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Draft Rumors Thread
#51
(Yesterday, 08:40 AM)Montana Tom Wrote: My bad.

Shedeur Sanders is known for his flashy car collection, which includes a Tesla Cybertruck, a Rolls-Royce, and potentially a Mercedes-Benz. He was the first person in Colorado to own a Tesla Cybertruck. Additionally, he has been seen in a Rolls-Royce and was reportedly in Las Vegas shopping for a new luxury car.

For a kid still in college...that spells entitled.

Not to go too far down the rabbit hole, but NIL has made this a lot more commonplace now...

Carson Beck recently had his Lambo and Benz stolen down in Mia. 

[Image: 270k-lamborghini-urus-performante-fans-8...jpg?w=1880]
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#52
Doogie just said he's hearing LG for Minnesota if the board falls right. I'd be stoked.
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#53
(Yesterday, 09:41 AM)MaroonBells Wrote: Outside of maybe Ward, who would've been the 7th QB taken last year, none of these QBs are worthy of a 1st round pick IMO. I don't know why any team would burn a 1st rounder on a QB this year when they can just pick a real player at another position, send a day two pick to Atlanta for Cousins, be competitive for a couple years, and wait for a better class. 

There, my first and last comment on this crap QB class.

Forgot the BOOM...

Totally agree with your take.  Hearing whispers that some teams have Tyler Shough (26 and has one healthy season in college) as their #1 QB prospect in this class says it all.
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#54
(Yesterday, 09:41 AM)MaroonBells Wrote: Outside of maybe Ward, who would've been the 7th QB taken last year, none of these QBs are worthy of a 1st round pick IMO. I don't know why any team would burn a 1st rounder on a QB this year when they can just pick a real player at another position, send a day two pick to Atlanta for Cousins, be competitive for a couple years, and wait for a better class. 

There, my first and last comment on this crap QB class.

(Yesterday, 10:04 AM)MAD GAINZ Wrote: Forgot the BOOM...

Totally agree with your take.  Hearing whispers that some teams have Tyler Shough (26 and has one healthy season in college) as their #1 QB prospect in this class says it all.

I'm aligned too...

Shit year to be the Titans...They need to draft Carter or Hunter and not think twice about it.  I would love to know how their trade-down scenarios played out.
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#55
(Yesterday, 09:57 AM)StickierBuns Wrote: Doogie just said he's hearing LG for Minnesota if the board falls right. I'd be stoked.

I think Zabel goes early, so if they want a guard, it's either going to be Tyler Booker or Donovan Jackson. Booker has a lot of great intangibles, but seems an ill fit unless we're going to run more power. And we just might! One player that might be a big surprise is Aireontae Ersery. He's a left tackle, more of a high 2nd round value, and I haven't read anything about anyone wanting to move him to guard, but the Vikings brought him in for a top 30, and I doubt it was to hear more about Max Brosmer.
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#56
(Yesterday, 08:40 AM)Montana Tom Wrote: My bad.

Shedeur Sanders is known for his flashy car collection, which includes a Tesla Cybertruck, a Rolls-Royce, and potentially a Mercedes-Benz. He was the first person in Colorado to own a Tesla Cybertruck. Additionally, he has been seen in a Rolls-Royce and was reportedly in Las Vegas shopping for a new luxury car.

For a kid still in college...that spells entitled.

I am not sure how spending money he earned using his talent to purchase himself nice things is a sign of being entitled. Entitled would be expecting these things for nothing. Boulder is quite the affluent town, CU is a university were many affluent people nationwide send their kids to school.

If you spend time in town and on campus there is no shortage of students driving nice cars and wearing nice watches. The difference between Sanders and these students is they have no discernable talent that they used to purchase these things on there own.

What's the difference between a college kid using NIL money to buy themselves things in school and a rookie doing the same thing after the draft? Sounds like you either have a Deion Sanders problem, NIL problem or both. That said I want no part of him.
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#57
(Yesterday, 10:11 AM)MaroonBells Wrote: I think Zabel goes early, so if they want a guard, it's either going to be Tyler Booker or Donovan Jackson. Booker has a lot of great intangibles, but seems an ill fit unless we're going to run more power. And we just might! One player that might be a big surprise is Aireontae Ersery. He's a left tackle, more of a high 2nd round value, and I haven't read anything about anyone wanting to move him to guard, but the Vikings brought him in for a top 30, and I doubt it was to hear more about Max Brosmer.

He's a BIG, BIG dude....

=============================
Takita Charles still remembers her son, Gophers tackle Aireontae Ersery, screaming at the family cookout.

