I heard he's like a 4.2 "in pads."I think it's clear he won't have the fastest 40 time on the field... but I believe he'll be the fastest *on field with pads on* guy. I think his long speed is good, but his acceleration is elite. He can accelerate past people and has the long speed to sustain separation. I agree it's comical to compare him to an Olympic sprinter... Olympic sprinters don't make receivers.I think this is kind of the point Matuski is trying to make. This is an overboard statement. Watkins is fast, sure. No need to exaggerate it. He will not be the fastest player on the field any given Sunday. I'd bet nearly every NFl team will have a DB faster than him to be honest. That doesn't mean he is going to get run down or it will greatly hinder his game. It's just the truth. This isn't Randy Moss, a guy who will blow by NFL DBs like they are average athletes. Matuski seems to be shedding some realism into the expectations and many don't like it very much. I'm not sure why. The comps of him and an Olympic sprinter are comical. It was a foolish statement that should have just been acknowledged as such once real information was introduced, but of course it wasn't.Watkins is a good prospect, the best WR in this draft. He has good speed and great overall ability. There is no need to embellish his speed for theater.I can see how we can nit pick his speed on the track... but is football played on the track?? I'm of the belief that on any given Sunday, Watkins is going to be the fastest on field with pads on player out there. His acceleration is second to none when he gets the ball in his hands. We can debate his track times all we want but what's the point... all that matters is who he is on the field, and that's fast as ####.I realize I seem like some kind of hater in the face of some of the ludicrous claims here (Olympic speed), but I'm not. Let Watkins be good or very good... even great. Lets chill out on the "faster than a speeding bullet, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" theme..Watkins doesn't have Olympic caliber speed (at least not US caliber) any more than Justin Hunter does, which came up in another thread.
A 10.59 is pretty fast. If Crabtree was that fast (I don't think he was able to run one before the draft - broken foot?), he would be a completely different animal and a better prospect. I've made that exact comparison before, Watkins could be what you would have if Crabtree WAS that fast. Where would Crabtree rank if he had Watkins speed?
The parallel I see are the folks putting this guy in the Calvin Johnson stratosphere, I recall I had a similar reaction in the Crabtree thread a couple years back as I do here - Just take a step back and breathe.
To answer your last question... I'd rather Crabtree was bigger with his current speed. He would be a completely different type of receiver if he were fast.
No one is doing that. So in addition to your refusal to accept real facts, you are creating strawmen. What's next?I realize I seem like some kind of hater in the face of some of the ludicrous claims here (Olympic speed), but I'm not. Let Watkins be good or very good... even great. Lets chill out on the "faster than a speeding bullet, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" theme..Watkins doesn't have Olympic caliber speed (at least not US caliber) any more than Justin Hunter does, which came up in another thread.
A 10.59 is pretty fast. If Crabtree was that fast (I don't think he was able to run one before the draft - broken foot?), he would be a completely different animal and a better prospect. I've made that exact comparison before, Watkins could be what you would have if Crabtree WAS that fast. Where would Crabtree rank if he had Watkins speed?
The parallel I see are the folks putting this guy in the Calvin Johnson stratosphere, I recall I had a similar reaction in the Crabtree thread a couple years back as I do here - Just take a step back and breathe.
To answer your last question... I'd rather Crabtree was bigger with his current speed. He would be a completely different type of receiver if he were fast.
No one is doing that. So in addition to your refusal to accept real facts, you are creating strawmen. What's next?I realize I seem like some kind of hater in the face of some of the ludicrous claims here (Olympic speed), but I'm not. Let Watkins be good or very good... even great. Lets chill out on the "faster than a speeding bullet, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" theme..Watkins doesn't have Olympic caliber speed (at least not US caliber) any more than Justin Hunter does, which came up in another thread.
A 10.59 is pretty fast. If Crabtree was that fast (I don't think he was able to run one before the draft - broken foot?), he would be a completely different animal and a better prospect. I've made that exact comparison before, Watkins could be what you would have if Crabtree WAS that fast. Where would Crabtree rank if he had Watkins speed?
