werdnoynek
Footballguy
I disagree with the regurgitation. He makes his own analysis. It is what it is. Right or wrong.
Sounds like Matt Forte.@evansilva: Greg Cosell on Bishop Sankey: "A complementary, sub-package role player ... He would go down on first contact a lot": http://t.co/C5vZN5mbqz
There's not a great track record of sub 210 pound RBs dominating in the league lately without either insane speed (i.e. Charles/Spiller/CJ2K) or unreal quicks (McCoy). There's Ray Rice and that's about it. I don't think Sankey is that good myself. I think he'll be a pretty ho-hum pro back.Strengths Good vision and balance. Subtle lateral agility to pick, slide and accelerate. Reads his blocks and instinctively runs to daylight. Fluid gate and efficient movement. Runs competitively. Good hands to pull in throws off his body. Was productive with a heavy workload in a pro-style offense. Team captain. Weaknesses Lacks ideal bulk and functional run strength -- not a robust tackle-breaker. Too often grounded by single-tacklers or tripped up by the ankles. Shows some hip tightness. Average explosion, speed and elusiveness. Has shown he can be contained by good defenses. Needs to become a more dependable, physical, fundamentally sound pass protector. Draft Projection Rounds 3-4 Bottom LineThe Pac-12’s leading rusher, Sankey has an overall average skill set and generally gains what is blocked for him. Is instinctive, competitive and shifty enough to be effective as a complementary zone runner, but must improve in pass protection.
That criticism ("would go down on first contact a lot") matches Peshek's elusiveness numbers (which I cited earlier in this thread), as well as my elusiveness numbers.@evansilva: Greg Cosell on Bishop Sankey: "A complementary, sub-package role player ... He would go down on first contact a lot": http://t.co/C5vZN5mbqz
No mans land hey... You mean like LeSean McCoy....Sample size isn't huge, but when I was looking at workout numbers for recent RB prospects I noticed that 205-210 without great speed was something of a dead zone. Donald Brown and Felix Jones are two high-profile guys who had pretty good overall workout numbers with dimensions pretty similar to Sankey. Neither guy really lived up to his billing in the NFL. My guess is that it's because they're caught between the two poles of "big back" and "speed back." With mid-high 4.4X speed, they're not quite blazing fast enough to dominate in the NFL as pure speed threats. And without great bulk, they're not able to thrive as power backs. So they're in this no-man's land as tweeners who aren't quite this or that.
Sankey is a touch thicker than both of those guys at 5'9.4" 209, but he's also slower with solid, but not burner-like 4.49 speed. Style-wise, he reminds me a little bit of Tashard Choice. Another high 4.4X guy with an identical BMI who was a little bit taller/heavier and a little less explosive. Although I think his game is a bit different from these other backs, none of the comparisons really paints an optimistic picture. If he's caught in that middle ground between not quite being fast/explosive enough to thrive as a speed back and not quite powerful/heavy enough to be a big back then he might be destined for a somewhat mediocre career.
Just based on what I've seen of him combined with the objective variables, I'd say he's probably a 25/75 blend of Doug Martin and Tashard Choice. Probably better as a backup/RBBC guy in the long run, but maybe good enough to thrive as a stopgap starter. Given how crazy people will go for any young RB who puts up decent stats in a favorable situation, I can't say he'd be a horrible pick if he wound up in an obvious starting role ala LeVeon Bell. However, there aren't too many of those in the league after free agency and I don't rate him as a guy who's obviously going to emerge eventually regardless of situation.
Sankey is a 50/50 blend of Zac Stacy and Pierre Thomas.Sample size isn't huge, but when I was looking at workout numbers for recent RB prospects I noticed that 205-210 without great speed was something of a dead zone. Donald Brown and Felix Jones are two high-profile guys who had pretty good overall workout numbers with dimensions pretty similar to Sankey. Neither guy really lived up to his billing in the NFL. My guess is that it's because they're caught between the two poles of "big back" and "speed back." With mid-high 4.4X speed, they're not quite blazing fast enough to dominate in the NFL as pure speed threats. And without great bulk, they're not able to thrive as power backs. So they're in this no-man's land as tweeners who aren't quite this or that.
