A close up of 3 Small School Prospects-By Matt Elder-Special Contributor-Football Reporters Online
Matt takes a closer look at three prospects for this draft from smaller schools.
Every year scouts from all over the country fly into places like Columbus, South Bend, and Athens. They come looking for the next big thing, the next sure fire prospect, and the guy who’s going to take their team to that next level. However every year players emerge that are not from places like Madison, Tuscaloosa, or Eugene instead these players come from places like Hampton, Charleston, and Hillsdale. Every year players come from the lower levels of college football and leave draft fans asking “Who?” on draft weekend. This article is going to over three players who are looking to be the next small school prospect to leave their mark on the NFL. We’ll look at one prospect who will get drafted, one who should get drafted, and one who deserves to get drafted.
Who Will Get His Shot...
DT Kendrick Ellis-
A dancing bear out on the field, Ellis's combination of size and athleticism is frankly frightening to opposing offenses. Coming from a very tradition rich Hampton program, Ellis has seen his stock sky rocket since his year ended in November. Ellis has a terrific first step as he explodes across the line of scrimmage and often catches the opposing offensive lineman off guard and gets the immediate advantage. He plays with very good leverage, and knows how to get low and explode out of his stance. He is incredibly strong coming out of his stance often being able to overpower players at the point of attack. I would like to see Ellis work hard on the fundamentals. He needs to stay low throughout the play, Ellis has a tendency to get high after initial contact and this can cause him to lose leverage battles. It has gone unnoticed by many due to his level of competition, because of how strong Ellis is he has been able to blow through most of the interior lineman he faced regardless of his technique, so he has never had a need to perfect that. There are questions about Ellis's character and work ethic after his dismissal from South Carolina. Ellis was initially suspended for part of 2008 for an undisclosed violation of team rules over the summer, and right before SEC media day Ellis was dismissed from the team for yet another violation. What caused the violation has never been disclosed but one has to assume that this has to be more than simply missing a curfew or being late to a team meeting. That being said seeing how far Ellis has risen on most boards is a sign that he must be answering questions surrounding his dismissal the right way and convincing people that he is worth the risk that comes along with taking players with character concerns.
Combine Results:
6'4, 346 lbs., 35” Arms, 10.5” Hands, 5.28 40, 26 Bench Press Reps (225 lbs.)
Stats:
2010-94 Tackles, 15 TFL's, 2 Sacks, 2 FF, and 5 QB Hurries
2009-51 Tackles, 15 TFL's, 1.5 Sacks, 1 FF, and 2 QB Hurries
Who Should Get His Shot...
CB Cortez Allen
The Citadel is known as a military college with a renowned Corps of Cadets program. Not much is made of or even thought of about their football team...until this year. This year everybody is buzzing about the tall and athletic CB in Cortez Allen. He is the type of prospect that scouts drool over and that can drive a coach to pull their hair out. The issue with Allen has always been his inconsistent technique and playmaking ability. He seems to lack the instincts you want in a lock down CB despite his measurables. His 5 career INT's over 41 games played give people plenty to wonder about. However keep in mind that Allen was unquestionably the top player at Citadel and was purposely avoided by some teams in an effort to minimize his impact on the game. However when he was thrown at he didn’t always show the skills needed to go after the ball and make a play on it. This is concerning because when watching him on tape you fall in love with everything he does prior to the pass getting there. He has the speed to stay with almost all of the WR's he will be matched up against, he showed the hip fluidity to transition from his backpedal to his sprint with little loss of momentum, and he did a great job of understanding his zone coverage responsibilities. The questions surrounding Allen are all about can you get him to take that next step in his development and go from good cover corner to a true lock down man to man cover corner? If he can do that, somebody is going to have a late round steal on their hands in a relatively weak DB class.
Combine Results:
6'1, 197 lbs, 32” Arms, 8.5” Hands, 4.51 40, 4.01 Shuttle, 6.76 3 Cone, 35” Vertical, 10'09” Broad
Stats:
2010-22 Tackles, 1 TFL, 2 INT's, 5 PBU's, 1 TD
2009-57 Tackles, 3 INT's, 5 PBU's, 1 TD
Who Deserves His Shot...