“I’d heard this yell before when him and his sister were wrestling for the potato peeler,” Charles said. “She snatched it and kind of snagged his finger. … He had the same yell. I was so nervous that I ran up to the house.”

This time, Ersery was wearing a big smile. Then 17 years old, he had played football for only two years at Ruskin High School in Kansas City, Mo. But the Gophers came calling with an offer — Ersery’s first from a major program — and wanted him to visit campus to get him to commit.

“He stood up, ‘Minnesota just called me!’ ” Charles said. “He was so excited. I’ll never forget that day.”

Ersery quickly committed to the Gophers in June 2019, setting him on a path toward becoming one of the top college tackles in this weekend’s NFL draft. He has since blossomed into a 6-6, 331-pound wrecking ball capable of holding off Penn State’s Abdul Carter, a coveted pass rusher who is expected to be taken within the top five picks Thursday night.

That’s a far cry from the roughly 220-pound high school freshman who once sat inside Ruskin’s weight room with no intention of playing football.

“I came a long ways,” Ersery said. “I’m not the same guy when I first walked in here.”

Ersery could hear his name called Thursday night, too, or early in Friday’s second round. He’s widely expected to be the first Gophers draft pick this year, following the likes of safety Antoine Winfield Jr., center John Michael Schmitz and safety Tyler Nubin, all second-round picks.

“We’ve had five straight years with a first- or second-round pick in the program,” Gophers coach P.J. Fleck said. “There’s going to be another one this year.”

‘He’s a basketball guy’

Ersery, the oldest of Charles’ five children, liked a different sport before his uncle, Bill Dudley, convinced him to tag along to football practice one day. Ersery sat in the weight room waiting for Dudley, who is a year older than his nephew. That’s when William Perkins, former head coach at Ruskin, first approached Ersery.

“That’s always been one of our rules,” Perkins said, “you can’t sit down in the weight room. … We had a conversation, ‘Well, why aren’t you playing football?’ He says he’s not really a football player. He’s a basketball guy.”

Perkins invited Ersery to join the team’s after-school weightlifting program.

“From there,” Perkins said, “he continued to come.”

By the following year, as a sophomore, Ersery was a starting offensive tackle and defensive end. By the time he was a junior, Ersery was ascending into a college prospect while making the state tournament in wrestling as a heavyweight and placing fourth in shot put at the state track and field meet; the wrestling and throwing coaches were on the football staff.

Ersery’s competitiveness comes out everywhere from the arcade to the weight room.

“He’s got a video where as a big kid he’s jumping on top of these stacked plyo boxes,” Perkins said, “to prove to some of the receivers that he was more explosive than they were. He’d compete with those guys.”

Ersery committed himself to the weight room entering his junior year, after which Gophers coaches put him through drills at a satellite camp at Lindenwood University in suburban St. Louis. The Gophers were among at least “12 to 15” programs that called Perkins afterward wanting to know more about Ersery upon seeing him in person.

“I still remember that day. It was so hot,” Ersery said. “They barely let us tap the water. But Minnesota stuck out to me because they were the only school talking about development. Not just on the field, but also off the field.”

‘My time had come’

Blaise Andries, who started 46 games for the Gophers offensive line from 2018 through 2021, remembers a humble, quiet Ersery arriving as a three-star recruit in 2020. But there was already something obvious to everyone when Ersery practiced.

“Everyone kind of knew he was going to be very good,” Andries said. “The only other time I had that impression was when [former Gophers and now Baltimore Ravens guard Daniel] Faalele came. … Aireontae shows up and he’s 25 to 30 pounds heavier than everyone and he’s also more athletic. You see those guys and you hope they have the attitude and effort to back it up, and he did.”

Ersery faced early trials, getting thrown into action in the sixth game of the season as a true freshman when 33 of his teammates were ruled out, many because of COVID-19. The following year, Ersery redshirted; he said he suffered a leg injury. 

At Gophers pro day in March, Ersery credited Minnesota’s 2021 veteran line that included Andries, Faalele, Sam Schlueter and Conner Olson for pushing and encouraging him.

“I remember Sam telling me after the [2021 season], ‘Man, good luck to you. I know you’re going to have a hell of a career. I’ll be watching,’ ” Ersery recalled. “Once he said that, I felt good inside. I knew my time had come.”

From there, Ersery started 38 consecutive games at left tackle for the Gophers. In December, he was named Big Ten Offensive Lineman of the Year for a season that included a game in which he allowed only one quarterback pressure by Penn State and Carter.

“He can do it all,” linebacker Cody Lindenberg said. “He can pass block, run block, good on his feet, agile. … He can do it all on the field, but when you get to meet him off the field, he’s a great human.”