Sankey is a touch thicker than both of those guys at 5'9.4" 209, but he's also slower with solid, but not burner-like 4.49 speed. Style-wise, he reminds me a little bit of Tashard Choice. Another high 4.4X guy with an identical BMI who was a little bit taller/heavier and a little less explosive. Although I think his game is a bit different from these other backs, none of the comparisons really paints an optimistic picture. If he's caught in that middle ground between not quite being fast/explosive enough to thrive as a speed back and not quite powerful/heavy enough to be a big back then he might be destined for a somewhat mediocre career.
Just based on what I've seen of him combined with the objective variables, I'd say he's probably a 25/75 blend of Doug Martin and Tashard Choice. Probably better as a backup/RBBC guy in the long run, but maybe good enough to thrive as a stopgap starter. Given how crazy people will go for any young RB who puts up decent stats in a favorable situation, I can't say he'd be a horrible pick if he wound up in an obvious starting role ala LeVeon Bell. However, there aren't too many of those in the league after free agency and I don't rate him as a guy who's obviously going to emerge eventually regardless of situation.
If I were to extend my mock to 3 rounds I'd have Jack taking a RB there as well. Unfortunately Sankey will already be gone to Den at 63.One mock projection and commentary:
70. Jacksonville Jaguars: Bishop Sankey, RB, Washington
Geoff Says: Maurice Jones-Drew is gone. Jacksonville did bring in Toby Gerhart as a replacement but they still need more dynamic ability at the position. Bishop Sankey has it all: agility, speed, surprising power and soft hands to receive out of the backfield.
LeSean McCoy:
Pre-draft measurables
Ht 5 ft 10¼ in
Wt 204 lb
40-yd dash 4.50 s
10-yd split 1.52 s
20-yd split 2.59 s
20-ss 4.18 s
3-cone 6.82 s
Vert 29 in
Broad 8 ft 11 in
BP 17 reps
All values from Pittsburgh Pro Day, except for Ht and Wt.
I feel better about Bishop Sankey as a prospect heading into this years draft than I did about McCoy back in 2009...
I feel better about Bishop Sankey as a prospect heading into this years draft than I did about McCoy back in 2009...LeSean McCoy:
Pre-draft measurables
Ht 5 ft 10¼ in
Wt 204 lb
40-yd dash 4.50 s
10-yd split 1.52 s
20-yd split 2.59 s
20-ss 4.18 s
3-cone 6.82 s
Vert 29 in
Broad 8 ft 11 in
BP 17 reps
All values from Pittsburgh Pro Day, except for Ht and Wt.
I feel better about Bishop Sankey as a prospect heading into this years draft than I did about McCoy back in 2009...
I completely forgot that Jim Brown called Trent Richardson correctly. Well done.If my memory is working tonight, Pead was a kind of 50/50 guys overall both with draftniks and dynasty players, so nothing proven by missing on guy people were split one. And 90 plus percent of the world missed on Trent Richardson (Jim Brown got it right). again no point here.I was high on Pead and went back to see what I missed scouting him. What I took from it is that I over-valued running ability and receiving vs. his terrible blocking. He can do some good things running the ball but if he can't block he won't play.Isaiah Pead
Liked RB Pead. Naturally quick + explosive. Dynamic + decisive north-south runner.Some similarities to J. Charles when he came out of Texas
Liked CIN Pead. Decisive downhill runner with explosive short area burst. Natural wiggle in open field. Stop + start, change of direction.
Love Rams pick of Pead. Runner-receiver. Can also align at WR. Some similarities to McCoy coming out of Pitt (remember he was 2nd rd pick).
Ditto.LeSean McCoy:
Pre-draft measurables
Ht 5 ft 10¼ in
Wt 204 lb
40-yd dash 4.50 s
10-yd split 1.52 s
20-yd split 2.59 s
20-ss 4.18 s
3-cone 6.82 s
Vert 29 in
Broad 8 ft 11 in
BP 17 reps
All values from Pittsburgh Pro Day, except for Ht and Wt.
