1 00:00:00,320 --> 00:00:05,280 Speaker 1: The Big Bets on Campus Podcast podcast podcast. All right, 2 00:00:05,280 --> 00:00:10,879 Speaker 1: here we go. Welcome to the Big Bets on Campus 3 00:00:10,880 --> 00:00:13,320 Speaker 1: Podcast presented by bet MGM. This is the group of 4 00:00:13,320 --> 00:00:15,400 Speaker 1: five Deep Dive. I'm Mike Caliber is joined by my 5 00:00:15,480 --> 00:00:18,320 Speaker 1: co host, Mike Ianello. This is Part two and our 6 00:00:18,360 --> 00:00:20,480 Speaker 1: G five NFL Draft coverage. So if you missed our 7 00:00:20,480 --> 00:00:22,959 Speaker 1: first episode where we covered all the first and second 8 00:00:23,040 --> 00:00:26,120 Speaker 1: round prospects in the upcoming drafts, please go back listen 9 00:00:26,120 --> 00:00:30,639 Speaker 1: to that one comment, rate review, subscribe. Everything you do 10 00:00:30,720 --> 00:00:33,560 Speaker 1: on YouTube as well as your podcast feed really helps 11 00:00:33,600 --> 00:00:35,680 Speaker 1: us out. But this is the episode where we're hitting 12 00:00:35,720 --> 00:00:38,080 Speaker 1: on the sleepers, the diamonds, and the rough the true 13 00:00:38,080 --> 00:00:41,440 Speaker 1: difference makers between good GMing and elite GMing. If you 14 00:00:41,479 --> 00:00:44,559 Speaker 1: want to be somebody who leads your franchise to an 15 00:00:44,640 --> 00:00:48,000 Speaker 1: NFL championship getting that Super Bowl trophy, you need to 16 00:00:48,040 --> 00:00:51,040 Speaker 1: crush rounds three all the way through the undrafted free 17 00:00:51,040 --> 00:00:54,560 Speaker 1: agent portion of the post draft process. So we're going 18 00:00:54,640 --> 00:00:56,280 Speaker 1: to get into some of those guys. We're gonna hear 19 00:00:56,320 --> 00:00:58,720 Speaker 1: their names very early in round three, all the way 20 00:00:58,760 --> 00:01:01,040 Speaker 1: down to some of those camp in bites that could 21 00:01:01,040 --> 00:01:03,680 Speaker 1: be the last player to make an NFL roster, but 22 00:01:03,720 --> 00:01:06,360 Speaker 1: that we're bullish on. So we're gonna start with a 23 00:01:06,440 --> 00:01:08,839 Speaker 1: player that I kicked out of the last episode, Michael 24 00:01:08,840 --> 00:01:11,440 Speaker 1: Pratt from Tulane. I'm not a believer in him being 25 00:01:11,440 --> 00:01:13,800 Speaker 1: a second r NFL draft pick, but maybe you are. 26 00:01:13,959 --> 00:01:15,080 Speaker 1: I know what, what are your thoughts? 27 00:01:16,360 --> 00:01:20,080 Speaker 2: Yeah, I love Pratt. To me, I have Pratt QB 28 00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:24,680 Speaker 2: seven in this draft. I think Williams May you know, 29 00:01:25,200 --> 00:01:26,720 Speaker 2: I have that as tier one. But if you want 30 00:01:26,720 --> 00:01:29,600 Speaker 2: to throw Jay and Daniels in, fine, Williams May Daniels, 31 00:01:29,760 --> 00:01:32,560 Speaker 2: that's clearly tier one. I think they're gonna go one, two, three, 32 00:01:33,160 --> 00:01:36,039 Speaker 2: Then I think there's a massive gap, and then you 33 00:01:36,160 --> 00:01:40,840 Speaker 2: get into McCarthy, Knicks, Pennix in whatever order you want, 34 00:01:41,640 --> 00:01:43,360 Speaker 2: and then I have Pratt right there after that. I 35 00:01:43,400 --> 00:01:46,080 Speaker 2: have him at the top of tier three. If you're 36 00:01:46,080 --> 00:01:48,320 Speaker 2: going to try to tell me Spencer Ratler is ahead 37 00:01:48,320 --> 00:01:51,720 Speaker 2: of Michael Pratt, you're insane. So to me, I have 38 00:01:51,720 --> 00:01:53,280 Speaker 2: Pratt right there. And I think when you look at 39 00:01:53,280 --> 00:01:56,480 Speaker 2: the way the NFL is, if you don't have maybe 40 00:01:56,480 --> 00:01:58,960 Speaker 2: you don't have Patrick Mahomes, you're screwed. But even if 41 00:01:58,960 --> 00:02:00,760 Speaker 2: you want to say, if you don't have a Mahomes, 42 00:02:01,200 --> 00:02:08,560 Speaker 2: Josh Allen Lamar, you know Joe Burrow, like top six quarterback, 43 00:02:08,919 --> 00:02:15,760 Speaker 2: top guy, franchise QB. You're screwed unless you're loaded everywhere else, 44 00:02:15,960 --> 00:02:19,160 Speaker 2: unless you go Brock Purty. To me, when you look 45 00:02:19,200 --> 00:02:24,480 Speaker 2: at you know that that second tier obviously you know Chicago, Washington, 46 00:02:24,480 --> 00:02:29,080 Speaker 2: New England should go May Williams Daniels. You look at 47 00:02:29,080 --> 00:02:33,679 Speaker 2: who's protected, who needs a quarterback? Denver, Minnesota, Vegas. I'm 48 00:02:33,720 --> 00:02:36,600 Speaker 2: telling you, I think those teams are better off taking 49 00:02:36,680 --> 00:02:39,040 Speaker 2: Michael Pratt in round three than taking bow knicks in 50 00:02:39,120 --> 00:02:41,720 Speaker 2: round one, because I don't think you're winning any more 51 00:02:41,760 --> 00:02:44,000 Speaker 2: games with bow knicks than you would with Michael Pratt. 52 00:02:44,200 --> 00:02:46,320 Speaker 2: And you look at like, let's take Vegas for example. 53 00:02:47,800 --> 00:02:50,320 Speaker 2: You can't tell me Michael Pratt's worse than Aidan O'Connell 54 00:02:50,400 --> 00:02:53,440 Speaker 2: or Gardner Minshew. Obviously Mitchew's played in the league for longer. 55 00:02:53,560 --> 00:02:55,320 Speaker 2: But when you look at, you know, look at the 56 00:02:55,720 --> 00:02:58,560 Speaker 2: who else would be in there? Are you gonna take both? 57 00:02:58,639 --> 00:03:01,160 Speaker 2: Is your team better because you have bone knicks or 58 00:03:01,200 --> 00:03:06,120 Speaker 2: because you take you know, Romadunze and then you take Pratt, 59 00:03:06,200 --> 00:03:08,840 Speaker 2: or you take Quell Mitchell, who we talked about then 60 00:03:08,880 --> 00:03:11,880 Speaker 2: you take Pratt, like, dude, give me Mitchell in the 61 00:03:11,960 --> 00:03:15,359 Speaker 2: first and man Pratt in the third. You're gonna win 62 00:03:15,560 --> 00:03:18,000 Speaker 2: just many games, if not more than if you take 63 00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:21,200 Speaker 2: Bo Nicks is not winning U super Bowl, Michael Pennix 64 00:03:21,280 --> 00:03:23,480 Speaker 2: is not winning to use super Bowl. Could they be 65 00:03:23,520 --> 00:03:28,360 Speaker 2: fine NFL starters? Sure, they're not beating Patrick Mahomes on Sunday. Ever, 66 00:03:29,680 --> 00:03:32,040 Speaker 2: give me Pratt in round three or four and get 67 00:03:32,160 --> 00:03:34,680 Speaker 2: better guys in the first round. When you look at Pratt, 68 00:03:34,800 --> 00:03:38,560 Speaker 2: four year starter at Tulane, finished screer with ninety touchdowns, 69 00:03:38,760 --> 00:03:43,440 Speaker 2: twenty six interceptions, almost ten thousand passing yards. Obviously, when 70 00:03:43,440 --> 00:03:44,960 Speaker 2: we talked about G five, we always have to throw 71 00:03:44,960 --> 00:03:49,480 Speaker 2: the competition caveat and Pratt's four years actually it was 72 00:03:49,560 --> 00:03:52,200 Speaker 2: only over like a three year stretch. But he played 73 00:03:52,560 --> 00:03:56,200 Speaker 2: four Power five teams. He was two and two against 74 00:03:56,280 --> 00:04:01,000 Speaker 2: those teams, two outright wins with eight touchdowns in two interceptions. 75 00:04:01,240 --> 00:04:04,360 Speaker 2: The four teams he played were number ten Oklahoma, Number 76 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:08,320 Speaker 2: eleven Old miss, Number fourteen Kansas State, and number twelve 77 00:04:08,520 --> 00:04:11,000 Speaker 2: us SE. So it wasn't like he was playing like, oh, 78 00:04:11,040 --> 00:04:14,840 Speaker 2: Power five, he was playing, you know, Rutgers like he 79 00:04:15,200 --> 00:04:19,160 Speaker 2: played four top fifteen teams and through eight touchdowns two picks. 80 00:04:19,360 --> 00:04:22,839 Speaker 2: When you watch him, he is just calm pull in 81 00:04:22,839 --> 00:04:25,880 Speaker 2: the pocket. He's accurate, he has great mechanics. He looks 82 00:04:26,040 --> 00:04:29,680 Speaker 2: like an NFL type passer. He's a leader. His teammates 83 00:04:29,720 --> 00:04:32,920 Speaker 2: love him. I'm gonna throw all the cliches for him. Gamer, high, 84 00:04:32,960 --> 00:04:37,120 Speaker 2: football IQ, savvy, locker room guy, leads by examples. He's 85 00:04:37,200 --> 00:04:42,000 Speaker 2: everything Spencer Rattlers not so. He doesn't have the strongest arm. 86 00:04:42,000 --> 00:04:44,000 Speaker 2: I'm sure that's his not he's a little slow through 87 00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:46,600 Speaker 2: his progressions. Not the most athletic guy. He did rush 88 00:04:46,600 --> 00:04:48,480 Speaker 2: for twenty eight touchdowns, so at least he like had 89 00:04:48,520 --> 00:04:50,880 Speaker 2: that somewhat in his bag. I wouldn't say he's you know, 90 00:04:50,880 --> 00:04:54,240 Speaker 2: he's not Josh Allen, but he can't move. He's tough 91 00:04:54,279 --> 00:04:58,200 Speaker 2: as nails. You said it last week that you know. 92 00:04:58,320 --> 00:05:01,120 Speaker 2: I assume these nflgms aren't listen to me. They're gonna 93 00:05:01,160 --> 00:05:04,279 Speaker 2: take Michael Pannix and Bonnicks and they're gonna suck. And 94 00:05:04,320 --> 00:05:07,680 Speaker 2: I assume he's a backup. He's the guy where I think, 95 00:05:07,720 --> 00:05:11,040 Speaker 2: as soon as he enters the game, like he's not 96 00:05:11,040 --> 00:05:13,919 Speaker 2: gonna look rountld. He's not gonna look nervous. He's gonna 97 00:05:13,960 --> 00:05:16,880 Speaker 2: look like he's been in the league for years. I 98 00:05:16,920 --> 00:05:20,760 Speaker 2: think he should be, you know, an NFL starter, and 99 00:05:20,800 --> 00:05:23,760 Speaker 2: I think if he's a backup, he's won that. I 100 00:05:23,800 --> 00:05:25,960 Speaker 2: think will be a backup for a really long time 101 00:05:26,000 --> 00:05:27,920 Speaker 2: in this league. So, like I said, I think he 102 00:05:27,960 --> 00:05:29,920 Speaker 2: win more games with Michael Pratt in round three or 103 00:05:29,960 --> 00:05:31,919 Speaker 2: round four than you do with bon Knicks around one. 104 00:05:32,960 --> 00:05:35,120 Speaker 1: All right, I have lots of things to say about this. 105 00:05:35,240 --> 00:05:37,919 Speaker 1: Let's start with this a little trivia time. He talked 106 00:05:37,920 --> 00:05:40,960 Speaker 1: about him upsetting USC in that Cotton Bowl. How many 107 00:05:40,960 --> 00:05:42,760 Speaker 1: passes did he complete in that game? 108 00:05:42,839 --> 00:05:45,200 Speaker 2: I'll tell you what he ran for like eighty eight yards. 109 00:05:45,400 --> 00:05:47,560 Speaker 1: Oh that's great. I mean if this was like nineteen 110 00:05:47,640 --> 00:05:49,560 Speaker 1: forty five and he's running the wing t offense, Let's 111 00:05:49,560 --> 00:05:52,720 Speaker 1: talk about what he did passing the football games. 