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

Dorial Green-Beckham

badboy

Hall of Fame
I know some were following this kid and here is the latest on NCAA denying Oklahoma's request that he be allowed to play this season. Puzzling to me as I do not see his alleged activity being much different than Jameis Winston. I would suggest he pick a level II school with decent QB coach, an O line and a good passing QB then go to NFL draft in '15.


Oklahoma released a statement announcing the NCAA's decision Friday night, but Green-Beckham has yet to reveal his plans for the future. Although unlikely this close to the season, he has the option of transferring again to a lower level or JUCO program to play immediately in 2014. But assuming he remains in Norman for the upcoming season, Green-Beckham has two options: stay with Oklahoma for the 2015 season or go pro. He will be three years removed from high school after this season and eligible for the 2015 NFL Draft.

Green-Beckham is currently rated as the No. 39 overall player for the 2015 NFL Draft by NFLDraftScout.com and his full scouting report can be found here. He was dismissed by Missouri this past April following several off-field incidents, most recently a suspected burglary and assault. Green-Beckham has also had multiple run-ins with the law involving marijuana possession since he graduated high school.

Green-Beckham has first-round talent, but the immaturity and off-field issues are as relevant to his draft projection as his on-field ability. Staying at Oklahoma for the 2015 season and keeping his nose clean would only help his draft projection for the 2016 NFL Draft. However, he has the NFL upside to possibly be an early round pick in the 2015 NFL Draft, depending on whether a team would feel comfortable taking a chance on him. If Green-Beckham stays clean off the field, tests off-the-charts as expected at the NFL Combine and most importantly presents himself well during the interview process, it's not crazy to think he still has a chance at being a first-round pick next spring.

A jump to the NFL following an ineligible season wouldn't be an unprecedented move. Two summers ago, LSU dismissed Tyrann Mathieu from the football program due to repeated failed drug tests. Instead of transferring to a FCS program to play the 2012 college football season, Mathieu sat out and entered the 2013 NFL Draft where he was selected in the third round by the Arizona Cardinals. Mathieu has stayed out of trouble at the pro level (so far) and if not for an ACL tear late last season, he has been one of the league's top up-and-comers at the safety position.

On the flip side, the Cleveland Browns took a flier on troubled wide receiver Josh Gordon in the second round of the Supplemental Draft in July 2012. Despite playing in only 14 games in 2013, he led the league in receiving yards (1,646) and plays of 20-plus yards (30). But Gordon is facing a possible yearlong suspension due to multiple failed drug tests and his character has been a strong question mark since he entered the league. Will Gordon be able to stay out of trouble and on the field? Only time will tell, but many around the league are skeptical due to his off-field problems.

As part of Friday's release, Oklahoma pledged to "continue to provide the appropriate assistance to Dorial, just as it does with other students in helping him grow personally from the many opportunities available to him at OU." Green-Beckham needs to take advantage of the help being offered him and inject discipline and structure into his life, which will show NFL teams he is reliable on and off the field.

Based on talent alone, Green-Beckham has the ability to be a similar pro prospect as A.J. Green and earn top-10 grades from teams. But factoring in the character concerns, it would be unfair to stamp him with a round projection this early in the process. Green-Beckham has until mid-January to make a final decision on whether he will be a part of the 2015 NFL Draft class, so stay tuned to this situation.
http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/draft/...iver-for-dorial-green-beckham-is-the-nfl-next
 
I've read in different places that OU fans expect him to practice with the team this season and then enter the draft. Supposedly, Stoops will try to convince him to stay around for one more year. But he sold him on the fact that practicing against OU will get him better prepared for the NFL than killing FCS teams in games.
 
