Xue
Footballguy
Melvin Gordon is now listed at 213lbs. http://www.uwbadgers.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/melvin_gordon_764894.html
If you're a weight guy, which I'm not, I don't really see this as all that impressive. It's players will likely report heavier than they will actually play thanks to offseason weight training, ect. What will he weigh in week 7? Also, I don't trust team website in the least for weight. They are off way more than they are right.Melvin Gordon is now listed at 213lbs. http://www.uwbadgers.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/melvin_gordon_764894.html
Are you open to the idea that's he "faster" on the field than what he'll time? David Wilson "only" ran a 4.49 Official, but he's a lot faster or explosive on the field than someone like Lamar Miller, who ran a 4.40 Official. If you're saying he's not as fast as those guys based on what you think he'll time, then I agree with you. If you're saying he's not as fast based on actually watching him play, then I'd disagree with you.EBF said:213 is still pretty light for a RB with a listed height of 6'1". I'm not going to go on a crusade against Gordon, but I'm open to the idea that he might be overrated right now. I don't find him as impressive as other light backs like Spiller, Peterson, and Charles were in college. He's not as fast and seems a bit tighter than the latter two, though definitely not without some elusiveness and cutting ability. He's a good prospect. Perhaps not a great one, which is what he'd have to be to justify his devy ADP right now. I would not be surprised to see his teammate Corey Clement develop into a better pro. He has a much better frame for the NFL, appears to have very good speed for a stocky back, and also shows some good cutting/footwork. Surprisingly sudden at times for a big back. I'd be more likely to acquire him at his current market price than Gordon.
Not to derail this thread too much, but I disagree with the Wilson/Miller statement. Miller is a blur to the hole and in a straight line on the field. His acceleration out of the gate, when he knows where he's going, is unreal and displays his 40 time speed IMO. He doesn't play as fast as Wilson because Wilson has better change of direction speed and maintains his speed better through traffic. Miller is the faster player and it shows but circumstances can alter that. Perhaps Wilson's attributes more adequately reflect a larger scale of scenarios in football. I'm not sure. I only bring this up because I do in fact think it relates to Gordon. I think he maintains his speed well through traffic and change of direction. Still a high end 40 guy with true wheels like say, Mostert at Purdue, will have situations that arise to showcase that true speed that Gordon simply doesn't posses.Are you open to the idea that's he "faster" on the field than what he'll time? David Wilson "only" ran a 4.49 Official, but he's a lot faster or explosive on the field than someone like Lamar Miller, who ran a 4.40 Official. If you're saying he's not as fast as those guys based on what you think he'll time, then I agree with you. If you're saying he's not as fast based on actually watching him play, then I'd disagree with you.
Wisconsin RB Melvin Gordon squats 600 lbs at 213 pounds. 40 time? Coach Gary Anderson said, “I don’t know. Fast?"
There's a wide range of successful body types at RB, but generally speaking lighter players need to compensate with better mobility. If Gordon's listed height/weight are accurate (which they might not be) then he has a 28.1 BMI. There are a handful of good current NFL RBs in that same general ballpark: Chris Johnson, Jamaal Charles, CJ Spiller, Reggie Bush, Adrian Peterson, and DeMarco Murray. Maybe the most obvious common thread with those guys apart from size is sheer speed. That's a very, very fast group of players. All of them ran in the 4.2-4.40 range and Charles/Spiller/Peterson/Bush account for some of the fastest 100m times of any NFL RB. In order for another thin-framed RB to achieve similar success in the NFL, it's probably not a stretch to say that he needs to have similar speed and quickness. Is Gordon that fast? We'll know in February, but he doesn't have the 100m background and doesn't look as fast on film to me as guys like Spiller, Charles, and Johnson. It might seem unfair to compare Gordon to that group of players, but that's roughly the level he'll need to reach to become an effective long term NFL starter. I don't know if he's quite that good. Going back and watching Charles at Texas, he seemed looser and more compact than Gordon. Spiller and Johnson are more explosive. Gordon is good, but has an odd build for an NFL starter being tall and lean with long legs and a relatively high center of gravity. Peterson is built a little bit like that, but Peterson has some of the most active feet and best quickness of any back in the game. Gordon can move a bit, but he's not as gifted in that sense. He doesn't run quite as loose and definitely doesn't bring much functional power on the field regardless of what he might squat in a weight room.What does "better frame" mean? Does having a better frame make you a better RB overall? What do the frames of last year's leading rushers look like? The top 3 leading rushers (total yardage) McCoy, Forte, Charles, have frames that resemble nothing like Clement. Out of the top 10, I'd say only Morris, Lynch, and Gore have "stocky" frames similar to Clement, though even that's debatable.