112 00:05:52,760 --> 00:05:54,520 Speaker 2: He threw two touchdowns and I'm not looking up. He 113 00:05:54,560 --> 00:05:57,560 Speaker 2: threw two touchdowns and no picks. I know he was 114 00:05:57,640 --> 00:06:00,160 Speaker 2: like eight for seventeen or something like that, right. 115 00:06:00,480 --> 00:06:04,760 Speaker 1: Eight for seventeen is correct. Eight completions. I sort of got. 116 00:06:04,839 --> 00:06:07,120 Speaker 2: I don't have anything in front of me, like like, 117 00:06:07,200 --> 00:06:08,120 Speaker 2: I don't have his numbers. 118 00:06:08,120 --> 00:06:10,839 Speaker 1: Propty ding ding Ding number two, and this one's a 119 00:06:10,839 --> 00:06:11,640 Speaker 1: big strike in mind. 120 00:06:11,640 --> 00:06:13,920 Speaker 2: How many times how many touchdowns did he hand off Tadre. 121 00:06:13,760 --> 00:06:17,440 Speaker 1: Spears exactly Taj Spears when he wasn't there. We'll talk 122 00:06:17,480 --> 00:06:21,039 Speaker 1: about how he played last year, particularly against SMU, with 123 00:06:21,040 --> 00:06:24,240 Speaker 1: an opportunity to win back to back AAC titles. He 124 00:06:24,720 --> 00:06:27,360 Speaker 1: plays up against an SMU defense that was thirteenth in 125 00:06:27,400 --> 00:06:30,680 Speaker 1: past defense. He grades out sixty two point two according 126 00:06:30,720 --> 00:06:34,200 Speaker 1: to PFF, completes just fifty eight percent of his passes touchdown, interception. 127 00:06:34,640 --> 00:06:37,159 Speaker 1: They scored just fourteen points in the loss. I think 128 00:06:37,160 --> 00:06:39,160 Speaker 1: this kid is fine. I think he's going to be 129 00:06:39,200 --> 00:06:41,520 Speaker 1: a backup quarterback. You don't take backup quarterbacks in the 130 00:06:41,520 --> 00:06:43,919 Speaker 1: third round of the NFL draft. If you said we 131 00:06:43,960 --> 00:06:46,160 Speaker 1: get him in the fifth, I'm excited. I think he 132 00:06:46,200 --> 00:06:48,960 Speaker 1: could be a long term number two in the NFL. 133 00:06:49,320 --> 00:06:52,919 Speaker 1: I think his arm is average, and there's very few quarterbacks, 134 00:06:52,960 --> 00:06:55,880 Speaker 1: not just in the current era, really in the modern 135 00:06:55,960 --> 00:06:59,840 Speaker 1: era of the NFL, very few quarterbacks with average arms 136 00:07:00,120 --> 00:07:02,960 Speaker 1: that are plus starters. And you talk about like Gardner 137 00:07:03,000 --> 00:07:07,159 Speaker 1: Minshew and those guys like they're fine, they're stop gap starters. 138 00:07:07,200 --> 00:07:09,440 Speaker 1: I think if you put Pratt in there. He could 139 00:07:09,440 --> 00:07:11,880 Speaker 1: be a stop gap starter. He does. He does have 140 00:07:11,960 --> 00:07:14,240 Speaker 1: tools and traits that I think make him good enough 141 00:07:14,240 --> 00:07:16,440 Speaker 1: to be on a roster and to probably make fifteen 142 00:07:16,440 --> 00:07:19,040 Speaker 1: million dollars in his career. I mean, fingers crossed, I'm 143 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:21,040 Speaker 1: rooting for this kid. Go to the Chase Daniel route. 144 00:07:21,120 --> 00:07:25,640 Speaker 1: Just make like forty million dollars a backup quarterback. Like yeah, 145 00:07:25,720 --> 00:07:27,720 Speaker 1: But I think the reality is the best two lane 146 00:07:27,720 --> 00:07:31,080 Speaker 1: team maybe in program history. It was built around Taj 147 00:07:31,240 --> 00:07:34,400 Speaker 1: spears and explosive passing plays where it's like he would 148 00:07:34,440 --> 00:07:37,320 Speaker 1: find somebody wide open. That Jackson kid was an absolute burner. 149 00:07:37,440 --> 00:07:40,040 Speaker 1: They get into the open field and they score touchdowns. 150 00:07:40,400 --> 00:07:43,200 Speaker 1: Pratt was someone who facilitated that. He gets credit for that. 151 00:07:43,520 --> 00:07:46,360 Speaker 1: And the benefit is by doing all these things, he 152 00:07:46,440 --> 00:07:48,080 Speaker 1: is going to get an opportunity in the NFL to 153 00:07:48,120 --> 00:07:50,880 Speaker 1: at least secure a backup job. I think that's great. 154 00:07:51,000 --> 00:07:54,720 Speaker 1: I think anything above the third round is ridiculous. The 155 00:07:54,720 --> 00:07:57,040 Speaker 1: fact that he's in this conversation to be a second 156 00:07:57,120 --> 00:08:00,600 Speaker 1: round pick. I wouldn't take him above a junior. You 157 00:08:00,680 --> 00:08:03,040 Speaker 1: keep mentioning Bnicks and Penis. I don't think those two 158 00:08:03,040 --> 00:08:05,080 Speaker 1: guys belong in the same conversation at all, because I 159 00:08:05,120 --> 00:08:08,080 Speaker 1: think bo Nix is not even a good backup potential 160 00:08:08,240 --> 00:08:09,960 Speaker 1: in the NFL. I'm gonna throw that out as my 161 00:08:10,000 --> 00:08:12,120 Speaker 1: hottest take. I don't think he's anybody who should be 162 00:08:13,040 --> 00:08:15,480 Speaker 1: hanging around for all that long. It should be the UFL, XFL, 163 00:08:15,520 --> 00:08:17,200 Speaker 1: whatever they call on it. He can go have a 164 00:08:17,240 --> 00:08:20,280 Speaker 1: career there Tommy Maddock style. But when it comes to Pratt, 165 00:08:20,560 --> 00:08:22,840 Speaker 1: I would be hitting on my needs that are much 166 00:08:22,880 --> 00:08:25,520 Speaker 1: higher on the board and the wishless than about Gay. 167 00:08:26,040 --> 00:08:27,560 Speaker 2: So I agree with you in that sense where I 168 00:08:27,840 --> 00:08:29,680 Speaker 2: would not take in the second round. I don't think 169 00:08:29,720 --> 00:08:33,520 Speaker 2: when you just look at like his talent grade, you 170 00:08:33,559 --> 00:08:38,600 Speaker 2: know where did Zappy go? Fourth round? Like you know? Yeah, 171 00:08:38,679 --> 00:08:40,840 Speaker 2: I agree with you there. Do you agree with me 172 00:08:40,920 --> 00:08:43,640 Speaker 2: on two things? One, it sounds like you do. Do 173 00:08:43,679 --> 00:08:45,880 Speaker 2: you agree with me that you're gonna win just as 174 00:08:45,920 --> 00:08:48,280 Speaker 2: many games and you have just as much chance at 175 00:08:48,280 --> 00:08:52,160 Speaker 2: of winning a Super Bowl if you took Pratt later 176 00:08:52,320 --> 00:08:55,120 Speaker 2: then on day three as you do if you take 177 00:08:55,200 --> 00:08:56,360 Speaker 2: Pennix or Nicks Brown. 178 00:08:56,559 --> 00:09:01,680 Speaker 1: One, I think in a perfect scenario where Penex gets 179 00:09:01,679 --> 00:09:04,280 Speaker 1: with the right offensive coordinator, with the right pieces around him, 180 00:09:04,520 --> 00:09:08,000 Speaker 1: he could be a plus starter, like a fringe top 181 00:09:08,040 --> 00:09:10,600 Speaker 1: fifteen starter in the NFL. I think nix Is does 182 00:09:10,640 --> 00:09:13,680 Speaker 1: not have an NFL future whatsoever. Only in the exact 183 00:09:13,760 --> 00:09:16,800 Speaker 1: right scenario for Penis would I advocate taking him in 184 00:09:16,840 --> 00:09:19,520 Speaker 1: the late second, early third and then trying to build 185 00:09:19,520 --> 00:09:21,520 Speaker 1: around them. But yeah, I mean, all of this is 186 00:09:21,600 --> 00:09:23,800 Speaker 1: just about draft capital, and I think to take any 187 00:09:23,840 --> 00:09:26,120 Speaker 1: of those three guys early, I'm not into it. 188 00:09:26,200 --> 00:09:29,560 Speaker 2: All right. There, here's another question, because I think we 189 00:09:29,559 --> 00:09:32,600 Speaker 2: can all agree, whether we agree or not, those that's 190 00:09:32,640 --> 00:09:36,400 Speaker 2: going to be the top six agreed. Yes, do you 191 00:09:36,440 --> 00:09:41,400 Speaker 2: agree with me Pratt's QB seven, Yes, I do. Like 192 00:09:41,480 --> 00:09:45,000 Speaker 2: you take him over Raller and yeah, I mean Rattler 193 00:09:45,080 --> 00:09:46,600 Speaker 2: to me man who else? 194 00:09:47,240 --> 00:09:50,520 Speaker 1: Yeah, okay, Rattler. You can talk about the stuff between 195 00:09:50,520 --> 00:09:53,720 Speaker 1: the years and is you know, leadership ability or lack thereof, 196 00:09:53,800 --> 00:09:56,040 Speaker 1: and that starts to get a little bit soft and 197 00:09:56,120 --> 00:09:58,840 Speaker 1: mushy where you don't really know. But the thing that 198 00:09:58,840 --> 00:10:01,120 Speaker 1: concerns me the most about him, he took too many sacks. 199 00:10:01,120 --> 00:10:03,839 Speaker 1: I understand the South Carolina offensive line sucked, but that's 200 00:10:03,880 --> 00:10:05,199 Speaker 1: a good preparation. 201 00:10:04,760 --> 00:10:08,160 Speaker 2: For he's just he's every time i'd hear him talk, 202 00:10:08,559 --> 00:10:09,680 Speaker 2: he just is such a dick. 203 00:10:11,120 --> 00:10:12,520 Speaker 1: I mean, there's something to be said that a lot 204 00:10:12,520 --> 00:10:15,720 Speaker 1: of great NFL quarterbacks were jerks, but you have to 205 00:10:15,760 --> 00:10:17,680 Speaker 1: be great and you have to be able to handle 206 00:10:17,679 --> 00:10:20,560 Speaker 1: the pressure and to be able to deliver. Like you 207 00:10:20,640 --> 00:10:22,880 Speaker 1: look at some of the great all time jerks in 208 00:10:23,000 --> 00:10:26,480 Speaker 1: NFL history, like Brett Favre was not somebody who necessarily 209 00:10:26,800 --> 00:10:28,440 Speaker 1: I think would win over a locker room if it 210 00:10:28,480 --> 00:10:30,640 Speaker 1: wasn't for the fact that he could take a beating 211 00:10:30,960 --> 00:10:33,280 Speaker 1: and stand in and make throws left and right, Like 212 00:10:33,600 --> 00:10:35,000 Speaker 1: you have to be able to do that, and I 213 00:10:35,000 --> 00:10:37,079 Speaker 1: don't necessarily we don't need to talk about Spencer. 214 00:10:36,840 --> 00:10:37,520 Speaker 2: Ratler any further. 215 00:10:37,559 --> 00:10:40,280 Speaker 1: How about the bansition by position, Well. 216 00:10:40,240 --> 00:10:43,280 Speaker 2: Gonna say, quick, Friday Night ends, those six quarterbacks are 217 00:10:43,280 --> 00:10:44,960 Speaker 2: off the board. Bet Pratt to be the next to 218 00:10:45,040 --> 00:10:45,400 Speaker 2: be taken. 219 00:10:45,640 --> 00:10:47,079 Speaker 1: All right, Yeah, I think I think that's a good 220 00:10:47,080 --> 00:10:48,040 Speaker 1: actionable point there. 221 00:10:49,760 --> 00:10:51,520 Speaker 2: Other G five we're gonna we're gonna try to give 222 00:10:51,520 --> 00:10:53,880 Speaker 2: as many G five guys love as possible at least 223 00:10:53,880 --> 00:10:56,240 Speaker 2: so you know, if you listen to a pod forever, 224 00:10:56,400 --> 00:10:58,480 Speaker 2: you know the names. If you don't when you hear 225 00:10:58,480 --> 00:11:01,280 Speaker 2: the name, but oh they mentioned that guy, do you 226 00:11:01,280 --> 00:11:04,120 Speaker 2: have any thoughts or any notes on the other g 227 00:11:04,240 --> 00:11:08,120 Speaker 2: five qbs who probably see the names called Austin Reid 228 00:11:08,160 --> 00:11:14,240 Speaker 2: Western Kentucky, Carter Bradley, South Alabama, Gavin Hardson UTAP any 229 00:11:14,240 --> 00:11:16,400 Speaker 2: thoughts on those three? Is there anybody else you think 230 00:11:16,440 --> 00:11:18,839 Speaker 2: it's drafted or do you have any thoughts on those guys? 231 00:11:18,840 --> 00:11:20,360 Speaker 2: If you had to pick one kind of who would 232 00:11:20,360 --> 00:11:21,400 Speaker 2: you take for those three? 