The parallel I see are the folks putting this guy in the Calvin Johnson stratosphere, I recall I had a similar reaction in the Crabtree thread a couple years back as I do here - Just take a step back and breathe.
To answer your last question... I'd rather Crabtree was bigger with his current speed. He would be a completely different type of receiver if he were fast.
Start here. You don't like someone trying to keep this conversation reasonable. Oh well.Matuski seems to be shedding some realism into the expectations and many don't like it very much. I'm not sure why. The comps of him and an Olympic sprinter are comical. It was a foolish statement that should have just been acknowledged as such once real information was introduced, but of course it wasn't.
I agree he isn't "Olympic caliber" in terms of speed (or if some are going to call a speed that many high schoolers are capable of, it devalues the conventional meaning until it is unrecognizeable, as you alluded to).I realize I seem like some kind of hater in the face of some of the ludicrous claims here (Olympic speed), but I'm not. Let Watkins be good or very good... even great. Lets chill out on the "faster than a speeding bullet, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" theme..Watkins doesn't have Olympic caliber speed (at least not US caliber) any more than Justin Hunter does, which came up in another thread.
A 10.59 is pretty fast. If Crabtree was that fast (I don't think he was able to run one before the draft - broken foot?), he would be a completely different animal and a better prospect. I've made that exact comparison before, Watkins could be what you would have if Crabtree WAS that fast. Where would Crabtree rank if he had Watkins speed?
The parallel I see are the folks putting this guy in the Calvin Johnson stratosphere, I recall I had a similar reaction in the Crabtree thread a couple years back as I do here - Just take a step back and breathe.
To answer your last question... I'd rather Crabtree was bigger with his current speed. He would be a completely different type of receiver if he were fast.
I don't think they have the firepower.There is some chatter that the lions are thinking of moving up in the draft to get watkins
http://www.olympic.org/olympic-results/london-2012/athletics/100m-mNo one is doing that. So in addition to your refusal to accept real facts, you are creating strawmen. What's next?I realize I seem like some kind of hater in the face of some of the ludicrous claims here (Olympic speed), but I'm not. Let Watkins be good or very good... even great. Lets chill out on the "faster than a speeding bullet, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" theme..Watkins doesn't have Olympic caliber speed (at least not US caliber) any more than Justin Hunter does, which came up in another thread.
A 10.59 is pretty fast. If Crabtree was that fast (I don't think he was able to run one before the draft - broken foot?), he would be a completely different animal and a better prospect. I've made that exact comparison before, Watkins could be what you would have if Crabtree WAS that fast. Where would Crabtree rank if he had Watkins speed?
The parallel I see are the folks putting this guy in the Calvin Johnson stratosphere, I recall I had a similar reaction in the Crabtree thread a couple years back as I do here - Just take a step back and breathe.
To answer your last question... I'd rather Crabtree was bigger with his current speed. He would be a completely different type of receiver if he were fast.Start here. You don't like someone trying to keep this conversation reasonable. Oh well.Matuski seems to be shedding some realism into the expectations and many don't like it very much. I'm not sure why. The comps of him and an Olympic sprinter are comical. It was a foolish statement that should have just been acknowledged as such once real information was introduced, but of course it wasn't.![]()
You are lost. The Olympic discussion happened well before you got here and was based on the US team.http://www.olympic.org/olympic-results/london-2012/athletics/100m-mNo one is doing that. So in addition to your refusal to accept real facts, you are creating strawmen. What's next?I realize I seem like some kind of hater in the face of some of the ludicrous claims here (Olympic speed), but I'm not. Let Watkins be good or very good... even great. Lets chill out on the "faster than a speeding bullet, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" theme..Watkins doesn't have Olympic caliber speed (at least not US caliber) any more than Justin Hunter does, which came up in another thread.
A 10.59 is pretty fast. If Crabtree was that fast (I don't think he was able to run one before the draft - broken foot?), he would be a completely different animal and a better prospect. I've made that exact comparison before, Watkins could be what you would have if Crabtree WAS that fast. Where would Crabtree rank if he had Watkins speed?
