jurb26 said:
Banger said:
It can't be all one trait without the other but I definitely target WR's with speed/separation over hands/reliability. Give me the game changer over the chain mover all day long.
I voted for speed/separation as well, but for a slightly different reason. The bottom line is that most guys who are going to get drafted can catch the ball fairly well. On top of that, catching the ball is about as easy a thing as there is to evaluate in a prospect IMO. For that reason I care far more about guys who can create separation. Creating separation at the NFL level is the most difficult aspect to build IMO. Most college DBs are pathetic at jamming at the line and most college coaches won't even allow them to do it. On top of that, NFL DBs and CBs study the WRs they are covering far more. People are trying to claim that a guy who gets open but can't catch is useless. Well, so is a guy who can't get open in the 1st place. I'd rather have a guy who can get open 8 out of 10 times an maybe only make 4 catches than a guy who gets open 4 out of 10 times and makes 3 catches.
Agreed. Separation/speed creates pressure on the defense, causes double teams and changes the way teams defend which gives advantages to the offense in other areas. The Wayne Chrebets are nice and they make important NFL plays but they don't disrupt or change the game nearly as much as speed does.
That's why 40 times are so important to NFL teams. Yes hands count and are important but if you are slow and can't separate it doesn't matter much.You basically described B. Edwards and if he were a FA there would be a dozen teams lining up to give him a huge contract.
So then all the top receivers, being game changers, should have great speed. Right? Peruse the top 10 WR's each year and you won't necessarily find guys who are the fastest WR on their team or were tops in speed in their draft class. Hands and route running are the keys.The problem with this poll is it lumps route running in with speed. Good route running can be taught and a good route runner can get as much seperation as a speedster despite being slower.
So I look for guys with great hands and good route running. I also look for good body control and aggresiveness going after the ball. With some learning in the route running arena, you end up with a guy that has sticky hands, can catch the contested ball yet can get open as well.
Raw speed is tremendously over-rated...because raw speed doesn't get you open in the NFL like it did in college. The league is full of fast guys who rise no higher than 3rd or 4th on the depth chart and never change the course of a game their entire careers...except as KR's and PR's.