I feel better about Bishop Sankey as a prospect heading into this years draft than I did about McCoy back in 2009...
You may be right about that. McCoy has turned out to be an absolute elite RB. A dream for any fantasy team.As much as I like Sankey, he's no McCoy. Doesn't have the same level of ankle-breaking moves.
Bishop Sankey Scouting Report
By Charlie Campbell
Strengths:
- Excellent vision
- Runs with great balance
- Pad level
- Body lean
- More powerful than one would think
- Thick lower body
- Has a nose for the end zone
- Can get yards after contact
- Quickness
- Has a burst to the hole and second level
- Great cutting ability
- Elusive runner
- Has potential as a receiver
- Capable of controlling games
- Runs well in the second half
- Durable
- Consistent
- Scheme versatile
- Good teammate
- Unselfish
- Upside
- Experienced Weaknesses:Lacks elite speed
- Lacks elite size
- Lots of carries the past two seasons (616)
- Will continue to need development as a blocker
- Will continue to need development as a receiver
- Summary: The Huskies had a disappointing 2012 season, but bounced back to field a tough team in 2013. The biggest reason was Sankey. While he played well as a sophomore replacing Chris Polk, Sankey dominated the Pac-12 last fall. The junior ran well against the elite teams in the conference and was a steady force on the ground for Washington. In 2012, Sankey had an excellent debut as a starter. He averaged five yards per carry and totaled 1,439 yards with 16 touchdowns, plus caught 33 passes for 249 yards. Sankey ended the season in impressive fashion with 205 yards on 30 carries against Boise State. The toughest defense he saw all season was Stanford, yet he gained 144 yards on 20 carries.
Sankey was one of the nation's best backs in 2013. He averaged 5.8 yards per carry on the year for 1,775 yards with 18 touchdowns. The junior also tracked down 25 receptions for 298 yards and another score. Sankey ran really well against Stanford (27-125-2) and Oregon (28-167-2), though he did have a fumble against the Ducks.
Sankey was remarkably consistent as he went over 100 yards in nine different games with two others above 90 yards rushing. He also reached 200 yards in three games: Illinois (35-208), California (27-241) and Washington State (34-200). Sankey scored a touchdown in every game of the season. He made the right decision to enter the 2014 NFL Draft as he had nothing left to prove in college and already totaled a lot of carries across the past two seasons (616).
Sankey is a well-balanced runner. He is elusive around defenders and runs with great pad level and balance. That allows him to pick up yards after contact. Sankey has quickness, strength, toughness and receiving ability. He will need to continue to improve his blitz protection and receiving skills, but he has good starting points should end up being a three-down back quickly in his NFL career.
At the Combine, Sankey ran faster than expected with a 40-yard dash time of 4.49 seconds. He also had an impressive total on the bench press (26 reps) and did well in the receiver drills. That performance solidified Sankey as a second-day selection.
For the NFL, Sankey looks like a three-down starting running back. If he were a little bigger and faster, he could be a first-round talent, but he should be one of those second-day backs that ends up being a starter in the NFL and a favorite of fantasy football players. Player Comparison: Ray Rice. Sankey is similar to the Rice that played pre-2013, not the one that slumped coming off the Super Bowl. Sankey is a little bit smaller than Rice (5-9, 218), but Sankey could end up weighing about the same after some time in the NFL. They share the same running style. Both Sankey and Rice have quickness to the hole and are shifty runners with excellent pad level to pick up yards after contact. Both players are tough to bring down. Rice was a second-round pick in the 2008 NFL Draft, and Sankey could be selected in the same round this May.
NFL Matches: Houston, Tennessee, Cleveland, Oakland, Miami, New York Jets, Atlanta
There are a lot of teams that are going to target running backs on the second day, or in the mid-rounds, of the 2014 NFL Draft.
