WEBVTT - Drive Time: 2023 Defensive Tackles Review and Senior Bowl Practice Notes

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<v Speaker 1>To I remove going deep speedways. Peace do hell peas do.

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<v Speaker 2>From the Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex.

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<v Speaker 1>This is Drivetime with Travis Wingfield.

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<v Speaker 2>He's my hands in the playoffs. What is up, Dolphins

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<v Speaker 2>and welcome to the Draft Time Podcast. I am your host,

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<v Speaker 2>Travis Wingfield. And on today's show, we're going to continue

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<v Speaker 2>our twenty twenty three season review as we jump over

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<v Speaker 2>to the defensive side of the football. The interior defensive

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<v Speaker 2>linemaner up on today's show. Plus, I have two and

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<v Speaker 2>a half days worth of senior bull practice notes and

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<v Speaker 2>plenty of prospects for you to keep your eye on

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<v Speaker 2>in this year's draft. From the Baptist Health Studios inside

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<v Speaker 2>the Baptist Health Training Complex. This is.

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<v Speaker 1>The Draft Time Podcast.

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<v Speaker 2>May gaffe start here on Friday because I alluded to

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<v Speaker 2>this on the Wednesday podcast. Do you guys remember that

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<v Speaker 2>Jets diatribe I had back in August my Hard Knocks

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<v Speaker 2>takeaway that Aaron Rodgers ran the Jets entire organization and

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<v Speaker 2>it was a bad thing for that team. I have

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<v Speaker 2>to find that clip somewhere. It's gonna take some time

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<v Speaker 2>to dig back through because I didn't tile the episode

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<v Speaker 2>that it's buried in one of those August episodes.

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<v Speaker 1>But I called it exactly, did I not?

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<v Speaker 2>Have you guys seen the story by Diana Russini and

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<v Speaker 2>Zach Rosenblat, it's word for word what I said. I

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<v Speaker 2>don't have the clip off the top, but I do

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<v Speaker 2>remember the exact moment when I realized that Aaron Rodgers

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<v Speaker 2>was the coach. We already knew he was the GM

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<v Speaker 2>because they brought in like five people who could not

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<v Speaker 2>perform at this level and put them in prominent positions,

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<v Speaker 2>like their offensive coordinator for a head coach whose defense

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<v Speaker 2>specializing like a starting wide receiver at forty four million

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<v Speaker 2>dollars total who got deactivated by the end of the year,

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<v Speaker 2>or another receiver who didn't even play most of the season,

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<v Speaker 2>or a couple offensive tackles, a quarterback that threw one

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<v Speaker 2>touchdown and thirteen picks at Yukon and threw a ninety

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<v Speaker 2>nine yard pick six and a hell mary against US

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<v Speaker 2>this year. But we knew he was the head coach

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<v Speaker 2>because I will never forget when salav made a comment

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<v Speaker 2>during a preseason game that was aired on Hard Knocks

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<v Speaker 2>in the headset and Rogers who's on the other end

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<v Speaker 2>of the headset, And I'm sure there's Nathaniel Hackett. I'm

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<v Speaker 2>sure there's Jeff Ulbrich on that communication as well. He

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<v Speaker 2>disagreed with Sala's commentary.

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<v Speaker 1>And Sala immediately.

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<v Speaker 2>Buckled and agreed with Aaron. Hey, this guy's blue. I

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<v Speaker 2>don't think of this coach. Yeah, this guy's not blue.

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<v Speaker 2>Sky's definitely not blue. I can't forget it. So these

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<v Speaker 2>these notes from that column, I mean, it matches up perfectly.

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<v Speaker 1>Here's a blurb.

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<v Speaker 2>It's not uncommon for team decision makers to consult star

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<v Speaker 2>quarterbacks on potential roster additions, but the perception around the

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<v Speaker 2>league is of the Jets went beyond the norm. Quote

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<v Speaker 2>Rogers isn't the assistant GM. One AFC Joe manager said,

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<v Speaker 2>Joe Douglas is the assistant GM. You don't say, you

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<v Speaker 2>don't say. Quote that's what Aaron wants. End quote was

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<v Speaker 2>a common refrain from Hackett as he told coaches what

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<v Speaker 2>plays he wanted to run during camp. Often, Rogers would

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<v Speaker 2>hear Hackett's play call and want something else, so the

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<v Speaker 2>entire offense would reset.

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<v Speaker 1>Weird. It's so weird.

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<v Speaker 2>As Rogers was pushing the limits of a torn achilles

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<v Speaker 2>rehab determined to return in a little over three months,

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<v Speaker 2>and unprecedented recovery time for that injury. Wilson, along with

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<v Speaker 2>some other Jets teammates and coaches, grew tired of the

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<v Speaker 2>way Salah fond over Rogers. According to team sources, the

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<v Speaker 2>only thing better than Dolphin's success is the Jets being

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<v Speaker 2>the Jets, right baby, And we're right back in that

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<v Speaker 2>once again.

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<v Speaker 1>You'll love to see it.

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<v Speaker 2>Let's go ahead and pick up our season review series

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<v Speaker 2>here with a quick position group, and we're gonna get

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<v Speaker 2>thugh this in the first segment here, because the final

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<v Speaker 2>two two segments of the show today are dedicated to

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<v Speaker 2>college prospects scouting. I don't know if you guys can

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<v Speaker 2>tell the pep and the zeal in my voice my

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<v Speaker 2>step today because I'm a little bit more inclined to

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<v Speaker 2>talk about the draft because the last two years it

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<v Speaker 2>kind of felt like we didn't really have a draft,

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<v Speaker 2>and we did have, you know, mid and late round picks,

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<v Speaker 2>but it's always different when you have a first round pick.

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<v Speaker 2>So let's go ahead and pick this up with the

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<v Speaker 2>interior defensive line and Christian Wilkins, who look this might

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<v Speaker 2>come back and he's gonna maybe be gone in a

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<v Speaker 2>couple of months, and it's like, well, why'd you hype

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<v Speaker 2>him up so hard? It's because I just want to

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<v Speaker 2>be factual about what we saw on the field this year.

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<v Speaker 2>I don't think you could lay out a player's career

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<v Speaker 2>trajectory jujicary any better than what you got from Christian

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<v Speaker 2>Wilkins over the first five years of his career. I

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<v Speaker 2>think it's ring of honor pacing, isn't it. He got

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<v Speaker 2>better every single year. He's been as durable and reliable

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<v Speaker 2>as anybody else in the National Football League, and does

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<v Speaker 2>it by playing the most percentage of stabs over the

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<v Speaker 2>last three years of any interior defensive lineman in the

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<v Speaker 2>National Football Again, I'm not sure what's gonna happen with him.

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<v Speaker 2>I would have said no chance he gets out previously,

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<v Speaker 2>but he seems to be dead set on taking maximum

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<v Speaker 2>value and he straight up earned the right to do

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<v Speaker 2>that with his contract. I thought he was crazy to

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<v Speaker 2>turn down the top of the market offer he got

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<v Speaker 2>last year, but he wasn't.

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<v Speaker 1>It was I who was crazy.

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<v Speaker 2>I do not want to lose this player, but I

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<v Speaker 2>also think that you can pretty much take that money

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<v Speaker 2>that you save and attack everything else on the roster

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<v Speaker 2>and just have a glaring hole let's call it what

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<v Speaker 2>it is at the defensive tackle position. But you could

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<v Speaker 2>pretty much patch together everything else you have to patch

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<v Speaker 2>together this offseason, which luckily for us. And this is

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<v Speaker 2>another thing that I don't think you know, certain people

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<v Speaker 2>that cover the team phil to mention this, like when

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<v Speaker 2>they talk about cap opulips or whatever they call it,

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<v Speaker 2>Like all the Dolphins positions of need, for the most part,

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<v Speaker 2>are not premium positions, even like your third receiver. It's

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<v Speaker 2>not top dollar for that right. Like receivers, premium edge

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<v Speaker 2>is premium. You maybe need a left tackle depending on

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<v Speaker 2>what Toron are Stead does, but for the most.

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<v Speaker 1>Part, it's guards.

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<v Speaker 2>It's a center, it's a nose tackle, a third receiver,

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<v Speaker 2>a strong, a free state strong safety, a slot corner. Maybe,

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<v Speaker 2>like it's not it's it's not corner, it's not pass rusher,

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<v Speaker 2>it's not quarterback. It's not the premium spots.

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<v Speaker 1>So you can really.

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<v Speaker 2>Take that money, which is premium money, and sparse it

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<v Speaker 2>across like five positions and improve all those. It's kind

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<v Speaker 2>of a give or take what you do. But back

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<v Speaker 2>to Christian Man. We've seen him play across multiple schemes

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<v Speaker 2>and multiple different fronts, even odd one, tech, three, tech

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<v Speaker 2>five tech. Whatever you want to play him at, he

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<v Speaker 2>can do it. He helps you play in the light

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<v Speaker 2>boxes and can still defend the run with down a

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<v Speaker 2>hat in the box, becoming one of the most productive

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<v Speaker 2>tacklers the running game has ever seen. From a defensive tackle,

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<v Speaker 2>he can be part of your NASCAR packages as the

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<v Speaker 2>loan interior defensive lineman. You get like fifteen two and

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<v Speaker 2>forty three out there, and then there's Christian just poking

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<v Speaker 2>wrong right in the middle of that defensive line, getting

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<v Speaker 2>after those pass rush reps. His and his hustle are

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<v Speaker 2>continuously on display into training camp, into practice, into games.

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<v Speaker 2>His love for the game is infectious. His teammates love him.

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<v Speaker 2>He's singularly focused on the game. Opponents hate playing against him.

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<v Speaker 2>I love watching him agitate the hell out of Josh Allen.

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<v Speaker 1>He's just an elite, elite, elite elite.

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<v Speaker 2>Player, and the stats have been there for a while now, right,

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<v Speaker 2>and it's been since really his first couple of years

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<v Speaker 2>in league. The last three years he's taken off This year,

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<v Speaker 2>nine sacks were twenty eighth in the National Football League,

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<v Speaker 2>but ninth or fifth among defensive tackles. Why did I

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<v Speaker 2>say ninth? He was fourteenth in QB hits total with

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<v Speaker 2>twenty three that was third among defensive tackles and PFF

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<v Speaker 2>had him with eight or eight among defensive tackles with

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<v Speaker 2>sixty one QB pressures that was a career high as well.

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<v Speaker 2>The way that he can ride this is front call system.

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<v Speaker 1>Whatever it is.

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<v Speaker 2>He does everything that versatility speaks to, Like if they

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<v Speaker 2>want to run outside and play outside zone, he can

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<v Speaker 2>ride the wave and stay and engage until the time

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<v Speaker 2>to get off that block against those outside zone looks.

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<v Speaker 2>Then he can win with quickness inside and beat your

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<v Speaker 2>man gap schemes or as a pass rusher. The way

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<v Speaker 2>he can anchor against doubles and hold a point when

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<v Speaker 2>he has to do that as well. What a year,

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<v Speaker 2>What a career for thinety four. And if this is

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<v Speaker 2>the end, I don't know, but if this is the end, man,

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<v Speaker 2>what a.

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<v Speaker 1>Great player he was for us for those five years.

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<v Speaker 1>Number ninety two.