WR Andre Holmes-Hillsdale
Never heard of him? Doesn’t worry neither have many other people who are just now reading his name for the first time. Let me tell you why you'll want to know his name as we draw closer to the 2011 NFL Draft. Holmes hails from DII Hillsdale College which plays in the powerful GLIAC conference which is one of the stronger football conferences in DII. He has put up back to back 1,000 yard receiving seasons and really became a more consistent big play receiver in 2010. The 6'4 WR has made a habit of towering over most CB's and that was also the case at this year's NFLPA Texas v. The Nation game where he showed off good body control, and a willingness to fight through tackles and pick up extra YAC yards. The athleticism that Holmes showed off during the NFLPA game is reinforced by the fact that he was the 2010 Triple Jump Champion from the GLIAC conference. Holmes had questions remaining about his overall speed and ability to possibly separate at the next level as he headed to Indianapolis for this year’s combine. At the combine he proceeded to answer those questions laying down an impressive 4.53 40 yard dash to go along with an even more impressive 6.69 3 cone drill which shows off his quickness and ability to change directions. Moving up a level Holmes needs to show more explosiveness off the line. He's going to face more consistent and effective jams in the NFL in an effort to neutralize his down the field size advantage. He needs to show more urgency in trying to get into his routes and must learn to fire off the line to try and beat the jam. Should be an effective red zone weapon early on in his career but I think he has Marques Colston type potential as a big WR who if he learns to be just a little more physical could become dominant in time.
Combine Results:
6'4, 210lbs., 34” Arms, 8.5” Hands, 4.53 40, 4.31 Shuttle, 6.69 3 Cone 35” Vertical, 10'10” Broad
Stats:
2010-104 Receptions, 1,368 Yards, 11 TD's
2009-77 Receptions, 1,076 Yards, 6 TD's
*this piece is even more timely now thta Mr. Ellis is a member of the NY Jets-The Eds*
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Showing posts with label Small School Prospects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Small School Prospects. Show all posts
Saturday, April 30, 2011
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2011 NFL Draft –A closer look at 3 small school prospects
Labels:
2011 NFL Draft,
Small School Prospects
Monday, April 25, 2011
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Big Talent From the Small Schools
(the 11th Installment of the "Pro Draft Report" presented by Football Reporters)
Big Talent from the Small Schools
By Jay Horn-Special Contributor-Football Reporters Online
The 2011 Draft is jam-packed with talented players from non-FBS schools. 56 players from ‘small schools’ (Divisions 1-AA, 2, 3, and NAIA) where invited to this year’s NFL Combine. The conventional wisdom is shifting from the day when scouts only looked at a couple standouts from these lower-tier divisions. Recently, a number of impact players have come from “less” than the Division-1 farm system.
In 2008, Brandon Carr from perennial D-II power Grand Valley State broke in as a starting cornerback for the KC Chiefs after being taken in the 5th round, in 2009 RB Bernard Scott was a 6th round pick from Abilene Christian who dazzled the NFL in his rookie season with big kick-off returns and steady production in the backfield for the Cincinnati Bengals. Also that year, WR Johnny Knox, Scott’s teammate at ACU, has been extremely productive since entering the League as a 5th round pick with the Bears. Another ACU product, OT J’Marcus Webb, was taken in the 7th round and has earned a starting role with the Bears as well.
Last year, some of the NFL’s most exciting rookies came from ‘small schools.’ D-2 Tiffin Dragons RB Chris Ivory (who played only four games as a senior after suffering a broken leg) became a starter for the defending World Champion New Orleans Saints. GLIAC standout offensive tackle Jered Veldheer from Hillsdale, was taken in the 3rd round by the Raiders and was a fixture on the o-line starting at both center and tackle. Perhaps one of the best ‘feel good stories’ of this year was the success of former Chadron State and Harlon Hill winner RB Danny Woodhead. Originally drafted by the Jets and signed in 2008, Woodhead was cut, re-signed to the practice squad, then cut again and signed by the Patriots in 2010. He became one of the Patriots most productive offensive players, finishing the season with a career high 547 rushing yards on just 97 carries (5.64 per carry) and a TD. He also had 379 yards receiving on 34 catches with 5 TDs. His yards per rush was a Patriots team record and fourth in the NFL.
