For me, the most pro-ready and best all around prospect at WR is Amari Cooper. He would come in and immediately start across from Bowe and eventually replace him as the primary WR.
What's wrong with Sammy Coates?
The guy has all of the tools in the world, I would equate him to Vernon Davis but at the WR position, but he hasn't produced much at all this season. Coates isn't even close to being his team's leading receiver so I'm not going to blame it on the scheme. Physically, Coates looks like a top 10 pick but his production is that of a mid to late rounder. Where would you take him?
Any thoughts on Coates' teammate, D'haquille Williams?
There is a massive difference in production between he and Sammy Coates so far this year; yes, this could be entirely due to Coates being injured from the Arkansas game but Coates only caught one pass in that game and dropped a possible TD pass despite playing 52 snaps against the Razorbacks. Williams is a JUCO transfer with good size, speed, and explosiveness, though not on the same level as Coates as far as pure physical ability goes. Is he a potential #1 WR or just a 2 at best?
Does DGB declare? If so, do you even dare to touch him given his off-field issues?
Despite not playing this season, I think that there is a real possibility that DGB does declare for the 2015 NFL draft; he just doesn't seem like the type of person who would be willing to go through another year of college over getting paid as a pro athlete. If he does declare, what round would you be willing to take a risk on him? The guy has had problems with at least two key NFL issues, abuse of women and weed. DGB has top 5 talent but an off-field reputation that would have him banned from the league if he had committed those acts as a Pro.
Do Jaelen Strong, Kevin White, or Devante Parker have enough speed to be potential #1 WRs? If not, are their other gifts good enough for them to be close to what Larry Fitzgerald has been in the league?
Is Stefon Diggs actually that fast? When I watch him, I don't see the same dimension of speed that guys like Jackson, Wallace, etc have. I'll be very curious to see what he actually runs at the Combine.
Who are you guys keeping your eyes on this year at the WR position? [Reply]
well that sucks hes a goner in the 1st for sure. i would have loved to have gone something like collins, and then perriman or mcbride.
btw he and bowe arent even close to the same type of player... perriman doesn't have legitmate 4.2 speed, but he's extremely explosive. an acrobatic, high flying type of receiver. [Reply]
Originally Posted by OldSchool:
Not his speed, just how he plays. Inconsistent ball skills & hands, bad routes, etc.
no, thats a silly way to call two receivers the same... by your definition dewayne bowe and desean jackson are the same as jackson also has inconsistent hands, ball skills, and runs poor routes. [Reply]
Originally Posted by jonzie04:
no, thats a silly way to call two receivers the same... by your definition dewayne bowe and desean jackson are the same as jackson also has inconsistent hands, ball skills, and runs poor routes.
Originally Posted by OldSchool:
Just watch him play dude, you'll see it.
i've seen him play in several games... he and bowe aren't even remotely similar type of receivers. is he inconsistent? sure. but that and i suppose body type is about where the similarities end. [Reply]
Originally Posted by O.city:
Perriman has bad hands though right? Pass
Per rotoworld:
Originally Posted by :
UCF WR Breshad Perriman had a drop rate of 12.96% in 2014, according to PFF.
That is terrible. The sample size might be smaller than others, as Perriman dropped seven of 54 catchable passes, but PFF has a tendency to side with the receiver on what exactly is "catchable." Perriman would have generated more buzz if he worked out at the Combine and still has a shot at being a late first-round selection, but very poor drop rates tend to carry over to the NFL - at least early on. Mar 4 - 10:13 AM