Keep Texans Talk Google Ad Free!
Venmo Tip Jar | Paypal Tip Jar
Thanks for your support! 🍺😎👍

3rd Round DeVier Posey WR Ohio State

The more I watch of Posey the more I'm encouraged. He runs really smooth and crisp routes. That bodes well in the type of offense we run. The key to him adjusting is going to be his football IQ. Everyone can kind of agree that Jacoby just fell flat in this area. I can see him being on the field as WR2 about midway of the season.

It really stinks how the new CBA limits the amount of workouts and camps in the off-season so I'm curious to see how the rookies adapt. It didn't seem to hurt many guys after last year's lockout though. Although I would like to add a guy like Braylon Edwards, I can see us going into the season with AJ, KW, and the kids.

That's what I like about Posey.
 
Like others have said, you're confusing Posey's "character" issues with Dwight Jones' character issues.

Posey is the guy who sold his own personal ring so his mother could keep her electricity on. He got 5 games for that. Then he worked his job and got paid the union rate. And he got 5 games for that because the union rate for the job was more than the NCAA allowed.

And during those 10 games, he played the scout team QB and continued to work with the team.

badboy has been watching too much footbal, it's easy to confuse one guy from another; heck, a lot of the receivers in this draft class look similar to one another! :spin:
 
It really stinks how the new CBA limits the amount of workouts and camps in the off-season so I'm curious to see how the rookies adapt...
Larry Fitzgerald sponsors a WR camp that I think Cris Carter & Jerry Rice help with. I can't recall if any of our draft picks have attended before ... I wonder why???

Seems like you'd want your rookies to spend some time with those greats ... ?
 
Larry Fitzgerald sponsors a WR camp that I think Cris Carter & Jerry Rice help with. I can't recall if any of our draft picks have attended before ... I wonder why???

Seems like you'd want your rookies to spend some time with those greats ... ?

No even moderately high WR pick since Jacoby Jones down?
 
Here's an SI.com article on Posey, specifically the Texans' choice of him, and a few screen shots that they analyzed.

Pretty decent article. Here's an excerpt:

The 6-foot-2, 211-pound Posey has a high quota of playmaking ability and, if he’s single-covered while teams pay attention to Johnson, looks like he can find some seams. The play below comes from Ohio State’s win over Miami in 2010, with Pryor at QB.

Posey ran a pretty simple corner route, but in the process managed to both beat the press coverage on the line and accelerate into space beyond the deep safety.

posey-1.jpg

And...

posey-5.png


Posey’s there with space, but Pryor’s throw sailed a bit. Worse yet, for our specific study, Posey short-armed his catch attempt, no doubt hearing the footsteps from the closing safety.

That’s an issue that comes up again and again with Posey. He’ll go over the middle, he might even make some catches in traffic - he scored against Indiana in 2009 on a play similar to this one, where he plucked the ball and secured it before being rocked at the goal line. But he’ll drop some passes that he shouldn’t and he will shy from contact at times.

There were two examples of that from Ohio State’s 2010 opener against Marshall. Posey scored twice in that game, so this all emphasizes his up-and-down performances. In the second quarter, on a deep ball from Pryor, Posey kept floating long, allowing Marshall’s safety to slip underneath him and bat a pass away. Then, to open the fourth, Posey sat down against zone coverage and Pryor hit him in the numbers - Posey flat-out dropped it.

Houston will hope for more consistency from Posey as an NFL rookie. Will the Texans get it?
 
no long speed and afraid of the middle of the field is his downside. Nice.

Classic darkhorse. under the radar/studied among 2012 WR class. what Kubiak likes is his ability to create separation in & out of breaks. DeVier possess the upside needed to succeed in the NFL making him a great value with a mid 3rd rd. pick. Posey killed the Ducks in 2010 Rose Bowl he could not be covered, caught everything thrown to him 8 receptions 101 yards, 12.6 yards per catch & game winning TD. He is the type of receiver who excels in the redzone, combination of creating space & awareness, knowing how to help the QB. Toughness over the middle is one reason they took Martin, who is more of a slot WR, in 4th also great value considering he will return kicks as well. :wesmantexanfan:
 
Here's an SI.com article on Posey, specifically the Texans' choice of him, and a few screen shots that they analyzed.

Pretty decent article. Here's an excerpt:



And...

I'll tell ya' ... these writers (Chris Burke, in this instance)... they like to find fault and something to write about, at times they just don't watch enough tapes and/or don't watch it closely enough - understandable, as they had to write about a lot of different players, they skimmed through the tapes.