233 00:11:21,800 --> 00:11:23,960 Speaker 1: I think there's a chance in the right system. Austin 234 00:11:24,000 --> 00:11:28,040 Speaker 1: Reid hangs around the NFL a little bit. He had 235 00:11:28,360 --> 00:11:30,920 Speaker 1: if you look at some of the splits in situational football. 236 00:11:31,120 --> 00:11:33,000 Speaker 1: He was great in the red zone. He did a 237 00:11:33,000 --> 00:11:34,720 Speaker 1: really good job. I think he only took one sack 238 00:11:34,760 --> 00:11:37,200 Speaker 1: in his whole career at Western in the red zone. 239 00:11:37,440 --> 00:11:40,000 Speaker 1: Very efficient there. It was also an offense that you 240 00:11:40,040 --> 00:11:42,480 Speaker 1: put so much on tape. You're throwing into so many 241 00:11:42,480 --> 00:11:45,280 Speaker 1: different coverages. You're playing in a lot of cases from 242 00:11:45,280 --> 00:11:48,000 Speaker 1: behind because their defense wasn't all that great. So the 243 00:11:48,040 --> 00:11:50,280 Speaker 1: fact that Bailey Zappy can be a backup quarterback in 244 00:11:50,280 --> 00:11:52,560 Speaker 1: the NFL out of that pseudo system. I know that 245 00:11:52,559 --> 00:11:54,680 Speaker 1: it's changed a little bit since Zappi moved on to 246 00:11:54,720 --> 00:11:57,520 Speaker 1: the NFL. I think there's a chance for him to be, 247 00:11:57,840 --> 00:12:00,320 Speaker 1: let's call it a six to seventh round pick, and 248 00:12:00,440 --> 00:12:03,680 Speaker 1: to maybe beat out a veteran who's more expensive in 249 00:12:03,800 --> 00:12:07,080 Speaker 1: camp and become an NFL backup. The other two guys 250 00:12:07,360 --> 00:12:11,400 Speaker 1: pass hard pass on the UTEP quarterback as well as 251 00:12:11,760 --> 00:12:16,199 Speaker 1: Carter Bradley from South Alabama. I think even though the 252 00:12:16,240 --> 00:12:19,120 Speaker 1: Sunbelt is one of our favorite so lots of good defense, 253 00:12:19,200 --> 00:12:21,520 Speaker 1: lots of good personnel that move on to the NFL level, 254 00:12:21,640 --> 00:12:24,040 Speaker 1: I just don't see him being somebody who's going to 255 00:12:24,040 --> 00:12:26,000 Speaker 1: translate to the NFL level and all of a sudden 256 00:12:26,200 --> 00:12:28,360 Speaker 1: play at a higher level than he did at the college. 257 00:12:28,760 --> 00:12:32,120 Speaker 2: See if I take a backup, I'm taking Bradley. Hey, 258 00:12:32,160 --> 00:12:36,000 Speaker 2: this might sound like an old man take, but hey, 259 00:12:36,200 --> 00:12:38,959 Speaker 2: Austin Reedi gets a fancy red Corvette and his production drops. 260 00:12:39,440 --> 00:12:42,559 Speaker 2: That's red flag city to me. I'm taking Bradley's strictly 261 00:12:42,559 --> 00:12:45,160 Speaker 2: because neither one of these guys as NFL talent. But 262 00:12:45,480 --> 00:12:48,000 Speaker 2: Bradley's dad was an NFL coach for like twenty years. 263 00:12:48,080 --> 00:12:50,319 Speaker 2: He's been around the game since he was born. Really 264 00:12:50,400 --> 00:12:53,120 Speaker 2: high football. IQ. If I'm having a guy holding a clipboard, 265 00:12:53,160 --> 00:12:54,880 Speaker 2: I want the guy whose dad was an NFL coach 266 00:12:54,920 --> 00:12:55,439 Speaker 2: for a year, so. 267 00:12:55,400 --> 00:12:57,760 Speaker 1: It sounds like he should be a coach. Why don't 268 00:12:57,800 --> 00:13:01,840 Speaker 1: he just pick up a GA job, get into the pipeline. 269 00:13:02,240 --> 00:13:06,680 Speaker 2: He's my QB three practice squad guy, hold the clipboard, 270 00:13:06,800 --> 00:13:10,199 Speaker 2: and I want him scouting the other team. So give 271 00:13:10,240 --> 00:13:14,120 Speaker 2: me him all right, running back, and you have to 272 00:13:14,160 --> 00:13:17,960 Speaker 2: pick a G five back? Are you going Rashin Ali 273 00:13:18,800 --> 00:13:23,840 Speaker 2: from Marshall, Blake Watson from Memphis, Kamani Vidal from Troy, 274 00:13:24,400 --> 00:13:28,880 Speaker 2: George Tlani Boise State, or Frank or Junior Southern. 275 00:13:28,640 --> 00:13:32,040 Speaker 1: Miss This one's super easy to me. It's rashein a 276 00:13:32,160 --> 00:13:35,439 Speaker 1: Lee all day, every day, twice on Sunday, which is 277 00:13:35,480 --> 00:13:37,920 Speaker 1: appropriate because that's where he's going to be playing. Listen, 278 00:13:37,960 --> 00:13:40,880 Speaker 1: if you go back to Bruce Felman's freaklist, he ranked 279 00:13:40,920 --> 00:13:43,800 Speaker 1: number ninety six and he wrote this about Rashin a Lee. 280 00:13:44,120 --> 00:13:46,880 Speaker 1: The six foot two hundred eleven pounder from Ohio Vertical 281 00:13:46,960 --> 00:13:49,840 Speaker 1: jumped thirty six inches in the off season, broad jump 282 00:13:49,880 --> 00:13:52,800 Speaker 1: ten feet, also power cleaned three thirty five and squat 283 00:13:52,880 --> 00:13:55,160 Speaker 1: at five hundred pounds. The kids a monster in the 284 00:13:55,160 --> 00:13:57,520 Speaker 1: weight room. He's got the ability to break tackles. He's 285 00:13:57,520 --> 00:13:59,839 Speaker 1: got wiggle. When he got to the second level, you 286 00:14:00,240 --> 00:14:02,439 Speaker 1: run away from a lot of players, particularly when he's 287 00:14:02,480 --> 00:14:05,360 Speaker 1: fully healthy with a better offensive line. In twenty twenty one, 288 00:14:05,440 --> 00:14:07,800 Speaker 1: he was an All American style, you know player in 289 00:14:07,880 --> 00:14:09,800 Speaker 1: terms of his production, the way he looked. He just 290 00:14:09,800 --> 00:14:12,240 Speaker 1: flipped on the games like that New Orleans Bowl. It's like, 291 00:14:12,280 --> 00:14:14,880 Speaker 1: why is this guy playing at Marshall. His numbers were 292 00:14:14,920 --> 00:14:17,880 Speaker 1: bananas in twenty twenty one, twenty four total CDs, forty 293 00:14:17,920 --> 00:14:20,440 Speaker 1: six receptions. People that are a lot smarter than me, 294 00:14:20,560 --> 00:14:22,320 Speaker 1: that live and die with the tape say that he 295 00:14:22,360 --> 00:14:25,040 Speaker 1: can pick up, you know, blitz packages and he can 296 00:14:25,080 --> 00:14:28,040 Speaker 1: protect his quarterback. That's awfully important to becoming a three 297 00:14:28,080 --> 00:14:29,640 Speaker 1: down back, which I think is what he's going to 298 00:14:29,720 --> 00:14:32,680 Speaker 1: be in the NFL. Last year is all offensive line 299 00:14:32,720 --> 00:14:34,960 Speaker 1: was awful. We talked about this Marshall team. They were 300 00:14:34,960 --> 00:14:37,040 Speaker 1: a mess at quarterback. They were a mess on the 301 00:14:37,080 --> 00:14:39,320 Speaker 1: offensive line. He's still got in the end zone sixteen 302 00:14:39,360 --> 00:14:41,720 Speaker 1: times with over five yards per carry. In a lot 303 00:14:41,720 --> 00:14:43,440 Speaker 1: of cases he had a break a tackle at the 304 00:14:43,440 --> 00:14:46,200 Speaker 1: line of scrimmage just to get any positive yarded. So 305 00:14:46,520 --> 00:14:49,640 Speaker 1: I think he's the complete package. It's rare at the 306 00:14:49,680 --> 00:14:51,800 Speaker 1: G five level to have a guy who doesn't have 307 00:14:51,800 --> 00:14:54,960 Speaker 1: any appreciable weaknesses. Yes, it'd be great if he was 308 00:14:55,040 --> 00:14:56,760 Speaker 1: a little bit faster a tenth of a second and 309 00:14:56,840 --> 00:15:00,040 Speaker 1: the forty had more quote unquote home run potential. He 310 00:15:00,040 --> 00:15:02,280 Speaker 1: still had a lot of long runs and long receptions 311 00:15:02,320 --> 00:15:05,040 Speaker 1: in college for somebody who struggled in that department. 312 00:15:05,120 --> 00:15:08,160 Speaker 2: He led the country with plays of fifty plus yards. 313 00:15:08,320 --> 00:15:10,960 Speaker 1: Yes, so to me, I think it's rashein al Lee, 314 00:15:11,120 --> 00:15:13,720 Speaker 1: you know pretty clearly. I don't think anyone else is 315 00:15:13,720 --> 00:15:16,640 Speaker 1: in his tier. I think every other player that you listed, 316 00:15:17,160 --> 00:15:19,440 Speaker 1: a lot of them were super productive in college. Some 317 00:15:19,480 --> 00:15:21,720 Speaker 1: of that was system fit, some of it was the 318 00:15:21,720 --> 00:15:23,920 Speaker 1: competition they were facing. But a lot of them have 319 00:15:24,040 --> 00:15:27,560 Speaker 1: either physical limitations or some issues in terms of being 320 00:15:27,640 --> 00:15:30,320 Speaker 1: complete players. So that's that's my big headline here. He 321 00:15:30,360 --> 00:15:33,040 Speaker 1: is a complete player. He's ready if an NFL starter 322 00:15:33,160 --> 00:15:35,840 Speaker 1: got hurt, I think he'll be drafted and ideally put 323 00:15:35,880 --> 00:15:38,920 Speaker 1: into you know, an RB two situation if somebody gets hurt. 324 00:15:38,960 --> 00:15:41,600 Speaker 1: He's someone who could win you your fantasy league by showing 325 00:15:41,680 --> 00:15:43,800 Speaker 1: up out of nowhere and running for one thousand yards 326 00:15:43,800 --> 00:15:44,760 Speaker 1: and scoring ten touchdowns. 327 00:15:44,800 --> 00:15:48,800 Speaker 2: The NFL. Yeah, I love Ali. You know the Knox 328 00:15:48,840 --> 00:15:51,800 Speaker 2: I will say, just to play Devil's advocate. He did 329 00:15:51,840 --> 00:15:54,800 Speaker 2: followed a lot and the injuries. You know, he missed 330 00:15:54,800 --> 00:15:58,040 Speaker 2: all of twenty twenty two basically with injury. He missed 331 00:15:58,080 --> 00:16:00,000 Speaker 2: the game last year, and then you got hurt again 332 00:16:00,040 --> 00:16:03,280 Speaker 2: and he like heres ankle at the end of last year. 333 00:16:03,640 --> 00:16:06,240 Speaker 2: Then he tore his bicep before the senior ball, so 334 00:16:06,680 --> 00:16:09,320 Speaker 2: he's not even healthy now. So he's had like three 335 00:16:09,320 --> 00:16:12,480 Speaker 2: different injuries in the last two years. So that concerns me. Well, 336 00:16:12,480 --> 00:16:16,280 Speaker 2: I agree with you. Ali's the first G five back 337 00:16:16,560 --> 00:16:21,120 Speaker 2: off the board. I love Blake Watson, and you mentioned 338 00:16:21,400 --> 00:16:24,400 Speaker 2: their system plays the systems why I love Blake Watson, 339 00:16:24,760 --> 00:16:29,640 Speaker 2: Darryl Henderson, Tony Pollard, Antonio Gibson, Kenneth Gainwell. Memphis has 340 00:16:29,840 --> 00:16:33,320 Speaker 2: just printed NFL running backs, and I think Watson just 341 00:16:33,400 --> 00:16:36,800 Speaker 2: he fits today's NFL perfectly. Last year, his first year 342 00:16:36,840 --> 00:16:40,480 Speaker 2: at Memphis, eleven hundred yards rushing with fourteen touchdowns on 343 00:16:40,520 --> 00:16:45,240 Speaker 2: the ground, fifty three catches, three receiving touchdowns. He averaged 344 00:16:45,440 --> 00:16:49,280 Speaker 2: six yards per carry and nine yards per reception. He 345 00:16:49,360 --> 00:16:52,760 Speaker 2: was a wide receiver in high school. He has elite hands. 