I've read in different places that OU fans expect him to practice with the team this season and then enter the draft. Supposedly, Stoops will try to convince him to stay around for one more year. But he sold him on the fact that practicing against OU will get him better prepared for the NFL than killing FCS teams in games.
Interesting but not sure I agree with Stoops. He would be an afterthought at OK and the go to guy at most II schools and be seeing game action. He needs to be careful choosing program to go to IF he leaves OK. Whichever route, he needs to get his act together. He could be throwing millions away.
 
Ross Jones @RossJonesFox
Former Missouri WR Dorial Green-Beckham declined visit with #Cowboys, source says. Reasoning for decision is unclear.


tumblr_n5fd2keafP1sifwfao2_500.gif
 
This guy was not removed from the Texans' Board so much as he probably was never placed on it.
 
Thought I had posted this already... forums have been timing out for me a lot and being only on iPad I miss whether my posts made it through sometimes...

Reported on Twitter and Yahoo a couple of days ago that Texans have done due diligence on DGB, may have him in their sights...

Green-Beckham might be the name to watch out of that second tier of receivers. Most evaluators believe he has the talent to be among the first tier, if not for off-field concerns. But that hasn't stopped wideout hungry teams from bringing Green-Beckham in for a visit. Multiple sources have told Yahoo Sports that while he has been removed from a lot of draft boards, at least a few teams have done deep dives into his life that suggest they've got the green light from ownership to take him. Don't be surprised if he gets snapped up at Houston's pick at 16 or the Bengals at 21.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/jags-c...cooper---triggering-run-on-wrs-061757248.html

Also reported:
– I’m told the Seattle Seahawks would love to grab Dorial Green-Beckham if he’s available at the 63rd selection but they expect the receiver to be off the board during the initial fifteen picks of round two.
http://www.draftinsider.net/blog/?p=10495
 
Can Green-Beckham be trusted?
IT'S FEB. 17, and, like at the start of every other NFL scouting combine, each team has set up a booth inside a cavernous lounge in Lucas Oil Stadium. The effect is a gantlet drill of executives, coaches, and scouts every bit as daunting as the on-field workouts or the Wonderlic tests that await the latest class of draft prospects.

Entering this fray on a chilly Indianapolis morning is Dorial Green-Beckham, a 22-year-old conundrum of talent and troubles. Each team gets 15 minutes with him -- or more like 13 minutes after pleasantries and small talk. Got to get down to business.

All Green-Beckham has to do is tell the truth. He has no choice. As he moves from booth to booth, shaking hands, grasping at names, he knows his 87 receptions and 17 TDs over two years at Missouri have been offset by two marijuana-related arrests and an investigation into a possible domestic disturbance that led to his dismissal from the team.

"I had to repeat that story every single time," Dorial says weeks later, sounding a bit weary still even now. "It was all about finding out what happened at the University of Missouri."

And yet -- as Green-Beckham shuttles from table to table -- it isn't. The people asking him the questions already have most of the answers. This is an exercise in performing under pressure, one long off-field drill to measure his character.

"Can we trust you?"

Green-Beckham is asked that question more than 20 times. The only possible answer is yes, of course. Who would say no? The teams know it's a stock response, a part of the process that cannot promise any real guarantees. "They wanted to know what I learned from that, and if they give me all of this money, am I prepared for it? But I knew that's what they were going to do. I went in there, and I was ready for whatever." He had to be. If NFL teams decide they cannot trust him, Green-Beckham could drop from a prospective first-round draft pick to a third-rounder.

The final interview ends at 11:30 p.m., just 5½ hours before his wake-up call. He jogs over to his hotel to stretch and do a few exercises to loosen his hamstrings, which are stiff from sitting all day. Lights out at 12:30 a.m.

That next morning should begin the most nerve-wracking part of the experience: the combine's on-field workout, a grueling series of drills and tests meant to identify the best of the 300 prospects invited to Indianapolis. But few of those watching this now made-for-TV spectacle from the comfort of their homes would ever suspect that these finely tuned, media-trained college football stars are drained before they even slip on their spandex. "You're mentally exhausted," Green-Beckham says later. "Some guys are so beat-up from the interviews, they don't even go out there and test good."