In doing so, they did themselves a disservice.

Burke got several things wrong:
- Route running is Posey's strong suite.
- Catching the ball in traffic is not a bad part of his game.

Think about it... A guy with no deep speed that can't run route and is afraid of going in the middle... Would there be a team stupid enough to draft such a guy in the third round?

I can get to the specific play(s) when I have some time, but I don't think it's really necessary.
 
I'll tell ya' ... these writers (Chris Burke, in this instance)... they like to find fault and something to write about, at times they just don't watch enough tapes and/or don't watch it closely enough - understandable, as they had to write about a lot of different players, they skimmed through the tapes.

In doing so, they did themselves a disservice.

Burke got several things wrong:
- Route running is Posey's strong suite.
- Catching the ball in traffic is not a bad part of his game.

Think about it... A guy with no deep speed that can't run route and is afraid of going in the middle... Would there be a team stupid enough to draft such a guy in the third round?

I can get to the specific play(s) when I have some time, but I don't think it's really necessary.

I agree, but to be fair I don't think he was saying that is who Posey is but rather he has shown a tendency to do those things.

And I don't even know if it's a tendency really. Just a couple of not so great moments.

But I agree with your point that he has shown the ability to do those things more than he has shown to not do them.

I guess we'll just have to wait and see how he adjusts to the NFL.
 
Very Nice breakdown of Posey's Game

Click on the link for a 76 style breakdown. While I don't agree with a few things he said, I think a lot of people are just unsure of what to make of Posey. Having a true QB throwing the ball to him will improve his game drastically I believe though.

In the Seinfeld episode “The Soul Mate,” George tries to prove that there’s a massive conspiracy against him at his deceased wife’s charitable foundation. At one point, he gives an enthusiastic speech to Jerry about the situation and closes by stating, “That’s what we know.”

Jerry replies, “But we already knew that!”

And that, in a nutshell, is where we are with DeVier Posey. You want to study his game, learn what type of player he is? Well, then you may as well pull out the film from 2009 or ’10, or check out what people had to say when it looked like he might enter the supplemental draft last summer.

We really don’t have any new information regarding Posey as a player, since he was suspended for the first 10 games of his senior season because of his involvement in the Ohio State off-field scandal that took down Jim Tressel.

Upon his return to the lineup in 2011, Posey caught 12 passes in three games.

So, we have to dip a little deeper into the tape to find out what the Houston Texans added with the 68th pick in the draft. The Texans needed to find some depth at wide receiver, especially after stumbling without Andre Johnson in the lineup last season.

Is Posey capable of being a go-to guy for the Texans? It might be awhile until there’s an answer.

Even in diving back to Posey’s previous seasons, it’s important to remember that he had Terrelle Pryor throwing to him, so his numbers (6o catches in 2009, 53 in 2010) certainly were not aided by that fact.

There’s a pretty wide variance in Posey’s game, too, with a lot of good mingling with some obvious bad to create an uncertain picture. We’ll open on the glass half-full side of things …

The 6-foot-2, 211-pound Posey has a high quota of playmaking ability and, if he’s single-covered while teams pay attention to Johnson, looks like he can find some seams. The play below comes from Ohio State’s win over Miami in 2010, with Pryor at QB.
 
NFL Comparison:
Brandon LaFell, Steve Breaston, Nate Burleson, Kevin Walter, Mohamed Massaquoi
Posey compares to Steve Breaston and Kevin Walter? Breaston is a reed-thin slot receiver. Walter is 225lb possession receiver who is instrumental in the run game. Which one is Posey?

Internet scouts....
 
The problem is the writer sometimes describes the play all wrong; therefore, the conclusion he drew from that play is incorrect.

Start with the "not so good" part, Chris Burke brought up a play in the Sugar Bowl as followed:

"It’s a good start to the play, with Posey beating tight coverage at the line and getting inside the corner covering him. However, that corner had deep safety help, which means Posey and Pryor had to run everything to perfection to complete a slant pattern.
That’s not quite what happened.
Posey’s there with space, but Pryor’s throw sailed a bit. Worse yet, for our specific study, Posey short-armed his catch attempt, no doubt hearing the footsteps from the closing safety.
That’s an issue that comes up again and again with Posey. He’ll go over the middle, he might even make some catches in traffic - he scored against Indiana in 2009 on a play similar to this one, where he plucked the ball and secured it before being rocked at the goal line. But he’ll drop some passes that he shouldn’t and he will shy from contact at times."

......

That was not what happened, Burke!

