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Thursday, May 26, 2022
Where is Mac Jones Ranked?
Wednesday, May 25, 2022
Where do the Patriots rank?
OTAs are in New England
He also threw the ball with the kind of anticipation, confidence, and accuracy not always typical of a rookie, slipping in some tricky throws to covered receivers in drills."
More from Zack Cox who was one of a few to notice how some players were playing linebacker.
Cox wrote, "Linebacker Josh Uche, whom position coach Steve Belichick envisions “being a big part of this defense,” saw reps at edge and off-the-ball alignments. He’s a prime candidate to take on a larger workload following Kyle Van Noy’s offseason departure.
Uche and Deatrich Wise were New England’s first-choice edge rushers with Pro Bowler Judon absent, with Wise occasionally standing up and dropping into coverage. That’s a new wrinkle for Wise, who always has played as a hand-in-the-dirt defensive end."
James White looks like he might be a go come September as he's practicing and that could be huge for the Patriots offense. Jeff Howe had the following to say about White.
Howe wrote, "With White, who is bouncing back from season-ending hip surgery having previously noted that he still has a ways to go in his recovery, it's not surprising that he remains limited at this stage. That said, his presence for the team's OTAs, in any capacity, is a positive sign. In the absence of any setbacks this summer, While will look to reclaim his change-of-pace role in New England's backfield ahead of Week 1."
One last thing we saw how the Patriots were going to be using some of the coaches. As expected Bill worked with the offense, Judge worked with the quarterbacks, Patricia worked with the offensive line and surprisingly Fears watched on from the bleachers. The Patriots the media confuse people on occasion and this year seems no different.
Ray Rauth recently gave his opinion on the Patriots coaching staff. Rauth wrote, "I’m not surprised New England’s players aren’t happy. Greg Bedard was the first to report this and usually I don’t agree with anything Bedard has to say about the Patriots, but this time we’re on the same page. Both Judge and Patricia were failed head coaches, and though both had success as coordinators with New England (Patricia: Defensive Coordinator, and Judge: Special Teams Coordinator), I don’t have a lot of faith in either guy leading the Patriots offense..."
Overall thoughts: It's been seven or eight days with nothing to write. This is just OTAs so it might not mean anything but then again last year's OTAs didn't mean anything supposedly but they showed Mac being better than expexted. So take everything coming from this year's OTAs with a grain of salt. These practices might not mean anything or they could mean everything.
Thursday, May 19, 2022
If You're Still Bitching About Tyquan Thorton, You're Holding A Bias.
Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Steve Belichick Spoke To The Media Back To Back And There Were Nuggets Of Truth In The Ramblings Of The Patriots Way.
Saturday, May 14, 2022
Who Will Be The Patriots Most Impactful Rookie In 2022?
Thursday, May 12, 2022
Josh McDaniels Gets His Quarterback Out Of New England And Only Paid A Sixth For Him.
But I also know that our job is to try to go out there and win two football games that we have left. So that starts with Buffalo Monday night. Cam’s done a great job of preparing this week. Those choices are Bill’s. Whatever he chooses, that’s what we’re going to do, and I feel confident going in with the plan that we have right now.”
McDaniels threw Belichick under the bus. Belichick is a hard headed guy. And when Bill makes his mind up, there's no changing it. It's very possible that Bill decided that Stidham was not starting for him and to end Stidham's career before it started by not letting him start in 2020.
Overall thoughts:
Stidham is now Josh McDaniels problem. The last time McDaniels was a coach, he chased out starter Jay Cutler for Tim Tebow. The acquisition of Stidham could be nothing but getting a veteran backup. However, it could also be him preparing to make a move by putting pressure on Carr. Only time will tell. It may just turn out that Stidham was with the Patriots to appease Josh McDaniels. If so, it would answer a few questions and create some others.
Regardless of how Mac Jones turns out, if McDaniels makes a quarterback out of Stidham with the Raiders, people will be able to justify Bill getting in his own way. If not, people will be able to brag about how savvy Belichick was to get something for someone who was worth nothing.
Also i'm pretty sure Mac was taken over Justin Fields to appease Robert Kraft but that's another story.
The Patriots Could Find A Single Season Band-aid In Chris Harris.
Wednesday, May 11, 2022
Who Is Matt Sokol And What To Expect From Him.
Tuesday, May 10, 2022
Should The Patriots Trade Damien Harris?
Why Keene Should Be In Competition With White For A Roster Spot.
Should The Patriots Go After James Bradberry?
Monday, May 9, 2022
How Similar Are Olave And Thornton?
PROs: "Twitchy and long athlete with good height and excellent long speed. Above-average route-runner who knows how to use his speed. Has good body control and twitch to sink on breaking routes and stay friendly to the QB. Has long arms and flashes a wide catching range. A springy athlete who can make some plays in the red zone. Willing blocker who sustains on his blocks. Shows good awareness of his assignment on run plays."