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<v Speaker 2>Zach Seeler, I mean copy and paste it right there

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<v Speaker 2>right Seriously, what a year for Zach Sealer. The way

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<v Speaker 2>that he was able to take his pass rush to

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<v Speaker 2>the next level. Like, look, I've thought he was the

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<v Speaker 2>most underrated player in the league for really since he

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<v Speaker 2>signed that extension back in twenty twenty. I think it

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<v Speaker 2>was when he signed that, like, oh, we just got

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<v Speaker 2>a great player for pretty cheap. But I did not

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<v Speaker 2>know that he had this pass rush arsenal that he

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<v Speaker 2>unfurled this season. The power, the push pull, the creating

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<v Speaker 2>of leverage to then exploit it, mantra and understanding of

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<v Speaker 2>angles and how to utilize power and length to get

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<v Speaker 2>guys leaning one way, just flat out dominant all year

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<v Speaker 2>for Zach Sealler, the way he worked with guys around him,

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<v Speaker 2>whether it was an end stuff hunting off of him,

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<v Speaker 2>or him being the looper, or him set in the pick,

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<v Speaker 2>he just gets after it. I mentioned Christian snap count.

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<v Speaker 2>I didn't tell you exactly what it was. It was

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<v Speaker 2>nine to sixty eight. Zach had forty four or fewer reps.

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<v Speaker 2>He's right there. It's insane, and like talk about durability.

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<v Speaker 2>Even the game, what game was? It? Was it Buffalo

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<v Speaker 2>where he went down was kind of grabbing at his shoulder.

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<v Speaker 2>Maybe he's Baltimore and you're like, oh, that looks like

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<v Speaker 2>a collar bone or a separated shoulder, and he was

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<v Speaker 2>back into the next series dragging that thing. But he

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<v Speaker 2>was back in there. He just has that zeal, that love,

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<v Speaker 2>that passion for the game. I just think it mentally

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<v Speaker 2>in the makeup is everything you want, just like it

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<v Speaker 2>is with Christian. And the technical aspect of his game

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<v Speaker 2>is fun to discuss. But now we've got the numbers

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<v Speaker 2>to really back that up. I mean, ten sacks. How

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<v Speaker 2>many defensive tackles are doing that. I'll tell you he

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<v Speaker 2>was one of fourth do that this year. He was

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<v Speaker 2>twenty first overall with twenty two QB hits. That was

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<v Speaker 2>one fewer than Christian, which ranked him fourth among defensive tackles.

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<v Speaker 2>He had a pick, a touchdown, four passes defense, two recoveries.

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<v Speaker 2>What a season for Zach Sealer. Christian had sixty one pressure,

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<v Speaker 2>Zach had six. Zach had thirty seven run stops. Christian

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<v Speaker 2>had thirty four. Two really good players man, And then

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<v Speaker 2>we go to the next part of the depth here

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<v Speaker 2>on the interior defensive line, number ninety eight Ray Kwon Davis.

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<v Speaker 2>He had a career year, but that speaks to kind

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<v Speaker 2>of the of those four years here career highs was

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<v Speaker 2>seventeen games played, first time he did miss a game

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<v Speaker 2>in his career, twenty four pressures, and six QB hits,

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<v Speaker 2>which tripled his previous high of two QB hits. I

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<v Speaker 2>guess at his best, he's a space eater who's long

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<v Speaker 2>and can be disruptive against the run, kind of a

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<v Speaker 2>glue piece inside that helps you operate around him. But really,

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<v Speaker 2>my real take is that it's hard to imagine him

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<v Speaker 2>coming back this year because he just never took that

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<v Speaker 2>next step that you thought he would back in year

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<v Speaker 2>two or even year three, and that was kind of

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<v Speaker 2>his career going back to Alabama, amazing dominant man versus

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<v Speaker 2>children freshman year there at Bama, and he has never

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<v Speaker 2>been that player ever since. And I thought his length

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<v Speaker 2>alone would make him a wicked one tech pass rusher,

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<v Speaker 2>but it's been the opposite of that. There's zero threat

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<v Speaker 2>of pass rush there, there's minimal power against the run.

0:11:01.720 --> 0:11:03.720
<v Speaker 2>He got walked back and erased easily with the catch

0:11:03.720 --> 0:11:04.960
<v Speaker 2>and climb on doubles.

0:11:05.040 --> 0:11:06.920
<v Speaker 1>Just very uninspiring football.

0:11:07.120 --> 0:11:08.800
<v Speaker 2>And they tried to bring in a bunch of beefy

0:11:08.840 --> 0:11:11.120
<v Speaker 2>nose tackles to replace him, and it didn't really work out.

0:11:11.160 --> 0:11:12.839
<v Speaker 2>But I think it spoke to where they saw his

0:11:13.600 --> 0:11:17.120
<v Speaker 2>long term, his longevity here and the number ninety three.

0:11:17.160 --> 0:11:20.520
<v Speaker 2>DeShawn hand, I thought his limited workload produced what you

0:11:20.679 --> 0:11:22.640
<v Speaker 2>kind of hoped it would in terms of a guy

0:11:22.679 --> 0:11:24.800
<v Speaker 2>that played less than three hundred snaps for you, good

0:11:24.800 --> 0:11:28.079
<v Speaker 2>gap discipline, sound tackler, didn't get removed by duo or

0:11:28.120 --> 0:11:29.040
<v Speaker 2>other doubles the way.

0:11:28.880 --> 0:11:29.960
<v Speaker 1>I talked about ninety eight.

0:11:30.200 --> 0:11:32.679
<v Speaker 2>Just a solid rotational piece that you have to have

0:11:32.920 --> 0:11:35.560
<v Speaker 2>and a good I guess not a if something happened

0:11:35.559 --> 0:11:37.160
<v Speaker 2>in ninety four ninety two, I think this defense would

0:11:37.200 --> 0:11:40.840
<v Speaker 2>have kind of come apart on the interior. But DeShawn Han,

0:11:40.880 --> 0:11:42.360
<v Speaker 2>you can do a lot worse than him to kind

0:11:42.360 --> 0:11:44.840
<v Speaker 2>of be the next guy online there, and he was

0:11:44.880 --> 0:11:46.480
<v Speaker 2>that all year long for them. So he recorded his

0:11:46.559 --> 0:11:48.520
<v Speaker 2>first sack since his rookie year, and he had the

0:11:48.559 --> 0:11:50.880
<v Speaker 2>most cub hits of his career. He also made sixteen

0:11:50.880 --> 0:11:53.280
<v Speaker 2>tackles on just two hundred and nineteen snaps played. So

0:11:53.559 --> 0:11:57.160
<v Speaker 2>that Chagranterarior Defensive Line short podcast or segment of the

0:11:57.160 --> 0:11:59.240
<v Speaker 2>podcast here today, I should say, let's go ahead and

0:11:59.280 --> 0:12:01.600
<v Speaker 2>take our first break right there on this Friday and

0:12:01.679 --> 0:12:03.920
<v Speaker 2>come back on the other side and hit the senior

0:12:03.960 --> 0:12:05.680
<v Speaker 2>ball because I have a lot of notes to get to.

0:12:05.720 --> 0:12:08.719
<v Speaker 2>That's next Draft Time podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought

0:12:08.720 --> 0:12:09.720
<v Speaker 2>to you by a donation.

0:12:13.280 --> 0:12:17.760
<v Speaker 1>Oh you baby, it's draft season. Ye can you feel it?

0:12:18.000 --> 0:12:20.800
<v Speaker 1>Oh yeah. I get so excited this tame of year

0:12:20.840 --> 0:12:23.600
<v Speaker 1>when it comes to the prospects and getting the chance

0:12:23.679 --> 0:12:26.760
<v Speaker 1>to take a look at them. I don't know why.

0:12:27.320 --> 0:12:27.920
<v Speaker 1>I don't know why.

0:12:29.000 --> 0:12:31.160
<v Speaker 2>It's nine thirty on a Friday morning. I'm playing golf

0:12:31.200 --> 0:12:33.040
<v Speaker 2>today and this is the last thing I have to

0:12:33.040 --> 0:12:34.280
<v Speaker 2>do before I go out to play golf.

0:12:34.320 --> 0:12:35.959
<v Speaker 1>So I'm just feeling a little bit jazzed.

0:12:35.720 --> 0:12:37.840
<v Speaker 2>Up right now, and I've been feeling kind of jazzed

0:12:37.880 --> 0:12:42.080
<v Speaker 2>up all week because I don't know if this is

0:12:42.120 --> 0:12:43.760
<v Speaker 2>the same for you guys. I know it's different in

0:12:43.760 --> 0:12:46.080
<v Speaker 2>my position that I do this for a living, but

0:12:46.520 --> 0:12:48.559
<v Speaker 2>the draft just hasn't really done it for me the

0:12:48.600 --> 0:12:51.240
<v Speaker 2>last couple of years. I've had no issue, you know,

0:12:51.640 --> 0:12:54.240
<v Speaker 2>going to Indy for the Combine and talking to Daniel

0:12:54.280 --> 0:12:57.600
<v Speaker 2>Jeremiah about Dolphin's second round, second and third round prospects

0:12:57.640 --> 0:12:59.640
<v Speaker 2>they might be able to add to their roster, or

0:13:00.080 --> 0:13:02.640
<v Speaker 2>even watching tape of camp Smith after he was drafted,

0:13:02.800 --> 0:13:05.200
<v Speaker 2>or you know, two years ago Eric Azukama, who I

0:13:05.200 --> 0:13:08.600
<v Speaker 2>fell in love with his Texas Tech tape for whatever reason,

0:13:09.480 --> 0:13:11.480
<v Speaker 2>not having that first round pick, not having a couple

0:13:11.559 --> 0:13:13.360
<v Speaker 2>of top fifty picks like we do this year, is

0:13:13.400 --> 0:13:14.760
<v Speaker 2>it is it fifty to fifty.

0:13:14.920 --> 0:13:15.920
<v Speaker 1>I don't know what the second pick is.

0:13:15.960 --> 0:13:20.400
<v Speaker 2>It's close. I feel reinvigorated by the process and thus

0:13:20.520 --> 0:13:24.319
<v Speaker 2>the macho man Randy Savage voice that I'm just a

0:13:24.320 --> 0:13:25.800
<v Speaker 2>little bit fired up, and that's usually the voice I

0:13:25.800 --> 0:13:27.200
<v Speaker 2>go to when I'm fired up. So let's go ahead

0:13:27.200 --> 0:13:30.079
<v Speaker 2>and talk about some notes here from the Senior Bowl

0:13:30.480 --> 0:13:33.760
<v Speaker 2>that has wrapped in terms of practices. On Monday, I'm

0:13:33.800 --> 0:13:38.960
<v Speaker 2>going to cross reference my notes with the great Kyle Crabs. Someday,

0:13:39.040 --> 0:13:42.000
<v Speaker 2>Kyle and I are going to launcher on Patreon and

0:13:42.040 --> 0:13:44.920
<v Speaker 2>you guys are going to have the best Dolphins coverage imaginable,

0:13:46.480 --> 0:13:49.920
<v Speaker 2>not that that's not what this is, and we're also

0:13:49.920 --> 0:13:51.840
<v Speaker 2>going to talk about the game. But in this podcast,

0:13:51.880 --> 0:13:54.640
<v Speaker 2>I want to talk strictly about the practice because I

0:13:54.720 --> 0:13:56.680
<v Speaker 2>think I think you glean a lot and for me,

0:13:57.679 --> 0:13:59.839
<v Speaker 2>you know, people always ask me, Travis, could you show

0:13:59.920 --> 0:14:02.520
<v Speaker 2>up tomorrow and coach a football game or coach of

0:14:02.559 --> 0:14:06.040
<v Speaker 2>football practice, and I'd be a little bit weary about it.