346 00:16:53,120 --> 00:16:55,240 Speaker 2: I think he's the perfect third down but he doesn't 347 00:16:55,240 --> 00:16:57,680 Speaker 2: need to get better as a pass blocker. But you 348 00:16:57,760 --> 00:17:01,080 Speaker 2: mentioned the guys are just named Antonio Gibson, Kenneth Gainwell 349 00:17:01,160 --> 00:17:04,359 Speaker 2: like to me, he is going to have that exact 350 00:17:04,640 --> 00:17:07,280 Speaker 2: career in the NFL. You take him in round six. 351 00:17:07,440 --> 00:17:11,119 Speaker 2: I think he is a perfect complimentary third down back. 352 00:17:11,840 --> 00:17:14,520 Speaker 1: I love Blake Watson, and I think it's nice too. 353 00:17:14,760 --> 00:17:17,239 Speaker 1: Having covered his entire career, I think he followed his 354 00:17:17,359 --> 00:17:21,080 Speaker 1: entire career fell into our podcast footprint here started at 355 00:17:21,080 --> 00:17:24,000 Speaker 1: Old Dominion. You want to see somebody move from smaller 356 00:17:24,040 --> 00:17:26,960 Speaker 1: G five football up to know the quote unquote power 357 00:17:27,000 --> 00:17:29,359 Speaker 1: six in the AAC. He got to Memphis and he 358 00:17:29,359 --> 00:17:31,399 Speaker 1: played even better. I mean a part of that's the 359 00:17:31,400 --> 00:17:34,560 Speaker 1: system and giving him the opportunity. But in terms of workload, 360 00:17:34,680 --> 00:17:36,720 Speaker 1: he had more touches. He was the focal point of 361 00:17:36,720 --> 00:17:39,439 Speaker 1: the offense and he delivered. So I'm with you on 362 00:17:39,480 --> 00:17:42,119 Speaker 1: this guy. I think his overall size obviously hurts him 363 00:17:42,119 --> 00:17:44,440 Speaker 1: a little bit in terms of where he gets drafted 364 00:17:44,480 --> 00:17:48,240 Speaker 1: because it's very difficult to envision him being a bell 365 00:17:48,359 --> 00:17:51,000 Speaker 1: cow back in the NFL, a feature back. But there's 366 00:17:51,119 --> 00:17:54,480 Speaker 1: always spots for Kenny Gainwell's in the NFL with so 367 00:17:54,680 --> 00:17:57,960 Speaker 1: much happening out of the backfield, and it's been this renaissance. 368 00:17:58,040 --> 00:18:00,480 Speaker 1: I heard something recently. It was a kind conversation I 369 00:18:00,520 --> 00:18:02,480 Speaker 1: believe on the NFL network and they were talking was 370 00:18:02,480 --> 00:18:05,040 Speaker 1: Reggie Bush, you know, born at the wrong time, put 371 00:18:05,040 --> 00:18:07,280 Speaker 1: into the wrong version of the NFL. At the very 372 00:18:07,320 --> 00:18:09,359 Speaker 1: beginning of his career, he had tons of receptions and 373 00:18:09,400 --> 00:18:11,320 Speaker 1: think g had like eighty eight one year with the Saints, 374 00:18:11,480 --> 00:18:13,560 Speaker 1: but he never really got used in that same way 375 00:18:13,600 --> 00:18:15,520 Speaker 1: for the rest of his career. Where a guy like 376 00:18:15,600 --> 00:18:19,560 Speaker 1: Watson comes in, almost every team has weeks where they'll 377 00:18:19,560 --> 00:18:21,320 Speaker 1: target a running back seven or eight times out of 378 00:18:21,320 --> 00:18:23,960 Speaker 1: the backfield. So he's somebody who could move into that 379 00:18:24,359 --> 00:18:27,919 Speaker 1: get fifteen snaps per game and still be on an 380 00:18:28,000 --> 00:18:30,440 Speaker 1: NFL radar and play well enough to earn his keep 381 00:18:30,480 --> 00:18:32,480 Speaker 1: and to get to his second contract. So I like 382 00:18:32,520 --> 00:18:34,480 Speaker 1: Blake Watson a lot there, All. 383 00:18:34,440 --> 00:18:36,439 Speaker 2: Right, real quick, judge, you I mentioned comin even all 384 00:18:36,480 --> 00:18:38,840 Speaker 2: from Troy. He was second in the nation with their breath. 385 00:18:38,800 --> 00:18:41,119 Speaker 1: Too small, too small, I think, right. I mean he's 386 00:18:41,119 --> 00:18:42,840 Speaker 1: about five to seven, but he's all. 387 00:18:42,760 --> 00:18:46,439 Speaker 2: Muscle, dude. He only he was tired with Oli Gordon 388 00:18:46,480 --> 00:18:49,720 Speaker 2: for over thousand yards after contact, ninety four missed tackles. 389 00:18:49,880 --> 00:18:51,800 Speaker 2: And then if you do want a seventh round, pick 390 00:18:51,840 --> 00:18:54,359 Speaker 2: a little cheat code for you. Pick Frank Gore because 391 00:18:54,480 --> 00:18:57,479 Speaker 2: do you places quarterback, wide receiver, running back, kick returner 392 00:18:57,600 --> 00:18:59,760 Speaker 2: or bring his aunt thieves twelve in the country and 393 00:18:59,800 --> 00:19:03,119 Speaker 2: yard after contact, led Southern missing like every category for 394 00:19:03,160 --> 00:19:07,960 Speaker 2: four straight years, he's basically drafting four, you know, back 395 00:19:08,000 --> 00:19:10,240 Speaker 2: of the roster guys. He's like the perfect scout team 396 00:19:10,240 --> 00:19:11,520 Speaker 2: play because he can just play any positions. 397 00:19:11,920 --> 00:19:14,320 Speaker 1: I mean, what's the line from the Friday Night Light movie. 398 00:19:14,359 --> 00:19:16,040 Speaker 1: You know, he'll fill up the water bottle, will walk 399 00:19:16,080 --> 00:19:17,760 Speaker 1: the dog, He'll paint in your back porch. The guy 400 00:19:17,800 --> 00:19:20,760 Speaker 1: does everything so he can pass, and he can pass 401 00:19:21,920 --> 00:19:22,280 Speaker 1: all right. 402 00:19:22,359 --> 00:19:26,040 Speaker 2: Wide receiver, I will say, compared to last year, super thin. 403 00:19:26,560 --> 00:19:28,880 Speaker 2: You know, last year we talked about Nakua, We talked 404 00:19:28,880 --> 00:19:31,720 Speaker 2: about Dell, we talked about Rice. On our last pot, 405 00:19:31,800 --> 00:19:35,120 Speaker 2: we talked about Malachi Corley. Went after that, Oh boy, 406 00:19:35,119 --> 00:19:37,080 Speaker 2: oh boy. I only have three guys are in down 407 00:19:37,119 --> 00:19:41,040 Speaker 2: that could potentially get drafted. Ja Kwon Jackson from Chulane, 408 00:19:41,359 --> 00:19:47,120 Speaker 2: Luke McCaffrey from Rice, Joshuasiphis from UTSA first, is there 409 00:19:47,119 --> 00:19:49,359 Speaker 2: anybody else you think could hear their name called? And 410 00:19:49,400 --> 00:19:52,119 Speaker 2: if not of those three guys, anybody you want to 411 00:19:52,119 --> 00:19:52,560 Speaker 2: talk about. 412 00:19:53,000 --> 00:19:55,880 Speaker 1: I mean, there's always a potential for a sneaky under 413 00:19:55,880 --> 00:19:57,879 Speaker 1: the radar guy to come up from the FCS ranks, 414 00:19:57,880 --> 00:19:59,480 Speaker 1: but we're not going to talk about that, so let's 415 00:19:59,480 --> 00:20:02,280 Speaker 1: just stick with guys you mentioned. My player in this 416 00:20:02,359 --> 00:20:05,680 Speaker 1: grouping is McCaffrey. He tested really well. He's eighty seventh 417 00:20:05,720 --> 00:20:09,719 Speaker 1: percent style on the three cone drill night McCaffrey. I mean, listen, 418 00:20:10,080 --> 00:20:13,359 Speaker 1: is his measurables are matching up with his lineage because 419 00:20:13,840 --> 00:20:17,840 Speaker 1: ninety first percentile on the shuttle to former quarterback. I 420 00:20:18,000 --> 00:20:21,280 Speaker 1: really like it when players switch positions because I think 421 00:20:21,280 --> 00:20:22,800 Speaker 1: it hides a little bit of their value in the 422 00:20:22,880 --> 00:20:25,680 Speaker 1: learning curve. He got better and better moving from quarterback 423 00:20:25,680 --> 00:20:29,520 Speaker 1: to receiver in his time at Rice. And another thing 424 00:20:29,560 --> 00:20:33,520 Speaker 1: that's also interesting to me, at least from a receiver perspective, 425 00:20:33,720 --> 00:20:37,000 Speaker 1: when your quarterback stink or when there's no continuity and 426 00:20:37,040 --> 00:20:39,760 Speaker 1: you still put up good numbers, that impresses me. He 427 00:20:39,880 --> 00:20:42,640 Speaker 1: caught passes from six different Rice quarterbacks in the past 428 00:20:42,680 --> 00:20:44,760 Speaker 1: two years. He knows how to be a pro clearly 429 00:20:44,800 --> 00:20:47,359 Speaker 1: from his family history, he clearly put in the work 430 00:20:47,600 --> 00:20:50,320 Speaker 1: to get better and did it at a place where 431 00:20:50,359 --> 00:20:52,440 Speaker 1: there wasn't much limelight. I think he started his career 432 00:20:52,520 --> 00:20:55,359 Speaker 1: at what Nebraska as a quarterback. He had an opportunity 433 00:20:55,560 --> 00:20:59,480 Speaker 1: to make stay at a bigger name program. He wanted 434 00:20:59,480 --> 00:21:02,520 Speaker 1: to play and he wanted to give it an honest 435 00:21:02,560 --> 00:21:05,840 Speaker 1: go at wide receiver. He has the physicality, he has 436 00:21:05,880 --> 00:21:08,200 Speaker 1: the numbers. I think this could be a real steal 437 00:21:08,240 --> 00:21:11,120 Speaker 1: for somebody. And I know sometimes it smacks a bit 438 00:21:11,160 --> 00:21:14,280 Speaker 1: of nepotism, or it's just the name. No one's comparing 439 00:21:14,320 --> 00:21:15,919 Speaker 1: him to Christian. No one thinks he's gonna come in 440 00:21:15,960 --> 00:21:17,840 Speaker 1: and be an all pro guy. But I think in 441 00:21:17,880 --> 00:21:20,720 Speaker 1: the current NFL, where you need three good receivers, there's 442 00:21:20,720 --> 00:21:22,560 Speaker 1: no reason why he can't work his way into that 443 00:21:22,600 --> 00:21:24,879 Speaker 1: third wide receiver slot for a lot of teams in 444 00:21:24,920 --> 00:21:27,760 Speaker 1: the NFL. So he's my pick of this group. Although 445 00:21:27,840 --> 00:21:32,040 Speaker 1: Jackson's speed is so enticing, Like if we just list 446 00:21:32,080 --> 00:21:34,400 Speaker 1: off some of his splits in his forty yard dash, 447 00:21:34,440 --> 00:21:36,480 Speaker 1: time you say that three times, you know the ghost 448 00:21:36,520 --> 00:21:37,960 Speaker 1: Al Davis is going to come out and listen to 449 00:21:38,000 --> 00:21:40,760 Speaker 1: this podcast. But like he's somebody that a team will 450 00:21:40,800 --> 00:21:43,320 Speaker 1: fall in love with the ability to stretch the field 451 00:21:43,560 --> 00:21:46,200 Speaker 1: in four or five wide receiver sets, that's still valuable 452 00:21:46,359 --> 00:21:47,840 Speaker 1: to take the top off of the defense. 453 00:21:48,640 --> 00:21:50,640 Speaker 2: Yeah. I think Jackson as fast as he really didn't 454 00:21:50,640 --> 00:21:52,520 Speaker 2: put off like crazy numbers that too lane and he 455 00:21:52,560 --> 00:21:55,119 Speaker 2: had Pratt. Yeah, to me, mcaver is a no brainer. 