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| JetsInsider Draft Forum A forum to discuss all subjects related to the NY Jets and the NFL Draft. Post all of your mock drafts and predictions here. For more detailed info please go to our sister site, www.draftinsider.net! |
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#41 |
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The angry poster
All League
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4,396
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Well CBS has him as a projected mid 2nd rounder. I'd love to see him in the 3rd if he does fall. Small? Tell that to James Harrison see what he says. I'd say good size with room to build on. If you are looking to add a good blitz he'd be well worth a 2rd round. Problem is his past. He will need to score a high wonderlic and shine in an interview or yes he will drop. He will need to show he is dedicated to succeed at the next level. If not yeah he could fall but it will not be because of ability.
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#42 |
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All League
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 3,838
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If we want to discuss that his straight line speed is lacking, then ok, but he rest of what is in this thread just doesn't make sense to me at all.
He is better suited to play 4-3 end? He played OLB in college. Why would he not be able to play that position in the pros? No one is saying he is a speed rusher, but why do we need that, we have maybin already? We need someone who can play every down and thats what upshaw is. To the poster who said "upshaw doesn't have the bend and hip flexibility of harrison"? Harrison was undrafted and cut multiple times. Did those teams/scouts miss his incredible "bend"? Harrison is a brawler-type pass rusher, not a speed guy, which is exactly what upshaw is. Upshaw is a strong, powerful FOOTBALL PLAYER. He has the stats and experience to back up his mearurables. He is someone who can play the run on 1st and 2nd down (maybin can't right now) and then be a pass rusher out of a 2 or 3 point stance on 3rd down. How often would he be playing "in space" in our defense? Rarely....he would be physically setting the edge with this strength or chasing from the backside, which, regardless of his timed speed, he was able to do on multiple times against LSU. I have to disagree that he wouldn't be an excellent pick for us. |
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#43 |
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Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 1,602
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Even if he's 270 my bigger issue is his height, possibly length, and most of all his speed. The weight would help him out as a 4-3 DE type.
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#44 | |
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All League
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 3,346
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Quote:
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#45 |
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waiting for our pass rush thunderbolt
All League
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 3,439
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#46 |
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Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 1,602
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#47 |
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waiting for our pass rush thunderbolt
All League
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 3,439
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#48 |
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Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 1,602
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Yeah I managed to crack that tough code. I think that would be more fun to figure out if Upshaw required the same level of commitment as Dumervil.
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#49 |
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All League
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 3,838
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Just saw this posted my McShay....the more I read, the more I want upshaw here. There is no JPP in this draft, so to search out speed when we have a proved 3-4 OLB, who absolutely can rush the passer, would be a huge mistake for us.
Upshaw's first step is just average, but he's arguably the best hand-fighter in this group. He shows above-average upper-body strength on film, and his active hands make it difficult for offensive tackles to sustain blocks on him. There's also a lot to like about Upshaw's foot speed. At 6-2 and 271 pounds, he has the lateral quickness to keep offensive tackles off-balance and impressive finishing power as a pass-rusher. |
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#50 |
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Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 21,304
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ProFootballWkly Pro Football Weekly
The top prospect in Mobile this week is Alabama OLB Courtney Upshaw. Been called "a cross between Woodley & Harrison" Evaluation: A tough, competitive, relentless defender with a professional makeup, Upshaw is thickly muscled and NFL-strong — jolts blockers, gets extension and plays with leverage to stack the run. Was impactful late in his junior season, flashing disruptive ability, closing speed and strong tackling. Is an average athlete, and short arms and small hands are concerning, but is a solid, winning player who projects best as a left outside ’backer in a 3-4 scheme. http://www.profootballweekly.com/pro...ney-upshaw-41/ |
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