993 chi | 16 | 68 206 3.0 0 | 16 132 8.2 0 || 1994 atl | 16 | 183 779 4.3 7 | 32 335 10.5 1 || 1995 atl | 16 | 236 1083 4.6 6 | 37 350 9.5 2 || 1996 atl | 15 | 72 321 4.5 3 | 16 168 10.5 0 || 1997 stl | 16 | 34 84 2.5 1 | 8 77 9.6 0 || 1998 ind | 4 | 6 15 2.5 0 | 1 9 9.0 0 |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+| TOTAL | 149 | 1031 4301 4.2 30 | 177 1559 8.8 4 |+----------+-----+--------------------------+-------------------------+
That's all fine and good, but that guy was built like Bettis, not Bush.
 
Biabreakable said:
I am skeptical of Michael Bush being a success at the NFL level more because I have not heard that he runs with great power and tackle breaking ability. And I have not heard people touting his intangible abilities such as vision balance ect.
:thumbup: We are definitely on the same page Bia. I agree with skeptical. I'm not saying Bush will be a bust, but I got burned too badly by Shelton to think that size/speed/athleticism = success at RB - and Shelton was set up to succeed in a good power running attack, so it wasn't because he was being misused. Bush is definitely a superior athletic specimen to Shelton, but I don't think a little more speed and agility would have changed how badly Shelton's career has gone thus far.

Looks like Bush will be one of the most heavily debated players in rookie drafts this offseason.

 

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