456 00:21:55,160 --> 00:21:56,560 Speaker 2: And I think the fact that you know, when you 457 00:21:56,560 --> 00:21:58,760 Speaker 2: get to these round five through seven and the guy's 458 00:21:58,800 --> 00:22:01,760 Speaker 2: fighting and klawn and make the team the guy that 459 00:22:01,840 --> 00:22:05,040 Speaker 2: everyone's calling, you know, the NEPO baby, give me that 460 00:22:05,160 --> 00:22:06,800 Speaker 2: chip on each other you mentioned it. You saw him 461 00:22:06,840 --> 00:22:08,680 Speaker 2: have to drop down from Nebraska. He had his switch 462 00:22:08,760 --> 00:22:10,600 Speaker 2: positions and all he did was lead the American and 463 00:22:10,680 --> 00:22:14,560 Speaker 2: touchdown catches. You know, freaky athletic. He he's second in 464 00:22:14,600 --> 00:22:16,840 Speaker 2: the country and contested catches last season. 465 00:22:17,560 --> 00:22:19,359 Speaker 1: I mean, that's all the NFL is like when you 466 00:22:19,359 --> 00:22:21,879 Speaker 1: think about Sundays, like, unless you're a Tyreek kill, unless 467 00:22:21,880 --> 00:22:25,040 Speaker 1: you're a super elite route runner or have crazy speed, 468 00:22:25,280 --> 00:22:27,119 Speaker 1: you don't get wide open looks. You got to go 469 00:22:27,240 --> 00:22:28,520 Speaker 1: take the ball away from something. 470 00:22:28,280 --> 00:22:32,240 Speaker 2: Too like he's not the like small shifty Jillian Edelman 471 00:22:32,280 --> 00:22:37,040 Speaker 2: white receiver like search on Twitter Luke McCaffrey one handed catch. 472 00:22:37,119 --> 00:22:39,439 Speaker 2: This dude was one handed moss and dudes in the 473 00:22:39,480 --> 00:22:42,240 Speaker 2: end zone last year. Like, I think he absolutely is 474 00:22:42,280 --> 00:22:44,080 Speaker 2: a home run at in this kind of range for 475 00:22:44,080 --> 00:22:45,560 Speaker 2: a guy that you just know is gonna work his 476 00:22:45,640 --> 00:22:48,159 Speaker 2: bag off to like make the team and get you know, 477 00:22:48,160 --> 00:22:50,160 Speaker 2: I'm sure he's got a massive chip on his shoulder 478 00:22:50,200 --> 00:22:53,080 Speaker 2: being the less talented brother. So yeah, give me Luke 479 00:22:53,119 --> 00:22:58,000 Speaker 2: McAfrey all day. All right. Tight end Dalen Hooker Carrado state, 480 00:22:58,160 --> 00:22:59,160 Speaker 2: any thoughts. 481 00:23:00,320 --> 00:23:03,000 Speaker 1: I like the guy. I think it's funny that when 482 00:23:03,040 --> 00:23:08,119 Speaker 1: people talk about the position in general, I saw like 483 00:23:08,200 --> 00:23:10,440 Speaker 1: two or three comments where, oh, he doesn't have the 484 00:23:10,480 --> 00:23:12,840 Speaker 1: speed to stretch the field like, and then they just 485 00:23:12,920 --> 00:23:15,040 Speaker 1: start listing off some of the greatest tight ends in 486 00:23:15,160 --> 00:23:17,760 Speaker 1: NFL history. It's like, no one thinks he's gonna be Gronk, 487 00:23:17,960 --> 00:23:20,560 Speaker 1: No one thinks he's gonna be you know, Travis Kelce. 488 00:23:20,800 --> 00:23:24,200 Speaker 1: Like that's fine. You can be a really good number two, 489 00:23:24,240 --> 00:23:27,440 Speaker 1: borderline number one receiver because he's physical the point of attack, 490 00:23:27,480 --> 00:23:30,200 Speaker 1: he can block, and when he gets the ball, he's 491 00:23:30,240 --> 00:23:32,200 Speaker 1: a pretty good runner once he gets up to full speed. 492 00:23:32,240 --> 00:23:35,720 Speaker 1: You saw him really do some damage in the second level. 493 00:23:35,760 --> 00:23:38,280 Speaker 1: I granted it was the Mound West, but he had 494 00:23:38,320 --> 00:23:41,200 Speaker 1: a really nice season and as long as he stays healthy, 495 00:23:41,240 --> 00:23:43,119 Speaker 1: and that's the big issue on him. He had, you know, 496 00:23:43,119 --> 00:23:45,600 Speaker 1: a lost season at BYU due to injury. He's also 497 00:23:45,680 --> 00:23:47,920 Speaker 1: older because he won on his Mormon mission. I think 498 00:23:47,920 --> 00:23:50,440 Speaker 1: these are realistic things. I think this moves him down 499 00:23:50,640 --> 00:23:53,280 Speaker 1: teams draft boards. But when I watch him play, I'm like, 500 00:23:53,320 --> 00:23:56,000 Speaker 1: that's an NFL tight end for sure. I think he's 501 00:23:56,200 --> 00:23:58,440 Speaker 1: you know, if you told me in two years trying 502 00:23:58,440 --> 00:24:00,919 Speaker 1: to set my lineup for my fantasy, he's in that, like, 503 00:24:01,480 --> 00:24:03,880 Speaker 1: just outside the top ten of tight ends. That makes 504 00:24:03,880 --> 00:24:06,240 Speaker 1: sense to me, given his ball skills and his ability 505 00:24:06,400 --> 00:24:08,479 Speaker 1: for run, you know, running after the catch. So I 506 00:24:08,560 --> 00:24:11,200 Speaker 1: like the guy a lot. I'm happy to see him succeed. 507 00:24:11,240 --> 00:24:14,080 Speaker 1: We talked about him a ton in the preseason series 508 00:24:14,080 --> 00:24:16,640 Speaker 1: talking about Colorado State being a sleeper in the Mound West. 509 00:24:16,640 --> 00:24:18,720 Speaker 1: He was a reason why he lived up to the hype. 510 00:24:19,000 --> 00:24:21,840 Speaker 1: Their quarterback situation again, we just talked about McCaffrey catching 511 00:24:21,880 --> 00:24:25,640 Speaker 1: passes from different quarterbacks. Issues on at that position group. 512 00:24:26,200 --> 00:24:28,320 Speaker 1: He was still able to produce even though they were 513 00:24:28,320 --> 00:24:30,800 Speaker 1: playing musical chairs. They had a freshman in there. They had, 514 00:24:30,960 --> 00:24:33,040 Speaker 1: you know, a guy who didn't have experience. He was 515 00:24:33,080 --> 00:24:34,840 Speaker 1: a safety blanket. I think he got close to what 516 00:24:34,920 --> 00:24:37,560 Speaker 1: seven hundred yards of the rams last year. So yeah, 517 00:24:37,600 --> 00:24:38,359 Speaker 1: I'm in on Hooker. 518 00:24:38,800 --> 00:24:40,320 Speaker 2: Yeah, I think it's only weird about Hooker. I agree. 519 00:24:40,359 --> 00:24:42,200 Speaker 2: He had a great year, you know, thir and third 520 00:24:42,240 --> 00:24:44,680 Speaker 2: among all tight ends and forced miss tackles last year. 521 00:24:44,840 --> 00:24:46,520 Speaker 2: And it's weird he has that weird com He really 522 00:24:46,520 --> 00:24:48,440 Speaker 2: didn't do anything at Uyu, so he has that weird 523 00:24:48,480 --> 00:24:52,080 Speaker 2: combo of like one season of real breakout production at 524 00:24:52,080 --> 00:24:54,600 Speaker 2: Colorado State. But you can't even say like he's super 525 00:24:54,680 --> 00:24:56,640 Speaker 2: rock because, like you said, he's twenty four years old, 526 00:24:56,640 --> 00:24:59,480 Speaker 2: because he had like two years of like religious mission trips. 527 00:24:59,520 --> 00:25:02,040 Speaker 2: So it's like he's like rab but like old. So 528 00:25:02,080 --> 00:25:03,040 Speaker 2: it's kind of a weird thing. 529 00:25:03,720 --> 00:25:07,160 Speaker 3: The podcast is presented by North Carolina's newest sports book, 530 00:25:07,240 --> 00:25:10,119 Speaker 3: bet MGM. Use the bonus code action when signing up 531 00:25:10,119 --> 00:25:12,280 Speaker 3: to get one hundred and fifty dollars in bonus bets 532 00:25:12,280 --> 00:25:21,840 Speaker 3: when you bet just five dollars. Four new users in Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, 533 00:25:21,880 --> 00:25:25,959 Speaker 3: New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, 534 00:25:26,080 --> 00:25:28,679 Speaker 3: and Wyoming. Terms and conditions apply. Must be twenty one 535 00:25:28,760 --> 00:25:32,240 Speaker 3: or older. Gambling problem called one eight hundred gambler. 536 00:25:33,760 --> 00:25:35,680 Speaker 2: Any offensive lineman you want to talk about, I. 537 00:25:35,720 --> 00:25:39,440 Speaker 1: Like Frank Crumb, I like any Wyoming tough. You think 538 00:25:39,440 --> 00:25:42,159 Speaker 1: about all their teams just in the d until you 539 00:25:42,200 --> 00:25:45,280 Speaker 1: like about blocking, but just Wyoming go for oun data. Yeah. 540 00:25:45,320 --> 00:25:48,200 Speaker 1: I also thinks there's a certain element of like culture 541 00:25:48,320 --> 00:25:50,280 Speaker 1: where they talk about some of the guys at the 542 00:25:50,359 --> 00:25:53,359 Speaker 1: very top, particularly at the tackle position. Sometimes these guys 543 00:25:53,359 --> 00:25:57,119 Speaker 1: are like dancing bears. They have such great athleticism and 544 00:25:57,160 --> 00:26:00,280 Speaker 1: they're more in the past protection scheme. I sometimes want 545 00:26:00,280 --> 00:26:02,320 Speaker 1: to add into the mix, whether it's just you're too deep. 546 00:26:02,600 --> 00:26:05,240 Speaker 1: A guy who's a road grader, who is a bully 547 00:26:05,400 --> 00:26:08,000 Speaker 1: who comes in maybe a half second after the whistle 548 00:26:08,000 --> 00:26:10,600 Speaker 1: blows and knocks over a defensive back off the pile, 549 00:26:10,680 --> 00:26:13,520 Speaker 1: like those are Wyoming guys. So that's just my thought 550 00:26:13,560 --> 00:26:15,760 Speaker 1: on it. We don't have to get into it. We don't, 551 00:26:15,800 --> 00:26:17,879 Speaker 1: you know, claim to be the cole Kublicks of the 552 00:26:17,920 --> 00:26:22,240 Speaker 1: world breaking down all the different elements and the schemes 553 00:26:22,280 --> 00:26:24,160 Speaker 1: and all those kind of things. But when it comes 554 00:26:24,200 --> 00:26:27,040 Speaker 1: to culture fits, I wouldn't mind having a wyoming offensive 555 00:26:27,080 --> 00:26:28,320 Speaker 1: linement in my locker room. 556 00:26:28,680 --> 00:26:31,240 Speaker 2: Agreed, all right. Switching over to defense, and you look 557 00:26:31,240 --> 00:26:33,440 Speaker 2: at the edge rushers. If you listen to our part 558 00:26:33,480 --> 00:26:40,040 Speaker 2: one podcast everything we said about Marshall Neeland, Mohammed Kamara 559 00:26:40,119 --> 00:26:45,160 Speaker 2: is the exact opposite. This dude is all production. Thirteen sacks, 560 00:26:45,359 --> 00:26:48,840 Speaker 2: seventeen tackles for loss. Last year Mountain West Defensive Player 561 00:26:48,880 --> 00:26:52,880 Speaker 2: of the Year. This dude's a lunatic. When you watch 562 00:26:52,960 --> 00:26:54,840 Speaker 2: him play, He's one of those guys who are like, 563 00:26:55,000 --> 00:26:58,439 Speaker 2: when you watch, you're like, that dude is not like 564 00:26:58,480 --> 00:27:02,280 Speaker 2: you just you can you notice him on defense, crazy energy, 565 00:27:02,680 --> 00:27:05,560 Speaker 2: He launches off the line of scrimmage as soon as 566 00:27:05,840 --> 00:27:10,040 Speaker 2: he is relentless. Everything you read about him from his teammates, 567 00:27:10,040 --> 00:27:14,280 Speaker 2: his coach is just no nonsense player, super intense, work 568 00:27:14,320 --> 00:27:19,440 Speaker 2: ethic like but compared to Nieland he's undersized. You know, 569 00:27:19,640 --> 00:27:23,560 Speaker 2: he's fast, but he's small. He's not as long, but 570 00:27:23,640 --> 00:27:27,200 Speaker 2: he plays with crazy intensity. And I'm telling you, give 571 00:27:27,200 --> 00:27:30,359 Speaker 2: me this dude on my team every day of the week. 572 00:27:30,640 --> 00:27:32,280 Speaker 2: I don't care how big he is, I don't care 573 00:27:32,280 --> 00:27:34,119 Speaker 2: how long he is. Give me the dude that I 574 00:27:34,200 --> 00:27:36,640 Speaker 2: know when the ball snapped he's going to try to 575 00:27:36,800 --> 00:27:40,480 Speaker 2: kill the other team's quarterback or die trying. I love 576 00:27:40,880 --> 00:27:41,679 Speaker 2: Mohammed Kamara. 