The parallel I see are the folks putting this guy in the Calvin Johnson stratosphere, I recall I had a similar reaction in the Crabtree thread a couple years back as I do here - Just take a step back and breathe.
To answer your last question... I'd rather Crabtree was bigger with his current speed. He would be a completely different type of receiver if he were fast.Start here. You don't like someone trying to keep this conversation reasonable. Oh well.Matuski seems to be shedding some realism into the expectations and many don't like it very much. I'm not sure why. The comps of him and an Olympic sprinter are comical. It was a foolish statement that should have just been acknowledged as such once real information was introduced, but of course it wasn't.![]()
Go ahead and list all the Olympians that aren't Olympians.
Who cares if Watkins is an Olympian or not? He's not going to be running for gold. He's going to be ballin' on Sundays. And he is an Olympian at being a WR. That is what I care about most.You are lost. The Olympic discussion happened well before you got here and was based on the US team.http://www.olympic.org/olympic-results/london-2012/athletics/100m-mNo one is doing that. So in addition to your refusal to accept real facts, you are creating strawmen. What's next?I realize I seem like some kind of hater in the face of some of the ludicrous claims here (Olympic speed), but I'm not. Let Watkins be good or very good... even great. Lets chill out on the "faster than a speeding bullet, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" theme..Watkins doesn't have Olympic caliber speed (at least not US caliber) any more than Justin Hunter does, which came up in another thread.
A 10.59 is pretty fast. If Crabtree was that fast (I don't think he was able to run one before the draft - broken foot?), he would be a completely different animal and a better prospect. I've made that exact comparison before, Watkins could be what you would have if Crabtree WAS that fast. Where would Crabtree rank if he had Watkins speed?
The parallel I see are the folks putting this guy in the Calvin Johnson stratosphere, I recall I had a similar reaction in the Crabtree thread a couple years back as I do here - Just take a step back and breathe.
To answer your last question... I'd rather Crabtree was bigger with his current speed. He would be a completely different type of receiver if he were fast.Start here. You don't like someone trying to keep this conversation reasonable. Oh well.Matuski seems to be shedding some realism into the expectations and many don't like it very much. I'm not sure why. The comps of him and an Olympic sprinter are comical. It was a foolish statement that should have just been acknowledged as such once real information was introduced, but of course it wasn't.![]()
Go ahead and list all the Olympians that aren't Olympians.
Everyone here seems to understand such but you.
Going by your list, I was an Olympic caliber sprinter in high school as well. I guess by your benchmark anyone breaking 11 seconds is Olympic caliber? It is fairly clear you didn't run yourself and don't have a clue.
Congrats for comparing Watkins to Burkina Faso's Olympic representative (10.48). I didn't even know that country existed until you gave us this list.![]()
eta - Sammy Watkins remains on the non-Olympian list. It isn't even close.
Amazing post!OK sounds good guys. I'm frankly unsure why people are so hung up on not calling a guy's speed "Olympic caliber" when it clearly is by the literal definition, that people want to be less encompassing of the actual definition of the words used. At the same time, these are the same people that use "epic" when describing some mildly exciting event, or uber when describing something that is slightly above average, or any other hyperbolic term to describe nearly anything. Maybe this group has some kind of USA-centric view which allows for exceptions like this.
Just about everyone agrees that Sammy Watkins is the best wide receiver in the 2014 draft class. And depending on which mock draft you consult, he could go anywhere from No. 2 to No. 8. Meanwhile, the Lions, well-stocked at wideout and with plenty of other needs, have the No. 10 pick.
There's no way Watkins falls that far and even if he does, Detroit wouldn't even consider taking him, right?
On the surface, it sure seems implausible. Matt Millen hasn't been with the team since 2008, and in addition to Calvin Johnson, one of the league's best receivers, the Lions signed Golden Tate, and have Ryan Broyles and Kris Durham, too. For a seven-win outfit, there are bigger concerns.
