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#1
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![]() Quote:
I think. Not that this refutes your arguement. Just says the Steelers saw him as very valuable. Dont think it is in the draft. DB's in college that are good athletes switch from corner to safety quite a bit. (I know Texas has had a number of guys at corner go to safety in the NFL and vice versa) Also get the smaller LB's in college moving back in the pros. Also, I think it might be harder to quantify who will make a good safety because so much of that position requires instinct. Corners have one requirement that must come before all others, blazing speed. And a shutdown corner can make safeties look very good as can good DL. Essentially imo you are correct about free agency though. A known quantity, like the guys you mentioned, are gold. Their defense schemes help them though, or one might say a good safety allows a team to create a tougher defensive scheme. Not sure which one comes first. I think Baltimore with Reed looks at its defensive backfield as a very good punt return team that makes the offense punt on downs other than fourth due to turnovers. It is very apparent they put an emphasis on DB's catching the ball instead of just knocking it down. And holding guys up and stripping them. Kinda makes sense cause you get to return against 5 fat offensive lineman, and a QB... As opposed to running back a kickoff or punt against the best athletes on the team. Last edited by pgardn : 01-14-2009 at 11:14 PM. |
#2
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![]() a little off topic but i read "the blind side" by michael lewis a few years ago and have followed michael oher since.
looks like another fat offensive lineman could go in the first round. great read period. but for anyone that doesn't understand why left tackle is (on average) the second highest paying position in the nfl behind only qb, it's a must. |
#3
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![]() The redskins have drafted Sean Taylor (RIP) with the fifth pick and Laron Landry with the sixth pick.
I listened to Parcells and Keyshawn Johnson one time on the radio and they were discussing the safety position. Parcells compared safety to fullback in the sense that both positions require high impact collisions at top speed often against bigger opponents. One interesting fact was that the average career of a safety is amongst the shortest of any position. Most of the time, colleges can't afford to keep their best athletes playing safety so they keep them or convert them to other positions. Is it any wonder that the two best safeties, Reed and Polamalu, are products of two of the fastest teams in recent memory in the canes and the trojans? Everything is cyclical in sports. I would imagine with the spread offenses becoming so common in college football, athletic safeties will grow in importance. |
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