In the AFC South, Sankey has a few landing spots. The Titans are moving on from Chris Johnson, and Sankey would be a nice replacement as their feature back. The Texans could use a running back behind Arian Foster. Ben Tate is gone and Foster has had injuries, so it looks very likely that Houston will be drafting a running back. Sankey could fit the Texans at the top of Round 3 - if he gets there.
In the AFC West, Oakland signed Darren McFadden to a 1-year deal, but the Raiders could use a back capable of carrying their offense in case McFadden gets hurt again.
In the Big Apple, the Jets could use a featured runner for their offense. Elsewhere in the AFC East, Miami is still searching for a stable running back. Sankey could be brought in to compete with the Dolphins' holdovers.
Cleveland is likely to address running back in free agency, but the team could use multiple backs. The Browns could use one of their second-day picks on Sankey. Cleveland could get a nice value by targeting a back Sankey in Round 3 - if he is still available.
Atlanta made a short-term signing with Steven Jackson, but the Falcons need a starter for the long haul. Sankey could be a nice fit in Atlanta. http://walterfootball.com/scoutingreport2014bsankey.php
What is the source of that stat? Greg Peshek's numbers disagree, as do my numbers.Never mind, just saw the update.
Bishop Sankey, RB (5-10. 209) — Sankey stood on his numbers from the combine (he was a top performer in his position group in the bench press and broad jump, and the No. 1 performer in his position group in the three-cone drill and short shuttle). He looked very good in the position drills at the pro day, catching the ball well out of the backfield. Sankey was the top running back in the nation at breaking tackles last season. He isn’t a flashy player, but a solid performer with the chance to be the first running back selected in the 2014 NFL Draft.
http://blogs.nfl.com/category/pro-days/
I don't know. It's an NFL.com article. I posted the site.What is the source of that stat? Greg Peshek's numbers disagree, as do my numbers.Never mind, just saw the update.
Bishop Sankey, RB (5-10. 209) — Sankey stood on his numbers from the combine (he was a top performer in his position group in the bench press and broad jump, and the No. 1 performer in his position group in the three-cone drill and short shuttle). He looked very good in the position drills at the pro day, catching the ball well out of the backfield. Sankey was the top running back in the nation at breaking tackles last season. He isn’t a flashy player, but a solid performer with the chance to be the first running back selected in the 2014 NFL Draft.http://blogs.nfl.com/category/pro-days/
Bishop Sankey: "I'm an all around Running Back"
In 2011, Bishop Sankey was more or less anonymous.
In 2013, he was arguably the most feared player in the Pac-12.
Indeed, after getting just 28 carries as a freshman, the Washington running back ran 289 times for 1,439 yards and 16 touchdowns as a sophomore in 2012.
One-year wonder? Flash in the pan? Nope. Sankey set personal bests across the board in 2013, rushing 327 times for 1,870 yards and 20 touchdowns. He also had 28 receptions for 304 yards and a touchdown.
That’s an average of 10.9 yards per catch and 6.1 yards per touch.
It appears Sankey has the college game figured out, which is why the 5-10, 203-pound back has elected to forgo his senior season and is now preparing for the NFL.
“I think there’s definitely a transition going into the NFL,” Sankey said on The MoJo Show. “Obviously the guys are bigger and stronger and faster and they do a little bit more on defense, but I feel well-prepared. So I’m still in the process of getting (ready) for that – really just trying to get physically and mentally prepared for the Pro Day and draft day. I’m excited for it.”
That preparation, of course, involves a whole lot of training. If the combine is any indication, however, Sankey’s work is paying off. The 21-year-old finished second among running backs in the bench press, repping 225 pounds an impressive 26 times. He also ran a 4.49 in the 40-yard dash – which was faster than the likes of Oregon’s De’Anthony Thomas (4.50), Baylor’s Lache Seastrunk (4.51) and Arizona’s Ka’Deem Carey (4.70).
“I’m happy with my numbers,” Sankey said. “I hit all my marks that I expected to hit, and I think it went fairly well. I caught the ball pretty well during the position drills and felt good and crisp on those. So I couldn’t be happier with my results from the combine.”