Posey lined up a couple yards outside the numbers.
The Buckeyes ran a 4-vertical pattern with Posey the lone receiver on the right; the Razorbacks were in man coverage with a single deep safety.

Posey ran a seam route (not a slant).
He opened up the CB by faking an outside release and beat him to the inside.

Posey started to look for the ball around the 15yd-mark from the LOS.
This is where the ball should have been aimed at; somewhere between 15-18 yards to avoid the safety.

However, the ball sailed high as it was thrown to 22-23 yards.

Pryor locked onto his target too soon; he never moved the safety with his eyes; this allowed the safety to converge quickly.

Remember that it was a 4-vertical against a single deep safety.
All Pryor had to do is to look straight downfield (he didn't) at the safety to hold him there for a little bit.

Or failing that, he could have just thrown the ball a couple of yards shorter and Posey would have had an easy catch.

The ball sailed high; Posey reached out with one hand, but it was just too far away.

I don't get how Burke can say that Posey "short-armed" his catch attempt on an overthrown ball.

posey-5.png


He even chose the "best" camera angle to try to fool people into believing his point.
And with that he concluded that Posey short-armed it because he was "no doubt" hearing footsteps from the closing safety.

No Burke, the guy who needs more consistency is you!
icon10.gif
 
That was not what happened, Burke!
...
No Burke, the guy who needs more consistency is you!
icon10.gif
Exactly, rack him! MSR Gotta do a more credible job with SI.

Here's the play cued up & slow-mo: http://youtu.be/xEkBl91EJsk?t=3m54s If Burke had just listened to the commentator he'd have done a better job.

Pryor locked onto his target too soon; he never moved the safety with his eyes; this allowed the safety to converge quickly.
That's the one thing that jumped out at me more than anything watching these older cutups -- Pryor locks on worse than even Leinart, imo. It's like there's always only one WR in pattern. Makes a receiver's job a lot tougher.
 
Exactly, rack him! MSR Gotta do a more credible job with SI.

Here's the play cued up & slow-mo: http://youtu.be/xEkBl91EJsk?t=3m54s If Burke had just listened to the commentator he'd have done a better job.

That's the one thing that jumped out at me more than anything watching these older cutups -- Pryor locks on worse than even Leinart, imo. It's like there's always only one WR in pattern. Makes a receiver's job a lot tougher.


Exactly! 76 did a much better job than saying what I disagreed with than I would have done. The thing about playing with inconsistent QB's who move around a lot is it sometimes gets receivers into some bad habits. Burke said that Posey isn't a good route runner, but that's just not true in my opinion. When you have an inaccurate QB who scrambles a lot you're not going to be used to the ball being delivered on time consistently.

That's why I'm excited to see what he's going to do in this offense. He won't have that problem here of worrying about QB's moving around and can simply play within the system. I've also seen him make some tough catches where he took big shots so I'm not worried about him shying away from contact either.
 
Great finding "False Start"! Nice to see him and put a Texans picture on this guy. Hopefully he will pan out, however Im affraid that I will always measure him againts Rueben Randle since we past on him to get Posey.

Time will tell.
 
Posey is working with the threes right now. He’ll stay with the young group. I could tell of his progress last week, my initial reaction was very good. I think the more information we gave him toward the end of the week, obviously they bog down a little bit. He’s got a lot of ability. He just needs the reps, so we’ll take it a day at a time. - Kubiak at Monday OTAs

Sounds like he has a ways to go.
 
Interesting, I wonder who the 1's and 2's are with Johnson out.

I'd imagine guys with experience in the system would currently be ranked highest: KW, Lestar Jean (1s) and then Juaquin Iglesias, Jeff Maehl (2s), and then Posey and Martin (3s), and then Jones, Holliday, and Jackson in no particular order.
 
I'd imagine guys with experience in the system would currently be ranked highest: KW, Lestar Jean (1s) and then Juaquin Iglesias, Jeff Maehl (2s), and then Posey and Martin (3s), and then Jones, Holliday, and Jackson in no particular order.

Well if DeVier Posey cannot beat out Jeff Maehle or Juaquin Iglesias then this will be a really bad pick. Same probably goes for Keshawn Martin.
 
Well if DeVier Posey cannot beat out Jeff Maehle or Juaquin Iglesias then this will be a really bad pick. Same probably goes for Keshawn Martin.

With 2 days of OTAs it's normal to have the younger guys running with the younger guys while they learn the system. There is NO WAY that Posey enters camp not running with at least the 2's.
 
Well if DeVier Posey cannot beat out Jeff Maehle or Juaquin Iglesias then this will be a really bad pick. Same probably goes for Keshawn Martin.

