Can you call him and ask him for us?I'm rooting for this guy, he's a good friend of mine. So, is he set to play in the next game?
Can you call him and ask him for us?I'm rooting for this guy, he's a good friend of mine. So, is he set to play in the next game?

That is nice, but he was a 4.3 guy before he hurt his knee and was considered the fastest guy on the team for most of his time at Mizzou. He is a long strider, so when he gets up to full speed he looks like a gazelle and is very hard to catch.Reportedly he ran a 4.46 and eye opening 4.12 short shuttle (compare to J.Best who had a 4.17 short shuttle) at his workout, in addition to the 41+ vertical. Seems like his speed was evident in his workout.Otis, there is no doubt he could be a stud, but you just don't know how much the injuries have affected his speed, he didn't lose his size and super-human leaping ability.Otis said:Another note:
http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/pr...d09b88047b.htmlInterestingly, Alexander was signed to a four-year contract, with a modest signing bonus of around $35,000. As such, the Rams treated him as if he were a draft pick, albeit a low-round draft pick.
This. Let everyone else fight about MoMass and Brandon Tate and Deion Branch and Josh Morgan and whatever other mediocre talents are on the waiver wire. None of those guys will win a season for you.Him being a STL WR is not a limitation at all. Clayton was around a top-10 WR in standard scoring before he went out for the season. After he went out, Bradford threw 12 completions to Amendola. There is absolutely tons of opportunity for someone here, especially someone with superior physical traits like DA.I see only opportunity here. I remember Boldin's rookie season. He stepped into a team with a mediocre quarterback and no other solid WR options and had one of the most dominating rookie WR seasons ever (aside from maybe only Randy Moss?). In STL now we are talking about a QB with laser accuracy in Bradford. Yes he's a rookie, but he's looked fantastic and helped make that team competitive.Seems like a very Knee Jerk reaction. I kid, I kid. It had to be said given we are talking about a STL WR. Seriously, I think they guy has a ton of talent and if you can get him for free in a dynasty, go for it. I just cut Max Komar for him. Why not? The upside is tremendous. Worst case- he tears his knee again in practice or a game and I drop him. Best case - he catches on, I start him for a week or two and get decent results, then I sell him as soon as I find a taker before the knee blows up. Very low risk.Otis said:I can't believe there's not more discussion of this. Am I the only one who is this excited? There's so much talk about so many mediocre players out there, how are we ignoring someone who has such ridiculous upside?
I have a feeling he will fall somewhere in the middle of both scenarios and be a fantasy non-factor who I end up wasting a roster spot on for longer than necessary. Just my![]()
The injury concerns are always concerns, but Frank Gore also dominated in college and then slipped a bunch in the NFL draft based on his injuries. Nobody believed in him either. He's been a top RB in the league for years now.
This is to me one of the most intriguing fantasy prospects in the NFL right now. It's certainly a ton more interesting to me than the guys who are getting all the hype on the waiver wire in recent weeks. Most of those guys will at best turn out to be a WR4 on a good day. Depending on his progress in terms of healing and learning the playbook over the past 6 weeks, I think Alexander has the potential to quickly become the top receiving threat in STL and potentially a top-20 fantasy WR on a weekly basis (if not better).That's how I see it too. Sure, there are concerns but who would you rather have as the WR at the end of your dynasty bench?
I think people are holding off because the guy was just on the practice squad. Meaning, the Rams thought enough of him that they left him open for any team in the league to sign him at any moment. If they were really expecting him to make an impact, he would have stayed on the roster. All those other guys that people talk about have at least been on teams' active roster. I do wish I shared your enthusiasm though. I have him stashed on one league. I just think we can start the clock now for the next injury to hit.Otis said:I can't believe there's not more discussion of this. Am I the only one who is this excited? There's so much talk about so many mediocre players out there, how are we ignoring someone who has such ridiculous upside?
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=5678915
ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis Rams promoted wide receiver Danario Alexander from the practice squad to the active roster to replace injured Mark Clayton.
Alexander was a star at Missouri last season but wasn't drafted after undergoing a fourth operation on his left knee in February. When the Rams signed him in August, Alexander said he was still rehabbing the knee.