Sankey said Washington’s offense was “very pro-style” during his freshman and sophomore seasons and involved a lot of huddling. This past year, however, Washington ran a no-huddle, hurry-up offense much more frequently.
“I think I can adjust to pretty much anything,” Sankey said.
Then again, NFL scouts have a way of figuring that out. During his combine interviews, Sankey was asked questions about both his personal life and his football life. At times, he was asked to draw up plays and break down film.
“They just want to see how you react,” Sankey explained.
They’ll get another opportunity to see how Sankey reacts during his Pro Day on April 2.
“I’m feeling good about it,” he said. “Really, these past few months I’ve just been training (and) getting ready for the combine and everything. Now that that’s done, really my next focus is Pro Day. So the training continues. I’m really just taking it a week at a time – or even better, a day at a time.
“I think I’m an all-around back,” Sankey continued. “I think I’ve proven that I can tote the rock on the ground and be productive on the ground, but I can also come out of the backfield and catch some balls for you, and I also feel confident in my pass-blocking abilities. I have a good feel for what the defense is going to do.” http://mojo.radio.cbssports.com/2014/02/26/bishop-sankey-im-an-all-around-running-back/
Futures: Washington RB Bishop Sankey
by Matt Waldman
This week’s Futures contains excerpts from the 2014 Rookie Scouting Portfolio, my 1284-page scouting report on 164 prospects at the offensive skill positions, which is available for download now. The RSP donates 10 percent of each purchase to Darkness to Light, a non-profit organization devoted to preventing sexual abuse through the training of individuals, communities, and organizations on its dynamics.
The draft community is split on Washington running back Bishop Sankey. Some consider him a top-five back. Others see a committee guy, but never a featured starter. I side more with the latter viewpoint, but I do see how Sankey can develop into a full-time starter.
The reason for this split is scheme fit. When Sankey is reading the defenders directly in front of him he can be decisive, get downhill fast, and get his pads low enough to split the defense. When he focuses on his blocks, he can press and cut back to aid his lineman’s effort.
But ask Sankey to read linebackers, corners, or safeties a level behind the immediate blocks happening at the line of scrimmage and he struggles. He gets confused or hesitant and his reactions are tentative and slow. The speedy back with quick cuts and momentum to carry a defender for 2-3 yards is gone.
I think these lapses are often more conceptual than physical. Certain blocking schemes are easier for him to see the field than others. When Sankey gets confused, you can see it with his footwork. He’ll stutter rather than cut and he winds up exposed to the defense.
I believe Sankey’s best chance to develop into a starter depends on him going to a team that runs a lot of gap-style plays. This includes traps, power, counter plays, and sweeps -- run designs where linemen pull and the runner has one option and doesn't have to do much reading of the defense pre-snap. It’s the running back’s equivalent of an exam with true/false questions.
In contrast, zone blocking is like multiple choice: it requires a runner has the skill to anticipate what the defense will do on a play. Sankey has the athleticism to create, but when given two-to-three options he doesn’t read the line fast enough to succeed on a consistent basis.
He’ll often bounce runs in directions where there’s little chance to gain yards on a play where he had a clear opportunity to diagnose it differently. Sankey also misses some downhill opportunities that require a decisive, aggressive mindset.
Maybe this improves, but right now Sankey is better in a gap-style offense that places tigher boundaries on his creative options. When this happens, he displays greater shiftiness, layers of moves to make defenders miss, and burst from his cuts.
Still, today’s Futures is not a balanced illustration of Sankey’s good and bad plays. It’s focused solely on difficult plays that often mark the difference between a future NFL starter and a future backup.
And despite Sankey having a better match with one scheme fit, his decision making and skill at seeing the second level needs refinement regardless of scheme.
Bouncing Outside vs. Staying Inside
This is a first-and-10 with 13:53 in the first quarter against Stanford. Sankey is at the right of the quarterback in an 11-personnel pistol. The ball is at the right hash of the Washington 30 and the defense is sporting a 3-3-5 look. The outside linebacker is over the tight end at the right end.