577 00:27:42,800 --> 00:27:45,399 Speaker 1: I am with you. I couldn't be more in lockstep 578 00:27:45,520 --> 00:27:47,720 Speaker 1: on this one. And what's interesting, having watched a ton 579 00:27:47,760 --> 00:27:50,880 Speaker 1: of Colorado State football, really the last two years, he 580 00:27:50,920 --> 00:27:52,600 Speaker 1: was the best defender they had, so you know that 581 00:27:52,720 --> 00:27:55,480 Speaker 1: every single team was game planning against him, and he's like, 582 00:27:55,480 --> 00:27:57,040 Speaker 1: I don't care, I'm still going to be the defensive 583 00:27:57,040 --> 00:27:59,600 Speaker 1: player of the year in this conference. He finished second 584 00:27:59,640 --> 00:28:02,000 Speaker 1: in career at Colorado State with thirty and a half 585 00:28:02,080 --> 00:28:05,679 Speaker 1: thirteen career tackles for loss with almost forty six. To me, 586 00:28:05,840 --> 00:28:09,320 Speaker 1: he's very similar to Shaq Barrett, another Colorado State product 587 00:28:09,480 --> 00:28:12,119 Speaker 1: who became an NFL Pro bowler. And like Barrett, he 588 00:28:12,160 --> 00:28:14,760 Speaker 1: moved from linebacker to edge and once he did that, 589 00:28:15,000 --> 00:28:17,680 Speaker 1: he still remains undersized, but he flourished in that role. 590 00:28:18,000 --> 00:28:21,439 Speaker 1: And I think he really made himself rich by his measurables. 591 00:28:21,560 --> 00:28:23,880 Speaker 1: His ten yards split one point five eight, elite forty 592 00:28:23,960 --> 00:28:26,720 Speaker 1: yard dash four point five eight, that is going to 593 00:28:26,760 --> 00:28:28,720 Speaker 1: make him a very high third round pick, if not 594 00:28:28,760 --> 00:28:31,200 Speaker 1: a second round pick. You mentioned it in our first episode. 595 00:28:31,400 --> 00:28:33,720 Speaker 1: Depending on how the dominoes fall in the first round 596 00:28:33,960 --> 00:28:36,240 Speaker 1: and when those edge rushers go, if there's a run 597 00:28:36,280 --> 00:28:38,520 Speaker 1: on them in the top twenty, I think teams are 598 00:28:38,560 --> 00:28:40,840 Speaker 1: going to start getting desperate because if you don't have 599 00:28:40,880 --> 00:28:43,560 Speaker 1: a Patrick Mahomes, as we started this episode talking about, 600 00:28:43,640 --> 00:28:45,840 Speaker 1: you gotta get to a Patrick Mahomes. You gotta hurt 601 00:28:45,840 --> 00:28:48,400 Speaker 1: these guys, you gotta make life miserable for them, and 602 00:28:48,440 --> 00:28:50,480 Speaker 1: you can never have too many pass rushers. So for 603 00:28:50,520 --> 00:28:52,640 Speaker 1: that reason, I think he's gonna be a very early 604 00:28:52,680 --> 00:28:53,400 Speaker 1: third round pick. 605 00:28:54,760 --> 00:28:56,840 Speaker 2: Think with Kamara two and like, this is crazy comparison. 606 00:28:56,840 --> 00:29:00,400 Speaker 2: Obviously he's not close to that talent level. He's the 607 00:29:00,440 --> 00:29:03,480 Speaker 2: closest thing I've ever noticed, at least for me recently 608 00:29:03,520 --> 00:29:07,840 Speaker 2: with Michaeh Parsons, where when I watch Colorado State when 609 00:29:07,840 --> 00:29:11,400 Speaker 2: they're on defense, I'm watching Kamara and just like, is 610 00:29:11,440 --> 00:29:13,600 Speaker 2: he gonna get there this time? And like, like Parsons, 611 00:29:14,320 --> 00:29:16,200 Speaker 2: you always know where Parsons is, Like even when he 612 00:29:16,200 --> 00:29:18,240 Speaker 2: doesn't get a sack, you just like see him fly 613 00:29:18,280 --> 00:29:21,200 Speaker 2: across your screen and like either get double teamed or 614 00:29:21,240 --> 00:29:23,360 Speaker 2: swinging miss or the quarterback has to step up to 615 00:29:23,400 --> 00:29:27,240 Speaker 2: avoid him. Where that every single snap is determined based 616 00:29:27,240 --> 00:29:29,480 Speaker 2: on where Kamara is, Like they have to game plan 617 00:29:29,520 --> 00:29:32,360 Speaker 2: against him, and it's basically like he's either gonna screw 618 00:29:32,440 --> 00:29:34,800 Speaker 2: up the whole play or they're gonna are they are 619 00:29:34,800 --> 00:29:36,440 Speaker 2: they gonna be able to blot Like you just watch 620 00:29:36,520 --> 00:29:38,760 Speaker 2: him every play. I love I love watching him play. 621 00:29:39,560 --> 00:29:42,080 Speaker 2: The other edge rushers that probably go Eric Watts, Yukon 622 00:29:43,320 --> 00:29:46,680 Speaker 2: and Javon Solomon from Troy. I like Troy a lot 623 00:29:46,760 --> 00:29:50,880 Speaker 2: or Solomon a lot from Troy. He's just he's just undersized, but. 624 00:29:51,440 --> 00:29:53,120 Speaker 1: I mean I could talk about him really fast. He 625 00:29:53,160 --> 00:29:57,000 Speaker 1: is undersized, but he's fast, he's twitchy. For that reason, 626 00:29:57,080 --> 00:29:59,200 Speaker 1: I think he's probably gonna fall to the fifth rounds 627 00:29:59,200 --> 00:30:00,880 Speaker 1: because of, you know, his overall length. 628 00:30:00,880 --> 00:30:04,600 Speaker 2: And so when I'm reading like NFL draft like analysis, 629 00:30:04,600 --> 00:30:07,960 Speaker 2: there's nothing I love more than here in smooth hips. 630 00:30:08,040 --> 00:30:10,320 Speaker 2: Ohlman got them smooth hips. 631 00:30:10,120 --> 00:30:12,720 Speaker 1: He certainly has those smooth hips allowed him to lead 632 00:30:12,760 --> 00:30:14,720 Speaker 1: the country in sacks. I think you can do a 633 00:30:14,720 --> 00:30:17,280 Speaker 1: lot worse than adding the leader in sacks to your 634 00:30:17,400 --> 00:30:20,840 Speaker 1: roster at sixteen last year, three time all Sun Belt 635 00:30:20,840 --> 00:30:23,600 Speaker 1: team over you know, the course of his career. Honorable 636 00:30:23,640 --> 00:30:26,400 Speaker 1: Mention All American Once I watched him a ton because 637 00:30:26,480 --> 00:30:28,880 Speaker 1: I love Carlton Marshall on that defense a couple of 638 00:30:28,920 --> 00:30:32,120 Speaker 1: years ago, but he actually stood out more in terms 639 00:30:32,120 --> 00:30:34,720 Speaker 1: of just wrecking plays in the passing game. And in 640 00:30:34,760 --> 00:30:37,160 Speaker 1: his career he had sacks against k State in South Carolina, 641 00:30:37,200 --> 00:30:39,000 Speaker 1: so he wasn't out of his element when they played 642 00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:41,280 Speaker 1: some of the best teams on their schedule. So he's 643 00:30:41,320 --> 00:30:43,560 Speaker 1: somebody that I think you can get at a discount 644 00:30:43,560 --> 00:30:45,520 Speaker 1: because of his physical limitations. But if you get him 645 00:30:45,520 --> 00:30:47,320 Speaker 1: in the fifth round, I think there's no reason to 646 00:30:47,320 --> 00:30:49,320 Speaker 1: think that he couldn't add you know, let's call it 647 00:30:49,400 --> 00:30:52,800 Speaker 1: three four five sacks as a situational pass rusher by 648 00:30:52,840 --> 00:30:54,280 Speaker 1: you know, the first couple of years of his career. 649 00:30:55,080 --> 00:30:58,240 Speaker 2: YEP, I completely agree, all right. For linebackers, we got 650 00:30:58,320 --> 00:31:01,840 Speaker 2: Jordan McGee from Temple Hyre, s Knight from UTEP, Easton 651 00:31:01,920 --> 00:31:05,600 Speaker 2: Gibbs from Wyoming, John Tree Hunter from Georgia State, Dallas 652 00:31:05,600 --> 00:31:08,719 Speaker 2: Gant from Toledo, and Jackson Mitchell from Yukon. Those are 653 00:31:08,720 --> 00:31:11,760 Speaker 2: the linebackers I expect to hear called. Two guys I 654 00:31:11,840 --> 00:31:14,240 Speaker 2: just wanted to quickly say we mentioned the Wyoming thing 655 00:31:14,680 --> 00:31:18,960 Speaker 2: copy paste Easton Gibbs just tackling machine smaller guys, so 656 00:31:19,040 --> 00:31:21,280 Speaker 2: he's gonna fall, but just works his bag off. He's 657 00:31:21,320 --> 00:31:23,440 Speaker 2: a guy I'd love to have the sixth seventh round, 658 00:31:23,600 --> 00:31:25,680 Speaker 2: and then we mentioned it for Christian Haynes. Jackson Mitchell 659 00:31:25,720 --> 00:31:27,440 Speaker 2: is a guy I think really got hurt from coming back. 660 00:31:27,520 --> 00:31:30,880 Speaker 2: I think he's probably firmly a Day three draft pick 661 00:31:31,360 --> 00:31:33,280 Speaker 2: if he went came out of the draft last year 662 00:31:33,680 --> 00:31:37,760 Speaker 2: for Yukon. Now he's probably that fringe round seven UFA guy, 663 00:31:37,840 --> 00:31:41,000 Speaker 2: but he just did everything for that Yukon defense. And yeah, 664 00:31:41,160 --> 00:31:42,920 Speaker 2: I really wish he ended the draft last year after 665 00:31:42,960 --> 00:31:45,080 Speaker 2: that one hundred and forty tackle season. Do you have 666 00:31:45,080 --> 00:31:46,480 Speaker 2: any thoughts on those six guys? 667 00:31:46,800 --> 00:31:48,920 Speaker 1: I like Jackson Mitchell, I still do. The guy played 668 00:31:48,920 --> 00:31:51,680 Speaker 1: through injury like it wasn't it wasn't even hard to see, 669 00:31:51,680 --> 00:31:53,840 Speaker 1: like he had the huge cast on his arm, and 670 00:31:53,880 --> 00:31:58,360 Speaker 1: like that to me shows toughness because in the nil era, 671 00:31:59,000 --> 00:32:02,320 Speaker 1: oh like I'm not getting you know, enough endorsements, or like, 672 00:32:02,480 --> 00:32:04,720 Speaker 1: oh I could play at a better program and immediately any 673 00:32:04,720 --> 00:32:08,480 Speaker 1: opportunity transferring. This guy was stuck at Yukon after a 674 00:32:08,560 --> 00:32:10,800 Speaker 1: huge breakout season. By the way, he could have gone anywhere, 675 00:32:11,040 --> 00:32:15,040 Speaker 1: comes back, buys into it. Things just didn't go the 676 00:32:15,080 --> 00:32:17,320 Speaker 1: Huskies way last year. We don't have to belabor that point, 677 00:32:17,560 --> 00:32:19,400 Speaker 1: but I don't think that. I think it's a bit 678 00:32:19,400 --> 00:32:21,200 Speaker 1: of an overaction to say all of a sudden, oh, 679 00:32:21,240 --> 00:32:23,080 Speaker 1: they don't have guys who can play in the NFL. 680 00:32:23,080 --> 00:32:25,120 Speaker 1: We talked about Haynes in the first episode. I think 681 00:32:25,160 --> 00:32:28,200 Speaker 1: Mitchell's somebody who can be a rotational guy in the NFL, 682 00:32:28,440 --> 00:32:31,960 Speaker 1: those tackling machines, making sure that those five yard runs 683 00:32:31,960 --> 00:32:34,280 Speaker 1: don't turn into twenty five yard runs. I know that 684 00:32:34,360 --> 00:32:38,560 Speaker 1: linebacker has become almost the mirror image of the running 685 00:32:38,560 --> 00:32:40,880 Speaker 1: back position on offense, where it's like, we don't value 686 00:32:40,880 --> 00:32:42,720 Speaker 1: this position anymore. We don't pay these guys a lot 687 00:32:42,720 --> 00:32:44,680 Speaker 1: of money. They're not as impactful as they were in 688 00:32:44,680 --> 00:32:47,880 Speaker 1: the nineties. That's true, but you still gotta have guys 689 00:32:47,880 --> 00:32:50,600 Speaker 1: who are reliable, and it's a position group that if 690 00:32:50,600 --> 00:32:53,040 Speaker 1: you don't have depth, where you don't have quality starters, 691 00:32:53,280 --> 00:32:55,520 Speaker 1: you can be taken advantage of in a serious way. 692 00:32:55,880 --> 00:32:57,920 Speaker 1: I think he can be somebody who can be a 693 00:32:58,000 --> 00:33:00,000 Speaker 1: value add you know, in the sixth or seventh round. 