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Saccopoo Memorial Draft Forum>Cesar Ruiz, C, Michigan
staylor26 09:08 PM 02-24-2020
Seems like he has solidified himself as the top C in this class. Just about everybody has him #1 and in the top 32-40 range overall.

I think he’d be a great pick at 32 and an even better one after trading down a few spots if possible.
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BryanBusby 12:01 PM 03-31-2020
They can sign a FA corner after the draft if they like a fatty more. :-)

Teams are going to slow dance to not fuck up comp picks for awhile. Settle down Francis.
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staylor26 09:51 PM 04-11-2020
https://mobile.twitter.com/JReidNFL/...62295935987718
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Tribal Warfare 09:10 AM 04-13-2020
Originally Posted by Direckshun:
I just think this team has such pressing concerns in our back seven that we really have no choice but to go there.
"Because Mahomes" is the reason and makes IOL a very high priority
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Hoover 09:48 AM 04-13-2020
If Cesar Ruiz is there at 32 you draft him and don't think twice about it. Great way to start retooling the line with a 20 year old center! But I don't think he fall to us.
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Chief Northman 12:57 PM 04-13-2020
Originally Posted by Hoover:
If Cesar Ruiz is there at 32 you draft him and don't think twice about it. Great way to start retooling the line with a 20 year old center! But I don't think he fall to us.
I’m just not sold that he is elite. He happens to be #1a/b at his position in an average-below average IOL crop. Some people want to compare him to Garrett Bradbury from last year, who is a good player, but Bradbury also had his share of struggles last year in the middle of that Vikings offensive line. I don’t think Ruiz is as good of a prospect as Bradbury, and I don’t think the drop off is as significant if the Chiefs wait until the mid rounds to pick up an interior offensive lineman. There is greater talent at other positions in rounds one and two.
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JohnnyHammersticks 09:47 AM 04-14-2020
Can't even fathom going through something this heartbreaking at 8 years old. Pretty wild to see the obstacles some people can overcome in life.

Deceased dad of Michigan’s Cesar Ruiz is still at center of his NFL draft dream
By J. Brady McCollough Staff Writer April 11, 2020 5 AM

When evaluating potential investments, NFL general managers and scouts like to know a player is not a risk to lose motivation with the first big paycheck he receives. It helps, in that case, to play the game for a bigger purpose, which has never been a problem for Michigan center Cesar Ruiz.

Ruiz was 8 years old when his father, also named Cesar, was hit by a car on the side of a South New Jersey highway, ending his life at 26. The elder Cesar had reportedly pulled over to help another driver change a flat tire.

“This whole entire experience is dedicated to that whole situation, that tragedy,” Ruiz said at the NFL scouting combine. “I still do it, every night, every day, I think about it. If my dad was here to see what I’m doing right now, he would be mind-blown. So I’m still playing for my dad, I still play through my dad, my dad still lives through me. And that’s how it’s always going to be.”

It wasn’t just his father’s death that shaped the mentality of one of the draft’s top interior linemen, but how he died — being a good Samaritan.

“That’s really what I pride myself on is just doing things for people and being a good person,” Ruiz said. “And the fact — the way it happened, he was doing something good, being a good person, you really wouldn’t want it any other way if something were to happen like that.”

Ruiz had not started playing football before his dad passed away. Looking back, he believes the tragedy is what drove his mother, Latoya, to encourage Cesar to join a team.

“Football came into my life when I was 10 years old,” said Ruiz, a native of Camden, N.J. “I really played because my mom really wanted me to get out of the house. It was kind of a therapeutic thing for me because I was still mourning the death of my father. And she saw it. Basically what she did was try to find something that would help me out.”

Ruiz took to the game quickly and would transfer to IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., before his junior year of high school. That gave him an opportunity to get out of his rough Camden neighborhood and focus on football and his academics. There, he blossomed into the top center recruit in the country and made such an impression at Michigan that he started five games as a freshman.

“At Michigan, I was always in my playbook, always studying the offense,” Ruiz said. “I just have a thing for football. That’s where I think I stand out with these interviews, because I just know so much about football and I love football.”

Ruiz is projected as a borderline first-round pick entering the draft, but he’s confident he should be picked on the first day.

“Because if you look at the film, if you look at how I dominate people, if you look at my character, how smart I am, I have everything for a first rounder,” Ruiz said.

Link
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