The line slants left and the left guard and left tackle double-team the defensive end. Sankey takes the exchange with this double team ahead of him and works towards the left tackle. The left guard has worked beyond this initial double team to the outside linebacker at the second level of the defense.
Sankey bounces the play to the outside shoulder of the left tackle. As he reaches the edge of the formation a yard behind the line of scrimmage, he slows his gait as he spots the outside linebacker working outside the left guard. Sankey bounces outside the slot receiver in an attempt to reach the line, sees the safety coming downhill and tries to dip inside. He spins through some of the safety’s wrap, but he’s hit by two more players and dropped after a gain of two yards.
If you stop the video at the 14-second mark, you’ll see the point where Sankey makes the decision to bounce the play outside. The guard is approaching the outside linebacker, but the linebacker’s helmet is well outside the guard’s pads. In a sense, Sankey’s decision to bounce the play seems sensible. However, there is a decent argument that Sankey had the blocks to cut the run inside the left guard, especially when reading the wide receiver and the safety.
Look at the position of the safety relative to the slot receiver and the position of the left guard and it supports the idea that an aggressive cut down hill earns Sankey as many yards as a bounce outside while reducing the chance of losing yards. I could go one step further and argue that if Sankey made a hard cut down hill and delayed his burst a beat, he’d have room for the outside linebacker to overrun his angle and burst behind the defender for a larger gain.
My criticisms of Sankey’s decision on this play are debatable, but it sets the stage for a pattern of more questionable decisions. Here’s a first-and-10 with 8:12 in the first quarter from a 1x3 receiver 10-personnel shotgun set with the ball at the left hash versus a nickel look. The offensive line slants left with the center and left guard double-teaming the defensive tackle, but the opposite splits the double team so early that Sankey should have seen the helmets of the defensive tackle and defensive end crashing inside as he’s taking the exchange from the quarterback.
See link for video being referenced.The better prospects in this class would read this cutback opportunity to the right where there’s an open gap. With a 4-flat 20-yard shuttle and a 6.75-second, three-cone drill, Sankey has demonstrated on and off the field that he has the burst and quick change of direction to cut to his right and exploit the backside gap. Instead, Sankey plants and cuts to the left side.
As Sankey reaches the edge, the left tackle has fallen to the ground. Sankey is now in damage control mode as he faces down an unblocked defensive end and the penetration up the middle. He lowers the pads into the defensive tackle, but he’s dropped for a three-yard loss.
Restart the video to the one minute-mark and pause it. Sankey could have read the alignment before the snap and anticipated the penetration inside. The defensive tackle right of center has his helmet over the inside shoulder of the right guard. The defensive tackle left of center is set up between the center and left guard.
Sankey knows his linemen will be slanting left, which means the third defender he should have noted is the defensive end outside the right tackle. The position of the end should have been enough for Sankey to anticipate a huge gap between the right guard and right tackle.
Questionable View of the Next Level
The best running back prospects read the field a level beyond their current path. Not many do this well. However, good prospects read and react to defenders within a radius of 5-10 yards of their path when in open space. There are two plays within five minutes of each other where Sankey’s vision comes into question.
The first wouldn’t be a question if I didn’t see the second play minutes later. It’s a 31-personnel pistol with Sankey as the tailback on a second-and-8 with 4:27 in the first quarter. The back to Sankey’s right shifts outside the left tackle before the snap. When the play begins, the left guard pulls to the left edge as the rest of the line slants right. Sankey works up the left hash and through a crease at the line of scrimmage between the outside linebacker and safety.
The cornerback ends this run with a great hit and wrap of Sankey for a minimal gain. After watching this play numerous times, I don’t think Sankey sees the cornerback until it’s too late for him to do anything but lower his pads into a hard hit that will get under Sankey’s pads regardless.