Except that the team hosted Watkins Tuesday as one of their 30 allotted pre-draft visits, and that comes after new Lions coach Jim Caldwell had dinner with Watkins before his pro day. The former Clemson star even got to meet Johnson and Tate while in Detroit.
“It'd be definitely a blessing playing with Megatron and Golden Tate, having Reggie Bush and Matthew Stafford,” Watkins said, via the Detroit Free Press. “They're doing a great job with the program with all the coaches. If I ever go there, sky's the limit.”
It's one thing to be infatuated -- coaches and scouts fall in love every year around this time -- but that doesn't guarantee a team will trade up for that player. Exacerbating matters: The Rams, who hold the No. 2 pick, are in the market for a wide receiver and Watkins makes a lot of sense. If the Lions are serious, they'd have to trade up eight spots, which won't come cheap.
Two years ago, the Redskins moved up from No. 6 to No. 2 for the right to take Robert Griffin III. The cost (paid, incidentally, to the Rams): first-round picks in 2012, 2013 and 2014, and a 2012 second-rounder.
Assuming the Rams would be willing to listen to trade offers this time around (and we can't imagine they wouldn't), they may be looking for a similar haul. Working from the premise that the Lions would consider Watkins that high, they'd likely have competition from other teams looking for a quarterback.
From the perspective of early April, a month before the actual draft, this all seems highly improbable. Then again, who had the Lions using first-round picks on wideouts in four of five drafts from 2003-2007?
(Incidentally, ProFootballTalk.com's Michael David Smith writes that if the Lions are legitimately interested in Watkins, it would be because they think he's Megatron's eventual replacement.)
For the sake of discussion, let's say Watkins ends up in Detroit. He'd expect to have success playing alongside some of the league's most explosive players.
“I think I can go in and not be the superman wide receiver but go in there and make plays and help my team out. ... Going in (with) a veteran receiver that dominates the game and Golden Tate, too, won a championship, so they know how to play and they know how to prepare for the game,” Watkins said.
The good news is that in 29 days we won't have to speculate. The first round of the 2014 NFL Draft is Thursday, May 8.
What Bob said. Matuski and skypager, please drop it. This thread is for talking about how Watkins will fare in the NFL. Thanks.Bob Magaw said:Than a lot of US preps have speed that is "Olympic caliber". By this diminished comparison, it loses it's conventional meaning.
Watkins wouldn't make the US Olympic team.
As others have said, he is really fast, saying he is Olympic fast if what is meant by that is what plenty of US high schoolers could run, doesn't make the point any better. No doubt he would be a fearsome sprinter for the Laplanders or Inuit Eskimo teams.![]()
Still interested in where you would rank Crabtree if he had the speed of Watkins or Watkins if he had the size of Bryant (call it an inch taller and 10 lbs heavier), which is very relevant to the thread.Well, now this thread will drop off page 1. What a party pooper.
It's a fair question about comparing prospects to known NFL players.Why do we always have to compare and find an exacet replica of a player that is already playing?....... if prospect doesn't fit, size, weight, speed, athletic ability, etc exactly then he can't possibly become an elite WR. It's ridiculous!
Watkins passes the eye test. He's been productive. He's on the upper end of athletic ability, but he's not a freak........what he does do better than almost every other WR that's entered the draft in the past 10 years is route running. He knows how to set up his defenders and get open. He's fast on top of that. It's silly watching everyone get into a pissing match over what cookie cutter WR mold Watkins fits in. Watkins is himself. He's a unique WR on his own. He'll be elite.
Exactly.It's a fair question about comparing prospects to known NFL players.Why do we always have to compare and find an exacet replica of a player that is already playing?....... if prospect doesn't fit, size, weight, speed, athletic ability, etc exactly then he can't possibly become an elite WR. It's ridiculous!
Watkins passes the eye test. He's been productive. He's on the upper end of athletic ability, but he's not a freak........what he does do better than almost every other WR that's entered the draft in the past 10 years is route running. He knows how to set up his defenders and get open. He's fast on top of that. It's silly watching everyone get into a pissing match over what cookie cutter WR mold Watkins fits in. Watkins is himself. He's a unique WR on his own. He'll be elite.