My post wasn't about where they'll end up; my post is where they PROBABLY were when OTAs started. Until the rookies learn their routes, the guys that know the routes should have an advantage.

In a week, the whole list could be turned on its ear as guys learn the ropes and the offense and start to show what they can do.
 
I'd imagine guys with experience in the system would currently be ranked highest: KW, Lestar Jean (1s) and then Juaquin Iglesias, Jeff Maehl (2s), and then Posey and Martin (3s), and then Jones, Holliday, and Jackson in no particular order.

I think trindon is higher than you have him listed and no way is Iglesias ahead of the two draft picks. I doubt he even gets more reps in team drills.
 
I think trindon is higher than you have him listed and no way is Iglesias ahead of the two draft picks. I doubt he even gets more reps in team drills.

Judging from Kubes interview the other day, you're probably right about Trindon.

And I only expect Iglesias to be ahead of the rookies the first few days of practice until they get their feet under them. I expect the rooks to be the 2nd teamers within a week, especially K-Mart.
 
Well if DeVier Posey cannot beat out Jeff Maehle or Juaquin Iglesias then this will be a really bad pick. Same probably goes for Keshawn Martin.

Outside of KW, what WR has Kubiak identified and acquired that really has contributed much of anything? I can't think of a name.

The WR spot has to get better. If we don't find a gem out of the bunch we've got right now...then I think we're potentially in trouble this year.

At some point, the offense has to rely on the WRs more than it has recently. We're basically a flavor of two scoops of Arian Foster, a dash of Ben Tate, and a pinch of Name-That-Texans-TE.

IF guys like Posey, Jean, Martin, and even Dweeb Jones find ways to REALLY contribute...this team is unstoppable in 2012. If not, I hope nothing happens to Arian Foster.
 
Outside of KW, what WR has Kubiak identified and acquired that really has contributed much of anything? I can't think of a name.

Outside of David Anderson (7th) , Jacoby Jones (3rd) and Trycycle Holliday (6th) and if you really wanna get technical Dorin Dickerson (7th) ..... What WR's has Kubiak drafted or traded for ??


The answer would be .... None.


To be fair to Kubiak , Jacoby Jones has all world talent .... Just no brain to go along with that talent. In his time with the Texans , Kubiak extracted as much as can be expected out Jones and his pea brain.

Anderson was solid if un-spectacular while with the Texans , making plays when given the opportunity.


They really havent had the luxury of drafting a WR high either .... Kubiak and Smith were saddled with a 2-14 team that was lacking of talent from the top of the roster to the bottom.
In fixing the rest of the roster , the WR position has been ignored .... yet we've seen the team produce back to back 4500 passing yard seasons with #80 , KW and <insert joke here> at WR .... and would likely have duplicated that last season if not for a series of injuries , their top two QB's out for 6 games and #80 missing 9 games , that would have broken lesser teams.
 
Outside of David Anderson (7th) , Jacoby Jones (3rd) and Trycycle Holliday (6th) and if you really wanna get technical Dorin Dickerson (7th) ..... What WR's has Kubiak drafted or traded for ??


The answer would be .... None.

Technically we traded for mason last year.
 
Technically we traded for mason last year.

...and we gave Bryant Johnson (picked @ #17 by AZ in 2003) an extended "looksee" to see if he could help.

...he didn't.
and I wonder why that is... he was a decent 3rd option for the Cards behind Boldin and Fitz. Had a 45 catch year with the Niners... Seems like he should have been the guy to step up. Except Kubiak kept trying to make Jones into something he wasn't; a #1 WR.
 
Technically we traded for mason last year.

The point is they have spent very few resources in the WR position since Kubiak took over .... Honestly they didnt do much to fill the position in the Capers / Casserly era either.

Here's a list of every WR drafted by the Texans - including the expansion draft.

Jermaine Lewis - 6th round of the expansion draft , originally drafted in the 5th round #153 in 1996 by Baltimore.

Avoin Black 16th round pick in the expansion draft , originally drafted in the 4th round #121 in 2000 by Buffalo

Jabar Gaffney 2nd round #33 in 2002.

Andre Johnson 1st round #3 in 2003

Sloan Thomas 7th round #211 in 2004

Jerome Mathis 4th round #114 in 2005

David Anderson 7th round #251 in 2006 - Kubiaks first draft.

Jacoby Jones 3rd round #72 in 2007

None in 2008

None in 2009

Trindon Holliday 6th round #197 in 2010
Dorin Dickerson 7th round #227 in 2010 - Technically a TE but they drafted him to play WR.