Can you call him and ask him for us?I'm rooting for this guy, he's a good friend of mine. So, is he set to play in the next game?![]()

Love this development. There was a different thread last night and I was susrprised by the level of skepticism. His knees are a huge question mark, no question. However, I'd say his knees were a far bigger question mark heading into his last season at Mizzu coming off a 2nd ACL, and he led the NCAA in receiving yards with 1781. Since then, he had another procedure following a senior bowl injury but nothing like an ACL repair. He's passed a physical with an NFL team, put up big measurables in a workout, and impressed the team in practice enough to promote him from the practice squad at a time of need. IMHO he could not have a better situation than being added to a WR deprived team, with a franchise QB, and proven productivity in college. He's a great 'grab for free and stash' for dynasty leagues. God knows teams are holding a lot of WRs who never approached Alexander's college production, and are significant NFL longshots. Alexander is better than that, even with knee concerns.
I agree with everything said here.There is a RB in Washington right now that would argue that point with you....I think people are holding off because the guy was just on the practice squad. Meaning, the Rams thought enough of him that they left him open for any team in the league to sign him at any moment. If they were really expecting him to make an impact, he would have stayed on the roster. All those other guys that people talk about have at least been on teams' active roster.Otis said:I can't believe there's not more discussion of this. Am I the only one who is this excited? There's so much talk about so many mediocre players out there, how are we ignoring someone who has such ridiculous upside?
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=5678915
ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis Rams promoted wide receiver Danario Alexander from the practice squad to the active roster to replace injured Mark Clayton.
Alexander was a star at Missouri last season but wasn't drafted after undergoing a fourth operation on his left knee in February. When the Rams signed him in August, Alexander said he was still rehabbing the knee.
I do wish I shared your enthusiasm though. I have him stashed on one league. I just think we can start the clock now for the next injury to hit.
Meh, interesting info but don't we hear that about a lot of WRs before they get tested at the combine? I'm not going to reject adding Alexander at the end of my dynasty bench just because he was reportedly 4.3 pre-injury and ran a 4.46 under a formal test. Also, he had 1781 receiving yards last season at post-ACL surgery speed. It was my understanding the recent procedure was of lesser degree, which makes sense since he was doing a workout and putting up those numbers 3-4 moinths later.That is nice, but he was a 4.3 guy before he hurt his knee and was considered the fastest guy on the team for most of his time at Mizzou. He is a long strider, so when he gets up to full speed he looks like a gazelle and is very hard to catch.Reportedly he ran a 4.46 and eye opening 4.12 short shuttle (compare to J.Best who had a 4.17 short shuttle) at his workout, in addition to the 41+ vertical. Seems like his speed was evident in his workout.Otis, there is no doubt he could be a stud, but you just don't know how much the injuries have affected his speed, he didn't lose his size and super-human leaping ability.Otis said:Another note:
http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/pr...d09b88047b.htmlInterestingly, Alexander was signed to a four-year contract, with a modest signing bonus of around $35,000. As such, the Rams treated him as if he were a draft pick, albeit a low-round draft pick.
Who would know better than his "good friend"?I'm rooting for this guy, he's a good friend of mine. So, is he set to play in the next game?

At 6'5, if he's even back to near full speed (which he apparently may be based on his footrace), he's close enough. He'll be a nightmare to cover.That wasn't my point, but let me break this down a different way. If Chris Johnson came back after an ACL surgery and only was able to run a 4.4, would you say he had his speed back? DA is plenty fast, but he may not be the complete mismatch he was when fully healthy before his career got sidetracked by injuries.Trust me, I'm a life long Mizzou fan and have seen the guy multiple times up close and in person and he is a stud when fully healthy. I'm 6' and I'm telling you that having stood toe to toe with the guy, there aren't many DBs that can run, jump and out battle him for a ball because of his size and leaping ability. In fact, the last time I saw him (at a basketball game before he went to the Senior Bowl) he was with 5'10" DB Kevin Rutland, who will likely be a late round draft choice and when I saw the two together the very first thing that popped into my head is "there is no way he could stop DA from catching a fade in the endzone".The problem is that in the NFL, big guys that can catch and jump are a dime a dozen... but 6'4 220 lb WRs with 41 inch verticals and 4.3 speed (with good hands) are rare. That is the difference in him being back to full speed.