0:14:06.040 --> 0:14:08.520
<v Speaker 1>It might take me some time to get my feet wet.

0:14:08.920 --> 0:14:10.280
<v Speaker 2>I always say, if you want me to coach a

0:14:10.320 --> 0:14:13.040
<v Speaker 2>baseball practice or even a basketball practice tomorrow, I could

0:14:13.040 --> 0:14:15.280
<v Speaker 2>do that because I played both those sports at a

0:14:15.320 --> 0:14:18.480
<v Speaker 2>relatively high level. Football I quit after eighth grade. Not

0:14:18.480 --> 0:14:22.920
<v Speaker 2>funny how that works out. But when I get asked

0:14:22.960 --> 0:14:25.960
<v Speaker 2>that question, I always say, my true passion, my true talent,

0:14:26.040 --> 0:14:30.760
<v Speaker 2>my true I think skill. I think I think exists

0:14:30.800 --> 0:14:37.680
<v Speaker 2>in talent recognition and body movement and skill application and projection.

0:14:38.240 --> 0:14:42.120
<v Speaker 2>And that's why going through these practices, it's the one

0:14:42.120 --> 0:14:46.680
<v Speaker 2>on ones that really, to me, provide the most benefit.

0:14:46.960 --> 0:14:48.800
<v Speaker 2>And you can never take these notes from the Senior

0:14:48.840 --> 0:14:52.120
<v Speaker 2>Bowl practices, especially one on ones, and say, Okay, that

0:14:52.160 --> 0:14:56.080
<v Speaker 2>player is good. All it does is turned you back

0:14:56.080 --> 0:14:58.040
<v Speaker 2>to the tape. And I've already gotten into the tape

0:14:58.040 --> 0:15:00.240
<v Speaker 2>on some of these guys, and to me, it confirms

0:15:00.280 --> 0:15:03.160
<v Speaker 2>what I saw on the practice field on the one

0:15:03.160 --> 0:15:04.680
<v Speaker 2>on one portions of the practice.

0:15:04.920 --> 0:15:06.400
<v Speaker 1>So I want to go through these notes real quick.

0:15:06.440 --> 0:15:09.400
<v Speaker 2>We'll do offense first, defense second, and then since it

0:15:09.480 --> 0:15:13.320
<v Speaker 2>is February and football is like over by the way,

0:15:13.160 --> 0:15:15.480
<v Speaker 2>by the way.

0:15:14.960 --> 0:15:16.400
<v Speaker 1>Can we just talk about this real quick.

0:15:16.400 --> 0:15:19.360
<v Speaker 2>I'm like, my tangents are all over the place today.

0:15:20.240 --> 0:15:25.000
<v Speaker 2>I wasn't at the Pro Bowl, but I can almost

0:15:25.120 --> 0:15:26.920
<v Speaker 2>promise you this is what the Pro Bowl looked like

0:15:26.960 --> 0:15:32.520
<v Speaker 2>for the passing competition. Right. They showed up, probably had

0:15:32.600 --> 0:15:36.840
<v Speaker 2>lunch or dinner or whatever before showed up, found a

0:15:36.880 --> 0:15:39.600
<v Speaker 2>couple of footballs through maybe ten of them, and then

0:15:39.640 --> 0:15:41.720
<v Speaker 2>went out and did the thing on national television.

0:15:41.760 --> 0:15:44.200
<v Speaker 1>Like I know that.

0:15:45.920 --> 0:15:49.920
<v Speaker 2>We're I don't know, man, there's like a contingency that

0:15:52.040 --> 0:15:55.960
<v Speaker 2>I think it's probably just Twitter too, that judges the

0:15:56.000 --> 0:15:58.360
<v Speaker 2>performance of a player based off of a paramount commercial

0:15:58.400 --> 0:16:02.120
<v Speaker 2>with Hey Arnold Patrick's which, by the way, phenomenal commercial

0:16:02.280 --> 0:16:05.520
<v Speaker 2>and Tua's acting chops are ninety nine percent better than

0:16:05.560 --> 0:16:08.640
<v Speaker 2>any celebrity endorsement ad you'll ever see out there where it's.

0:16:08.520 --> 0:16:13.680
<v Speaker 1>Like catch up, huh, Like they have no sense of

0:16:14.120 --> 0:16:16.760
<v Speaker 1>let's make this real even though it's not. Tua did that.

0:16:16.880 --> 0:16:19.360
<v Speaker 2>I thought he was very good in the ad, but

0:16:19.560 --> 0:16:21.560
<v Speaker 2>you know, Patrick Stewart dogged on him for not having

0:16:21.600 --> 0:16:23.280
<v Speaker 2>the big co homas in the big moment the fact

0:16:23.280 --> 0:16:25.840
<v Speaker 2>that the hook comes up short and now Pro Bowl

0:16:25.920 --> 0:16:31.040
<v Speaker 2>passing skilled, challenge skills, whatever skill. What did I say, Like,

0:16:31.080 --> 0:16:32.640
<v Speaker 2>we're making evaluations off of this.

0:16:32.760 --> 0:16:33.720
<v Speaker 1>It's crazy to me.

0:16:34.240 --> 0:16:37.200
<v Speaker 2>Probably just had some pancakes and through five footballs before

0:16:37.240 --> 0:16:40.800
<v Speaker 2>that competition. Speaking of guys that actually tried their best,

0:16:42.280 --> 0:16:45.040
<v Speaker 2>the only quarterback on my Senior Bowl notes right here.

0:16:46.680 --> 0:16:49.480
<v Speaker 1>Is Joe Milton, and I just I don't think any other.

0:16:49.760 --> 0:16:51.680
<v Speaker 2>Like a lot of times at the Senior Bowl, you'll

0:16:51.720 --> 0:16:53.920
<v Speaker 2>have a couple of first round picks, like I remember

0:16:54.000 --> 0:16:56.640
<v Speaker 2>Josh Allen and Baker Mayfield were at the same Senior

0:16:56.680 --> 0:17:01.720
<v Speaker 2>Bowl class, pretty pretty freaking good. And some years I

0:17:01.720 --> 0:17:04.160
<v Speaker 2>remember the year they had like Mike White and Brandon

0:17:04.160 --> 0:17:05.639
<v Speaker 2>Silver's and they were like, man, these are some good

0:17:05.680 --> 0:17:07.600
<v Speaker 2>third and fourth round prospects. And don't get me wrong,

0:17:07.680 --> 0:17:10.560
<v Speaker 2>I love Mike White's my absolute dude, my favorite people

0:17:10.560 --> 0:17:13.880
<v Speaker 2>in the entire National Football League. But these middle round

0:17:13.960 --> 0:17:20.240
<v Speaker 2>quarterback prospects typically typically are kind of wasted draft picks

0:17:20.280 --> 0:17:23.160
<v Speaker 2>because you can't get on the field unless you're starting.

0:17:23.480 --> 0:17:25.520
<v Speaker 2>You're not going to be the starter unless there's hope

0:17:25.520 --> 0:17:27.640
<v Speaker 2>for your future as a franchise quarterback, or if you're

0:17:27.640 --> 0:17:29.359
<v Speaker 2>coming in off the bench in a pinch as a

0:17:29.359 --> 0:17:32.280
<v Speaker 2>backup quarterback like a Gardner Minshew, and that's like the

0:17:32.320 --> 0:17:34.560
<v Speaker 2>best you can hope for. But even then, if you

0:17:34.640 --> 0:17:37.160
<v Speaker 2>have Gardner Minshew as you're starting quarterback, you're you're probably

0:17:37.200 --> 0:17:39.320
<v Speaker 2>drafting a quarterback the next year. Now, the Colts already

0:17:39.320 --> 0:17:41.479
<v Speaker 2>had that guy this year. Gardner played a great had

0:17:41.600 --> 0:17:44.200
<v Speaker 2>a good season. He's not a great player, but he's

0:17:44.200 --> 0:17:45.920
<v Speaker 2>like that twenty fifth best quarterback in the league.

0:17:45.920 --> 0:17:47.920
<v Speaker 1>That's like the best, the best you can help for

0:17:49.000 --> 0:17:49.800
<v Speaker 1>in the middle rounds.

0:17:49.840 --> 0:17:52.520
<v Speaker 2>Right, So I just kind of get like off put

0:17:52.560 --> 0:17:56.520
<v Speaker 2>by like grating Sam Hartman, I just don't care. But

0:17:57.320 --> 0:18:00.200
<v Speaker 2>the quarterback I will take a look at is somebody

0:18:00.480 --> 0:18:02.840
<v Speaker 2>that comes off the truck like a jugs machine. And

0:18:02.840 --> 0:18:05.400
<v Speaker 2>that might be the best comparison for Joe Milton from Tennessee.

0:18:05.640 --> 0:18:08.159
<v Speaker 2>In fact, I text Kyle Krabs, like, does Joe Milton

0:18:08.600 --> 0:18:11.520
<v Speaker 2>know where the ball's going when he releases it? And

0:18:11.520 --> 0:18:13.399
<v Speaker 2>he said, he's a human jugs machine, Travis. He just

0:18:13.400 --> 0:18:15.720
<v Speaker 2>pumps that thing over and over again. I don't think

0:18:15.720 --> 0:18:18.679
<v Speaker 2>that he can play right now. He can't play. But

0:18:18.800 --> 0:18:21.240
<v Speaker 2>there have been guys that have had traits that way,

0:18:21.440 --> 0:18:24.200
<v Speaker 2>who were further along and further advanced. Josh Allen's college

0:18:24.240 --> 0:18:26.280
<v Speaker 2>tape was I thought phenomenal. There was a bunch of

0:18:26.320 --> 0:18:28.879
<v Speaker 2>missus accuracy wise, but the way he carried and lifted

0:18:28.880 --> 0:18:31.239
<v Speaker 2>that offense is exactly what he's done for Buffalo in

0:18:31.240 --> 0:18:34.600
<v Speaker 2>his career. Who's the next one I'm trying to think

0:18:34.640 --> 0:18:40.359
<v Speaker 2>of here? The big toolsy traitsy Jordan Love? Right, that

0:18:40.480 --> 0:18:42.639
<v Speaker 2>was Jordan Love's tape. He had a long way to

0:18:42.680 --> 0:18:45.080
<v Speaker 2>go though in his development, and sure enough he sits

0:18:45.080 --> 0:18:47.280
<v Speaker 2>for three years in the bench behind Aaron Rodgers and

0:18:47.280 --> 0:18:48.439
<v Speaker 2>look at him. He looks like one of the best

0:18:48.480 --> 0:18:50.919
<v Speaker 2>quarterbacks in the NFL right now. I don't think Joe

0:18:51.000 --> 0:18:54.240
<v Speaker 2>Milton's anywhere near that. Anthony Richardson kind of got this

0:18:54.280 --> 0:18:56.320
<v Speaker 2>whole raw, like hasn't played enough. But when you watched

0:18:56.359 --> 0:18:59.440
<v Speaker 2>his tape, there was high little processing on that tape,

0:18:59.600 --> 0:19:01.800
<v Speaker 2>which is the most important thing for a quarter If

0:19:01.840 --> 0:19:04.480
<v Speaker 2>you can't do that, nothing else matters. And Joe Milton's

0:19:04.480 --> 0:19:06.440
<v Speaker 2>a good example of that. He can throw the football

0:19:06.560 --> 0:19:09.280
<v Speaker 2>ninety yards. It's Joe Milton's a good example of why

0:19:09.359 --> 0:19:12.359
<v Speaker 2>you shouldn't trust almost anybody out there that tweets about football, right,

0:19:12.840 --> 0:19:13.800
<v Speaker 2>like if.