694 00:33:00,000 --> 00:33:02,000 Speaker 1: I hope he gets drafted because I think he's someone 695 00:33:02,040 --> 00:33:05,440 Speaker 1: who's proven, at least you know two years ago that 696 00:33:05,760 --> 00:33:09,120 Speaker 1: he's an absolute missile to the football. He is very 697 00:33:09,160 --> 00:33:12,000 Speaker 1: quick diagnosing plays, and he's a sure tackler, and he's 698 00:33:12,040 --> 00:33:14,520 Speaker 1: also someone who's disrupted you can force fumbles and get 699 00:33:14,560 --> 00:33:15,560 Speaker 1: into the backfield as well. 700 00:33:16,440 --> 00:33:19,560 Speaker 2: The country led the country and fumbles recovered the last year. 701 00:33:19,560 --> 00:33:24,200 Speaker 2: Before last year all right, secondary, the only safety had 702 00:33:24,200 --> 00:33:26,560 Speaker 2: written now was Trey Taylor from air Force. And then 703 00:33:26,680 --> 00:33:28,600 Speaker 2: cornerback was weird because it was all over the map, 704 00:33:28,680 --> 00:33:32,480 Speaker 2: Like every site you looked for prospects, like there was 705 00:33:32,520 --> 00:33:35,400 Speaker 2: probably five or six g five corners that were listed, 706 00:33:35,520 --> 00:33:38,120 Speaker 2: but every site had a different like three or four guys, 707 00:33:38,120 --> 00:33:39,600 Speaker 2: so I didn't want to just write like every name. 708 00:33:40,160 --> 00:33:42,040 Speaker 2: The three big ones that I saw pretty much on 709 00:33:42,120 --> 00:33:46,160 Speaker 2: every list were Chicken Museum from Colorado State, Carlton Johnson 710 00:33:46,200 --> 00:33:49,640 Speaker 2: from Fresno State, and Mike Abraham from Marshall. There's a 711 00:33:49,640 --> 00:33:53,120 Speaker 2: few other guys that you know potentially fall into that list. 712 00:33:54,560 --> 00:33:57,040 Speaker 2: Are there any guys you know corner safeties that you 713 00:33:57,080 --> 00:33:58,800 Speaker 2: were interested in? The one I'll talk about of the 714 00:33:58,880 --> 00:34:02,120 Speaker 2: guys I just named is Mike Abraham because he's the guy. 715 00:34:02,160 --> 00:34:03,800 Speaker 2: Like I said that. I know we've talked about on 716 00:34:03,800 --> 00:34:05,960 Speaker 2: the Pod a lot. He was so good at Marshall 717 00:34:06,200 --> 00:34:09,680 Speaker 2: fifty five passes defended in twelve picks during his Marshall career, 718 00:34:10,160 --> 00:34:13,000 Speaker 2: led the Sunbelt and interceptions over the last two years. 719 00:34:13,280 --> 00:34:17,200 Speaker 2: Ballhawk and then just a quick ramp on this state 720 00:34:17,239 --> 00:34:20,520 Speaker 2: of you know, Pro Bowl, the NFL Drafts, Pro Day 721 00:34:21,280 --> 00:34:24,360 Speaker 2: combine stuff. I was reading his you know profile on 722 00:34:24,480 --> 00:34:27,400 Speaker 2: NFL dot com and this sentence made me so angry. 723 00:34:28,440 --> 00:34:33,040 Speaker 2: Looks twitchier on tape than he did at his pro day. Okay, 724 00:34:33,160 --> 00:34:34,919 Speaker 2: so then he's twitchy, Like I don't give a shit 725 00:34:34,960 --> 00:34:36,880 Speaker 2: what he did as Pro Day. If when he's playing 726 00:34:36,920 --> 00:34:40,560 Speaker 2: football he's fast in twitchy, then he's fast and twitchy. 727 00:34:40,920 --> 00:34:41,080 Speaker 1: You know. 728 00:34:41,080 --> 00:34:43,040 Speaker 2: We saw with Kyle Hamilton and his forty hard time. 729 00:34:43,040 --> 00:34:44,920 Speaker 2: It's like if you watch him at Our Dame, he 730 00:34:45,000 --> 00:34:46,440 Speaker 2: was fast, and then you see him with the Ravens 731 00:34:46,440 --> 00:34:49,080 Speaker 2: and that he's fast and like he's awesome and he's sick. 732 00:34:49,480 --> 00:34:51,839 Speaker 2: We mentioned it last year with Pogannakua, like watch him 733 00:34:51,840 --> 00:34:55,520 Speaker 2: with the football, he runs fast. See them like Abraham, 734 00:34:55,800 --> 00:34:58,160 Speaker 2: when you watch him play. He's twitchy, he's fast. I 735 00:34:58,160 --> 00:34:59,640 Speaker 2: don't care what he does as Pro day. When he's 736 00:34:59,680 --> 00:35:03,440 Speaker 2: playing for football, he's twitchy. So draft him to play football. 737 00:35:03,760 --> 00:35:06,279 Speaker 2: So that's my rant. I like Mike Abraham of kind 738 00:35:06,320 --> 00:35:09,760 Speaker 2: of those G five corners. Anybody I listed or anybody 739 00:35:09,760 --> 00:35:11,160 Speaker 2: else you want to talk about that you kind of 740 00:35:11,200 --> 00:35:12,800 Speaker 2: like coming out of the G five secondary. 741 00:35:13,719 --> 00:35:16,040 Speaker 1: Well, first, I think there's a lot to be said, 742 00:35:16,080 --> 00:35:19,160 Speaker 1: particularly when you get to the mental aspect of the NFL. 743 00:35:19,200 --> 00:35:23,000 Speaker 1: There's paralysis through analysis where if you don't know exactly 744 00:35:23,040 --> 00:35:25,160 Speaker 1: the scheme or where you're supposed to be or where 745 00:35:25,160 --> 00:35:27,160 Speaker 1: players are going to be when you're playing in zone, 746 00:35:27,400 --> 00:35:30,560 Speaker 1: when you're passing people off and coverage, you can play slower. 747 00:35:30,800 --> 00:35:33,160 Speaker 1: And it can also go the opposite way, where, yes, 748 00:35:33,200 --> 00:35:35,560 Speaker 1: a guy may have two tenths of a second faster 749 00:35:35,680 --> 00:35:37,680 Speaker 1: on a forty yard dash, but if he doesn't know 750 00:35:37,719 --> 00:35:40,840 Speaker 1: where he's supposed to be or have that field feel 751 00:35:41,000 --> 00:35:43,440 Speaker 1: for lack of a better word, that he can play slower. 752 00:35:43,600 --> 00:35:45,359 Speaker 1: We've seen it play out. So I do think it's 753 00:35:45,360 --> 00:35:48,439 Speaker 1: a good point when you talk about the secondary. There's 754 00:35:48,480 --> 00:35:52,759 Speaker 1: just one guy that I was thrilled to research for 755 00:35:52,800 --> 00:35:55,239 Speaker 1: this piece, and it's Trey Taylor out of air Force, 756 00:35:55,280 --> 00:35:55,759 Speaker 1: first of all. 757 00:35:56,040 --> 00:35:58,680 Speaker 2: And I knew, I knew. I later wrote him down. 758 00:35:58,880 --> 00:36:00,680 Speaker 2: You want to talk about it, all right? 759 00:36:00,960 --> 00:36:04,439 Speaker 1: I mean, the guy is a dog. You watch that meme, 760 00:36:04,480 --> 00:36:06,760 Speaker 1: it's like, you know, you go through the whole roster. Dog. 761 00:36:06,960 --> 00:36:10,160 Speaker 1: This guy's a dog. He's Ed Reid's cousin. He won 762 00:36:10,280 --> 00:36:13,200 Speaker 1: the Thorpe Award last year, which is increasingly rare for 763 00:36:13,239 --> 00:36:15,640 Speaker 1: a G five player to win a national award. Taylor 764 00:36:15,719 --> 00:36:18,439 Speaker 1: is the first ever Thorpe Award winner recipient from Air Force, 765 00:36:18,440 --> 00:36:20,680 Speaker 1: and only the second Falcon to win a major college 766 00:36:20,680 --> 00:36:23,600 Speaker 1: football award, joining Chad Hennings, who won the nineteen eighty 767 00:36:23,600 --> 00:36:27,080 Speaker 1: seven Allen Trophy before contributing to the Dallas Cowboys Super 768 00:36:27,120 --> 00:36:30,160 Speaker 1: Bowl teams. You'll get his PFF grade eighty two point six. 769 00:36:30,239 --> 00:36:32,680 Speaker 1: You'll get his rafts score nine point three to three 770 00:36:32,760 --> 00:36:36,080 Speaker 1: out of ten, twenty two bench reps at two twenty five, 771 00:36:36,200 --> 00:36:38,520 Speaker 1: twenty two, which is incredible for a player out of 772 00:36:38,520 --> 00:36:41,640 Speaker 1: the secondary, great vertical, great shuffle, three cone time. The 773 00:36:41,680 --> 00:36:44,960 Speaker 1: guy's a stud, and he's also a proven leader. At 774 00:36:45,000 --> 00:36:47,000 Speaker 1: the very least, I know he's gonna come in and 775 00:36:47,040 --> 00:36:49,279 Speaker 1: work his ass off because when you look at all 776 00:36:49,360 --> 00:36:52,360 Speaker 1: of his accomplishments on the field. He was also honored 777 00:36:52,360 --> 00:36:56,160 Speaker 1: by the Falcons as the Defender of the Nation award, 778 00:36:56,200 --> 00:36:59,080 Speaker 1: which is an award given to a college football player 779 00:36:59,320 --> 00:37:02,000 Speaker 1: from one of the name service academies based on exceptional 780 00:37:02,080 --> 00:37:04,920 Speaker 1: leadership qualities, performance on and off the field, and a 781 00:37:05,000 --> 00:37:08,279 Speaker 1: high standard of integrity. I understand that the NFL you 782 00:37:08,320 --> 00:37:10,640 Speaker 1: want to stock your team with the best players possible, 783 00:37:10,920 --> 00:37:14,640 Speaker 1: but it doesn't hurt getting a first class human being 784 00:37:14,880 --> 00:37:17,719 Speaker 1: who also is an incredible athlete to get in your 785 00:37:17,719 --> 00:37:19,759 Speaker 1: locker room because he can do it all. He was 786 00:37:19,800 --> 00:37:21,800 Speaker 1: a tremendous tackle or if you look at his highlight 787 00:37:21,840 --> 00:37:24,560 Speaker 1: reels that are making the rounds on social media, he 788 00:37:24,760 --> 00:37:26,920 Speaker 1: flew in like when he walked down to the box 789 00:37:27,120 --> 00:37:29,719 Speaker 1: like running backs had to be on notice because he 790 00:37:29,800 --> 00:37:32,480 Speaker 1: was throwing kids around like rag dolls, and he went 791 00:37:32,520 --> 00:37:34,480 Speaker 1: and got the football. You know, there wasn't a whole 792 00:37:34,520 --> 00:37:37,319 Speaker 1: lot of opportunities when teams were throwing at him, but 793 00:37:37,360 --> 00:37:40,279 Speaker 1: when they did, he took it away. And the last 794 00:37:40,320 --> 00:37:42,799 Speaker 1: piece of it is I don't know