I have a devy draft coming up on Saturday in which I have picks 1.05 and 1.06. Gurley/Yeldon/Tyner/Dyer are gone. Everyone else of note is available, so I've been catching up on watching some clips of them. I was more impressed with Clement than I expected to be, but at the same time I'm not necessarily sold yet. Just felt he had surprising speed and cutback ability for a big back. He seemed to run a bit high/narrow though. I don't disagree that other players offer more value for what they cost. Elliott in particular is a good value. DLF has Clement really high, though much of that is due to Wisconsin homer Russell Clay ranking him higher than most would. I think he'd fall out of the top 12-14 in a lot of dev drafts, which makes him exponentially cheaper in practice than Gordon. Truth is that I don't know if I'd be likely to roster either right now.While I really like Clement as well, I wouldn't take him at his current price. His current value right in the Devy drafts I've been in are in the late 2nd. I'd much rather target Greg Bryant and Ezekiel Elliott for cheaper whether that's in a draft or through a trade. Or maybe even David Williams and Justin Davis who are going for pennies.
Here's my early rankings based who I think will declare:I dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
That's pretty much where I'm at as well. There are a lot of moving parts after Davis but the top 3 are pretty well established IMO. Gurley is easily the best RB in the class and in the last several years for that matter. I've got Gordon and Davis pretty close. Then a drop off. I like Duke Johnson a lot but want to see him this year for confirmation. He could be the 4 guy for me.Gurley.... then Gordon...Davis...the rest
Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Gurley is nothing like Richardson. Also, you do realize he was a track star, right?Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Richardson is nothing like Richardson. Also, being a track star doesn't make you sub 4.45.Gurley is nothing like Richardson. Also, you do realize he was a track star, right?Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
You said, 2x, he has "some speed." That is blatantly false.Richardson is nothing like Richardson. Also, being a track star doesn't make you sub 4.45.Gurley is nothing like Richardson. Also, you do realize he was a track star, right?Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Williams and Gurley both ran career bests of 10.70 100m in HS. I think both guys are closer to 4.50.Richardson is nothing like Richardson. Also, being a track star doesn't make you sub 4.45.Gurley is nothing like Richardson.Also, you do realize he was a track star, right?Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
I don't think you're totally off the mark. If I had to cite a weakness in his game, it would be suddenness/explosiveness. He's light on his feet with good agility, but he's not a flashy prospect in terms of his fast-twitch. He also runs pretty high through the line of scrimmage, which negates some of his physical strength. I know he ran a 10.70 in high school, but he doesn't play to that speed and has likely gained a lot of weight since then. I would expect him to run solid times in his workouts, but not freaky stuff. I could see him looking more ordinary in the NFL because he doesn't have the "wow" level mobility of guys like MJD, Peterson, Charles, and McCoy. There's a little bit of sluggishness to his game and he'll be punished for that more at the next level. However, he's a big dude and he can catch the ball. If he pans out, I think it will be as sort of a Steven Jackson type.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Williams is a lot more sudden than Gurley. He seems to hit top speed in a hurry and is much more decisive. I do value strength, power and yac, however my opinion of Gurley is that he only maximizes those traits on the second level and can be slowed if he has to make a move or create in much the same way as Richardson and Andre Williams.Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Also, I don't see much creativity from Gordon as well, certainly not more than Gurley.
Richardson was a great prospect. He just forgot how to run once he got to the NFL.
I don't like Karlos that much, but would definitely back him to run a faster 40 than Gurley. One guy seems to play a little bit above his 100m time and one guy a little bit below. Karlos isn't Spiller/Ginn fast, but he still runs like he was shot out of a cannon. Bear in mind that some guys start fast and then plateau at a low top speed whereas others start slowly, but build to a crazy top speed. That can affect the relative quality of their performances across the different distances.Williams is a lot more sudden than Gurley. He seems to hit top speed in a hurry and is much more decisive. I do value strength, power and yac, however my opinion of Gurley is that he only maximizes those traits on the second level and can be slowed if he has to make a move or create in much the same way as Richardson and Andre Williams.Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Also, I don't see much creativity from Gordon as well, certainly not more than Gurley.
Richardson was a great prospect. He just forgot how to run once he got to the NFL.
When you use Andre Williams in the same breath as Todd gurley... you lose me. That's like me comparing teddy Bridgewater to Aaron Rodgers because they're both 1st round picks.Williams is a lot more sudden than Gurley. He seems to hit top speed in a hurry and is much more decisive. I do value strength, power and yac, however my opinion of Gurley is that he only maximizes those traits on the second level and can be slowed if he has to make a move or create in much the same way as Richardson and Andre Williams.Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Also, I don't see much creativity from Gordon as well, certainly not more than Gurley.