0:19:13.680 --> 0:19:14.520
<v Speaker 1>You have your like.

0:19:16.480 --> 0:19:22.840
<v Speaker 2>Takes, takes exist because we allow them to in terms

0:19:22.880 --> 0:19:27.520
<v Speaker 2>of the validity of those takes. And like, I just

0:19:27.600 --> 0:19:30.280
<v Speaker 2>don't think most people watching, like I'm so all over

0:19:30.280 --> 0:19:33.200
<v Speaker 2>the place today. So I'm gonna talk about USC receiver

0:19:33.320 --> 0:19:36.200
<v Speaker 2>Brendan Rice. And there was reps where he like ran

0:19:36.359 --> 0:19:37.960
<v Speaker 2>through the dB in one on one drills and it

0:19:38.000 --> 0:19:40.040
<v Speaker 2>took like six seconds to get open him. But because

0:19:40.080 --> 0:19:42.680
<v Speaker 2>he physically dominated a six foot tall, one hundred and

0:19:42.720 --> 0:19:45.000
<v Speaker 2>ninety pounds cornerback, like people were like, look at the

0:19:45.040 --> 0:19:47.280
<v Speaker 2>physicality and the way contact doesn't bother him. It's like, no,

0:19:47.359 --> 0:19:50.040
<v Speaker 2>that's a terrible rep because he can't move, he's got

0:19:50.080 --> 0:19:52.800
<v Speaker 2>no shake, he's got no suddenness, there's no there's no

0:19:52.880 --> 0:19:55.280
<v Speaker 2>nuance of the route roading. I saw people tweeting like

0:19:55.280 --> 0:19:57.320
<v Speaker 2>how good of a date Brendan Rice had, and it's like.

0:19:57.720 --> 0:20:00.879
<v Speaker 1>He did it. He's not a good football player. I'm sorry.

0:20:01.119 --> 0:20:04.639
<v Speaker 2>You know, Brian Scout's two to one three at Twitter

0:20:05.160 --> 0:20:08.520
<v Speaker 2>whatever the hell, Like, just because you watch football doesn't

0:20:08.520 --> 0:20:11.840
<v Speaker 2>mean you know what you're doing, right, And so I

0:20:11.840 --> 0:20:13.800
<v Speaker 2>think Joe Milton be a good example of that, Like

0:20:13.880 --> 0:20:15.760
<v Speaker 2>just put Joe Milton on TV and someone can say, Wow,

0:20:15.760 --> 0:20:18.040
<v Speaker 2>he throws the ball eighty five yards without a real

0:20:18.119 --> 0:20:20.840
<v Speaker 2>stride into his step, and can throw the ball sixty

0:20:20.880 --> 0:20:23.040
<v Speaker 2>five miles an hour with minimal just to kind of

0:20:23.040 --> 0:20:26.520
<v Speaker 2>flick of the wrist. He's got insane physical tools, but

0:20:26.560 --> 0:20:29.280
<v Speaker 2>he can't play the position. So I do think he'll

0:20:29.280 --> 0:20:32.560
<v Speaker 2>get drafted off those traits alone. And quite frankly, he's

0:20:32.600 --> 0:20:34.800
<v Speaker 2>the only quarterback in the game that I would even

0:20:34.840 --> 0:20:37.080
<v Speaker 2>look at, because the only guys that I think the

0:20:37.119 --> 0:20:40.800
<v Speaker 2>Dolphins look at this year are toolsy, developmental guys. Can

0:20:40.840 --> 0:20:43.000
<v Speaker 2>you trade up and go get a top line prospect?

0:20:43.000 --> 0:20:46.160
<v Speaker 2>Can you get Caleb Williams If you can, I would

0:20:46.160 --> 0:20:46.719
<v Speaker 2>support that.

0:20:46.960 --> 0:20:47.439
<v Speaker 1>You can't.

0:20:47.600 --> 0:20:51.560
<v Speaker 2>You can't do it, So try and get a better

0:20:51.680 --> 0:20:53.920
<v Speaker 2>version of Scaler Thompson, a late round draft pick who

0:20:53.920 --> 0:20:55.520
<v Speaker 2>doesn't have those big tools. Right, he doesn't have any

0:20:55.520 --> 0:20:57.239
<v Speaker 2>of those big tools. You can do better than that

0:20:57.280 --> 0:20:59.720
<v Speaker 2>in terms of your tools. He developmental guy. Joe Milton

0:20:59.760 --> 0:21:01.359
<v Speaker 2>is that. That's my only quarterback note. I don't have

0:21:01.400 --> 0:21:04.120
<v Speaker 2>any running back notes. It's hard to gauge the runs

0:21:04.160 --> 0:21:06.480
<v Speaker 2>and the practice in the passing game period, I didn't

0:21:06.480 --> 0:21:08.439
<v Speaker 2>really see an explosivity from that group, so I'm not

0:21:08.440 --> 0:21:10.639
<v Speaker 2>really concerned about it. Plus, I like Raheem and I

0:21:10.640 --> 0:21:13.040
<v Speaker 2>love Devon a Cham, So I tend to think running

0:21:13.040 --> 0:21:15.840
<v Speaker 2>back's not really high on the priority list this offseason,

0:21:16.160 --> 0:21:19.120
<v Speaker 2>unless it's like a Derrick Henry or you know, Chris

0:21:19.160 --> 0:21:23.560
<v Speaker 2>Brooks style runner. Receivers, Xavier Laguette was probably the most

0:21:24.600 --> 0:21:28.919
<v Speaker 2>polarizing prospect of the entire week. Down a mobile from

0:21:28.960 --> 0:21:31.280
<v Speaker 2>South Carolina. I told you, guys, I was super into

0:21:31.320 --> 0:21:33.919
<v Speaker 2>his game coming in. He's the guy that like showed

0:21:33.960 --> 0:21:36.520
<v Speaker 2>me away the most. He was two inches short than

0:21:36.560 --> 0:21:38.840
<v Speaker 2>he was listed. He ran routes like he had rocks,

0:21:38.840 --> 0:21:40.680
<v Speaker 2>and his shoes like looked like he was. You always

0:21:40.680 --> 0:21:42.320
<v Speaker 2>want to be quick, but not in a hurry. He

0:21:42.320 --> 0:21:44.080
<v Speaker 2>looked like he was in a hurry and not quick.

0:21:44.160 --> 0:21:45.240
<v Speaker 2>That's not good for a receiver.

0:21:45.520 --> 0:21:45.760
<v Speaker 1>Now.

0:21:46.200 --> 0:21:48.200
<v Speaker 2>I love the rest of the receivers in the game,

0:21:48.240 --> 0:21:50.240
<v Speaker 2>except for I talked about him already, Brendan rece from

0:21:50.320 --> 0:21:52.480
<v Speaker 2>USC stiff as hell, strapped to a backboard.

0:21:52.520 --> 0:21:54.080
<v Speaker 1>I can't win with that. Now.

0:21:54.840 --> 0:21:58.320
<v Speaker 2>The guys that I did, like Lad McConkey, What a

0:21:58.359 --> 0:22:00.000
<v Speaker 2>player he looks like. Now, I don't think he's gonna

0:22:00.040 --> 0:22:01.720
<v Speaker 2>play on the outside, and that to me means I

0:22:01.720 --> 0:22:03.760
<v Speaker 2>don't think he can play in the first two rounds

0:22:03.760 --> 0:22:07.119
<v Speaker 2>of the draft. But Daniel Jeremiah compared him to Doug Baldwin,

0:22:07.119 --> 0:22:08.600
<v Speaker 2>who's one of the best route wuners in the history

0:22:08.600 --> 0:22:11.160
<v Speaker 2>of the National Football League, and I kind of see

0:22:11.160 --> 0:22:14.639
<v Speaker 2>that uncoverable quicks identical look to each of his routes

0:22:14.640 --> 0:22:17.439
<v Speaker 2>with certain subtleties to get lean, to get leverage and

0:22:17.480 --> 0:22:20.960
<v Speaker 2>exploit that. He's so polished, has no wasted steps. He

0:22:21.040 --> 0:22:23.520
<v Speaker 2>keeps his pads over his shoes, and it allows him

0:22:23.560 --> 0:22:25.480
<v Speaker 2>to break out of those breaks or explode out of

0:22:25.480 --> 0:22:27.199
<v Speaker 2>those breaks. I should say, you see it as a

0:22:27.240 --> 0:22:29.800
<v Speaker 2>runner after the catch as well. Lad mcconklely's gonna go.

0:22:29.880 --> 0:22:32.400
<v Speaker 2>Lad McConkie's gonna go in the third or fourth round

0:22:32.480 --> 0:22:35.919
<v Speaker 2>and be like Danny ammandole for somebody. That's my prediction

0:22:36.000 --> 0:22:38.320
<v Speaker 2>for him. Now, those are the kind of players that

0:22:38.359 --> 0:22:40.480
<v Speaker 2>I'm not crazy about. You guys know that about me.

0:22:40.640 --> 0:22:43.159
<v Speaker 2>I'm a size and speed queen. Not really, I'm a

0:22:43.160 --> 0:22:45.560
<v Speaker 2>speed queen. And you'll hear that over the next couple

0:22:45.600 --> 0:22:48.960
<v Speaker 2>of players here. Because Roman Wilson from Michigan is gonna

0:22:49.000 --> 0:22:51.280
<v Speaker 2>run us up four four. Nobody could keep up with

0:22:51.359 --> 0:22:55.439
<v Speaker 2>him in the ways that he is like both Waddle

0:22:55.480 --> 0:22:58.720
<v Speaker 2>and Tyreek in the speed, but also in the detail

0:22:58.760 --> 0:23:00.960
<v Speaker 2>of his routes. I always pre which that Waddle and

0:23:01.040 --> 0:23:03.639
<v Speaker 2>Rique their nuance of their route running is what makes them

0:23:03.680 --> 0:23:06.119
<v Speaker 2>truly special, and the speed takes to a different level,

0:23:06.440 --> 0:23:09.320
<v Speaker 2>but they're lean their nuance there his explosion. I'm talking

0:23:09.400 --> 0:23:12.560
<v Speaker 2>at Roman Wilson. Now, he's small, but I'm really cool

0:23:12.600 --> 0:23:14.520
<v Speaker 2>with him being the second round pick for the Dolphins

0:23:14.560 --> 0:23:17.440
<v Speaker 2>this year. I think the best feat in the entire class.

0:23:17.680 --> 0:23:19.880
<v Speaker 2>He's got speed on crossers to run away from those

0:23:19.920 --> 0:23:23.320
<v Speaker 2>mesh concepts which we need somebody else like that, the

0:23:23.400 --> 0:23:25.960
<v Speaker 2>double move to take advantage of zero coverage or man

0:23:26.000 --> 0:23:29.000
<v Speaker 2>coverage that we struggled against so desperately late in the

0:23:29.000 --> 0:23:31.440
<v Speaker 2>season when you only had one of ten to seventeen

0:23:31.480 --> 0:23:33.680
<v Speaker 2>for most of the last part of the year. Charles

0:23:33.720 --> 0:23:37.240
<v Speaker 2>Davis says he thinks that when he gets drafted, he'll

0:23:37.400 --> 0:23:40.520
<v Speaker 2>there'll be a Roman Wilson package with design touches for us.