None in 2011

DeVier Posey 3rd round #68 in 2012
Keshawn Martin 4th round #121 in 2012


In Kubiaks first Six drafts he used two 7th rounders , a 6th and one premium pick at WR - that being Pea Brain in the 3rd round of 07.

Hard to say what he can and cant do with WR's when he hasnt really used any valuable resources on premium talent mainly because he was handed a roster lacking talent at so many positions.
 
The point is they have spent very few resources in the WR position since Kubiak took over .... Honestly they didnt do much to fill the position in the Capers / Casserly era either.

<snip>

Hard to say what he can and cant do with WR's when he hasnt really used any valuable resources on premium talent mainly because he was handed a roster lacking talent at so many positions.

This is a pretty good point.

Let's go back a bit further. People always talk about how Kubiak/Shanahan:
1) Don't normally draft linemen early because they have odd requirements for the ZBS.
2) Don't normally draft RBs early because the system works with guys that are available later

Do they do the same thing with WRs?

First off, who were the Bronco's receivers during Kubiak's time?

He inherited Anthony Miller (5'11", 190#), 1st round pick of the Chargers in 88) and Mike Pritchard (5'10#, 188#), 1st round pick of the Falcons in 1991. Those were his guys in 1995, his first year there. But he brought Ed McCaffrey from San Francisco (6'5#, 215#) who'd originally been drafted by the Giants in the 3rd round in 1991. McCaffrey became a fixture in Denver. Also in 1995, the Bronco's picked up an UDFA named Rod Smith (6', 200#) who would have an HOF career with Kubiak. He didn't start until his 3rd year with the team and then was a perennial pro bowler. Ed Kennison (6'1", 201#), a #1 pick by the Rams, took over for McCaffrey when he was injured in 2001. But McCaffrey eventually lost his pick to Denver 1st round pick, Ashley LeLie (6' 3", 200#). LeLie had a couple of very good seasons under Kubiak, the best being a 54 catch/1084 yard season. But the wheels fell off when Kubiak left. He bounced around and was never able to regain his form.

As to who the Bronco's drafted as WRs... it's a load of late round crap and even when they drafted in the early rounds, the guys were scrubs.

5 - Patrick Jeffers, 6'3", 217#, 5 year marginal career
1 - Marcus Nash, 6'3#, 195#, 1 year career and busted
3 - Travis McGriff, 5' 8#, 185#, 3 years and 5 receptions
6 - Chad Plummer, 6'3", 223#, 2 years and no stats
3 - Chris Cole, 6', 195#, 3 years, 12 catches
5 - Muneer Moore, didn't make it from Richmond
7 - Leroy Fields, didn't make it from Jackson State
6 - Kevin Kasper, 6'1", 197#, 5 years, marginal player
1 - Ashley Lelie, 6'3", 200#, 7 years and a starter
5 - Herb Haygood, 5' 11", 193#, 1 year
5 - Adrian Madise, 5' 11", 215#, 1 year
2 - Darius Watts, 6'2", 190#, 2 years, marginal player
6 - Triandos Luke, 5'10", 190#, 1 year and 6 receptions

Not a great track record... until you throw Rod Smith into the mix.

I wonder how much input Kubiak had into this? I think he's drafted WR better here than Denver did when he was there.
 
The WR spot is the only sport on the roster that really worried me going into this season. I was hoping they would address is early in the draft or via FA and they really didnt.
 
The WR spot is the only sport on the roster that really worried me going into this season. I was hoping they would address is early in the draft or via FA and they really didnt.

In a round about sort of way, they did.

Going into the draft, Smith said over and over that this draft was deep at WR. There were a lot of guys (off the top of my head: Randle, Toon, Sanu, etc.) who would have gone in the 1st-3rd round other years that dropped to later rounds because there were so many talented guys available OR because of character concerns.

Prior to his suspension, Posey was considered a 2nd round talent. A lot of people red-flagged him because of those suspensions as a "bad character" guy but on reviewing why he was suspended, he's really not. He's a very talented receiver that we basically stole because a lot of people slept on him.

Dwight Jones is possibly even more talented and has more potential than Posey except that he DOES have real character concerns. If he hadn't screwed around, he easily could have been drafted in the 2nd round.

Walterfootball had Jones AND K-Mart ranked higher than Posey although I think they were giving too much emphasis to Posey's suspensions.

So, in effect, we got 3 guys at WR who could be considered early round prospects, we just got them in later rounds. So that's a good deal, right? :)
 
Back
Top