Biabreakable
Footballguy
Ok so he is 23 years old entering the NFL then not 24 correct?
Yes. He will be 23 when the season starts but turning 24 before the season ends. The lists above I listed are based on age on Dec 31st.Ok so he is 23 years old entering the NFL then not 24 correct?
Right. So why didn't he come out last year? Why didn't he do this stuff when he was 18 or 19 years old like most other NFL caliber prospects? And maybe he put up 78/1326/14 because he's a 23 yo playing against mostly 18-21 year olds?So if he came out of college a year earlier after paying 65/1000/11, he'd be a stud. If he were born a month later, he'd be a stud.
But staying in school, posting 78/1326/14 and being a Sagittarius instead of a Capricorn means he's going to bust.
Makes sense.
His birthday is 12/3/92. That makes him 23 right now (not 24). He will not turn 24 until the later this year when another 9 months have passed. Because math. I'm not sure why you keep coming back to argue this as it's very simple math. With a birthday on December 3rd, 1992, he just turned 23 about 3 months ago on December 3rd, 2015. Because math.The data above is about WR who were 24 years old entering the league and players who were 21 years old.
Doctson will be 23 years old entering the league so the data above is not relevant to him.
BTW if Doctson is 23 years old then he must have been born in 1993. If he was born in 1992 he would be 24 years old. Because math.
yep, I understand that simple math.His birthday is 12/3/92. That makes him 23 right now. He will not turn 24 until the next 9 months pass. Because math. I'm not sure why you keep coming back to argue this as it's very simple math. With a birthday on December 3rd, 1992, he just turned 23 about 4 months ago on December 3rd, 2015.
Similarly, the data above is exactly what I said it was. If you go to profootball reference and use this link, it, it only allows you to search by age as of Dec 31st. Since Doctson will be 24 on Dec 31st, 2016, then that's the age I put in. So yes, the data is relevant to him and any other player that was 23 coming into the league whose birthday fell somewhere between Sept and Dec 31st thus turning 24 as well as any other players whose birthday was within those 12 months.
This isn't rocket surgery.
19922016-1992 = 24
2016-1993 = 23
If Doctson is currently 23 years old and was born on December 3rd what year was he born in?
The draft occurs in May so what age will he be when he is drafted?
Those are fair points.
But there are some fair rebuttals.
First, a cut off off 31st is arbitrary. He's 3 weeks away from not making your list. Is 3 weeks a lot or a little?
Second, the list of older players double counts the scouting discount for those guys a bit, but who were the top prospects in that list? Meachem and Avery were the only guys selected in the first two rounds, and both of them were speed guys with little else.
How many of those guys had combine numbers close to doctson's? Doctson is currently mocked between late first and early second, which means he will either be the highest or second highest drafted on this list.
And while it's a fair question why he didn't come out as a junior, the answer is simple - he had a chance to become a first or second round pick. Almost all of the guys on that list were day 3 picks or undrafted.
Your point is well taken, but if you made a list of people with his height/speed/agility/college production, you'd find a lot of good nfl players, too. So why is 3 weeks of age more meaningful than anything else about him?
It's not meant to contradict anything. As I stated above, pro football reference allows you to separate age by only 1 date -- Dec 31st. I didn't choose the date. I can't change it. And I'm certainly not going to go through a list of 300-400 names and figure out whose birthdays fell from Sept-Dec and move them manually onto another list.Gian the way you are sparsing the data is not something I think is fair at all. It contradicts your earlier post that recognizes Docson as 23 years old and Green, Benjamin being other recent examples.
I brought up John Brown who was 24 years old when drafted and you provide an excellent example of selection bias in how you partitioned the data. Yet somehow you are now talking about Doctson as a 24 year old player entering the league when this is not the case.
I do not care who is right about this, I just want the right answer.
If Doctson is 23 years old then you should not be comparing him to players who were 24. Your most recent post categorizes Doctson as being in a group with < 1% instead of comparing him to the 23 year old group that just earlier today you acknowledged he was a part of.
Mike Williams - not the fat one, the decent one. Had a really nice rookie and sophomore year - fell off a cliff after that.Who is Tampa Mike?
Kevin White, Cam Newton, Cordarrelle Patterson, Aaron Rodgers, Jaelen Strong, Keyshawn Johnson, O.J. Simpson, Corey Dillon, Brandon Jacobs, LeGarrette Blount, Chad Ochocinco, Steve Smith, Jeremy Shockey, and a few others will disagree with you.gianmarco said:The vast majority of guys with NFL-level talent don't go to JC or leave school and come back later. These guys are oftentimes recognized early on. Which again points to why you need to figure out why an older prospect is coming into the league at an older age.
