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Those are impressive. It also puts Agu’s numbers into perspective a little more. A 6’5-6’6 225+ DE running 4.75 and jumping 36 inches.
I think he could be one of those great tweener athletes that let's you not sub as much. He will have the size to play backer and the athleticism to play nickel, I think. He covered really well in the clips I saw from the camp.
For the record Singer thinks he blazes his own path.
I can't imagine OSU losses out on him.
For the record Singer thinks he blazes his own path.
Totally different.
How do you figure?
How do you figure?
Blazing your own path and then going to the same school as your dad would be kinda weird, but I understand him not being a shoe in for us just because his brother came here.
How do you figure?
OSU signed 3 of the top 15 WR last year (which is insane, but Bama had 3 of the top 6 and 4 of the top 10). There is no indication that once Ballard and Harrison committed by Feb of 2020 that they pushed nearly as hard as ND. They simply didn't "need" him at WR like ND needed him. They tried to convince him of defense while he preferred offense. Simply put, OSU thought they had better WR options. Who knows if that will be true or not in 4 years. But you can't beat the ND drum on his recruitment without providing perspective. Sonny is going to be top of the board for everyone.
All troll, no substance---think this is perfect for this response......What if he ends up deciding he wants to play with his brother? Who has the edge then?
All troll, no substance---think this is perfect for this response......
Explaining that there's more to it then OSU just wanting him "really badly". Many factors at play. And, like Singer said, blazing his own trail would mean no ND or OSU.
you said What if he wants to play w/ his brother, then who has the edge....well if he wants to play w/ his brother where else would he go to be with him...unless they have concocted a scenario for him to transfer to another school and commit to that school....but that's not what his plan is for now
What if he ends up deciding he wants to play with his brother? Who has the edge then?
Remember when the St. Brown's wanted to do their own thing?? I haven't heard a thing about Osiris at Stanford for a while and I think Amon-Ra could've been better at ND. Sonny can do his own thing and make his own path at ND.
Remember when the St. Brown's wanted to do their own thing?? I haven't heard a thing about Osiris at Stanford for a while and I think Amon-Ra could've been better at ND. Sonny can do his own thing and make his own path at ND.
osiris-was the least talented of the brothers and got much more love from services because of family
Amon-Ra-played for one of the deepest and best wr rooms while he has been there during his time...not like he was playing w/ likes of a converted qb to wr, and several other wr's who wouldn't even start for other teams so he had the wealth spread among them...he is NOTHING like any of the receivers we have had who put up decent numbers...doesn't have the speed like fuller and doesn't have the height like a claypool or boykin...but i think he did pretty well for himself
osiris-was the least talented of the brothers and got much more love from services because of family
Amon-Ra-played for one of the deepest and best wr rooms while he has been there during his time...not like he was playing w/ likes of a converted qb to wr, and several other wr's who wouldn't even start for other teams so he had the wealth spread among them...he is NOTHING like any of the receivers we have had who put up decent numbers...doesn't have the speed like fuller and doesn't have the height like a claypool or boykin...but i think he did pretty well for himself
His freshman numbers may have been lower but at least in recent years ND has a better track record of getting players drafted at WR with big final years.
USC Receivers in draft:
2020 Pittman 2nd Round
2017 Schuster 2nd Round
ND Receivers in draft:
2020 Claypool 2nd Round
2019 Boykin 3rd Round
2018 Brown 6th Round
2016 Fuller 1st Round
Alternatively, programs that more regularly get talented underclassmen on the field don't need "big final years" because guys like Claypool and Boykin are identified as obvious NFL prospects as sophomores and juniors.
Some mocks have him going as high as the late 1st round. More likely a 2nd-rounder, though. Regardless, I think it's laughable to argue that, given our anemic vertical passing game, a WR like ARSB would have had better professional prospects coming out of ND instead of USC.
OR Alternatively to your alternative, programs that consistently put wide receivers in the NFL on an annual basis because they have demonstrated the ability to develop talented players at a higher level necessarily limits some opportunities for younger guys who will get their turn in due time.
Irregardless, I think that even if he gets selected in the 2nd round it's laughable to think that a 5 star player that was the # 11 prospect in his class, who apparently got only a little better in 3 years and still can't do things that are essential in the NFL like "block" or "catch consistently" wouldn't have benefited from a program like ND that stresses those professional traits.