But in defense, it often is helpful for describing a player's potential when the reader doesn't know much of the player in question. Sort of in a "His upside is a WR similar to _______" It gives you a good starting point.
But I agree, every player is his own player and no two are identical.
J
).I think it's great to compare prospects to extant players. The reasons have been stated better than I could have. Most of the time prospects get compared to future HOF players or at least present day studs. I think this could be a possible problem with some people have with comparisons.I have to echo what Bob and Joe have said. Comparables are a way to try and predict the future numbers of a prospect and what type of a ceiling he may or may not have. Fantasy football is not an exact science which makes it such an enjoyable hobby. Watkins of course is his own player and will create his own story, but finding comparables also allows you to break a player down and see who he may actually be and what he can do.
I'm curious about this as well... who would play the slot? Tate? Sammy?I am struggling with all this Watkins to Detroit talk. Do the Lions really not view Tate as a WR2? Are they really planning on moving up to target Watkins? Or is this all just a smoke screen?
Calvin Johnson/Watkins/Tate would be down rigth lethal, but I just am struggling to see this going down. I think from a fantasy perspective Watkins in Detroit would be really good now and long term. The draft can't get here soon enough.
It would be interesting from a FF perspective but imo Detroit would be better served trading down and trying to get 3 picks in the first 2 rounds to draft mainly defense.I'm curious about this as well... who would play the slot? Tate? Sammy?I am struggling with all this Watkins to Detroit talk. Do the Lions really not view Tate as a WR2? Are they really planning on moving up to target Watkins? Or is this all just a smoke screen?
Calvin Johnson/Watkins/Tate would be down rigth lethal, but I just am struggling to see this going down. I think from a fantasy perspective Watkins in Detroit would be really good now and long term. The draft can't get here soon enough.
I believe without looking Tate is on the smaller side under 6' - maybe 5'11" or 10" - yet he didn't play much slot in Seattle, as that role was Doug Baldwin's from my understanding. Sammy can play any WR role and is lethal from all of them IMO... it would be interesting to see how they would use them. Tate just isn't all that imposing on the outside and I think Sammy would be better fit there if he ended up in Detroit.
Tate is made for the slot. He was a converted running back from his time in high school. He is 5'10 and great in small spaces, his run after the catch ability is great as well. I think Watkins can line up anywhere including the slot, but in this situation Tate would be the slot guy as Watkins seems like a better fit outside.I'm curious about this as well... who would play the slot? Tate? Sammy?I am struggling with all this Watkins to Detroit talk. Do the Lions really not view Tate as a WR2? Are they really planning on moving up to target Watkins? Or is this all just a smoke screen?
Calvin Johnson/Watkins/Tate would be down rigth lethal, but I just am struggling to see this going down. I think from a fantasy perspective Watkins in Detroit would be really good now and long term. The draft can't get here soon enough.
I believe without looking Tate is on the smaller side under 6' - maybe 5'11" or 10" - yet he didn't play much slot in Seattle, as that role was Doug Baldwin's from my understanding. Sammy can play any WR role and is lethal from all of them IMO... it would be interesting to see how they would use them. Tate just isn't all that imposing on the outside and I think Sammy would be better fit there if he ended up in Detroit.
I think he would be easier to imagine as an inch taller and 10 heavier. Everything he does now would be that much easier, he would be a bit closer to "elite" in my mind. He uses his size and positions himself well.. he still wouldn't have Dez's athleticism imo, but perhaps an edge on the mental (a small edge).Still interested in where you would rank Crabtree if he had the speed of Watkins or Watkins if he had the size of Bryant (call it an inch taller and 10 lbs heavier), which is very relevant to the thread.Well, now this thread will drop off page 1. What a party pooper.
This is where, IMO, people need to look the hardest at Watkins. There is a HUGE difference between being able to accelerate in college and the NFL. In college, these guys get free run because they know the college kids aren't fast enough to run with them or physical enough to press them.Sammy's acceleration is elite. It's his trademark attribute and how he's going to win in the NFL. He better have elite acceleration though because he's not particularly big and he can't jump so he has to separate to win.