Richardson was a great prospect. He just forgot how to run once he got to the NFL.
I was gone at questioning his speed but yeah, this too.When you use Andre Williams in the same breath as Todd gurley... you lose me. That's like me comparing teddy Bridgewater to Aaron Rodgers because they're both 1st round picks.Williams is a lot more sudden than Gurley. He seems to hit top speed in a hurry and is much more decisive. I do value strength, power and yac, however my opinion of Gurley is that he only maximizes those traits on the second level and can be slowed if he has to make a move or create in much the same way as Richardson and Andre Williams.Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Also, I don't see much creativity from Gordon as well, certainly not more than Gurley.
Richardson was a great prospect. He just forgot how to run once he got to the NFL.
Andre Williams has almost no later agility and super long legs. Todd gurley makes cuts subtle and decisive to gash defenses. It makes me question if you've seen them play.
It can be hard to talk definitively about that stuff until you have the concrete numbers in front of you. Is he actually 6'1" like they list him? Taller? Shorter? Is he 226 or 236? Will he run a 4.45 or a 4.55? All of those things matter and make a difference. I'm not going to say he's a freak just yet because it's not entirely clear. He's definitely a big back with good strength and power. I think he's fast enough. Beyond that, I can only speculate as to exactly how freakish he is. Personally, I don't think he's Jonathan Stewart or MJD as a physical specimen. His speed/quickness don't really jump off the screen. They only become impressive in the context of his size. That said, long speed really isn't the issue for me so much as his initial burst and explosiveness. I think he's just average in those categories relative to a typical NFL starter. That could be something that prevents him from reaching the mega star level in the NFL, which is all I'm really saying. Good as he is, very few reach that level and those that do are insanely gifted (beyond even just a typical 1st round talent).4.45-4.55 is just fine for a 220+ back? Gurley is 230 and those times would be near elite for a player his size, not just fine. His explosiveness is good for any RB prospect, for a guy with his size and other tools, it's down right filthy. The closest parallel to him is one I've mentioned before and not entirely different from Matt's, Fred Taylor.
I knew you must live in that region because you almost exclusively hype players from the southeast. This isn't the first time that you've used the, "If you don't agree with me completely then you haven't watched him play" type of argument. I have been tracking him since his freshman year like most people. There are already three games from 2013 up on Draft Breakdown, so you can spare me the "you haven't him play" stuff.Like I said, Gurley makes it look easy. He does so because his feet are silky smooth for a guy his size. I see a lot of UGA football because of where I live. I'm assuming you, not so much. Do yourself a favor and watch a few games.., really watch them. This guys ability jumps off the screen.
Ahh, I guess it's never a debate until the baseless personal attacks from you. Funny I was going to mention the jab you took at Waldman earlier but decided not too. Pointing out that he has ties to UGA is a classic passive aggressive dig to ruin his credibility on the topic. Seriously, can we/anyone ever disagree on a player without you just making things up out of thin air and resorting to personal attacks? I debunked your baseless claim of this before and don't care to bother with it again. You're just now figuring out where I live? It's posted in my profile right next to every post I make like yours is. Careful getting too sidetracked by my current place of dwelling because I haven't always lived in this region. There is a reason I form stronger opinions on guys from the region in which I live, both good and bad. It's because I watch a lot more of them than other players. That's what happens when you have a closer proximity and better availability to information. That's also why I openly state, many times, I need more information on west coast players. I just can't watch as much of them. I've most recently done this with players like Lee, Richardson and Ajayi. I'm glad I did with Ajayi because it opened my eyes to some things. I'm not going to pretend to know things or have insight on something I don't. Sometimes I am able to supplement my intake by making a concerted effort to watch west coast games and I will if there is a player, team or just game I'm particularly interested in. It doesn't happen as often as I'd like, though. Sorry but I do have a life outside of football. I imagine you have the same problem, hence the statement.I knew you must live in that region because you almost exclusively hype players from the southeast. This isn't the first time that you've used the, "If you don't agree with me completely then you haven't watched him play" type of argument. I have been tracking him since his freshman year like most people. There are already three games from 2013 up on Draft Breakdown, so you can spare me the "you haven't him play" stuff.
I don't think lack of speed was Nero's real argument though. Here's what he said:My issue isn't with your ranking of Gurley. It's with statements that you've made that don't align with the player he is. I don't really care if you rank Gurley 1 or 2 or 10. It's your ranking, not mine. I could care less that Nero list him at 5. I care that he stated his speed was just OK. Go ahead and rank him at 5 if there is a reason that makes sense. Lack of speed simply isn't 1 of them.
