Wolf
100% Texan
http://msn.foxsports.com/other/stor...-round-receivers??CMP=OTC-K9B140813162&ATT=23
I didn't know he was so big
If the 1996 NFL Draft one that netted Keyshawn Johnson, Terrell Owens, Muhsin Muhammad, Joe Horn, Amani Toomer, Terry Glenn, Marvin Harrison and Bobby Engram was the "Year of the Receiver," the 2008 NFL Draft was the "Year of No Receivers."
OK, so that's not fair, really. Rookies DeSean Jackson and Eddie Royal all second-round selections each turned out fantastic first-year campaigns. Jackson and Royal were two of the more dangerous wideouts in the league.
But as far as how the NFL Draft went last April? Well, not a single receiver was taken in the first round. Compared with the nearly half-dozen defensive backs scooped up by teams hungry for corners and safeties, it was a sad day for the wideout position.
Was the lack of receiver love just a one-year fluke? Or was it a sign of the times; a precursor for years to come?
With recent first-round draft busts like Charles Rogers, Mike Williams, Troy Williamson and Matt Jones polluting rosters across the league and "diva" first-roundekirs killing locker rooms, perhaps waiting until the second round to grab a Anquan Boldin or Chad Johnson has simply become the better play. Heck, perhaps waiting until the second day to snag a Marques Colston or Brandon Marshall is the even wiser strategy.
I didn't know he was so big
Patrick Turner, USC: Let me start off with an open letter on Turner's behalf. Dear NFL scouts, please don't pin the collective failure of former Trojan receivers Dwayne Jarrett and Mike Williams on Patrick Turner. Whereas quarterbacks and linebackers get the benefit of the doubt coming out of USC, scouts and pundits seem to be a little sour on USC receivers. Turner may have never lived up to the potential he had coming out of high school, but the kid is a baller. Catching 49 passes for 741 yards during his senior season won't raise any eyebrows from the stat-loving football public, but 10 touchdowns might. And at 6-5, 220 pounds, he's more than just statistics. He's limitless potential.