Screamin A got a daughter.both he and skip are questionable
unmarried, no kids
Skip seems like a 60 year old 7 year old. Just wants to watch ,read, and talk sports and cares about nothing else.
Screamin A got a daughter.both he and skip are questionable
unmarried, no kids
Prototypical WR is 6'4 or 6'5. Can't teach speed, can't teach height. Calvin Johnson is a prototypical wide receiver.
Prototypical and typical are two different things. please stop talking about football.
So much wrong in this post..
Mayock believes each fits the new prototype of a receiver valued for being able to use their size to win one-on-one battles.
“Evans and Benjamin are kind of today’s flavor in the NFL,’’ Mayock said. “Those 6-5, 230-pound wide receivers, (capable of catching) the back-shoulder throws, outside the numbers in the red zone.’’
Again, he is 6'5Evans, to me, is the clear-cut WR #2 in this class by a mile. Some will say that if he runs a 4.55 40 at the Combine, he can’t be taken this high, but I wholly disagree. His acceleration hasn’t limited him ever before (see that 95 yard TD vs. Alabama), and he can get just enough separation from defenders to where he need only use his strength to slough a guy off him and he’s gone. His awareness and willingness to keep plays alive is what separates him from the rest of the pack in this class. With Manziel as his QB, he learned to improvise very well, and he simply has that prototypical build a GM looks for in a huge red zone and WR1 target
Matthews possesses a prototypical frame for the wide receiver position, standing 6’3” and carries his 207 pounds very well.
Former Baylor WR Josh Gordon will enter the NFL Supplemental Draft, an NFL source confirmed.
Gordon (6-4, 225), who did not play last season after transferring to Utah, is known in scouting circles for his prototype size and athletic ability.
Jones is one of the best prospects at wide receiver in NFL history and fits in as one of the prototype models.
A productive three-year starter at Alabama, Julio Jones is a prototype NFL receiver who possesses an ideal combination of size, speed and strength.
The 6-3, 220-pounder bypassed his senior season after catching 78 passes for 1,133 yards and seven touchdowns last year as a junior. Starting all 40 games in three seasons at Alabama, Jones had 179 receptions for 2,653 yards and 15 TDs.
According to his profile on NFL.com, Jones “has the prototypical build to become a No. 1 receiver” and is “a vertical threat due to his height, strength, leaping ability and speed.”
Greg McElroy returns for his second season as starting quarterback and he has plenty of enticing receivers, led by NFL prototype wideout Julio Jones.
He is a postmodern prototype for his position, Randy Moss minus the misanthropy. But Calvin Johnson, Georgia Tech's once-in-a-generation wide receiver, is not perfect. � Yes, the 6'5", 235-pound junior is the biggest reason the Yellow Jackets are 5--1 and one of the favorites to win the ACC
Detroit Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson represents the prototype of size, speed, leaping ability and body control.
As if any more evidence was needed to prove the New York Jets are strongly considering drafting a wide receiver with their first pick of the 2014 NFL Draft, it now appears Florida State's Kelvin Benjamin is the latest pass catcher to draw the Jets' wandering eye for receivers.
Manish Mehta of the New York Daily News reported via Twitter that, according to a team source, the club is "very intrigued" by massively-sized Benjamin (6-5, 242 pounds), and that a Benjamin visit to the Jets' facility is pending. "You can't teach 6-5," the source said.
On the plus side, he is both bigger and faster than Childs and Burton. You can't teach speed, but you can't teach height either. Childs is close at 6'3", but he's more of a possession receiver, while Webb could likely stretch the field, at least somewhat.
This is where Johnson separates himself from Marshall and every other receiver in the NFL, and why he is the best wide receiver in the NFL. You can't teach size and speed, and Johnson has a better combination of it than anyone.
At 6'6" and 220 pounds, it was clear that Coleman's potential as a fearsome red zone threat was coming together, and with his straightaway speed and affinity for big plays, he would become a monstrous weapon in college and at the next level.
At the end of the day, you can't teach size, and that is something that Coleman does possess. The mystery lives on and we may never learn the answer, but the fact is, right or wrong, Coleman will be donning an NFL uniform next season.
Randy Shannon was the lead recruiter for the Hogs, and this once again shows this staffs commitment to recruiting the state of Florida. Finding athletes that are six and half feet all and bringing them to Arkansas is an exceptional bit of recruiting, and I wouldn't be surprised to see his big body out on the field in the end zone this season... You can't teach size.
Kelvin Benjamin won the BCS National Championship game for Florida State by jumping out of the gym to high-point a throw by famous Jameis Winston, and he has skills that should translate perfectly to the NFL. You can’t teach size, and he has plenty of it – topping out at six-foot-five and nearly 240 lbs
Benjamin could, all things considered, be the top red zone target in the entire draft. He's 6-5 and 234 pounds. He reeled in 15 catches and 54 passes in 2013. It's very possible that he won't be on the board when the Browns pick for the second time in the draft.
The big concern with Benjamin is that he is very much so an unfinished product. He will need to improve on his route-running, and he will also have to work on his hands. He dropped far too many catchable balls in his college days. That said, you can't teach Benjamin's size. The Browns may not be able to help themselves if he falls to No. 26.
As a longtime NFL scout once told me, you can't coach size. And at 6'5" and 234 pounds, Benjamin is almost a tight end, but he moves with the grace of a wide receiver
When people describe a prototypical wide receiver in today's NFL, they're talking about someone who stands at least 6'3", weighs around 220 pounds and has blazing speed with great hands.
Standing 6-foot-5 and weighing 225 pounds, Evans has the prototypical NFL build, and he claims all the attributes that go with it.
Physical prowess of the ilk possessed by Rogers often happens that way. It is, more often than not, a serendipitous confluence of skills, some of them learned, others imbued, many simply a function of heredity. In Rogers, the scouts see a player who is a rare amalgam of the prototype components that most teams desire in a wide receiver.
Roy Williams is one of the best receivers in the 2004 NFL Draft pool and may be the first wide receiver taken overall. He has the size, speed, and athletic ability to be dominant in the NFL.
Williams had 176 catches for 2,570 yards and 30 touchdowns in two seasons at USC. Williams quickly became the nation's most explosive and dynamic receiver, and there is very little question about his physical maturity. Williams has elite size, strength, hand-eye coordination and body control
still ain't getting involved with that type. Yall already know how women like to get physical to express themselves and like to slap and spit on dudes
....she's a woman that could two piece ya. imagine a domestic dispute. she would just clock ya and ya stumbling. i'm 5'10" so she ain't gotta reach up to my face.
Nutting in her p*ssy shaking like current day Ali.
Nutting in her p*ssy shaking like current day Ali.
was this necessary breh?Nutting in her p*ssy shaking like current day Ali.
Nutting in her p*ssy shaking like current day Ali.