There was a split-second of indecision from Sankey where he seemed unsure about either colliding or avoiding the corner, and it costs him the position to make contact with balance. Like I said, I’m not sure I would have noticed the above play if not for this first-and-10 run with 14:06 in the half. The defense is in a 3-3-5 look with two safeties split 15 yards deep against this read-option play.
The line slants left and the center works to the second level. Sankey sees the cutback opportunity behind the right tackle and executes a hard plant with his inside foot to cut behind the right tackle to the line of scrimmage. This is a good decision.
However, he’s slow to address the middle linebacker at the next level. He telegraphs this cut inside to the Stanford defender who approaches over the top from the right hash.
The linebacker hammers Sankey for no gain. Like the previous play, this is a difficult situation for any running back prospect. Only the best prospects would spot the linebacker fast enough to address the angle successfully. A runner like Adrian Peterson would be capable of lowering the pads and trucking the defender or making a second cut outside and using a stiff arm.
LeSean McCoy would have also been successful making that second cut to the right flat. Ryan Mathews is also skilled enough to make this second cut -- and Mathews may never fulfill his potential as a top-tier NFL runner. There are 30-40 runners in the league with the skills to address defenders in the ways Sankey failed to do in this game.
There’s no shame in Sankey not addressing these plays better. However, its plays like these that are the difference between an NFL contributor and an NFL starter --especially in run schemes that require an additional layer of creativity and the vision to locate second-level defenders early enough to defeat them.
Sankey has the potential to help a team as a contributor and grow into a lead back if he can learn to read the field wtih greater consistency. However, plays like these that I find in every game combined with Sankey's difficulty breaking tackles that starters in the NFL handle as a matter of routine make me skeptical about that upside.
Limit Sankey's choices and encourage more aggressive, reactive behavior and Sankey will have a fighting chance. The question is whether most NFL teams are this patient with running backs in a day and age where they can find a quality talent in the middle to late rounds that doesn't require this type of development.
Posted by: Matt Waldman on 02 Apr 2014 http://www.footballoutsiders.com/futures/2014/futures-washington-rb-bishop-sankey
No. 60: Bishop Sankey, RB, WashingtonBio: One of the more productive backs in the country over the last two seasons, Sankey totaled 3,309 yards and 36 rushing touchdowns on 616 carries in 2012 and ’13, adding 61 receptions for 553 yards and a touchdown for good measure. Often underrated in an offense that was uneven at best, Sankey broke out in his junior campaign with 1,870 yards, which ranked fourth in the nation, and 20 touchdowns, which also ranked fourth. The 5-10, 209-pound Sankey impressed and excelled despite an offensive line that did him no favors and general inconsistency from quarterback Keith Price. He appears ready to make a real impact in the NFL, though some believe that he’ll have limitations at the next level.
Strengths: Sankey has a good ability to read gaps and quickly find open spaces. He’s not a power back, but he keeps his legs moving through traffic and gains yards after contact with propulsion more than power. And when he moves quickly to and through the hole, he’s hard to catch up with — he gets up to speed quickly and has an estimable second gear. Good jump-cut runner who can move quickly to find openings, and he accelerates smoothly to linebacker depth and beyond. Cuts quickly to beat defenders — Sankey can foot-fake defenders easily and consistently. Good weapon on slice runs across the line, because he’s quick in short spaces. Not a dominant blocker, but gives good effort and can keep defenders at bay for the most part. More a cut-blocker than a face-up guy who’s going to use physical strength. An opportunistic runner who will outperform his line over time if need be. A valuable and versatile receiver who can excel in any screen package, with wheel routes, and if the quarterback needs to be bailed out. An aware player who keeps his eyes open and is always looking for opportunities to help his team.
Weaknesses: Runs too upright at times, leaving himself open to easy takedowns and turnovers — Sankey needs to keep his pad level down and blast through gaps. This issue definitely shows up on a consistent basis when he’s tasked to create openings at the line; Sankey is more reliant on line openings.