Yeah, I don't know if I can agree with the Tavon Austin comparison...Watkins might not be tall, but he's not small.
He has an NFL body.
I think he's more Sterling Sharpe than Dez. Sorry no video.Yeah, I don't know if I can agree with the Tavon Austin comparison...Watkins might not be tall, but he's not small.
He has an NFL body.
He's more Dez than he is Tavon...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_oNI6gG97k
Good post but the Austin inclusion was insane.This is where, IMO, people need to look the hardest at Watkins. There is a HUGE difference between being able to accelerate in college and the NFL. In college, these guys get free run because they know the college kids aren't fast enough to run with them or physical enough to press them.Sammy's acceleration is elite. It's his trademark attribute and how he's going to win in the NFL. He better have elite acceleration though because he's not particularly big and he can't jump so he has to separate to win.
In the NFL, he WILL get pressed and/or he will get bracketed or cut off of being able to run freely where he wants.
I'm not going to say that kills this ultra-high hype some people are building (I don't know) but I will say it is absolutely different and when you look at a guy like Dez Bryant: he's a big boy and he had trouble the first 2 years almost in learning how to deal with the press. Watkins isn't that big and it stands to reason it will be difficult. Can it be done? Sure. But most guys like this are slots guys and movers and most NFL teams don't draft a WR extremely high to play the slot.
That's the difference I see with Andre Johnson. His size and body control dictated from day one what he was able to do. He came in gifted and with potential and then he refined that while using those gifts. Watkins will come in gifted and with potential but will almost certainly have to adjust and learn/re-learn how he uses those gifts at the next level.
To me, he is much more Tavon Austin than Andre Johnson. In a few years, people might say Tavon is Percy Harvin on steroids.. Who knows? But it takes time when you have to adjust and Watkins is one of those guys who will need to. But he's never going to be the guy that can dominate every inch of a football field like ANdre can.
No doubt Bryant will make plays Watkins wouldn't (much better jumps at his pro day), but Watkins will make plays Bryant wouldn't due to his superior speed. It isn't obvious from here Watkins won't due as well or better overall, IMO. And I like Bryant a lot. I don't know about the mental part. Watkins appears more self-motivated and harder working, Bryant was kind of out of shape for his pro day. If Watkins doesn't need a baby sitter at the next level, that would be an improvement over Bryant, whether a small edge or larger is subject to debate.I think he would be easier to imagine as an inch taller and 10 heavier. Everything he does now would be that much easier, he would be a bit closer to "elite" in my mind. He uses his size and positions himself well.. he still wouldn't have Dez's athleticism imo, but perhaps an edge on the mental (a small edge).Give him top tier speed and I think his game would change... a lot. Hard to imagine a Crabtree blowing the top off a defense or running reverses and returning kicks.Still interested in where you would rank Crabtree if he had the speed of Watkins or Watkins if he had the size of Bryant (call it an inch taller and 10 lbs heavier), which is very relevant to the thread.Well, now this thread will drop off page 1. What a party pooper.
Sammy Watkins, WR, Clemson: No receiver has been this electrifying since Calvin Johnson came out of Georgia Tech. He is big, fast and explosive. Watkins’ after-the-catch yards are unreal. He is competitive and explosive. He has a rare ability and rare skill set in that he can be lethal as both a vertical receiver and in the short game. He’s Sterling Sharp with top-end speed. Watkins saved his best game for last in Clemson’s bowl game win over Ohio State. However, he’s young and will have to be handled the right way. Watkins is sensitive and naive, but he wants to be great and with the right coach and quarterback, he will be.
Bio: Many draft analysts will tell you that the 2014 class contains the deepest group of receivers they’ve seen in at least a decade. And Clemson’s Sammy Watkins can be found near the top of all those lists for a multitude of reasons.