Who be this year’s Ivory, Veldheer or Woodhead? Here is a sampling of a few of the possibilities in the 2011 Draft:
OFFENSIVE PLAYERS:
OT Ben Ijalana – Villanova 6’ 3.6” 319 – 5.30 – 2nd-3rd round
WR Edmund Gates – ACU 5’ 11.5” 189 – 4.37 – 3rd - 5th round
RB Taiwan Jones – Eastern Washington - 5’ 11.4” – 4.40 – 3rd – 5th round
OG – Will Rackley – Lehigh - 6’ 3.3” 307 – 5.20 – 3rd - 5th round
C – Brandon Fusco – Slippery Rock – 6’ 4.1” 302 – 5.25 – 4th – 6th round
TE – Schuyler Oordt – Northern Iowa – 6’ 6.0” 261 – 5th – 7th Round
OT – David Mims – Virginia Union – 6’ 8.2 335 – 5.58 – 5th – 7th round
QB – Pat Devlin – Delaware – 6’ 3.3” 226 – 4.82 – 6th – 7th round
DEFENSIVE PLAYERS:
DT Kendrick Ellis – Hampton 6’ 5.0” 336 – 5.05 – 4th – 6th round
CB Korey Lindsey-Woods – Southern Illinois – 5’ 10.1 181 – 4.45 – 5th – 7th round
CB Buster Skrine – Chattanooga – 5’ 9.5 186 – 4.37 – 5th – 7th round
CB Ryan Jones – Northwest Missouri State – 5’ 11.0 197 – 4.42 – 4th – 6th round
DT Cedric Thornton – Southern Arkansas 6’ 3.5” 299 – 5.91 – 7th round - UDFA
Big Talent from the Small Schools
By Jay Horn-Special Contributor-Football Reporters Online
The 2011 Draft is jam-packed with talented players from non-FBS schools. 56 players from ‘small schools’ (Divisions 1-AA, 2, 3, and NAIA) where invited to this year’s NFL Combine. The conventional wisdom is shifting from the day when scouts only looked at a couple standouts from these lower-tier divisions. Recently, a number of impact players have come from “less” than the Division-1 farm system.
In 2008, Brandon Carr from perennial D-II power Grand Valley State broke in as a starting cornerback for the KC Chiefs after being taken in the 5th round, in 2009 RB Bernard Scott was a 6th round pick from Abilene Christian who dazzled the NFL in his rookie season with big kick-off returns and steady production in the backfield for the Cincinnati Bengals. Also that year, WR Johnny Knox, Scott’s teammate at ACU, has been extremely productive since entering the League as a 5th round pick with the Bears. Another ACU product, OT J’Marcus Webb, was taken in the 7th round and has earned a starting role with the Bears as well.
Last year, some of the NFL’s most exciting rookies came from ‘small schools.’ D-2 Tiffin Dragons RB Chris Ivory (who played only four games as a senior after suffering a broken leg) became a starter for the defending World Champion New Orleans Saints. GLIAC standout offensive tackle Jered Veldheer from Hillsdale, was taken in the 3rd round by the Raiders and was a fixture on the o-line starting at both center and tackle. Perhaps one of the best ‘feel good stories’ of this year was the success of former Chadron State and Harlon Hill winner RB Danny Woodhead. Originally drafted by the Jets and signed in 2008, Woodhead was cut, re-signed to the practice squad, then cut again and signed by the Patriots in 2010. He became one of the Patriots most productive offensive players, finishing the season with a career high 547 rushing yards on just 97 carries (5.64 per carry) and a TD. He also had 379 yards receiving on 34 catches with 5 TDs. His yards per rush was a Patriots team record and fourth in the NFL.
