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Trying to salvage a career...
#1
Trying to salvage career, Vikings wideout Laquon Treadwell calls himself an 'underdog'The former first round pick has only 56 catches in 40 games and is being showcased for a trade

Laquon Treadwell knows exactly where his career stands with NFL cutdown day looming just 11 days away. And, yes, the Vikings receiver knows how odd it sounds, even after three disappointing seasons, for a 24-year-old former first-round pick to call himself an "underdog" surrounded by overachievers.
But, unfortunately for Treadwell and those who swung and missed on him with the 26th pick in 2016, even Treadwell could easily defend his early-career characterization with a descriptive self-analysis that explains why he's no longer overqualified to call himself an underdog.
"I can because over the last past few years I haven't played up to that potential," he said after Sunday's 25-19 preseason win over Seattle. "There are other guys who wasn't drafted and played better than me. So over time things change.
"Other guys probably had to prove themselves coming in. Now, it's time for me to prove myself, compete at a high level, stay locked in. Adversity is a little fun. I smile at adversity."
There have been few smiles as Treadwell has posted just 56 catches, 517 yards, one touchdown and 15 starts in 40 games as a Viking. And, chances are trending toward the next smile being one of wistful regret when this marriage finally ends with Treadwell being released or traded in a Troy Williamson-like fire sale over the next two weeks.
Considering the Vikings now have little use for him outside of third-string duties, Treadwell was asked Sunday night if he allows his mind to wander to what a fresh start with another team would feel like. To salvage as much of his career as possible without the smothering burden of every step being weighed against someone else's draft-day mistake.
"Of course, that comes across when you're struggling and you want to help a team so bad," Treadwell said. "But I try not to make that my reality because it's not. I try not to speak that into existence … because it's not reality.
"You got to embrace where you are at all times in your life. That's part of the reason I'm not on social media because it gives you false reality. I just try to stay in my present moment and go as hard as I can."
If the Vikings keep five receivers, Treadwell's reality is he has virtually no chance of making the team. Adam Thielen, Stefon Diggs and Chad Beebe are locked in as the top three while Brandon Zylstra and rookie seventh-round pick Olabisi Johnson are comfortably ahead of Treadwell at receiver and value on special teams.
If the Vikings keep their usual allotment of six receivers, Treadwell's main competition for the final spot is Jordan Taylor and Jeff Badet, not to mention the possibility of the Vikings signing another team's castoff, à la Aldrick Robinson early last season. Dillon Mitchell, another rookie seventh-round pick, is behind Treadwell at receiver but has value as a kick returner.
If the Vikings release Treadwell, they'll save $655,000 but carry $2.5 million in dead money. If they can somehow coax a trade, the entire cap hit goes away.
http://www.startribune.com/trying-to-sal...554656772/
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#2
It's a sad tale...I get no pleasure watching these kids flame-out, underperform. 
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#3
Or 75% of a career...
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#4
Quote: @"BarrNone55" said:
Or 75% of a career...
Thats generous. Your assuming someone plays him this year?
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#5
Treadwell needs to have a one-on-one sit down talk with Jerry Rice on how to be a premier wide receiver in the NFL.  The only knock on Rice coming out of college is that he wasn't very fast.  With sheer heart and determination, look how his career turned out.
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#6
Quote: @ArizonaViking said:
Treadwell needs to have a one-on-one sit down talk with Jerry Rice on how to be a premier wide receiver in the NFL.  The only knock on Rice coming out of college is that he wasn't very fast.  With sheer heart and determination, look how his career turned out.
Everything that's ever been written about Laquan is that he works really, really hard.  I just think he was over-valued (drafted due to need) and never became what they thought he would/could be.  I'm no college FB expert, but I watched the film on him before the draft... and he's pretty much what I thought he was: an underneath receiver who doesn't get good separation.
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#7
I knew he was no burner, but with his size and the possession skills he showed in college, I hoped he'd be a dominant red zone target.  Wrong!
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#8
When he is open, he only secures the catch 50% of the time. I think it's more of a not giving a crap attitude. 
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#9
I thought Cousins really gave him all the chances in the world last year.

Kirk of course isn't saying anything. The kid ran the wrong routes etc..It appears that Treadie really missed out on his best opportunity to make it with the Vikings then and there. 


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#10
Quote: @ArizonaViking said:
Treadwell needs to have a one-on-one sit down talk with Jerry Rice on how to be a premier wide receiver in the NFL.  The only knock on Rice coming out of college is that he wasn't very fast.  With sheer heart and determination, look how his career turned out.

True, to an extent - but Rice ran a 4.59 40 in 1985. At that time, only a few players ran under 4.50 and Rice's speed was "not great but above average". Rice was faster than most safeties playing during his career and there were still starting CBs that had roughly 4.6 speed.
Treadwell's best was 4.63 in 2016, when John Ross ran a 4.22. I doubt there is a CB in the NFL that didn't post 4.55 or less, many far faster, and a safety prospect with Treadwell's speed would be marginal. Many LBs and TEs are faster than Treadwell.
Speed isn't everything for a WR - look no further than John Ross. But I think there is a minimum needed in any era, and Treadwell doesn't meet the current minimum. I won't actually suggest the sacrilegious notion that Jerry Rice would not be a dominant player in today's NFL - but I will say that Treadwell would be a good NFL WR if you transported him back to the late 1980s.
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