That was the post I initially responded to.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.
Neither one of us really mentioned speed as the biggest concern.I don't think you're totally off the mark. If I had to cite a weakness in his game, it would be suddenness/explosiveness.
Let me reiterate that I have Gurley ranked as the #1 RB in the draft. Nothing contrarian about that.And I thought I was a contrarian.
Even if you think Gurley isn't the best RB in this class, he's one of the safest because he can play all 3 downs and he could be a workhorse.
The word "elite" is being tossed around too loosely here. You don't need to be an elite talent to be an elite producer. See: Giovani Bernard (soon enough), LeSean McCoy, Matt Forte, Eddie Lacy, Arian Foster, etc.
When you use a Bridgewatet/Aaron Rodgers analogy to describe the difference between Gurley and Andre Williams it makes me question whether you have seen them play. Obviously what you have seen of Gurley is so deluded by preconceived notions, you haven't seen him.When you use Andre Williams in the same breath as Todd gurley... you lose me. That's like me comparing teddy Bridgewater to Aaron Rodgers because they're both 1st round picks.Andre Williams has almost no later agility and super long legs. Todd gurley makes cuts subtle and decisive to gash defenses. It makes me question if you've seen them play.Williams is a lot more sudden than Gurley. He seems to hit top speed in a hurry and is much more decisive. I do value strength, power and yac, however my opinion of Gurley is that he only maximizes those traits on the second level and can be slowed if he has to make a move or create in much the same way as Richardson and Andre Williams.Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Also, I don't see much creativity from Gordon as well, certainly not more than Gurley.
Richardson was a great prospect. He just forgot how to run once he got to the NFL.
I'm posting from my phone, which made me miss some words in my previous post.When you use a Bridgewatet/Aaron Rodgers analogy to describe the difference between Gurley and Andre Williams it makes me question whether you have seen them play. Obviously what you have seen of Gurley is so deluded by preconceived notions, you haven't seen him.When you use Andre Williams in the same breath as Todd gurley... you lose me. That's like me comparing teddy Bridgewater to Aaron Rodgers because they're both 1st round picks.Andre Williams has almost no later agility and super long legs. Todd gurley makes cuts subtle and decisive to gash defenses. It makes me question if you've seen them play.Williams is a lot more sudden than Gurley. He seems to hit top speed in a hurry and is much more decisive. I do value strength, power and yac, however my opinion of Gurley is that he only maximizes those traits on the second level and can be slowed if he has to make a move or create in much the same way as Richardson and Andre Williams.Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Also, I don't see much creativity from Gordon as well, certainly not more than Gurley.
Richardson was a great prospect. He just forgot how to run once he got to the NFL.
I see what you're saying about Williams because that's what happened to me as well. I actually called a buddy I know in the BC athletic department to confirm my thoughts.If you watch a highlight tape of Andre Williams, he looks plenty decisive and runs with great speed and power. However, when you see every carry of a game there plenty runs where he is bottled up and goes down rather easily at or behind the los. I see the same tendency in Gurley. He doesn't play like a 230lb man until he gets going.
I will agree that Karlos Williams is kind of like DMC. That is not necessarily a bad thing especially since he is significantly heavier.
I agree and I don't see any of those things when I watch Gurley,either. The Florida game is an interesting one because he looked so dominate in the 1st half. He displayed all of the things that are being said he doesn't do well. On his 1st carry he made a sick jump cut in the hole, exploded up field to run through a closing window and pick up extra yds. On his 1st TD he again made a silky smooth jump cut in the hole, powered thru a tackle attempt in the hole by lowering his pad level an driving his legs and proceeded to run thru 2 more tackle attempts before stretching for the end zone. He later that half had another nasty cut back at the LOS, ran thru a tackle before generating momentum and burst upfield for 30+. In the 2nd had he simply got gassed for the reason you stated.The only time I saw gurley as nonexplosive was vs Florida in the 2nd half. However, that was his first game back after his ankle injury. So I'm willing to give him a 1 half pass. Outside of that, I've seen none of the things discussed.