Who be this year’s Ivory, Veldheer or Woodhead? Here is a sampling of a few of the possibilities in the 2011 Draft:
OFFENSIVE PLAYERS:
OT Ben Ijalana – Villanova 6’ 3.6” 319 – 5.30 – 2nd-3rd round
WR Edmund Gates – ACU 5’ 11.5” 189 – 4.37 – 3rd - 5th round
RB Taiwan Jones – Eastern Washington - 5’ 11.4” – 4.40 – 3rd – 5th round
OG – Will Rackley – Lehigh - 6’ 3.3” 307 – 5.20 – 3rd - 5th round
C – Brandon Fusco – Slippery Rock – 6’ 4.1” 302 – 5.25 – 4th – 6th round
TE – Schuyler Oordt – Northern Iowa – 6’ 6.0” 261 – 5th – 7th Round
OT – David Mims – Virginia Union – 6’ 8.2 335 – 5.58 – 5th – 7th round
QB – Pat Devlin – Delaware – 6’ 3.3” 226 – 4.82 – 6th – 7th round
DEFENSIVE PLAYERS:
DT Kendrick Ellis – Hampton 6’ 5.0” 336 – 5.05 – 4th – 6th round
CB Korey Lindsey-Woods – Southern Illinois – 5’ 10.1 181 – 4.45 – 5th – 7th round
CB Buster Skrine – Chattanooga – 5’ 9.5 186 – 4.37 – 5th – 7th round
CB Ryan Jones – Northwest Missouri State – 5’ 11.0 197 – 4.42 – 4th – 6th round
DT Cedric Thornton – Southern Arkansas 6’ 3.5” 299 – 5.91 – 7th round - UDFA
Labels:
2011 NFL Draft,
Small School Prospects
Saturday, October 24, 2009
0
Small School Prospects For 2010 In the Tri-State Area Turning Heads Everywhere

Small School Prospects For 2010 In the Tri-State Area Turning Heads Across The Nation- By Dr. Bill Chachkes-Football Reporters Online (photo: Fordham QB John Skelton throws to a receiver in the flat while being rushed by a Columbia defensive lineman in the 2009 liberty cup game on sept. 20th-By A.F. Chachkes for FRO
Most people do not look at the NYC area as a breeding ground for NFL level talent, but if you look hard enough, you can find players will do more then just make a roster at the next level. The very first player you notice when you talk about NYC area players is Fordham University’s talented Quarterback John Skelton.
While Fordham had some difficulty early on this season coming off a down 2008 after the Patriot league title in 2007, they seem to have righted the ship on the throwing arm of the talented 6”6” Skelton and his 6”5” younger brother Stephen, who is the teams’ tight end. Skelton also has the talented Asa Lucas at wide receiver, and Xavier Martin at tailback. Skelton Is lighting up the competition, with consistant performances of well over 300 yards every game (last week he threw 20-27-420 yards and five touchdowns against Cornell in a 39-27 win. Four of the scores were on passing plays of 50 or more yards). Skelton has been proclaimed by some, as a “Top Ten” quarterback. While he has a high level of skill, he most likely will be a day two selection in the 2010 NFL Draft. Still, he manages to turn heads every time he steps on the football field. Fordham plays Lafayette this weekend who are always a strong team.
Moving over to upper Manhattan, Columbia University has put a team on the field that some are calling the best in many years at the school. One player who is gaining recognition outside of the Ivy League is wide receiver/return specialist Austin Knowlin. While he has gathered accolades within the Ivy before, Knowlin is now perceived as a legitimate candidate to play at the next level. He needs only 135 years coming into this weekend (10-24) to set the all time receiving yardage record in Lions history. Five others at Columbia who are gaining some notice are running back Ray Rangel, quarterback M.A. Olawale, OL’s John Siler, and Evan Sanford, linebacker Cory Cameron and strong safety Andy Shalbrach. Columbia Travels to New Hampshire this week to play Dartmouth in an important road meeting.
Moving over to the Long Island teams, Hofstra once again has a few players who could easily get the chance to play on Sunday next season. One is Senior quarterback Cory Chirstoper, who at almost 6’2” and 251 pounds can remind you of Daunte Culpepper with his athletic style. One of his bodyguards on the offensive line is Mike Trice who weighs close to 360 pounds, and can play both guard and tackle. Although Trice has been part of an offensive line rotation and not a starter in the true sense, we have seen enough of him to know he is a prospect. Also Jimmy Mangiero and David Spinach deserve mention here. The Defense has two stellar defensive backs in Leslie Jackman and Ray McDonough. Hofstra already has an upset win over James Madison, and a road win against Rhode Island, they need to move their overall record to 5-3 and get a critical CAA win at home.
Finally out at Stonybrook, coach Chuck Priore has a few prospects on his squad of gridders as well. Defensive backs Cory Giddings and Chris Richards have continually made it difficult for opposing wide receivers to do their jobs this season. Defensive lineman Chris Perri has also been noticed this season for his work upfront, as has linebacker Tyler Santucci in the middle. On the offense three seniors who have interested us are wide receiver Stephan Towns, lineman Chris Pugliese, and running back Conte Cuttino. With a 3-4 record and a big game this week against Costal Carolina that will be shown on television you can expect this group to be playing all out.
You can also expect to hear more about at least some of these players in the future.