Ersery’s athleticism even tempted Fleck to try a trick play from Penn State’s 8-yard line while trailing 26-22 with about six minutes left. Carter covered Ersery, who went out for a pass in the flat, but Gophers quarterback Max Brosmer threw incomplete. The Nittany Lions won 26-25.

“We’ve had that in forever, and I don’t think we ever ran it,” Andries said. “Sometimes they throw us a bone, right?”

‘Mass of humanity’
Ersery is among the largest blockers in this draft class at 6-6 and 331 pounds. Yet he moves like a smaller player. His 40-yard dash, completed in 5.01 seconds and topping out at 19.76 miles per hour, ranked fourth among offensive tackles at the combine.

“Man,” Ersery said, “I was getting videos sent to me like, ‘That’s a very big guy moving at that speed!’ ”

If NFL teams like Ersery as much as draft analysts, he should be in good shape.

Ersery met with many teams throughout his trips to the Senior Bowl and the combine. At least three teams — the Patriots, Panthers and Saints — reportedly hosted Ersery among their allotted 30 predraft visitors. The Vikings hosted Ersery among many local visits that are not capped by the NFL.

His official NFL.com draft profile describes Ersery as a “mass of humanity with a broad chest and long arms.” Todd McShay, a former ESPN analyst, said Ersery has a ceiling matched only by Ohio State’s Josh Simmons and Missouri’s Armand Membou in this class of offensive tackles.

“The best three players on tape if I’m just doing the traits and what they can potentially be,” McShay said on his podcast, “The McShay Show.” “Big guys that move like [Ersery] don’t fail — very rarely.”

Ersery will spend draft weekend in Kansas City with family, ready to react to whatever is thrown his way.

“Life is full of ups and downs,” Ersery said. “I’m happy right now, but I’m pretty sure I’ll run into a brick wall again. Then you just got to respond.”

Startribune
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#58
Go get him:

ikingzFanPage
@vikingzfanpage
·
39s
According to
@DWolfsonKSTP
, JJ McCarthy has been “pounding the table” for the #Vikings to draft Alabama G Tyler Booker. Both players played together at IMG academy.
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#59
(Yesterday, 11:53 AM)purplefaithful Wrote: “Big guys that move like [Ersery] don’t fail — very rarely.”

Someone once said "I want big guys who move like little guys." Hard to put it better than that. 

4. AIREONTAE ERSERY, Minnesota (6-6, 331, 5.06, 1-2): Started his final 38 games at left tackle before opting out of the Golden Gophers’ bowl game. “I was completely shocked by this guy,” said one scout. “He’s gigantic but he can play. He’s a little high-hipped and stiff-hipped but he’s got feet and excellent balance. He’s really smart … the technique’s there. Uses his hands excellent. Run game, he’s so damn big and he can position and really just move it. In pass pro he knows he’s big and uses his length perfectly. I compared him to Orlando Brown, another big guy, but this guy is better. He’s a better athlete. There will be a lot of talk about putting him at right (tackle) but I’d put him at left.” Didn’t start playing football until his junior year in high school. “Big, long, athletic,” said a second scout. “Fluid in space. Liked him better in run than pass. He can improve in the pass game just working on his technique and consistency and not giving up the edge a little bit.” Started his only game played in 2020, redshirted in 2021 and started at left tackle for three years. “Had a good week at the Senior Bowl,” a third scout said. “Excellent knee bend and foot quickness in his pass set. Good extension to get his hands inside and control. Had a really good game against Iowa. Showed ability to anchor with power and can move defenders in the run game. He can get a little lackadaisical at times with his techniques, steps and pad level. He didn’t have a ton of high-school experience and didn’t play at a really good high-school program. He came in there kind of raw and had to learn. He’s a better athlete than (Daniel) Faalele. This kid’s going to be a starting left tackle.” Arms were 33 1/8, hands were just 9 ½. “We were concerned about laziness, lack of discipline and for the process,” said a fourth scout. “That’s bad, especially for an offensive lineman. But he’s an easy mover, light on his feet, pretty good space player for a big guy. You question his awareness a little bit. He’s head and shoulders above Banks and (Josh) Conerly on pure talent.” From Kansas City. “I wouldn’t say he’s had a checkered past but he’s had some little character things,” one scout said. “I believe in him. I’ll say this. I don’t think the character things will hurt his draft spot.” Added a fifth scout: “He’s very stiff. If he’s in the first (round) he’ll be the 30th pick as a right tackle.”
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#60
Thank God we got JJM last year and don’t have to deal with the potential landmine.

Johnny Football was the last sure fire bust this big. To bad no one in our division has a shot at him.
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