It's always important to know the why. Thanks for the back story and perspective!I think the difference between what you're comparing in age is off in the case of Doctson. The typical older RS senior has a college career that goes. RS because he's not ready year one. Year 2 just start to get on the field. Year 3, 4, 5 climbing the depth chart.
Doctson ran slow for a Texas kid coming out of high school and didn't get much recruiting love. *At the combine I think he proved he's not slow* So he went to Wyoming were he started and led his team as a true freshman. Then his grandfather got sick and he moved back to Texas to be with his family. His mom worked at TCU so he got a discount on tuition to go there and he was a "walk on" to the TCU team. He had to sit out a year because of transfer rules. He didn't transfer because he got in trouble.
I think that why Doctson is an older player is important. Because it's not the typical situation that an older player enters the NFL. There's no doubt that Doctson saw the benefits of the extra time but the difference is that it's not what made him. He's not the product of being in a system for so long. You can assume this because he led Wyoming as a true freshman. Is this a major selling point? No but it is at least what you would expect him to do.
Did Doctson see the benefits of the extra time? No doubt. But so did AJ Green. This is what makes Doctson special though. He's developed the skill of elite receivers. The way he does it might be the result of extra time but it's also something that the many of the 21 yo studs don't. It literally makes him special. The fact that he tested out well at the combine was major plus for him because his game is based somewhat on technical skill and smarts. Don't get me wrong, he's not Julio.
I'm sure some people might say "That's all good and he's a good player but I'd take the young hyped stud in Treadwell." I will address this because I have Doctson over Treadwell. And because this thread has been one of the most civil conversations of different opinions. Treadwell didn't test out as well at the combine. ZWK has serious warning flags about Treadwell from a numbers view. On tape what you see with Treadwell is a guy that looks like beast however he doesn't get a lot of separation, he doesn't win enough jump balls, he doesn't consistently catch enough balls and he doesn't have elite speed. He's being billed like he's Julio or Dez but he's not. Both Doctson and Treadwell I think are end of the first (NFL) types of talent. I take Doctson over Treadwell because I think at worst Doctson can be a jump ball/red zone guy. Treadwell at worst is a slower possession WR. I don't think either of them are busts of course but it's something to consider.
Which part of "the vast majority" confused you?Kevin White, Cam Newton, Cordarrelle Patterson, Aaron Rodgers, Jaelen Strong, Keyshawn Johnson, O.J. Simpson, Corey Dillon, Brandon Jacobs, LeGarrette Blount, Chad Ochocinco, Steve Smith, Jeremy Shockey, and a few others will disagree with you.
Tex
Do you even read, bro?Which part of "fewer" confused you?
Tex
ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. noted that with TCU WR Josh Doctson's performance at the NFL Scouting Combine, he is "locked in first-round status."
No breaking news there, as Doctson was viewed by many as a potential first-rounder even before the combine. He likely helped conjure that prognostication into reality in Indianapolis when he turned in a respectable 4.50-second sprint in the 40-yard dash, 41-inch vertical leap and a broad jump of almost 11 feet. Pro Football Focus' Steve Palazzolo wrote that he's built "a lot of momentum" with that strong performance and Kiper's assessment of the former TCU standout jives well with that.
Source: ESPN Insider
Mar 5 - 5:49 PM
TCU WR Josh Doctson had an 89-percent similarity score with D.J. Hackett based on Combine athletic testing.
Doctson was one of the clear winners in Indianapolis last weekend, showing off lethal leaps of 41 inches vertically and 131 inches horizontally. His 4.50 40-time wasn't quite as eye-popping, but that number's respectable enough. Indeed, ESPN's Mel Kiper Jr. believes he's "locked in" to be drafted on Day 1 due to his combine showing. As for his combine comparable, Hackett was unable to parlay his athletic gifts into such a high slot. The former Colorado wideout was plucked up by the Seahawks in the fifth round of the 2004 draft.
Source: Mock Draftable
Mar 5 - 8:40 PM
Rivals recruiting director Mike Farrell compared TCU WR Josh Doctson to Bengals WR A.J. Green in terms of his body-control.
