Top 103 v2.0
Posted: Sat Jan 2, 2010 2:44 pm
http://football.realgm.com/src_twelfthw ... ersion_20/
I'll update this again once all the underclassmen declare or not, then again after Senior Bowl week. My top 7-8 are basically static though.
I am aware Terrence Cody is on there twice. Put him a lot closer to #55 because dude has serious personal control issues. Talent-wise he is as good as Pat Williams right now, maybe even Shaun Rogers, but I'm not at all sold he can stay in shape physically or mentally long enough to make that sort of impact. I'm not alone in that thinking either.
Obligatory Tim Tebow opinion:
I think the Sugar Bowl is a great microcosm of what he is: best natural leader in years, perhaps ever, to play QB in college. Tough both physically and mentally. Very good at finding his first read and deciphering what it should be based on the defense. Good at throwing on the run, better than when he's in the pocket. Accuracy needs lots of work--he gets it to his receiver but they have to work for it, often breaking stride or reaching out. There were at least 7 times against UC where his receiver could have scored with a better throw, but Tebow merely just got them the ball and they got tackled. That's the difference between Peyton Manning's laser and Alex Smith's elephant gun--the completion percentages aren't drastically different, but life is a lot easier catching from one than the other.
Tebow throws hard strikes on short throws (see the Hernandez TD and early 3rd down conversion) but on longer throws his receivers have to slow down or alter course or leap up to make the catch--and it's still coming real hard and flat. Reminds me some of Derek Anderson...and I think that's the kind of NFL QB Tim Tebow will be--streaky, hard-throwing, great with time to throw, prone to WTF INTs and bad misses. Tebow is much more mobile and offers the run threat, and those leadership skills are real hard to ignore. I'd love to see him get on a team that doesn't need him to play for 1-2 years, sitting and learning behind a real mentor with a teaching QB coach that played the game.
I'll update this again once all the underclassmen declare or not, then again after Senior Bowl week. My top 7-8 are basically static though.
I am aware Terrence Cody is on there twice. Put him a lot closer to #55 because dude has serious personal control issues. Talent-wise he is as good as Pat Williams right now, maybe even Shaun Rogers, but I'm not at all sold he can stay in shape physically or mentally long enough to make that sort of impact. I'm not alone in that thinking either.
Obligatory Tim Tebow opinion:
I think the Sugar Bowl is a great microcosm of what he is: best natural leader in years, perhaps ever, to play QB in college. Tough both physically and mentally. Very good at finding his first read and deciphering what it should be based on the defense. Good at throwing on the run, better than when he's in the pocket. Accuracy needs lots of work--he gets it to his receiver but they have to work for it, often breaking stride or reaching out. There were at least 7 times against UC where his receiver could have scored with a better throw, but Tebow merely just got them the ball and they got tackled. That's the difference between Peyton Manning's laser and Alex Smith's elephant gun--the completion percentages aren't drastically different, but life is a lot easier catching from one than the other.
Tebow throws hard strikes on short throws (see the Hernandez TD and early 3rd down conversion) but on longer throws his receivers have to slow down or alter course or leap up to make the catch--and it's still coming real hard and flat. Reminds me some of Derek Anderson...and I think that's the kind of NFL QB Tim Tebow will be--streaky, hard-throwing, great with time to throw, prone to WTF INTs and bad misses. Tebow is much more mobile and offers the run threat, and those leadership skills are real hard to ignore. I'd love to see him get on a team that doesn't need him to play for 1-2 years, sitting and learning behind a real mentor with a teaching QB coach that played the game.