Facing some of the nation’s best defenses, he put up 3,391 yards and 27 touchdowns on 240 catches in his three-year collegiate career, and really exploded onto the scene in 2013, grabbing 101 passes for 1,464 yards and 12 scores. When DeAndre Hopkins left for the NFL following the 2012 season, and Watkins became every defense’s primary target, he was even more productive than he’d been before, which speaks to his potential.
“I think I can do just about anything on the field from wide receiver to running back to slot — I can make plays all over the field,” he said in February. “What I love doing is dominating defenses. I think that’s what I bring to the game and I think that’s going to turn over to the NFL. When I come into the NFL, I think I can be that dominant receiver.”
Athletically, yes. Schematically? There are a few things to work out in Watkins’ case, but over time, he could be just as dominant as he hopes.
Strengths: One of the things that makes Watkins so captivating as a player is that he is a legit weapon to make a big play from anywhere — from the backfield to the slot to any position in trips or bunch formations. Tremendous after-catch player on bubble screens, and he’s very dangerous on end-arounds. As a backfield weapon, he looks and thinks like a running back with his foot-fakes and acceleration. Has the pure speed and second gear to outrun college cornerbacks to the end zone, but will also gain separation with an estimable array of jukes off the line and in space. Tremendously effective in motion plays, especially out of the backfield — this is how he often creates separation — and his understanding of formation spacing and timing serves him well. He’s very tough to cover when he’s hitting the line with a full head of steam, and his NFL team would do well to use him in these types of “waggle” plays. Blocks with above-average effort and form, though not a lot of power.
Weaknesses: Watkins’ height creates concerns with regards to jump balls and contested catches; he’s simply not big enough to grab some of the balls that more physically imposing receivers might. And while he’s strong, he needs space to operate — he’ll get taken down on first contact a lot if the first contact is a form tackle attempt, though he’ll drive his helmet in and try to gain extra yardage. Watkins said at the combine that he’s comfortable with all manner of route concepts, but he was a quick up-and-out and vertical target at Clemson, and there are times when he appears a step slow on some more angular routes — especially curls and comebacks or anything with really quick cuts. Has the physical talent to master the techniques required and shows it at times, but that could be a process.
To his credit, Watkins addressed specific route issues from the podium at the scouting combine.
“I’ve become a pretty good route runner, but there are areas I can still improve in with getting out of my routes,” he said. “What I’m really focused on is my curl routes and my comebacks. I’ve got to get my transitions, and know when to run full speed or not, and sync my hips and get out of my routes.”
Conclusion: It’s clear that Watkins is one of the best athletes in this draft class at any position, and he’ll help whatever team drafts him right away, as long as that team understands what he can and can’t do. Watkins has credited South Carolina receiver Bruce Ellington (a very underrated player, in my book) with helping him grasp other route concepts besides the bubble screen and the straight go.
“They say I can’t run routes, so I definitely have to show them that I am probably one of the best receivers at running routes in the combine,” Watkins told TheState.com in February. “I don’t think a lot of guys are on mine, and [Ellington's] level on route running and knowing the fundamentals of break points and things like that.”
NFL teams don’t always take these limitations and strengths into account. When the Vikings took Tennessee’s Cordarrelle Patterson with one of their three first-round picks in 2013, it took a while for the now-departed coaching staff to mix him in as anything but a dynamic returner. When he was finally given the opportunity to use his full array of attributes, Patterson put up performances Minnesota hadn’t seen from a rookie receiver since Randy Moss scalded the league with his talent in 1998. Watkins could have a similar impact at the next level, but it will take an open-minded staff and creative playbook to get the most from him at the start.
NFL player comparison: Cordarrelle Patterson, Minnesota Vikings (1st round, Tennessee, 2013)
I wouldnt risk him returning kicks
Minnesota did with Harvin. Dallas did with Dez.I know.I wouldnt risk him returning kicksMinnesota did with Harvin. Dallas did with Dez.
I would say a mix of Roddy white/Blackmon and Harvin all in one... Really he is unlike anyone we have seen. in 3 years he will Dynasty Wr1 overallAJ is a true freak of nature.
If I had to pick a comp it would Dez even though Dez is an inch taller and 13 lbs. heavier.