0:23:40.600 --> 0:23:42.680
<v Speaker 2>We already have two of those guys, probably three now

0:23:42.680 --> 0:23:43.760
<v Speaker 2>with Devon a chan right.

0:23:43.960 --> 0:23:45.160
<v Speaker 1>You can never get enough of them.

0:23:45.240 --> 0:23:46.800
<v Speaker 2>And it's only going to cost you a second round

0:23:46.880 --> 0:23:51.040
<v Speaker 2>draft pick I think most likely, and a super cheap contract.

0:23:51.240 --> 0:23:54.159
<v Speaker 1>We need a player like this, we just do. I

0:23:54.200 --> 0:23:55.359
<v Speaker 1>think you need a third option.

0:23:55.640 --> 0:23:58.200
<v Speaker 2>It needs to be cheap, it needs to be reliable,

0:23:58.200 --> 0:23:59.800
<v Speaker 2>it needs to be immediate success for the next three

0:23:59.840 --> 0:24:02.880
<v Speaker 2>year four years with the opportunity to replace Tyreek one day.

0:24:03.359 --> 0:24:06.160
<v Speaker 2>We're not saying a Hall of Fame receiver, but someone

0:24:06.200 --> 0:24:09.400
<v Speaker 2>who can be the cheap option beyond Waddle right because

0:24:09.400 --> 0:24:12.080
<v Speaker 2>Wattle right now is the cheap option to Tyreek. I

0:24:12.080 --> 0:24:16.440
<v Speaker 2>would love to keep those two receiver dominant, like those

0:24:16.440 --> 0:24:18.399
<v Speaker 2>two guys need to continue here, I think in this

0:24:18.520 --> 0:24:20.000
<v Speaker 2>offense to maximize it.

0:24:20.080 --> 0:24:22.480
<v Speaker 1>Next was Jamari Thrash from Louisville.

0:24:22.560 --> 0:24:24.760
<v Speaker 2>I think he's an X or a Z like Roman Wilson,

0:24:24.800 --> 0:24:27.119
<v Speaker 2>plays all the positions, he can play anywhere across the formation.

0:24:27.400 --> 0:24:31.280
<v Speaker 2>But Thrash had professional polish. He won a vertical where

0:24:31.280 --> 0:24:34.760
<v Speaker 2>he pressed the toes, went arm over, widened the route

0:24:34.760 --> 0:24:37.119
<v Speaker 2>and then realigned on the red line to stack the

0:24:37.119 --> 0:24:40.200
<v Speaker 2>defensive back and made a contested catch. That's polish. That's

0:24:40.240 --> 0:24:42.600
<v Speaker 2>really good route running. And you saw that in and

0:24:42.600 --> 0:24:44.960
<v Speaker 2>out of breaks as well. Vertical speed to run pass

0:24:44.960 --> 0:24:47.280
<v Speaker 2>guys can sink the hips. I love the fit for

0:24:47.359 --> 0:24:51.520
<v Speaker 2>the vertical slash conversion to a deep curl, those eighteen

0:24:51.600 --> 0:24:54.160
<v Speaker 2>yard curl routes that we run with tons of anticipation

0:24:54.240 --> 0:24:56.399
<v Speaker 2>because he can sell it in a way with that

0:24:56.520 --> 0:24:59.400
<v Speaker 2>vertical speed that sends the safety of the cornerback vertical

0:24:59.600 --> 0:25:01.639
<v Speaker 2>and then cut back down the line. Try to find

0:25:01.800 --> 0:25:04.879
<v Speaker 2>fits in your offense in this game for players like that,

0:25:04.960 --> 0:25:07.760
<v Speaker 2>and I think that Jamari Thrash would have some of that.

0:25:07.760 --> 0:25:10.160
<v Speaker 2>The guy that I came away the most impressed by

0:25:10.240 --> 0:25:13.000
<v Speaker 2>was Malachai Corley, whose position fluid. I think he can

0:25:13.000 --> 0:25:15.159
<v Speaker 2>play in the slot. He can play nasty alignments and

0:25:15.400 --> 0:25:17.439
<v Speaker 2>tied to the formation. He can be your ex he

0:25:17.440 --> 0:25:19.600
<v Speaker 2>can play your Z. He can play HVAC, he can

0:25:19.600 --> 0:25:20.360
<v Speaker 2>play running back.

0:25:20.520 --> 0:25:21.119
<v Speaker 1>This is the kind of.

0:25:21.119 --> 0:25:25.120
<v Speaker 2>Player that I just think the Dolphins need. In fact,

0:25:25.160 --> 0:25:26.560
<v Speaker 2>we're gonna do a mock draft at the end of

0:25:26.560 --> 0:25:29.119
<v Speaker 2>this top two rounds Senior Bowl mock draft.

0:25:29.760 --> 0:25:30.199
<v Speaker 1>He's in it.

0:25:30.880 --> 0:25:33.840
<v Speaker 2>She got springs in his shoes with exceptional acceleration, dynamic

0:25:33.960 --> 0:25:36.840
<v Speaker 2>deep threat, but the physicality to beat and thwart press

0:25:36.920 --> 0:25:39.919
<v Speaker 2>coverage like he engages, he swipes, he gets into the route.

0:25:39.960 --> 0:25:42.159
<v Speaker 2>He also played through a ton of contact up the

0:25:42.160 --> 0:25:44.600
<v Speaker 2>stem all week. He got my guy shaw Smith way

0:25:44.680 --> 0:25:47.440
<v Speaker 2>from WSHU who didn't see a rep he didn't want

0:25:47.440 --> 0:25:49.960
<v Speaker 2>to hold on. And the DB's like they'll they'll do

0:25:50.040 --> 0:25:52.040
<v Speaker 2>that in these drills because it's almost impossible to cover

0:25:52.080 --> 0:25:55.359
<v Speaker 2>without flagging or without committing fouls in these open space

0:25:55.400 --> 0:25:58.119
<v Speaker 2>one on one drills. And Jim Naggy, the director of

0:25:58.119 --> 0:26:00.760
<v Speaker 2>the Senior Bowl, tweeted a photo before and after.

0:26:00.560 --> 0:26:01.680
<v Speaker 1>His weight gain offs.

0:26:01.680 --> 0:26:04.280
<v Speaker 2>He's in training program where he went from kind of

0:26:04.359 --> 0:26:07.080
<v Speaker 2>just a guy to rocked up, built solid, looking like

0:26:07.080 --> 0:26:08.000
<v Speaker 2>an absolute monster.

0:26:08.040 --> 0:26:09.520
<v Speaker 1>He's five foot ten, two fifteen.

0:26:09.720 --> 0:26:11.960
<v Speaker 2>He plays like DK Metcalf though, and if he runs

0:26:12.000 --> 0:26:13.800
<v Speaker 2>in the four fours, if he can clip four or five,

0:26:14.119 --> 0:26:15.240
<v Speaker 2>I don't even know if he'll be there in the

0:26:15.280 --> 0:26:17.080
<v Speaker 2>second round, but I hope that he does. I like

0:26:17.119 --> 0:26:19.160
<v Speaker 2>the way he steps into the end of the stem

0:26:19.200 --> 0:26:21.840
<v Speaker 2>with a simultaneous stab to kind of come back to

0:26:21.880 --> 0:26:25.240
<v Speaker 2>the football, like everything is coordinated for him. It's polished

0:26:25.280 --> 0:26:27.719
<v Speaker 2>with the physicality, which makes him really tough to deal with.

0:26:27.920 --> 0:26:29.840
<v Speaker 2>Then he plucks the football, doesn't the ball get to

0:26:29.840 --> 0:26:31.359
<v Speaker 2>his chest pad and eat him up, just plucks it

0:26:31.400 --> 0:26:31.960
<v Speaker 2>with his hands.

0:26:32.240 --> 0:26:34.040
<v Speaker 1>This is my guy. Can you tell?

0:26:34.240 --> 0:26:36.800
<v Speaker 2>They toss him and end around in the practice and

0:26:36.840 --> 0:26:38.760
<v Speaker 2>he drops his shoulder on a defensive back who was

0:26:38.800 --> 0:26:41.359
<v Speaker 2>trying to make a statement hit. Don't do that to

0:26:41.359 --> 0:26:44.520
<v Speaker 2>this guy. Go watch his cut up. I think Ian

0:26:44.600 --> 0:26:47.200
<v Speaker 2>Wharton posted a cutup of him, and there's a touchdown

0:26:47.240 --> 0:26:50.040
<v Speaker 2>run where he has the pylon no problem, but rather

0:26:50.080 --> 0:26:52.440
<v Speaker 2>than take it, he drops his shoulder and runs dB

0:26:52.560 --> 0:26:53.560
<v Speaker 2>over to score the touchdown.

0:26:53.640 --> 0:26:54.840
<v Speaker 1>Like he just has that mentality.

0:26:55.080 --> 0:26:58.840
<v Speaker 2>With how much we preach position in fluidity and you know,

0:27:00.320 --> 0:27:02.439
<v Speaker 2>and Reek in the backfield, anybody in the backfield or

0:27:02.480 --> 0:27:05.720
<v Speaker 2>the receivers out wide, this guy seems like an absolute

0:27:05.720 --> 0:27:06.280
<v Speaker 2>perfect fit.

0:27:06.400 --> 0:27:08.639
<v Speaker 1>I will I would wager. I can't.

0:27:08.760 --> 0:27:11.760
<v Speaker 2>I literally cannot wagers I guess my title or whatever.

0:27:12.000 --> 0:27:13.919
<v Speaker 2>I would wager that this guy will wind up in

0:27:13.960 --> 0:27:15.600
<v Speaker 2>a Shanahan based offense.

0:27:15.680 --> 0:27:16.800
<v Speaker 1>He just makes way too much sense.

0:27:16.800 --> 0:27:19.480
<v Speaker 2>He also has the hot highest run after catch average

0:27:19.720 --> 0:27:20.680
<v Speaker 2>in the country this year.

0:27:20.800 --> 0:27:23.240
<v Speaker 1>Finally, tes Walker from UNC is an X receiver.

0:27:23.359 --> 0:27:25.800
<v Speaker 2>He's high cut, long leged, kind of like Chris Chambers was,

0:27:25.960 --> 0:27:27.480
<v Speaker 2>but he can really sink the hips and out of

0:27:27.480 --> 0:27:29.359
<v Speaker 2>those breaks as well. A lot of good receivers in

0:27:29.359 --> 0:27:31.600
<v Speaker 2>this game. Keep an eye on those guys in the game.

0:27:31.680 --> 0:27:34.679
<v Speaker 2>On Saturday at tight end, I wrote a note on

0:27:34.760 --> 0:27:37.600
<v Speaker 2>Jaheem Bell, the fullback h back type from FSU. I said,

0:27:37.600 --> 0:27:39.520
<v Speaker 2>I'm not really sure and I couldn't figure out what

0:27:39.520 --> 0:27:41.640
<v Speaker 2>that meant. But then I realized it was that he's

0:27:41.680 --> 0:27:44.560
<v Speaker 2>physical enough to not get knocked off the stem through contact,

0:27:44.800 --> 0:27:47.200
<v Speaker 2>but I don't think he moves well enough to play

0:27:47.240 --> 0:27:47.879
<v Speaker 2>the next level.