Exactly, that is why he was one of my favorite Tigers of all time. He was virtually uncoverable when healthy in 2007.I'm not bagging on the guy, just pointing out he isn't normally a 4.46 guy, so the upside is enormous if he gets back to "full speed".At 6'5, if he's even back to near full speed (which he apparently may be based on his footrace), he's close enough. He'll be a nightmare to cover.That wasn't my point, but let me break this down a different way. If Chris Johnson came back after an ACL surgery and only was able to run a 4.4, would you say he had his speed back? DA is plenty fast, but he may not be the complete mismatch he was when fully healthy before his career got sidetracked by injuries.Trust me, I'm a life long Mizzou fan and have seen the guy multiple times up close and in person and he is a stud when fully healthy. I'm 6' and I'm telling you that having stood toe to toe with the guy, there aren't many DBs that can run, jump and out battle him for a ball because of his size and leaping ability. In fact, the last time I saw him (at a basketball game before he went to the Senior Bowl) he was with 5'10" DB Kevin Rutland, who will likely be a late round draft choice and when I saw the two together the very first thing that popped into my head is "there is no way he could stop DA from catching a fade in the endzone".The problem is that in the NFL, big guys that can catch and jump are a dime a dozen... but 6'4 220 lb WRs with 41 inch verticals and 4.3 speed (with good hands) are rare. That is the difference in him being back to full speed.
I see your point, and trust me I'm not trying to argue with you. I'm excited about this development regardless of legitimate cautions being discussed in this thread, and enjoy the discussion. I just wonder if he is unquestionably 'not back to full speed', or whether his 4.3 speed was possibly the same hyperbole we hear all the time about prospects before an official testing. When and how did he test to 4.3? On your comparison, if Chris Johnson went from an NFL combine-timed 4.24 to a similarly official result of 4.4 following injury, yeah, red flag. OTOH if a guy goes from an unoffial 'he's got 4.3 speed' reputation to a formally timed 4.46... not as significant IMHO. Without knowing more about the basis of his 4.3 speed, I don't trust what the 4.46 is being measured against. It happens all the time when disappointing combine times contradict what people expected or had been told a guy would run. Those guys didn't become slower, they were just never officially timed.That wasn't my point, but let me break this down a different way. If Chris Johnson came back after an ACL surgery and only was able to run a 4.4, would you say he had his speed back? DA is plenty fast, but he may not be the complete mismatch he was when fully healthy before his career got sidetracked by injuries.
Trust me, I'm a life long Mizzou fan and have seen the guy multiple times up close and in person and he is a stud when fully healthy. I'm 6' and I'm telling you that having stood toe to toe with the guy, there aren't many DBs that can run, jump and out battle him for a ball because of his size and leaping ability. In fact, the last time I saw him (at a basketball game before he went to the Senior Bowl) he was with 5'10" DB Kevin Rutland, who will likely be a late round draft choice and when I saw the two together the very first thing that popped into my head is "there is no way he could stop DA from catching a fade in the endzone".
The problem is that in the NFL, big guys that can catch and jump are a dime a dozen... but 6'4 220 lb WRs with 41 inch verticals and 4.3 speed (with good hands) are rare. That is the difference in him being back to full speed.
I see your point, and trust me I'm not trying to argue with you. I'm excited about this development regardless of legitimate cautions being discussed in this thread, and enjoy the discussion. I just wonder if he is unquestionably 'not back to full speed', or whether his 4.3 speed was possibly the same hyperbole we hear all the time about prospects before an official testing. When and how did he test to 4.3? On your comparison, if Chris Johnson went from an NFL combine-timed 4.24 to a similarly official result of 4.4 following injury, yeah, red flag. OTOH if a guy goes from an unoffial 'he's got 4.3 speed' reputation to a formally timed 4.46... not as significant IMHO. Without knowing more about the basis of his 4.3 speed, I don't trust what the 4.46 is being measured against. It happens all the time when disappointing combine times contradict what people expected or had been told a guy would run. Those guys didn't become slower, they were just never officially timed.That wasn't my point, but let me break this down a different way. If Chris Johnson came back after an ACL surgery and only was able to run a 4.4, would you say he had his speed back? DA is plenty fast, but he may not be the complete mismatch he was when fully healthy before his career got sidetracked by injuries.
Trust me, I'm a life long Mizzou fan and have seen the guy multiple times up close and in person and he is a stud when fully healthy. I'm 6' and I'm telling you that having stood toe to toe with the guy, there aren't many DBs that can run, jump and out battle him for a ball because of his size and leaping ability. In fact, the last time I saw him (at a basketball game before he went to the Senior Bowl) he was with 5'10" DB Kevin Rutland, who will likely be a late round draft choice and when I saw the two together the very first thing that popped into my head is "there is no way he could stop DA from catching a fade in the endzone".