if you're in 795 00:37:42,880 --> 00:37:45,440 Speaker 1: on this news, but as it sits, this is going 796 00:37:45,520 --> 00:37:47,399 Speaker 1: to be the last year that the US government will 797 00:37:47,440 --> 00:37:50,600 Speaker 1: permit service academy players those at Army, Navy, Air Force 798 00:37:50,960 --> 00:37:54,279 Speaker 1: to jump directly to college or jump directly to the 799 00:37:54,360 --> 00:37:58,040 Speaker 1: NFL from college. Next year, athletes will be required to 800 00:37:58,040 --> 00:38:00,640 Speaker 1: serve two years in the military, which had been you know, 801 00:38:00,800 --> 00:38:03,360 Speaker 1: kind of the long established rule until twenty nineteen, so 802 00:38:03,400 --> 00:38:05,400 Speaker 1: they had this window in which they could make the 803 00:38:05,440 --> 00:38:07,360 Speaker 1: quick jump. This is the last time. He's going to 804 00:38:07,400 --> 00:38:10,439 Speaker 1: be the last player to do it. As somebody who 805 00:38:10,600 --> 00:38:13,160 Speaker 1: loves the position of safety because it's so versatile, some 806 00:38:13,200 --> 00:38:15,720 Speaker 1: of my favorite players in college and the pros played 807 00:38:15,760 --> 00:38:19,000 Speaker 1: the position. This guy, the fact that they're having him 808 00:38:19,040 --> 00:38:22,440 Speaker 1: mocked like later in the NFL draft is bananas to me. 809 00:38:23,040 --> 00:38:24,840 Speaker 1: He is somebody that all you had to do. We 810 00:38:24,920 --> 00:38:27,000 Speaker 1: mentioned it with Kamara. There was a couple of Mound 811 00:38:27,040 --> 00:38:29,040 Speaker 1: West guys. There's some players who are like one of 812 00:38:29,040 --> 00:38:31,200 Speaker 1: these things or not like the other. You only had 813 00:38:31,200 --> 00:38:33,160 Speaker 1: to watch five or six snaps and you're like, what 814 00:38:33,400 --> 00:38:36,400 Speaker 1: is this guy doing at Air Force? Because he was 815 00:38:36,480 --> 00:38:40,160 Speaker 1: an absolute missile to the football and for that reason, 816 00:38:40,160 --> 00:38:42,280 Speaker 1: when you pair it with all the measurables, there's no reason, 817 00:38:42,440 --> 00:38:44,399 Speaker 1: in my opinion not to take him in the second 818 00:38:44,480 --> 00:38:47,480 Speaker 1: or third round, but apparently everywhere he's getting mocked. It's 819 00:38:47,560 --> 00:38:51,240 Speaker 1: interesting I mentioned on the previous podcast there's like aggregators 820 00:38:51,320 --> 00:38:55,240 Speaker 1: of all of the mock drafts around the internet right now. 821 00:38:55,400 --> 00:38:58,759 Speaker 1: His average pick is two hundred and fifty first his 822 00:38:58,880 --> 00:39:01,320 Speaker 1: best in the entire pross this was one hundred and sixth, 823 00:39:01,520 --> 00:39:03,959 Speaker 1: which still puts him, you know, not in that first 824 00:39:04,040 --> 00:39:08,759 Speaker 1: or second round conversation even close. You cannot convince me 825 00:39:08,800 --> 00:39:11,440 Speaker 1: there are two hundred and fifty college football players better 826 00:39:11,480 --> 00:39:13,680 Speaker 1: than this kid. I would take him as the second 827 00:39:13,760 --> 00:39:16,239 Speaker 1: or third best safety in this entire class. And as 828 00:39:16,239 --> 00:39:19,239 Speaker 1: I mentioned, world class human being, great plus to the 829 00:39:19,280 --> 00:39:21,120 Speaker 1: locker room. I want this guy on my team. 830 00:39:21,600 --> 00:39:23,439 Speaker 2: Hey, that's the guy you want to go to war with? 831 00:39:23,880 --> 00:39:25,680 Speaker 1: Literally yeah, quite literally? 832 00:39:27,080 --> 00:39:28,359 Speaker 2: A right, that's all I got. 833 00:39:29,239 --> 00:39:32,440 Speaker 1: All right, So we have covered it all from Quinyon 834 00:39:32,520 --> 00:39:35,680 Speaker 1: Mitchell ideally being the very first G five player and 835 00:39:35,719 --> 00:39:38,839 Speaker 1: first cornerback. Hopefully it cashes my ticket there, MIAs win 836 00:39:38,960 --> 00:39:43,320 Speaker 1: fifty fingers crossed for Quinnyon the Toledo product to be 837 00:39:43,360 --> 00:39:45,239 Speaker 1: the first corner off the board. I think he will 838 00:39:45,280 --> 00:39:47,799 Speaker 1: be all the way down to the last pick in 839 00:39:47,840 --> 00:39:50,400 Speaker 1: the seventh round as well. As some undrafted free agents. 840 00:39:50,440 --> 00:39:53,600 Speaker 1: I do think there's going to be some more defensive 841 00:39:53,600 --> 00:39:55,640 Speaker 1: players that are going to be impactful in this draft 842 00:39:55,640 --> 00:39:58,480 Speaker 1: than necessarily the offensive side, as we saw last year 843 00:39:58,480 --> 00:40:00,839 Speaker 1: from G five Land, But that's no reason to you know, 844 00:40:00,840 --> 00:40:03,200 Speaker 1: throw any cold water on it. Any final thoughts about 845 00:40:03,200 --> 00:40:05,240 Speaker 1: this draft class top to bottom. 846 00:40:05,600 --> 00:40:07,799 Speaker 2: No, I think this is you know this, this one 847 00:40:07,840 --> 00:40:11,560 Speaker 2: isn't as bettable as you know most of our pods typically. 848 00:40:11,719 --> 00:40:13,799 Speaker 2: I think I think hopefully you guys use what we 849 00:40:13,880 --> 00:40:15,440 Speaker 2: say here. I mean, it's harder this year. It's not 850 00:40:15,560 --> 00:40:18,920 Speaker 2: many like receivers. But if you're someone who plays Dynasty Fantasy, 851 00:40:18,960 --> 00:40:21,479 Speaker 2: like I said, we nailed it last year. The first 852 00:40:21,480 --> 00:40:23,799 Speaker 2: thing I did with my Dynasty draft ended was pick 853 00:40:23,840 --> 00:40:26,480 Speaker 2: up Pooka Nakua for free, and he's my you know, 854 00:40:26,560 --> 00:40:30,759 Speaker 2: he's like a top fifteen receiver. So you know, Rashid Ali, 855 00:40:31,040 --> 00:40:33,919 Speaker 2: Blake Watson, Malcai Corley like these are guys I would 856 00:40:33,920 --> 00:40:36,480 Speaker 2: be targeting in your dynasty leagues. You know, if you 857 00:40:36,520 --> 00:40:38,560 Speaker 2: want to take a flyer and Luke McCaffrey for free, 858 00:40:39,360 --> 00:40:42,000 Speaker 2: he'll he'll make an NFL team. So hopefully you can 859 00:40:42,000 --> 00:40:44,000 Speaker 2: take some of what we said and make it somewhat 860 00:40:44,040 --> 00:40:46,360 Speaker 2: actionable when it comes to at least dynasty leagues. 861 00:40:47,280 --> 00:40:49,799 Speaker 1: For Mike Iinello on Mike Calabres. This has been the 862 00:40:49,880 --> 00:40:54,399 Speaker 1: BBOC Podcast presented by Bett mgm our Group five Deep Dive. 863 00:40:54,440 --> 00:40:58,239 Speaker 1: Now in the book are two part NFL Draft series completes, 864 00:40:58,840 --> 00:41:00,840 Speaker 1: but we have more concept right around the corner. So 865 00:41:00,920 --> 00:41:02,840 Speaker 1: next week I'll be back here in the seat with 866 00:41:03,040 --> 00:41:06,239 Speaker 1: Colin Wilson talking about college baseball and the lead up 867 00:41:06,280 --> 00:41:09,000 Speaker 1: to the College World Series, the Super Regionals, all that fun, 868 00:41:09,040 --> 00:41:11,600 Speaker 1: all the way to Omaha, building all of your futures, 869 00:41:11,880 --> 00:41:14,680 Speaker 1: hopefully getting you to the tournament with five or six teams, 870 00:41:14,960 --> 00:41:17,880 Speaker 1: and as I mentioned in the last episode, really great payouts. 871 00:41:18,040 --> 00:41:20,399 Speaker 1: It's very rare for a top team or a top 872 00:41:20,440 --> 00:41:22,880 Speaker 1: two team to win the College World Series. Some crazy 873 00:41:22,920 --> 00:41:25,480 Speaker 1: things happen out in Omaha. So it's fun to have 874 00:41:25,560 --> 00:41:28,560 Speaker 1: some fifteen twenty twenty five to one tickets. Colin will 875 00:41:28,600 --> 00:41:31,520 Speaker 1: walk you through everything with his power rankings. The guy 876 00:41:31,760 --> 00:41:34,400 Speaker 1: is so in tune with what's going on on the 877 00:41:34,400 --> 00:41:37,279 Speaker 1: diamond in college baseball. He goes, I mean, genius level 878 00:41:37,280 --> 00:41:40,040 Speaker 1: doesn't even begin to scrape the service. He's talking about 879 00:41:40,080 --> 00:41:44,120 Speaker 1: wind at different stadiums. He's talking about deep pitching rotations, 880 00:41:44,480 --> 00:41:48,600 Speaker 1: understanding these managers. Having watched and covered college baseball for 881 00:41:48,640 --> 00:41:51,879 Speaker 1: so many years, he understands the strengths and weaknesses that's 882 00:41:51,920 --> 00:41:55,080 Speaker 1: taking place in the dugout as well. So I'm basically 883 00:41:55,120 --> 00:41:57,920 Speaker 1: going to play the de facto audience member pick his brain. 884 00:41:58,160 --> 00:42:00,080 Speaker 1: I think we're all beneficiaries of it. Last year we 885 00:42:00,160 --> 00:42:02,080 Speaker 1: ended up with a ticket on LSU to win the 886 00:42:02,160 --> 00:42:05,640 Speaker 1: national Championship. Hopefully we hand out another winner this time around, 887 00:42:05,640 --> 00:42:07,640 Speaker 1: So that'll be the end of next week. We'll call 888 00:42:07,680 --> 00:42:10,279 Speaker 1: it twenty six or twenty seventh of April. So be 889 00:42:10,360 --> 00:42:13,080 Speaker 1: sure to check out your podcast feeds, and it's always 890 00:42:13,239 --> 00:42:15,000 Speaker 1: really really helpful to us if you can go ahead 891 00:42:15,080 --> 00:42:17,719 Speaker 1: and rate and review both on YouTube as well as 892 00:42:17,719 --> 00:42:20,600 Speaker 1: social media and on your podcast where you can give 893 00:42:20,600 --> 00:42:23,359 Speaker 1: out five star reviews, where be sure to throw out 894 00:42:23,360 --> 00:42:26,200 Speaker 1: some free swags, some merchandise. Hey know what, I'm gonna 895 00:42:26,200 --> 00:42:27,759 Speaker 1: throw my hat in the ring here. Whoever writes the 896 00:42:27,800 --> 00:42:30,640 Speaker 1: best review of this episode, I'm happy to give you 897 00:42:30,680 --> 00:42:34,120 Speaker 1: a free ten dollars future on the College Diamond to 898 00:42:34,160 --> 00:42:37,480 Speaker 1: win the National Championship. So please fire in some five 899 00:42:37,520 --> 00:42:39,959 Speaker 1: star reviews as Stuck likes to say, you can write 900 00:42:40,000 --> 00:42:41,759 Speaker 1: whatever you want, it's got to be five stars, so 901 00:42:41,760 --> 00:42:44,200 Speaker 1: please rate and review. Tell a friend, Tell Anatomy you 902 00:42:44,239 --> 00:42:45,600 Speaker 1: know how we do here on the Big Bets on 903 00:42:45,600 --> 00:42:49,920 Speaker 1: Campus podcast. Thanks again for listening and enjoy The NFL Draft. 904 00:42:59,239 --> 00:43:03,759 Speaker 1: Action Network reminds you please gamble responsibly. If you or 905 00:43:03,760 --> 00:43:06,560 Speaker 1: someone you care about has a gambling problem, help is 906 00:43:06,600 --> 00:43:09,680 Speaker 1: available twenty four to seven at one eight hundred gambler