0:27:48.080 --> 0:27:49.760
<v Speaker 1>A guy that I do think moves well enough.

0:27:49.760 --> 0:27:51.720
<v Speaker 2>I talked about him in the preview Brevan span fod

0:27:51.960 --> 0:27:54.080
<v Speaker 2>He's an f and a y tight end that's like

0:27:54.200 --> 0:27:57.359
<v Speaker 2>what we need right from Minnesota. I'm really sold on

0:27:57.400 --> 0:27:59.640
<v Speaker 2>this dude after working him up. Arguably the best physical

0:27:59.680 --> 0:28:02.280
<v Speaker 2>gifts the class from a highweight speed standpoint, but you

0:28:02.320 --> 0:28:04.520
<v Speaker 2>saw the football acumen in the one on ones, tracking

0:28:04.520 --> 0:28:07.399
<v Speaker 2>corners and verticals with quiet hands to run through the throw.

0:28:07.720 --> 0:28:09.119
<v Speaker 2>This is probably the best tigh end of the game

0:28:09.119 --> 0:28:10.560
<v Speaker 2>and I would draft him pretty highly if I had

0:28:10.560 --> 0:28:12.640
<v Speaker 2>a chance to. Let's go ahead and take a break

0:28:12.680 --> 0:28:14.639
<v Speaker 2>because I have a bunch of offensive line notes. We'll

0:28:14.680 --> 0:28:16.119
<v Speaker 2>come back and finish that up, and the rest of

0:28:16.119 --> 0:28:18.640
<v Speaker 2>the defensive notes. I'll do a two round mock draft

0:28:18.640 --> 0:28:20.760
<v Speaker 2>for the Miami Dolphins and tell you about my show

0:28:20.880 --> 0:28:23.280
<v Speaker 2>I'm watching right now that I'm absolutely obsessed with all that.

0:28:23.359 --> 0:28:26.000
<v Speaker 2>Next Draft Time Podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought to

0:28:26.040 --> 0:28:32.680
<v Speaker 2>you by Autnation. Final segment of the week a Friday, February,

0:28:32.760 --> 0:28:35.480
<v Speaker 2>the second edition of the Draft Time Podcast. I left

0:28:35.480 --> 0:28:39.280
<v Speaker 2>you guys with the offensive line notes, and I didn't

0:28:39.920 --> 0:28:44.240
<v Speaker 2>add to my Jackson Powers Johnson notes right here from

0:28:44.320 --> 0:28:46.640
<v Speaker 2>the was it the Wednesday podcast? But I just want

0:28:46.640 --> 0:28:47.960
<v Speaker 2>to go ahead and let you guys know that I

0:28:47.960 --> 0:28:52.280
<v Speaker 2>think that he is a special, special, special prospect who

0:28:52.320 --> 0:28:53.960
<v Speaker 2>I would draft for the twenty first pick and a

0:28:53.960 --> 0:28:57.160
<v Speaker 2>heartbeat if he makes it there. Oklahoma tackle Tyler Geiton

0:28:58.080 --> 0:28:59.240
<v Speaker 2>is one of a lot of guys that I thought

0:28:59.280 --> 0:29:01.640
<v Speaker 2>popped this week. So light on his feet, and there

0:29:01.640 --> 0:29:03.400
<v Speaker 2>are three guys I'm gonna talk about here who are

0:29:03.440 --> 0:29:06.160
<v Speaker 2>six foot seven, three hundred and thirty pounds and just

0:29:06.360 --> 0:29:10.080
<v Speaker 2>moves so smoothly. I did feel like he kind of

0:29:10.160 --> 0:29:13.080
<v Speaker 2>let guys into his chest plate and his fundamentals weren't

0:29:13.080 --> 0:29:16.120
<v Speaker 2>there on every single rep, and when he would absorb

0:29:16.200 --> 0:29:18.120
<v Speaker 2>that contact, his feet would kind of flare open. He'd

0:29:18.120 --> 0:29:20.360
<v Speaker 2>get off balance, get over his pads, and would get

0:29:20.440 --> 0:29:22.880
<v Speaker 2>overwhelmed by power, which I think will happen to him

0:29:23.200 --> 0:29:26.640
<v Speaker 2>early on in his NFL career. Hopefully for him, it's

0:29:26.760 --> 0:29:29.960
<v Speaker 2>just like OTA's in training camp, maybe some preseason, maybe

0:29:30.000 --> 0:29:32.280
<v Speaker 2>into the year. Then he figures it out by September.

0:29:32.480 --> 0:29:34.240
<v Speaker 2>But I could see him having a rough rookie year

0:29:34.240 --> 0:29:35.880
<v Speaker 2>and then kind of coming to figure it out. That's

0:29:35.920 --> 0:29:38.520
<v Speaker 2>kind of the that's the projection, the trajectory you have

0:29:38.600 --> 0:29:40.600
<v Speaker 2>to figure out as a scout. And why I think

0:29:40.640 --> 0:29:43.640
<v Speaker 2>fans get so stuck on this player is this He'll

0:29:43.680 --> 0:29:46.160
<v Speaker 2>never be anything else. Besides that, it's not that way.

0:29:46.200 --> 0:29:49.000
<v Speaker 2>Progression is not linear. It happens in different ways. And

0:29:49.040 --> 0:29:51.040
<v Speaker 2>for Tyler Geiton, I could see him being a high

0:29:51.120 --> 0:29:53.920
<v Speaker 2>draft pick. He's got way too many physical skills, probably

0:29:54.000 --> 0:29:55.720
<v Speaker 2>long gome by the time we pick it twenty one.

0:29:56.040 --> 0:29:58.160
<v Speaker 2>But I could see him being the fifteenth pick in

0:29:58.200 --> 0:30:00.800
<v Speaker 2>the draft and then struggling a little bit his rookie season.

0:30:01.080 --> 0:30:04.360
<v Speaker 2>Another guy like that from Texas, Christian Jones. Wow, I

0:30:04.440 --> 0:30:05.920
<v Speaker 2>was so I didn't know who he was, and then

0:30:05.920 --> 0:30:09.080
<v Speaker 2>I watched some reps of his during the one on ones,

0:30:09.560 --> 0:30:12.120
<v Speaker 2>great hands to balance and mirror rushers. He was a

0:30:12.120 --> 0:30:14.600
<v Speaker 2>three year starter at right tackle, one at left tackle

0:30:14.640 --> 0:30:17.880
<v Speaker 2>for Texas. That's forty eight total starts. My first note

0:30:17.880 --> 0:30:19.680
<v Speaker 2>I was like, Wow, he's got skinny ankles. That could

0:30:19.680 --> 0:30:22.320
<v Speaker 2>be a problem. Maybe maybe he doesn't have this stand

0:30:22.360 --> 0:30:23.920
<v Speaker 2>in his pants to be able to anchor against these

0:30:23.920 --> 0:30:25.960
<v Speaker 2>bull rush you know, edge power rushers.

0:30:26.360 --> 0:30:29.840
<v Speaker 1>But then I watch him and he moves beautifully.

0:30:29.920 --> 0:30:32.320
<v Speaker 2>Like as I'm watching this rep, my first thought is,

0:30:32.360 --> 0:30:35.000
<v Speaker 2>those are some feathery feet man, easy mover, and then

0:30:35.080 --> 0:30:38.480
<v Speaker 2>literally kind of incepting my brain. Charles Davis jumps in

0:30:38.560 --> 0:30:41.200
<v Speaker 2>on the broadcast and says, former soccer player, of course

0:30:41.200 --> 0:30:44.120
<v Speaker 2>he is synchronized the hands with the feet exceptionally well

0:30:44.160 --> 0:30:47.040
<v Speaker 2>on those reps. He I like this guy a lot.

0:30:47.040 --> 0:30:48.720
<v Speaker 2>I don't know where he's projected to go, but just

0:30:48.760 --> 0:30:53.360
<v Speaker 2>watching these reps. There was a rep against Darius Robinson,

0:30:53.480 --> 0:30:56.600
<v Speaker 2>the Missouri at Missouri edge who's gonna wind up being

0:30:56.600 --> 0:30:59.760
<v Speaker 2>a first round draft pick, where he Robinson jab steps

0:30:59.840 --> 0:31:03.320
<v Speaker 2>up the field and then tries to spin back underneath inside,

0:31:03.320 --> 0:31:05.440
<v Speaker 2>which is a pretty typical pass rush move, you know,

0:31:05.760 --> 0:31:09.120
<v Speaker 2>widen him spin back inside and he not only cuts

0:31:09.120 --> 0:31:12.880
<v Speaker 2>off the original like jab step, upfield. He just slides

0:31:12.920 --> 0:31:15.400
<v Speaker 2>smoothly back into the b gap, drops the anchor, and

0:31:15.440 --> 0:31:18.200
<v Speaker 2>shuts that thing down. Darius Robinson did not get shut

0:31:18.240 --> 0:31:20.800
<v Speaker 2>down very often. Chris Jones did a couple times in

0:31:20.880 --> 0:31:21.280
<v Speaker 2>his work.

0:31:21.320 --> 0:31:22.600
<v Speaker 1>I'm I'm going to.

0:31:22.560 --> 0:31:24.760
<v Speaker 2>The computer right now, to the computer machine to find

0:31:24.760 --> 0:31:26.400
<v Speaker 2>out where people are talking about this guy, because I

0:31:26.400 --> 0:31:29.200
<v Speaker 2>thought he looked fantastic. I thought Patrick Paul from Utah

0:31:29.240 --> 0:31:32.200
<v Speaker 2>was similar, very similar build, big but skinny ankles and

0:31:32.240 --> 0:31:35.600
<v Speaker 2>great feet. That's a very rare pairing to have, and

0:31:36.800 --> 0:31:40.160
<v Speaker 2>a very mean temperament with upper body strength upstairs, just

0:31:40.280 --> 0:31:42.280
<v Speaker 2>solidly built. There was a one on one rep that

0:31:42.320 --> 0:31:43.720
<v Speaker 2>he won where he threw the guy to the ground

0:31:43.720 --> 0:31:46.200
<v Speaker 2>with a certain sense of attitude. Six foot seven, three

0:31:46.200 --> 0:31:48.720
<v Speaker 2>point thirty three also got bold a couple of times

0:31:48.880 --> 0:31:51.040
<v Speaker 2>where his hands would get widened out and again invites

0:31:51.080 --> 0:31:51.760
<v Speaker 2>that chess plate.

0:31:51.960 --> 0:31:53.080
<v Speaker 1>Some of these bigger guys, I don't think.

0:31:53.080 --> 0:31:55.320
<v Speaker 2>I don't think they know how to deal with that

0:31:55.400 --> 0:31:56.920
<v Speaker 2>type of power because they does don't see it all

0:31:56.920 --> 0:31:58.360
<v Speaker 2>the time, and so they kind of have to learn

0:31:58.400 --> 0:32:00.800
<v Speaker 2>how to reposition their hands. But they got taking advantage

0:32:00.800 --> 0:32:02.719
<v Speaker 2>of that way a couple of times. But man, they

0:32:02.720 --> 0:32:06.240
<v Speaker 2>showed these guys doing some you know, outside pulling, and

0:32:06.240 --> 0:32:07.520
<v Speaker 2>the way they got off the football I thought was

0:32:07.560 --> 0:32:09.600
<v Speaker 2>really impressive. Like, I was so curious to watch Patrick

0:32:09.600 --> 0:32:11.720
<v Speaker 2>Paul fire off the ball, and sure enough he has

0:32:11.760 --> 0:32:14.080
<v Speaker 2>the snapper he just like I bet you that his

0:32:14.160 --> 0:32:16.400
<v Speaker 2>tense that will be a ninetieth percentile because the way

0:32:16.440 --> 0:32:18.800
<v Speaker 2>he flew off the ball on that rep was so impressive.