The problem is that in the NFL, big guys that can catch and jump are a dime a dozen... but 6'4 220 lb WRs with 41 inch verticals and 4.3 speed (with good hands) are rare. That is the difference in him being back to full speed.

link?From Twitter: Tom Ackerman Sports Director, KMOX (1120 AM) Just saw Rams WR Donnie Avery, who is recovering from knee surgery. Tells me Danario Alexander (knee) recently beat M.Gilyard in a footrace.
https://twitter.com/Ackerman1120link?From Twitter: Tom Ackerman Sports Director, KMOX (1120 AM) Just saw Rams WR Donnie Avery, who is recovering from knee surgery. Tells me Danario Alexander (knee) recently beat M.Gilyard in a footrace.
thanks. for the life of me i couldn't find his twitter page.https://twitter.com/Ackerman1120link?From Twitter: Tom Ackerman Sports Director, KMOX (1120 AM) Just saw Rams WR Donnie Avery, who is recovering from knee surgery. Tells me Danario Alexander (knee) recently beat M.Gilyard in a footrace.
Thanks for setting us straight Gridiron Menace. And sorry we wasted your time.GridironMenace said:I can't believe that I actually read this entire thread. This thread is a bunch of wasted internet space.
Can't we all just agree that he is a great talent with great potential. With that said he is also as large of an injury risk there is. To those that are hating, stop. To those that are ready to put him in the HoF, stop. Neither camp is basing any of those opinions on fact. He is well worth a dynasty stash, there is absolutely no arguing that. Let time do its magic.
You seem to have a negative outlook on life and I would urge you to find a hobby that makes you happy and spend time doing it, perhaps model railroading, and then you will be able to interact with others and not feel like life has cheated you and passed you by, and when you feel better you will be feeling healthier and probably be better from a heart-health and blood pressure standpoint so stay strong brother and keep that chin up.GridironMenace said:I can't believe that I actually read this entire thread. This thread is a bunch of wasted internet space. Can't we all just agree that he is a great talent with great potential. With that said he is also as large of an injury risk there is. To those that are hating, stop. To those that are ready to put him in the HoF, stop. Neither camp is basing any of those opinions on fact. He is well worth a dynasty stash, there is absolutely no arguing that. Let time do its magic.
This thread is very mild in comparison... Have your read any other threads in the SP?..Seemed like healthy discussion in here to me..I look at it as adding much needed perspective in this thread that is full of unsubstantiated bickering. If you call that negative, then so be it.
I believe Robinson fills the role next to Amendola for the next several weeks, or until his health leaves him again..Alexander could surprise, but I think it's more likely the other 4 will see more reps on 2010..Interested to see what he's got. Not that optimistic on his chances for fantasy value this year, but he's got every opportunity this year with only Robinson/Gibson/Gilyard next to Amendola. Rams definitely have to address their #1 WR spot as Robinson/Gibson struggle to get much seperation.
I look at it as adding much needed perspective in this thread that is full of unsubstantiated bickering. If you call that negative, then so be it.

OMG he has a knife!!!I look at it as adding much needed perspective in this thread that is full of unsubstantiated bickering. If you call that negative, then so be it.

Unless you can give an example of anyone actually 'hating' or 'putting him in the HOF' it seems like an over the top and totally demeaning perspective. Some guys are excited and others are cautious about this player, just like every other NFL player discussed in the SP.I look at it as adding much needed perspective in this thread that is full of unsubstantiated bickering. If you call that negative, then so be it.