Conclusion: Sankey has limitations as a bellwether back, because he doesn’t have the physical dominance that such backs must have to succeed over time in the NFL — at the professional level, the running game is a war of attrition more than anything else. But he’s not a boom-or-bust player in the Chris Johnson mold, either — Sankey can do more than one thing on the field, and in the right circumstances (an offense that switches its backs often and situationally), he’ll be a major contributor. Specifically, I believe that he could have a bigger impact as a receiver in the NFL, though his impact as a rusher might not be the same as it was on the collegiate level. The Jahvid Best comparison is based on Best’s work at Cal more than his Lions career, which was unfortunately cut short by injuries.
NFL player comparison: Jahvid Best, Detroit Lions (1st round, 2010, Cal)
LOL.Matt has him as his 10th best running back in this draft.
Is it possible to get back that 19.95??
In all seriousness though the RSP is a great read with some nice analysis...
But I think that he is missing the mark big-time on Sankey!
3. Washington's Bishop Sankey may have emerged as draft's top back -
Quarterback Keith Price's impressive throwing session was the highlight at Washington's Pro Day but that was only because the best player there, Sankey, largely elected to sit on his Combine numbers.
The only timed drill Sankey ran was the 60-yard "long" shuttle. Scouts clocked him at 11.11 seconds -- a full .25 seconds faster than any running back timed at the Combine and the sixth fastest overall. He carried over his impressive effort into his positional workout, demonstrating his lateral agility and burst as he zipped around cones.
Perhaps most importantly, Sankey showed off his excellent hands during receiving drills, demonstrating the all-around game that could help him jump to the top of his positional group come draft day -- just like a similarly gifted back, Giovani Bernard, did a year ago.
Great balance on these two tough runs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhNxjGKUZegIn the latest Audible, Cecil Lammey compares him to Ronnie Hillman and then goes on to say he has poor creativity and balance. Not sure what he meant, since Cecil is in love with Hillman. Please advise.
He probably "got skinny" through the hole or some #### like thatIn the latest Audible, Cecil Lammey compares him to Ronnie Hillman and then goes on to say he has poor creativity and balance. Not sure what he meant, since Cecil is in love with Hillman. Please advise.
Nice tough TD run on that video... He didn't go down easy there!Great balance on these two tough runs:In the latest Audible, Cecil Lammey compares him to Ronnie Hillman and then goes on to say he has poor creativity and balance. Not sure what he meant, since Cecil is in love with Hillman. Please advise.
Or bad defense and tackling. Take your pick...Great balance on these two tough runs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhNxjGKUZegIn the latest Audible, Cecil Lammey compares him to Ronnie Hillman and then goes on to say he has poor creativity and balance. Not sure what he meant, since Cecil is in love with Hillman. Please advise.
Can I really take my pick? That doesn't seem right at all.Or bad defense and tackling. Take your pick...Great balance on these two tough runs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhNxjGKUZegIn the latest Audible, Cecil Lammey compares him to Ronnie Hillman and then goes on to say he has poor creativity and balance. Not sure what he meant, since Cecil is in love with Hillman. Please advise.
Who's to say.MoveToSkypager said:Can I really take my pick? That doesn't seem right at all.werdnoynek said:Or bad defense and tackling. Take your pick...Xue said:Great balance on these two tough runs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhNxjGKUZegMoveToSkypager said:In the latest Audible, Cecil Lammey compares him to Ronnie Hillman and then goes on to say he has poor creativity and balance. Not sure what he meant, since Cecil is in love with Hillman. Please advise.
It's your thought, why don't you explain it?Who's to say.MoveToSkypager said:Can I really take my pick? That doesn't seem right at all.werdnoynek said:Or bad defense and tackling. Take your pick...Xue said:Great balance on these two tough runs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhNxjGKUZegMoveToSkypager said:In the latest Audible, Cecil Lammey compares him to Ronnie Hillman and then goes on to say he has poor creativity and balance. Not sure what he meant, since Cecil is in love with Hillman. Please advise.
I wonder if LeSean McCoy can do that? It doesn't look like catching the football will be a problem for him.Definitely not a great athlete: http://instagram.com/p/m-rsCWnlLD/