0:32:18.840 --> 0:32:20.320
<v Speaker 2>He does that with thirty six inch arms in an

0:32:20.320 --> 0:32:22.760
<v Speaker 2>eighty seven inch wingspan. I think he has the goods

0:32:22.760 --> 0:32:24.440
<v Speaker 2>to be an elite tackle, but with how deep this

0:32:24.480 --> 0:32:26.160
<v Speaker 2>class is, you might be able to get him in

0:32:26.160 --> 0:32:28.120
<v Speaker 2>the second round on the defensive side of the ball.

0:32:28.160 --> 0:32:29.160
<v Speaker 1>A couple of dts here.

0:32:29.160 --> 0:32:31.720
<v Speaker 2>I mentioned Darius Robinson was a five technique with massive

0:32:31.800 --> 0:32:35.040
<v Speaker 2>nickel inside pass rush ability at Massura. The position of

0:32:35.080 --> 0:32:39.040
<v Speaker 2>flexibility is truly JJ Watt like and Brett Coleman who

0:32:39.240 --> 0:32:42.320
<v Speaker 2>once compared Jaln Phillips to JJ Watt that I thought was.

0:32:42.600 --> 0:32:43.720
<v Speaker 1>Pretty damn good.

0:32:43.840 --> 0:32:46.160
<v Speaker 2>Jalen can play that three technique and can definitely kick

0:32:46.200 --> 0:32:48.480
<v Speaker 2>your ass in the five technique as well, but from

0:32:48.520 --> 0:32:52.320
<v Speaker 2>a three and four eye technique, which is almost the

0:32:52.360 --> 0:32:55.080
<v Speaker 2>same position. Your three technique is the outside shoulder of

0:32:55.120 --> 0:32:57.760
<v Speaker 2>the guard. The four eye is the inside shoulder of

0:32:57.800 --> 0:33:00.400
<v Speaker 2>the tackle, so it's basically the B gap right thirteen

0:33:00.480 --> 0:33:03.760
<v Speaker 2>percent pass rush win rate from there as a five

0:33:03.840 --> 0:33:07.520
<v Speaker 2>or six technique. Think about Jalen Phillips position eighteen point

0:33:07.560 --> 0:33:09.959
<v Speaker 2>eight percent pass rush win rate and wider than that

0:33:10.080 --> 0:33:13.600
<v Speaker 2>the nine techniques out wide a nineteen percent. That's Camwake

0:33:13.680 --> 0:33:17.240
<v Speaker 2>level efficiency at three different positions. Height, weight, speed guy

0:33:17.520 --> 0:33:19.800
<v Speaker 2>two ninety five, six ' five. But I saw in

0:33:19.840 --> 0:33:22.960
<v Speaker 2>the notes that he was also very very well versed

0:33:22.960 --> 0:33:25.400
<v Speaker 2>and tactical in his rush plan. Coaches were raving about

0:33:25.440 --> 0:33:27.600
<v Speaker 2>that down there on the field, So he's probably a

0:33:27.600 --> 0:33:28.800
<v Speaker 2>first round pick as well. So I'm gonna have to

0:33:28.800 --> 0:33:31.160
<v Speaker 2>consider the first round pick if you're Miami, just like

0:33:31.200 --> 0:33:33.680
<v Speaker 2>tov Andre Sweat, who is a zero and one technique

0:33:33.680 --> 0:33:36.840
<v Speaker 2>from Texas, and he might get kind of downgraded in

0:33:36.840 --> 0:33:40.880
<v Speaker 2>the way Dexter Lawrence did, but he's got some of that,

0:33:41.560 --> 0:33:43.400
<v Speaker 2>some of that his skill set because of the sheer

0:33:43.440 --> 0:33:45.880
<v Speaker 2>size and mass. He is the nose tackle in this class,

0:33:45.880 --> 0:33:49.000
<v Speaker 2>three hundred and sixty five pounds, first step quickness and

0:33:49.040 --> 0:33:53.000
<v Speaker 2>pure pocket collapsing power, obviously immovable against the run. I

0:33:53.000 --> 0:33:54.960
<v Speaker 2>cannot wait to go back and watch his tape because

0:33:54.960 --> 0:33:56.680
<v Speaker 2>he just was a man amongst boys out there in

0:33:56.720 --> 0:33:59.360
<v Speaker 2>this week. Jordan Jefferson from LSU is a one or

0:33:59.400 --> 0:34:01.760
<v Speaker 2>three technique, which I think Miami, if we don't get

0:34:01.760 --> 0:34:03.760
<v Speaker 2>any four back, is a big, big need in this

0:34:03.800 --> 0:34:05.960
<v Speaker 2>football team. Lots of pop in his hands behind a

0:34:05.960 --> 0:34:09.240
<v Speaker 2>good pad level and leg drive and pocket collapsing ability.

0:34:09.280 --> 0:34:10.800
<v Speaker 2>A couple of guys I think makes sense for miamiy

0:34:10.800 --> 0:34:13.239
<v Speaker 2>there theot' three defensive tackles off the edge. I don't

0:34:13.280 --> 0:34:15.600
<v Speaker 2>think that either of these guys are in Miami's range.

0:34:15.640 --> 0:34:18.239
<v Speaker 2>So just kind of making some notes here because well

0:34:19.200 --> 0:34:22.640
<v Speaker 2>that's what we do. I thought Laatu Latsu was the

0:34:22.640 --> 0:34:23.799
<v Speaker 2>best player at the Senior Bowl.

0:34:23.800 --> 0:34:27.160
<v Speaker 1>He has a you know, he's a ten year plan.

0:34:27.200 --> 0:34:29.040
<v Speaker 1>What does it? Don't die? No for him, it's get

0:34:29.040 --> 0:34:32.160
<v Speaker 1>off the quarterback because his pass rush plan is so

0:34:32.640 --> 0:34:33.359
<v Speaker 1>well versed.

0:34:33.400 --> 0:34:35.279
<v Speaker 2>Looks like a five year veteran. He has counters to

0:34:35.320 --> 0:34:37.520
<v Speaker 2>his counters. He tried to spin move that did not

0:34:37.640 --> 0:34:40.200
<v Speaker 2>work and had the seamless counter move to rip right

0:34:40.239 --> 0:34:42.680
<v Speaker 2>off of that. Just they build off each other speed

0:34:42.680 --> 0:34:44.839
<v Speaker 2>to power, big enough to hold a point in base

0:34:44.880 --> 0:34:46.759
<v Speaker 2>against the run. Feel very good. About his ability to

0:34:46.840 --> 0:34:49.279
<v Speaker 2>drop in coverage. He's a top fifteen pig. If he

0:34:49.320 --> 0:34:50.799
<v Speaker 2>had cleaner medical, I'd say he's a.

0:34:50.719 --> 0:34:51.359
<v Speaker 1>Top five pick.

0:34:51.560 --> 0:34:54.600
<v Speaker 2>Chris Braswell is right there too, from Alabama. These Alabama

0:34:54.680 --> 0:34:58.200
<v Speaker 2>edges are different, man. They're so big, incredible power, speed, power,

0:34:58.239 --> 0:35:00.560
<v Speaker 2>and speed to power move for him. Played through guys

0:35:00.600 --> 0:35:01.920
<v Speaker 2>a lot in the one on one drills, which is

0:35:01.960 --> 0:35:03.399
<v Speaker 2>a trait that I love to see in these drills

0:35:03.400 --> 0:35:06.120
<v Speaker 2>because there's so much space that guys will sometimes try

0:35:06.160 --> 0:35:07.799
<v Speaker 2>to maximize that. But he was like, now I'm gonna

0:35:07.840 --> 0:35:10.239
<v Speaker 2>run through you, and that's a trait that I also

0:35:10.360 --> 0:35:12.160
<v Speaker 2>value a lot more when it comes to defending a

0:35:12.239 --> 0:35:15.319
<v Speaker 2>quarterback like Josh Allen. He's six foot three, two fifty five.

0:35:15.560 --> 0:35:17.279
<v Speaker 2>He has the look of a really good edge in

0:35:17.280 --> 0:35:19.880
<v Speaker 2>this league. At linebacker, it's the same guy talked about

0:35:19.920 --> 0:35:23.759
<v Speaker 2>before the week, Peyton Wilson from NC State six foot

0:35:23.800 --> 0:35:25.760
<v Speaker 2>four to two thirty. They camped him a Kiko Alonzo,

0:35:25.800 --> 0:35:28.640
<v Speaker 2>which was like, uh no, I don't want that. But

0:35:28.640 --> 0:35:31.000
<v Speaker 2>the nice thing about the build is it allows him

0:35:31.040 --> 0:35:33.319
<v Speaker 2>to play heavy but also quick. It's not too often

0:35:33.360 --> 0:35:35.720
<v Speaker 2>you see a linebacker win a one on one versus

0:35:35.760 --> 0:35:38.920
<v Speaker 2>running back pass catching drill. He absorbs the inbreak on

0:35:38.960 --> 0:35:41.640
<v Speaker 2>this rep walls it off, but then has the leverage

0:35:41.640 --> 0:35:45.080
<v Speaker 2>and you know, leg drive the broad jump to explode

0:35:45.120 --> 0:35:47.799
<v Speaker 2>out of that kind of put on your heels type

0:35:47.800 --> 0:35:49.840
<v Speaker 2>of leverage to play forward, make a player on the

0:35:49.880 --> 0:35:52.360
<v Speaker 2>football broke it up. He's a playmaker at the position

0:35:52.719 --> 0:35:55.880
<v Speaker 2>at cornerback. I am very intrigued by the slot corners

0:35:55.880 --> 0:35:57.319
<v Speaker 2>because I think it was a big issue for Miami

0:35:57.360 --> 0:35:59.879
<v Speaker 2>this year in the slot. I thought cater Ko who's rookie,

0:36:00.320 --> 0:36:03.400
<v Speaker 2>was all about these type of temperaments and play making abilities.

0:36:03.760 --> 0:36:06.320
<v Speaker 2>Thought we missed that in year two on cater Kou.

0:36:06.400 --> 0:36:07.880
<v Speaker 2>I'm not saying he can't do it, but it was

0:36:07.880 --> 0:36:10.160
<v Speaker 2>a down year for one of my favorite players on

0:36:10.160 --> 0:36:12.439
<v Speaker 2>the Dolphins team. I start here with Shaw Smith Wade

0:36:12.440 --> 0:36:16.560
<v Speaker 2>from WSU, who played on the perimeter at pullman Goku's

0:36:17.080 --> 0:36:19.280
<v Speaker 2>but I think is a slot corner at the next level.

0:36:19.440 --> 0:36:21.239
<v Speaker 2>I tweeted the rep of him running that route for

0:36:21.360 --> 0:36:23.319
<v Speaker 2>the receiver and getting the pick, and the common reply

0:36:23.520 --> 0:36:24.360
<v Speaker 2>was like, hey, that's holding.

0:36:24.440 --> 0:36:25.120
<v Speaker 1>Yeah it was.

