08-28-2018, 02:06 AM
In a recent piece for the website the Ringer, Vikings General Manager Rick Spielman expressed his anticipation of all the player tracking data the NFL is making available to teams. One marker he specifically is looking forward to tracking is which players get slower as seasons gets longer.
Spielman might want to take a close look at the data for one of his players whose speed is his primary weapon: receiver Stefon Diggs.
Diggs had 849 yards and eight touchdowns last season and earned himself a five-year, $72 million extension thanks to his speed.
“His explosion when he is next to a defender, it’s uncommon,” Vikings receivers coach Darrell Hazell said. “His ability to create separation in a 3-yard box is what makes him really special. When he gets on the hip of a guy, the distance that he creates in a split second is what makes him very unique.”
The memory of Diggs racing down the sidelines to beat the Saints and help the Vikings advance to the NFC championship is a memory forever etched in the mind of Minnesota sports fans.
Just before reaching the end zone on that play, Diggs reached a maximum speed of 18.6 miles per hour, according to the data company Sportradar. That kind of speed, however, was rare for Diggs in the latter quarter of the season.
http://www.startribune.com/vikings-recei...491812421/
Spielman might want to take a close look at the data for one of his players whose speed is his primary weapon: receiver Stefon Diggs.
Diggs had 849 yards and eight touchdowns last season and earned himself a five-year, $72 million extension thanks to his speed.
“His explosion when he is next to a defender, it’s uncommon,” Vikings receivers coach Darrell Hazell said. “His ability to create separation in a 3-yard box is what makes him really special. When he gets on the hip of a guy, the distance that he creates in a split second is what makes him very unique.”
The memory of Diggs racing down the sidelines to beat the Saints and help the Vikings advance to the NFC championship is a memory forever etched in the mind of Minnesota sports fans.
Just before reaching the end zone on that play, Diggs reached a maximum speed of 18.6 miles per hour, according to the data company Sportradar. That kind of speed, however, was rare for Diggs in the latter quarter of the season.
http://www.startribune.com/vikings-recei...491812421/