It's hard to make too big of a declaration on only 91 career carries, but personally I didn't notice any vision/instinct/goal-line work deficiency in Karlos Williams to be concerned about last year. Dude was cutting and sifting sifting through traffic quite well to my eyes. He looks to be too stiff in the hips to make multiple sharp cuts in quick succession, but he's more of a 1-cut-and-go back anyway so it's not a big deal imo. I do agree that his build is not exactly ideal, but I think those concerns may be a bit exaggerated. He definitely has real skinny calves for some reason, but he looks to have big powerful thighs which is more important for having a strong core anyway.I'm posting from my phone, which made me miss some words in my previous post.When you use a Bridgewatet/Aaron Rodgers analogy to describe the difference between Gurley and Andre Williams it makes me question whether you have seen them play. Obviously what you have seen of Gurley is so deluded by preconceived notions, you haven't seen him.When you use Andre Williams in the same breath as Todd gurley... you lose me. That's like me comparing teddy Bridgewater to Aaron Rodgers because they're both 1st round picks.Andre Williams has almost no later agility and super long legs. Todd gurley makes cuts subtle and decisive to gash defenses. It makes me question if you've seen them play.Williams is a lot more sudden than Gurley. He seems to hit top speed in a hurry and is much more decisive. I do value strength, power and yac, however my opinion of Gurley is that he only maximizes those traits on the second level and can be slowed if he has to make a move or create in much the same way as Richardson and Andre Williams.Sounds like the same description for Karlos Williams. I guess you don't value strength/power and Yards After Contact from Gurley? He's has very good hands and runs some solid routes; something that can't be said for Gordon and Williams yet.Gurley has great size and some speed, but I don't see suddenness or creativity. He reminds me a lot of Trent Richardson, a big back with some speed and decent hands. Unless he is super fast(sub 4.45), I don't think he will be able to live up to the hype surrounding him.What's the reasons for Gurley that low and below Yeldon?Right now, my top 5 is:1. Melvin GordonI dont follow college much but does anyone have any early rankings of the top 5-10 RB in next years draft
2. Duke Johnson
3. Karlos Williams
4. TJ Yeldon
5. Todd Gurley
Also, I don't see much creativity from Gordon as well, certainly not more than Gurley.
Richardson was a great prospect. He just forgot how to run once he got to the NFL.
I don't think this needs to get personal, but Andre Williams is never going to be Todd gurley agility wise.
I'll also take gurleys lateral agility over karlos Williams. The hype with karlos is because he's heavy and fast/ quick. But he lacks everything else IMO. Instincts, natural feel of defenses to maximize yards, hands are still a question, vision, subtle cuts, decisive cuts, goal line work, handle a big workload, pass protection. I also don't like karlos William's build at all. He looks like he is top heavy with thin legs. Combine that with his lack of ability to avoid contact and it's a big concern with injuries ( see DMC).
Too many times in this rb debate are looking for the next this or that. Identify all the areas a rb needs to be successful in the NFL. Then see how a prospect fits and what concerns are left. Todd gurley isn't quite as quick or maybe top end speed as karlos Williams ( debatable) but I'll take him in every other area hands down.
Speed gets a lot of people excited and I also think it's very overrated in the context of everything else they have to do. See david wilson, lamar miller, seastrunk, spiller(who hasn't lived up to the hype).
I'll take gurley at the goal line(one of the best rb prospects I've seen there in a long time. Or how he stiff arms defenders away regularly and some straight to the ground.
Much more to playing RB than size/speed...I don't think Karlos Williams has "it." I also don't buy the well he played safety, etc. If you're "special" when you have a football in your hands, you know what to do. Hasn't he been playing football all his life and just suddenly forgot how to cut back across a defense? When I watched that AP college video(thanks EBF for posting, gosh I missed AP in college) special just jumps off the page. Watch Arian Foster with the ball in his hands(pre-injuries) and you see he has a natural feel for how to gash defenses/where to cut. Jahvid Best also was special in college. Karlos Williams bounces outside often, unless a huge hole is open in the middle. Maybe a light will click on for him, but I think it's something either you have or you don't.If you re-read my post you'll see that I compared Williams to Peterson in regard to his combination of size and initial burst, not as all-around players. And I even mentioned Williams' agility "issues" earlier in that post, albeit I don't think they will be too big of a detriment in the end given his other skills; there's nothing wrong with being a 1-cut-and-go kind of RB, especially given Williams' other freakish abilities.
As for the McFadden comparison, they definitely have their similarities. But I think Williams is unquestionably heavier and more powerful. Plus I think Williams' agility is getting undersold in here. Sure it's not elite, but it's pretty damn adequate given the speed and size at which he's moving at. I think with a full workload of carries this year their will be a bigger sample size of carries where he shows off his agility.
As for why he didn't make a splash earlier in his career, that's quite simply explained by the fact that last year was his first at RB, he was playing on the other side of the ball as a Safety for his freshman and sophomore seasons. I think I remember reading that he didn't even start playing RB til midway through the FSU's training camp or something. There's even a highlight video of him as a safety where he makes some massive hits, further showing the power this guy has.