For him, though, the only questions left to answer are on the field. It feels like old times. It feels like freedom. It feels like football. Over the next couple of hours on the Lucas Oil turf, he goes out and confirms what everyone with decent vision or YouTube has known about him since he was a preteen basketball prodigy in southeastern Missouri: Dorial Green-Beckham is one heck of an athlete.

"It was comfortable," he will say, smiling broadly. "Some guys freeze up because we're in the lights and guys are watching. But I just went out there and had fun. I was just being me."

NFL executives are dedicating their considerable resources to figure out exactly who that is.

IN ANY OTHER YEAR, Green-Beckham might have been able to slip into the NFL without all that focus on his character. But pro football has changed forever. Coming off a year of unprecedented public scrutiny after the league's handling (many might say mishandling) of domestic abuse cases involving stars Ray Rice, Greg Hardy and Adrian Peterson, the NFL is under significant public pressure to clean its house; and do so in a time when fans know as much about the off-the-field exploits of their sports stars as they do their measurables. Indeed, some behavior now raises as many red flags as a torn ACL -- if not more.

"When something bad happens with a player and it all goes wrong," says former Tampa Bay Buccaneers general manager Mark Dominik, "you're the ones getting embarrassed."

That could be bad news for Green-Beckham. Because of his off-field missteps, he hasn't caught a touchdown pass in more than 15 months, when he caught two against Auburn in a breakout performance in the SEC championship game.

Perhaps the best comparison for Green-Beckham is...
http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/12782255/can-dorial-green-beckham-trusted

A good, long look into everything DGB.
 
This stood out for me:

Since Green-Beckham declared himself eligible for the draft, there have been whispers of multiple failed drug tests to NFL.com (Dorial's representatives adamantly deny this); of a suspect work ethic (Schmidt granted a rare interview to push back against that accusation); and of a wide-eyed immaturity that could make it difficult for him to separate himself from the sort of people who got him in trouble in Columbia.

"He's enabled, spoiled," an NFC personnel executive told the NFL Network. "Whatever everyone else was doing, he'd do it to be cool, trying to fit in."

In his interview session with reporters at the combine, Green-Beckham churns his way through the questions. He nervously taps the lectern with his hands as he speaks. He talks in spasms of sentence fragments, choosing to avoid much detail about what he, repeatedly, calls "the past." It is as uncomfortable to watch as it is for him to go through, something to be expected of nearly anyone forced to discuss their shortcomings in front of an audience full of reporters.
 
This stood out for me:

Yeah, he looks to me like somebody on too much Adderal. Got those crazy eyes. If I were an armchair psychiatrist I'd say personality disorder. But, alas, I did not stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. :truck:
 
Yeah, he looks to me like somebody on too much Adderal. Got those crazy eyes. If I were an armchair psychiatrist I'd say personality disorder. But, alas, I did not stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. :truck:

If you had this kids childhood you wouldn't want to talk about it either. Putting things in the past is a coping mechanism.
 
Yeah, he looks to me like somebody on too much Adderal. Got those crazy eyes. If I were an armchair psychiatrist I'd say personality disorder. But, alas, I did not stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. :truck:

Adderol is a common medication for those with ADD/ADHD. Properly used, it actually helps.

Unfortunately, I probably passed down the problem to at least three of my kids. At least they didn't have the misfortune of trying tranquilizers to help like they did in my day. The effect of tranquilizers is reversed in those with ADD/ADHD and makes the problem intensify.

I was fortunate to overcome those problems in a less helpful era.
 
Danny Parkins @DannyParkins

This pick will really piss me off at 16 - it totally disregards all risk, Mike Williams, big TE issues ... and adds nothing to the roster from the end of last season. At 51, I'm cool with getting a discount to offset risky potential. In between, gotta see the deal.
 
Back
Top