0:36:25.200 --> 0:36:28.040
<v Speaker 2>It is on the surface, but practice reps are just different,

0:36:28.120 --> 0:36:31.719
<v Speaker 2>especially in one on one it's tilted, so heavily towards

0:36:31.800 --> 0:36:33.880
<v Speaker 2>the offense. So if a guy has to grab a

0:36:33.920 --> 0:36:36.120
<v Speaker 2>little bit to essentially prevent a guy from running the

0:36:36.160 --> 0:36:38.120
<v Speaker 2>route to where the help would be, it doesn't really

0:36:38.160 --> 0:36:40.200
<v Speaker 2>bother me that much. What I saw on the rep

0:36:40.320 --> 0:36:42.680
<v Speaker 2>was the same thing he did wshoe feisty. He's here

0:36:42.719 --> 0:36:44.160
<v Speaker 2>to chew gum and mess up your day, and he's

0:36:44.200 --> 0:36:46.920
<v Speaker 2>all out of gun right, and mess up is not

0:36:46.920 --> 0:36:49.319
<v Speaker 2>the word I would say a non family friendly show.

0:36:49.520 --> 0:36:51.280
<v Speaker 2>The only way I ever wanted to describe my slot

0:36:51.320 --> 0:36:54.520
<v Speaker 2>corners is Tasmanian devil. That's all you need, just a

0:36:54.640 --> 0:36:57.520
<v Speaker 2>ball of energy wrapped up into a playmaking football player.

0:36:57.719 --> 0:37:01.120
<v Speaker 2>And while he mostly played outside, need to reroute to

0:37:01.160 --> 0:37:03.400
<v Speaker 2>play from trail, to compete all the way up the

0:37:03.400 --> 0:37:05.879
<v Speaker 2>stem to cat blitz to fit the run. With all

0:37:05.920 --> 0:37:10.399
<v Speaker 2>of that and incredibly choppy feet that helps him jump, leverage, absorb, lean,

0:37:10.800 --> 0:37:13.520
<v Speaker 2>and stay unencumbered by contact to run the stem without

0:37:13.520 --> 0:37:17.120
<v Speaker 2>getting tangled is so so impressive. And then quin Jon

0:37:17.200 --> 0:37:19.719
<v Speaker 2>Mitchell from Toledo, he's a perimeter cornerback. He's out of

0:37:19.719 --> 0:37:20.880
<v Speaker 2>our range. I just want to put him on the

0:37:20.920 --> 0:37:23.640
<v Speaker 2>list because he looks like a surefire top fifteen pick

0:37:23.640 --> 0:37:26.279
<v Speaker 2>and he was fantastic all week long. And then back

0:37:26.280 --> 0:37:29.480
<v Speaker 2>to the slot from Missouri Chris Abrams Strain. You know

0:37:29.880 --> 0:37:32.320
<v Speaker 2>what he does if I like him as a slot

0:37:32.400 --> 0:37:35.760
<v Speaker 2>right challenge, disrupt jack and press coverage. He got flagged

0:37:35.840 --> 0:37:37.640
<v Speaker 2>like Shaw Smith way during some of the one on ones,

0:37:37.760 --> 0:37:40.080
<v Speaker 2>but that's clean up a bowl. His intensity is inherent.

0:37:40.320 --> 0:37:42.040
<v Speaker 2>And then at safety, I have one player, a guy

0:37:42.080 --> 0:37:44.440
<v Speaker 2>that I actually first noticed because he was playing running

0:37:44.440 --> 0:37:48.520
<v Speaker 2>back reps Sioni Vaki from Utah, a safety back there

0:37:48.520 --> 0:37:50.479
<v Speaker 2>for them. He ran a Texas route with choppy feet

0:37:50.480 --> 0:37:52.120
<v Speaker 2>and the breakdown that shows me exactly what I want

0:37:52.160 --> 0:37:54.560
<v Speaker 2>to see from a guy who can gather from depth

0:37:54.600 --> 0:37:56.760
<v Speaker 2>and make plays in space as a as a tackler,

0:37:56.800 --> 0:37:59.879
<v Speaker 2>but also in coverage where he's so smooth to kind

0:37:59.880 --> 0:38:02.280
<v Speaker 2>of you know, trail and mirror guys. Just a totally

0:38:02.280 --> 0:38:06.160
<v Speaker 2>smooth operator think Brandon Jones, but can cover a little bit.

0:38:06.320 --> 0:38:06.719
<v Speaker 1>There you go.

0:38:06.840 --> 0:38:09.320
<v Speaker 2>Senior Bold Notes will recap the game and do Kyle's

0:38:09.360 --> 0:38:13.360
<v Speaker 2>notes on Monday. Also, just real quick few last notes.

0:38:14.239 --> 0:38:16.200
<v Speaker 2>My mock draft right now, which is stupid to do,

0:38:16.239 --> 0:38:17.920
<v Speaker 2>but we're gonna do anyways. It's a podcast and having

0:38:17.960 --> 0:38:21.520
<v Speaker 2>fun and whatever first round, I'm taking Jackson powers Johnson.

0:38:21.560 --> 0:38:23.239
<v Speaker 1>I think he might be there. We'll see, but.

0:38:23.239 --> 0:38:25.480
<v Speaker 2>He is just the way he can do what you

0:38:25.600 --> 0:38:28.840
<v Speaker 2>already did from your scheme perspective and then add power

0:38:29.160 --> 0:38:32.640
<v Speaker 2>for gap scheme for past pro and short yardage. What

0:38:33.000 --> 0:38:34.680
<v Speaker 2>a fine he would be. I hope we can make

0:38:34.719 --> 0:38:37.520
<v Speaker 2>that happen. In the second round. It's receiver Malachai Corley.

0:38:37.560 --> 0:38:40.440
<v Speaker 2>I think it's a big, big, big need another eligible

0:38:40.440 --> 0:38:43.040
<v Speaker 2>who can beat one on one coverage run after the catch,

0:38:43.320 --> 0:38:46.200
<v Speaker 2>Deebo Samuel. Think that in your entire and you know

0:38:46.440 --> 0:38:48.239
<v Speaker 2>the Niners, Like, think about the Niners if they had

0:38:48.560 --> 0:38:53.320
<v Speaker 2>let's say McCaffrey and an I yuk like, drop Deebo

0:38:53.440 --> 0:38:55.520
<v Speaker 2>Samuel into that, and how would that make the offense

0:38:55.560 --> 0:38:57.560
<v Speaker 2>continue to click and go? Like it's you can you

0:38:57.600 --> 0:39:00.440
<v Speaker 2>can get more than two eligibles. A friend text about

0:39:00.480 --> 0:39:02.400
<v Speaker 2>what the Dolphins and then I said that he said, oh, yeah, two,

0:39:02.280 --> 0:39:05.120
<v Speaker 2>it needs more weapons, Like yeah, yeah, I always want

0:39:05.120 --> 0:39:06.040
<v Speaker 2>more weapons, you dummy.

0:39:06.320 --> 0:39:09.040
<v Speaker 1>So there you go. The show.

0:39:09.040 --> 0:39:12.200
<v Speaker 2>I've been watching Fargo. You guys watch Fargo, Holy crap,

0:39:12.280 --> 0:39:14.720
<v Speaker 2>Season five. I'm on the finale. I'm watching that tonight.

0:39:15.080 --> 0:39:17.320
<v Speaker 2>That's one of the best shows I've ever seen. John

0:39:17.360 --> 0:39:19.759
<v Speaker 2>Hamm is phenomenal in that last season, even though he's

0:39:19.800 --> 0:39:22.440
<v Speaker 2>the worst person in the world. But check out Fargo.

0:39:22.880 --> 0:39:25.239
<v Speaker 2>I've watched seasons one, three, and five. I know that

0:39:25.280 --> 0:39:28.399
<v Speaker 2>sounds weird. It's anthology, so isn't actually track the entire thing.

0:39:29.280 --> 0:39:31.239
<v Speaker 1>Season two. I'm watching with my wife. Season four. I

0:39:31.320 --> 0:39:32.120
<v Speaker 1>just I'm not really.

0:39:32.000 --> 0:39:33.640
<v Speaker 2>Into period pieces, so it's like in the fifties, and

0:39:33.640 --> 0:39:35.600
<v Speaker 2>I wanted to skip over that, so I went ahead

0:39:35.600 --> 0:39:38.160
<v Speaker 2>to season five, and five was the best. I thought

0:39:38.160 --> 0:39:40.399
<v Speaker 2>one was really close to five, and three was really

0:39:40.400 --> 0:39:41.920
<v Speaker 2>close to that. And the movie is fantastic as well.

0:39:42.000 --> 0:39:46.080
<v Speaker 2>So Fargo, big, big fan of Fargo. Lastly, Hey, cancer Fighters.

0:39:46.120 --> 0:39:49.720
<v Speaker 2>Registration is open for the fourteenth annual Dolphins Challenge Cancer

0:39:49.760 --> 0:39:52.640
<v Speaker 2>on Saturday, February twenty fourth. Sign up to join Miami

0:39:52.640 --> 0:39:54.959
<v Speaker 2>Dolphins and this year's run, walk and ride and raise

0:39:55.000 --> 0:39:57.880
<v Speaker 2>funds with the DCC, which donates one hundred percent of

0:39:57.920 --> 0:40:02.319
<v Speaker 2>participant raised funds for innovative cancer research at Sylvester Comprehensive

0:40:02.360 --> 0:40:06.359
<v Speaker 2>Cancer Center. Registration closes Fembruary ninth. Visit www dot ride

0:40:06.480 --> 0:40:09.320
<v Speaker 2>DCC dot com to sign up and start donating today.

0:40:09.520 --> 0:40:11.000
<v Speaker 2>Also Seth Labat and I are going to be on

0:40:11.040 --> 0:40:13.600
<v Speaker 2>the air live at DCC from ten to twelve on

0:40:13.719 --> 0:40:16.000
<v Speaker 2>nine forty Fox Sports Am on the iHeart app.

0:40:16.040 --> 0:40:17.120
<v Speaker 1>Come check us out at the booth.

0:40:17.200 --> 0:40:18.800
<v Speaker 2>We're going to have some interviews there as well, probably

0:40:18.840 --> 0:40:20.320
<v Speaker 2>Jaylen Phillips, maybe Jamian Phllips, I don't know.

0:40:20.320 --> 0:40:23.280
<v Speaker 1>We'll see you. So all that good stuff Monday Podcast.

0:40:23.360 --> 0:40:23.920
<v Speaker 1>Back with you guys.

0:40:23.960 --> 0:40:27.000
<v Speaker 2>Then in the meantime, subscribe rate review, follow on social

0:40:27.080 --> 0:40:29.360
<v Speaker 2>at link for NFL. Check out my guys on the

0:40:29.360 --> 0:40:31.839
<v Speaker 2>Fish Tank podcast Seth and Juice. Go ahead and check

0:40:31.840 --> 0:40:34.360
<v Speaker 2>out the YouTube channel for Media Availabilities Dolphins Today. All

0:40:34.440 --> 0:40:36.239
<v Speaker 2>that stuff and so much more. At last, butt not

0:40:36.320 --> 0:40:37.319
<v Speaker 2>least Mimi Dolphins dot com.

0:40:37.400 --> 0:40:39.520
<v Speaker 1>Until next time, bens up on a camera and Daddy

0:40:39.719 --> 0:40:40.160
<v Speaker 1>just come home.