Who the hell will they draft 2008: Kent State CB Jack Williams
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But basketball is not what we are here for. We're here for football, and the NFL Draft is two-and-a-half weeks away! OMG! I Can't wait to smell the sweet hair grease oozing from Mel Kiper's head. BTW, be sure to sign-up for the21eraser's NFL Mock Draft Contest. As we gear up for the draft, we'll continue doing profiles of players we think the Colts will pick. Today, we focus on Kent State CB Jack Williams.
I've included Jack Williams on a the last few mock drafts I've done, and people are starting to ask Who the hell is this guy? and Why the hell would the Colts draft ANOTHER cornerback? Well, to answer the second question, the conclusion I came to years ago is Bill Polian does not feel right about the draft unless he takes at least one CB or S for no damned reason whatsoever. For years, we've seen guys like Donald Strickland, Cory Bird, Indress Bashir, and Joseph Jefferson get drafted (usually in the third round) only to get cut a few years later. Last year, many scratched their heads at picking a safety (Brandon Condren) in round five when areas like DT were still a big concern. However, per usual, Polian made fools of us all. He signed a free agent rookie (Ed Johnson) and drafted Keyunta Dawson in the seventh round.
Polian is god, folks. Polian is god.
As for Who is this guy?, I'll simply state that Jack Williams is the proto-typical Cover 2 corner, and he would fit in perfectly with what Dungy and Polian like to do in the secondary. For example, look at these measurements:
Height: 5'9, Weight: 178
I could be talking about Donald Strickland, Jason David, or Tim Jennings when I list those measurements, but I'm not. I'm talking about Jack Williams. As with all corners Polian looks at late in the draft, Williams is short. But, like with most other positions, height at CB is over-rated, especially if the corner is tough and can jump. Jack Williams can do both. He had a strong showing at the NFL Combine, displaying both strength and speed. Here's what NFL.com has to say about him (via The Sports Xchange):
13 career INTs. Wow! For comparison's sake, Thorpe Award winner Antoine Cason (a projected first round pick) has 15 college career INTs.
Before I go further, I'd like to direct you to skywalker's write-up of Jack Williams, which includes links and clips from KentStateSports.com. What skywalker's diary tells us is Williams has a ton of experience at CB. He's not some converted WR or a CB in college who could only play S in the pros. Williams has started since his sophomore year, and his production has remained consistent year after year. The other thing you learn from skywalker's diary is Jack Williams is ALWAYs around the football. He recorded 4 recovered fumbles, 4 pass break-ups, 4 INTs, and 3 sacks his senior year. Williams also played a lot of special teams at Kent State, earning him the team's award for Defensive Back of the Year and Special Teams Player of the Year. Williams' ability to play special teams would prove invaluable to him making the roster on a squad that, for the most part, has its secondary locked up. Marlin and Kelvin are the starters with Tim Jennings battling Dante Hughes, Keiwan Ratliff, and Michael Coe for nickel duty. I think Hughes will win the nickel job because he was really coming into his own before he got hurt last season.
Still, despite this heavy competition, Jack Williams could find his place on this roster, because when you look at his strengths, he is exactly the kind of dude you want smacking WRs on your defense:
His weaknesses? Well, to start, he grew up a Cowboys fan. This means that Jack was 10 years old the last time the Cowboys won a playoff game. Poor, poor Jack. I guess nobody's perfect. Jack's other weaknesses are his hips, which aren't very fluid when he turns to run. Again, he has the speed and quickness to run with many WRs, but if your hips don't turn quick when re-acting to a move, an NFL-caliber WR will eat you alive. More negatives, via NFL.com:
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Calipari
by DallyDrake on Apr 8, 2008 1:59 PM EDT 0 recs
Yes, they do
Recruiting can get you to the championship game. Coaching wins it. JMO.
by BigBlueShoe on
Apr 8, 2008 2:20 PM EDT
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Ok.
I've watched every Memphis game this year and I'm going to stick by my opinion instead of someone who has probably seen them play three or four times.
Calipari is a good coach that rubs people the wrong way... he's a better recruiter, yes, but why detract from his coaching because he can get guys to come to Memphis?
Sorry that the U of M doesn't do it the normal, boring Big Eleven way. We saw what happened when a good team from that conference ran in to that buzz saw.
The two teams produced an excellent title game and I just feel sad for Joey Dorsey because he had to watch the end from the bench due to a few ticky-tack fouls. Memphis will reload and be good again next year... plus they will have great leadership still with Anderson as a senior.
by DallyDrake on
Apr 8, 2008 8:32 PM EDT
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It's cool
by BigBlueShoe on
Apr 9, 2008 10:36 AM EDT
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Calipari is quite incompetent
by BlueVol03 on Apr 8, 2008 3:36 PM EDT 0 recs
I still can't believe
Do you guys feel we'll take Kevin Love in this draft? He can be something.
by MerryGoByeBye on Apr 8, 2008 3:48 PM EDT 0 recs
My bad
by MerryGoByeBye on
Apr 8, 2008 3:49 PM EDT
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Disagree
Dally Drake is painfully right. Manning was and is wrongfully labeled by the same stupidity in his illustrious carreer. "Only rings matter." I don't buy it. Kudos to Memphis and their fine coach.
by coltsfanawalt on Apr 8, 2008 10:08 PM EDT 0 recs
Follow-up
by coltsfanawalt on
Apr 8, 2008 10:12 PM EDT
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The only thing I can say against Calipari
Other than that, he's great. I watched Memphis playing a bit through the season and mostly it was quite great.
by MerryGoByeBye on
Apr 9, 2008 10:55 AM EDT
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In the words of Uncle Rico,
by coltsfanawalt on
Apr 10, 2008 1:34 AM EDT
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