Texans_Chick
Utopian Dreamer
ATX_Texan said:It might also have been because he only had 1/2 half of stellar play in college. Most Heisman winners were at the top of the game for longer than that.
I have to confess that I have my doubts about Mario. No, I am not a Bush or Young homer either. It just bothers me that he did not perform until the last half of his junior year and based on this limited production he is now supposed to be the next Reggie White. The other part of his sudden rise is because of his great work out numbers at the combine. It seems like there have been ample examples of NFL busts who parlayed one season (or half) in college and a great showing at the workouts into big bucks.
Mario started as a true freshman, and did some pretty remarkable things for all three years. Even his "half season" of production provided numbers that would be remarkable for most defensive ends.
His combine numbers are fat not just because he worked out really hard for the combine--they are fat because the guy is just some sick human being. Giant, long armed, muscled up, quick--a central casting NFL D-linemen.
Any player can be a "bust", especially in a profession that begs for injuries, but it is not fair to gloss someone that way before anybody has even taken an NFL snap.
This is the best article about the Bowie-Williams comparison being crap:
Link: "Mario Williams is No Sam Bowie"
And because I was bored and still residually P.O.'d about the ESPN cover article, and because there really isn't much going on, I put the beat down on the article and its boneheaded author in the blog today: Mario Williams: Media Hackery and Myths
Don't mess with the Texans.