Farrell stands by his outlet's three-star rating for Doctson out of high school (or at least he writes "I'm cool with [it]"), noting, "He was tall and skinny but could elevate out of high school, and he has added bulk and high-points the ball better than anyone else in the country." The comparison to Green has a bit of intrigue behind it, because the Bengals could well be looking at wideout come April's draft. In addition to his impeccable body-control, he's also as sure-handed a receiver as we have in this draft pool. In terms of his combine workout, the 6-foot-4, 190-pounder drew an 89-percent similarity score with D.J. Hackett. Doctson's a near-lock for the first round, though, while Hackett wasn't selected by the Seahawks until the fifth round back in 2004.
Source: rivals.com
Mar 6 - 5:02 PM
Depends how highly each is drafted and by what team for meTake him over Treadwell at rookie pick 2?
Yep. I have the 1 & 2 picks in one draft and landing spots could complicate/clarify the choices.Depends how highly each is drafted and by what team for me
Same. My lean is toward Treadwell so him going to the best opportunity would make it real easy. Coleman could muck it all up.Yep. I have the 1 & 2 picks in one draft and landing spots could complicate/clarify the choices.
TCU WR Josh Doctson scored as a fairly close stylistic hit to Odell Beckham when SB Nation's Arif Hassan scoured the data.
This one is juicy. Doctson's 90.7 similarity score with Beckham is just above the 90-percent threshold of being a significant hit. "At first glance, he doesn’t seem to compare well to Beckham, but despite being taller and heavier, tends to have the same distribution of weight and same relative scores in agility drills over speed drills (or, as Mayock would say, "quicker than fast"). They also have the same short-area burst scores, with very similar 10-yard splits," Hassan wrote. Doctson is actually better on contested catches (his 85 percent win rate leads all draft-eligible receivers) but isn't as good as Beckham in catch rate.
Source: Cold Omaha
Mar 7 - 8:42 PM
gianmarco's data is not skewed or selective. It is the data.Then there are the guys who are dominating in high school and as young college players like Trent Richardson and jadaveon clowney. Those guys dominated as 18-19 yr olds, but the production didn't translate. No reason doctson can't be the next Steve smith. A guy coming in at 23 vs 21 means you probably get less of a chance, at 21 they feel you may still develop if the first couple years don't work out. At 23 you have to make it happen immediately. You aren't getting a 5-6 yr window, with maybe 2 teams. You get a 1-3 yr window and if it isn't working hope a team takes a chance in a 27 yr old wr. The data is scewed because of course a player coming out young has done well and is probably drafted higher and given a better chance because of what a team invested. That list seems selective as well, where are the Charles Rogers and mike Williams guys? Not going back that far maybe..
TCU WR Josh Doctson converted 85 percent of the contested catches charted by Matt Harmon of Backyard Banter.
Specifically, Doctson won 17 of the 20 contested catches during games Harmon reviewed, which easily took the stop spot among receivers in this class. Ole Miss' Laquon Treadwell was next with 75 percent and Michael Thomas of Southern Miss was slight lower at 73.3 percent. We knew Doctson was great in these situations, however, it is always good to put a figure on paper. The TCU receiver also tested like the most athletic receiver at the NFL Combine.
Source: The Backyard Banter
Mar 8 - 10:34 AM
I always thought it retroreflective sheeting rather than paint..spider321 said:gianmarco's data is not skewed or selective. It is the data.
I get that some of you don't like it. That's fine.
Can Dotson end up being a great player? Sure.
Has any WR who turned 24 during their rookie season turned out to be a great player? Probably, but not in the last 10 years.
More often than not, stop signs are painted red and white. Who wants to argue that one?
So which is it, 6'2 or 6'4?Faust said:
NFL.com's Matt Harmon notes that TCU WR Josh Doctson was targeted on 41.6% of the 206 routes the analyst charted.
Doctson logged a catch on a fantastic 31.1% of his routes--higher than that of Baylor wideout Corey Coleman (30.6%), who was the next highest by Harmon's estimation. The 6-foot-4, 190-pounder flashed fantastic athleticism at the NFL Scouting Combine a shade over a week ago and SB Nation's Arif Hassan has logged him with a 90.7-percent similarity score to Odell Beckham. Not perfect, but close. While Coleman's been hampered by injury during the pre-draft season and Laquon Treadwell opted not to run the 40-yard dash in Indianapolis, Doctson's been checking every box to this point, turning himself into a near-lock for the first round in the process.
Source: Backyard Banter
Mar 8 - 8:51 PM