CONs: "Skinny frame will make him susceptible to more physical corners. Small hands and has some issues with drops, especially when attempting to bring a throw down through contact. Can see that he doesn’t trust his hands. Can rise up as he’s breaking on routes, giving away indicators to smarter defenders."
Tice wrote the following about Olave.
PROs: "Good overall athlete who plays fast. Consistently gets off the ball quickly at the snap. Uses his snap anticipation to his advantage to get vertical on defenders at a faster speed than they are expecting. Very good route-runner. Uses his body control, core strength and balance to consistently win. Displays an advanced route tree and polish at all three levels. Asked to run more technique-driven routes in high-leverage situations like the red zone and third down and is consistently able to do so. Plays with tempo and understanding of route concepts. Has the feel to find soft spots in zone coverages. Knows how to stay friendly to the QB and uncover. Great on scramble drills due to his spatial awareness. Good, natural hands. Comfortable extending away from his body to maximize his size. Has the ability to align both inside and outside. Good with the ball in his hands. Gets north and can pull away from defenders."
CONs: "Lacks strength to consistently hold up in blocking. Limited snaps vs. press coverage. Flashes ability to win but will be considered a question mark due to size."
So what does Tice say they have in common? Speed, route running, red zone ability, body control, awareness, and undersized. It also looks like Tice spent more time on Olave than Thorton. This could be because of school or because of the concensus board.
Lance Zierlein said the following about the two receivers.
Tyquan Thornton
PROs: "Accomplished sprinting background. Good productivity in healthy 2019 and 2021 campaigns. Play speed sets up easy slants and hitch throws. Short-area foot quickness for a taller receiver. Tape is full of route separation. Poised and ready on 50/50 deep-sideline shots. Tougher than his frame might have you believe. Sticky hands with plus catch radius.Instinctive in space with feel for zone bodies. Above-average feel for footwork near boundaries."
CONs: "Bone thin and likely to stay that way. Strong press coverage could eliminate him for the game. Hands are extremely small for the position. Linear release gets redirected and slowed. The entire route tree will not be available to him. Slow to sink, break and change direction in his patterns. Needs to stack defenders when he gets them beat. Could struggle to hang on through contact."
Zierlein had the following to say about Olave.
PROs: "Buttery smooth mode of operation. Able to jab and juke press doors open. Top-end speed creates vertical opportunities. Glider with ability to route coverage up. Burst for separation on all three levels.Able to sit and settle quickly for hitch/curl. Alters weight and direction for balanced route turns. Effortless in the air and can create a highlight. Adjusts speed to ball flight.Ball skills feature plus focus and well-timed, sudden hands. Scrambles with his quarterback. Blocked two punts during career and has gunner talent."
CONs: "Scheme provided a lot of room for free play. Lack of desired play strength could become a concern. Room for more manipulation as a route salesman. Average hand strength to finish the catch. Inconsistent working back to the throw when needed. Failed to hold onto would-be touchdown catch in first quarter of loss to Michigan. Average in run-after-catch mode.Gets run through as run blocker."
So what does Zierlein say they have in common?
Speed, quickness, route running are things they both do well but their hands are not as good as would like in various areas. While they have similarities, Zierlein says they have different flaws.
What did CBS have to say about the two.
Tyquan Thornton
PROs: "Somewhat spindly legitimate downfield burner with adequate releases because of his quickness. His second gear is fast; his top gear is outstanding. Long-striding glider. Very natural. Was held back by QB play in his final season at Baylor. Love his natural hands. Plucks the ball away from his frame. Will track it beautifully over his shoulder. The deep speed is real and natural hands are very enticing as a sizable downfield option."
CONs: "Not a YAC or contested-catch type. More physical cornerbacks will get into his frame and impede him at the outset of his route, but he isn't incredibly skinny."
Chris Olave
PROs: "Great top-end speed. Great route runner who does not tip off his break at the stem. Quick feet at the snap, which allows him to create good leverage. Does a great job tracking the ball over his shoulder and has been very productive for the Buckeyes in the red zone."
CONs: "Thin-framed boundary receiver who needs to be more physical through his routes. Explosive testing was average to below average. Can do a better job of creating yards after the catch."
What does CBS say they have in common?
Speed and over the shoulder are the two traits they have in common. According to CBS, they're both undersized, need to get more physical and don't do enough to get yards after the catch.
Summary
After looking at just NFL.com, Bleacher Report, and CBS, I can say they have some similarities. After all, they're both wideouts, so there's bound to be some. Personal bias and how much time spent will determine their opinions of the two receivers. After looking at a large amount of reports from when I did my scouting reports on each, I will say they each have their own things that seperates one from the other. This is not to say that they cannot be equally as good or bad but to say that they are not the same player.