Big fan of your work here TFK.I just added him in a 53 man roster IDP dynasty league. As you can imagine, pickings are slim for free agents. Sounds like he may be worth an add. Regards,THE FANTASY KING
Coach spags was on moving the chains with Tim and pat yesterday on his regular weekly spot. when asked about gilyard stepping into Clayton's role and danario being activated from the ps he basically glossed over gilyard, said he and others would get more reps. He said it's unfortunate that Clayton went down because he and Bradford had built a great chemistry. He said now it's up to Bradford to find that next Guy he's comfortable with, then added that Bradford and danario had clicked well in training camp. Sounded to me like spags has no horse persay and is giving guys an open shot to build a rapport with Sam. Good news for danario
Wasn't DA brought in at the end of camp and pretty much just continued rehabbing his legs? Did he actually get any real practice time? If not, I'm not sure how they could click except intellectually, yeah?Coach spags was on moving the chains with Tim and pat yesterday on his regular weekly spot. when asked about gilyard stepping into Clayton's role and danario being activated from the ps he basically glossed over gilyard, said he and others would get more reps. He said it's unfortunate that Clayton went down because he and Bradford had built a great chemistry. He said now it's up to Bradford to find that next Guy he's comfortable with, then added that Bradford and danario had clicked well in training camp. Sounded to me like spags has no horse persay and is giving guys an open shot to build a rapport with Sam. Good news for danario
Yes, DA was only with them the last week of training camp, but I assume he practiced with the team. Seems like the plan all along was to get him to the practice squad and let this be a redshirt type season, but doesn't necessarily mean he was a bystander in pactices at the end of camp. I believe I read in St. Louis newspaper after the signing that Bradford was excited about the signing, being familiar with Danario from his Big 12 days. Makes sense he worked with him even at the end of camp.Wasn't DA brought in at the end of camp and pretty much just continued rehabbing his legs? Did he actually get any real practice time? If not, I'm not sure how they could click except intellectually, yeah?Coach spags was on moving the chains with Tim and pat yesterday on his regular weekly spot. when asked about gilyard stepping into Clayton's role and danario being activated from the ps he basically glossed over gilyard, said he and others would get more reps. He said it's unfortunate that Clayton went down because he and Bradford had built a great chemistry. He said now it's up to Bradford to find that next Guy he's comfortable with, then added that Bradford and danario had clicked well in training camp. Sounded to me like spags has no horse persay and is giving guys an open shot to build a rapport with Sam. Good news for danario
Great news, he's already gotten looks with the first team. I'm getting the feeling that Spags and Bradford are not thrilled with Laurent/Gilyard/Gibson and are really pulling for Danario to take this opportunity by the horns and seize it.Article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/pr...aac2908a0d.html
The nuts and bolts of it:
""The Rams did a great job with me in the training room and the weight room," Alexander said. "I lift weights four days a week and get treatment five days a week. I'm very confident" in the leg.
He spent the first month of the season with the scout team, simulating the upcoming opponent's top wideout. But after Mark Clayton went down last Sunday with a season-ending knee injury, the Rams turned to Alexander.
"A lot of it had to do with what he'd been doing here on this practice field," coach Steve Spagnuolo said. "He knew he had a little bit of a road to overcome, but he's kind of worked right in there. I know the guys like him. He's worked hard. He deserves it."
Despite his practice squad status, Alexander kept up his playbook studies. He gave assurances that he's up to the speed with the offense.
"I know it all," he said. "When I came in I had to get in the playbook so I could get on the field to get where I'm at right now. I've been studying for this opportunity, and I'm going to take advantage of it."
Alexander still is doing scout team work, but he also took snaps with the first-team offense Wednesday.
"I think Danario's done a great job," quarterback Sam Bradford said. "When he was on the scout team, the past couple of weeks he's made some spectacular catches,
some great plays. He's a big body, he's got a lot of speed. So I'm looking forward to getting him in the rotation and developing a chemistry with him."
Yes, Gibson's been criticized because of his inconsistent hands and we all know Robinson has constant injury problems. Some think Gilyard has been disappointing, though his targets have increased since week 1 (last week, of course, due to Clayton). Still, Gibson and Gilyard do offer playmaking ability; Gibson's drops have overshadowed his nice after-the-catch abilities, and Gilyard's primarily been targeted on screens and short passes. I think they get the first shot to step up and do something, meaning Alexander's going to be eased in. Alexander's primary advantage is that he has speed that the others lack--and with the Rams sorely lacking any sort of deep threat, he could get a few targets downfield right away.Those who are banking on him as a deep dynasty flier should be thrilled. The greatest positives are that he's been practicing consistently, learning the playbook, and avoiding any setbacks with his knee.Great news, he's already gotten looks with the first team. I'm getting the feeling that Spags and Bradford are not thrilled with Laurent/Gilyard/Gibson and are really pulling for Danario to take this opportunity by the horns and seize it.
and snatching Devin Aromashodu off waivers!!!!!!Watch out next year for the attack of the DA.....Danario Alexander on the outside...Donny Avery on the outside...Danny Amendola in the slot!!!!!!!!!!
I actually think he may be a better bet than Tate. With the Pats, there are already productive options in Welker, Hernandez and now Branch. With the Rams, there isn't a whole lot of competition unless one of Robinson, Gibson or Gilyard steps up (sorry, Joe).I view b tate as a similar lotto ticket.