SHOULD CLARETT GO TO THE NFL???

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May 16, 2002
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#1
I think that boi will do fine in the nfl. They'll put him on a program that will him yolked up and he'll be runnin through foolz!
 
May 10, 2002
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#3
it wont be easy by a long shot.....but if he stays committed and works hard and ends up in the right situation, he has the talent to be the best back out of this draft class.....
 
May 6, 2002
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#6
I'm not going to hate on ole boy.. but that is going to mess up the way the darft is.. I think the quality of players are not going to be as good if they start to recruit out of high school..fools in the NLF, dont hit like teenagers..feel me
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#8
you dont get what I am sayin Wino.............with Clarrett comin in, that is gonna open the door for younger an younger players to be elible.........if it gets like basketball where they come straight outta highschool they will lose alot like say........free college education.....an football is like no other major sport, your risk of injury is VERY high.....so your gonna have some young kid, say he played one year......he spends all his money on his new escalade an house an house for his mom.......he blows his knee out...........he is fucked


an splitpersons called that shit on the nose...............you aint gonna see ANYONE like Ray Lewis in high school or college........they have no idea what they are in for
 
May 10, 2002
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#9
this might open the door for younger players to come out of COLLEGE earlier, but i dont think there is any way a high school kid would be stupid enough to declare for the draft......and more so, i dont think a NFL team would be stupid enough to draft the stupid high schooler who thinks he can go straight to the NFL.....Not unless his name is Bo Jackson or Hercshel Walker....

Now clarret is i believe 20 years old at the moment, (same age as Fitzgerald i believe?) he did play one year in one of the toughest confrences in college, and at times showed he can take over a football game....now that doesnt mean he can do the same in the NFL, but the upside to this kid is very high....
 
May 4, 2002
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#10
The only kinds of younger players you would see coming out early are speedy WRs and DBs. Every other position is not suited physically for the NFL game. They were talking on ESPN about one DE in the pros now. He weighed 240 lbs. as a red shirt freshman. 4 years later as a pro he weighs 283 lbs. Those college years are your growing years, when you put on the weight and muscle, and build your body for the rigors of the NFL schedule. Remember, the NFL season is twice as long as the college season. Clarrett couldn't stay healthy during his one season in college.
 

askG

Sicc OG
Nov 19, 2002
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#12
im sick of hearing about clarett...i hope hes a bust in the nfl.

on a side note...what do you ppl think is going to happen w willis mcgahee?...he didnt win rookie of the year, he didnt get voted to the pro bowl...did he even play?...his agents gotta be one of the most full of shit big mouths in sports.
 
May 4, 2002
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#15
askG said:
his agents gotta be one of the most full of shit big mouths in sports.
Damn I hate Drew Rosenhaus.




The appropriately titled article here is called:

Drew Rosenhaus is a scumbag

Posted By: Jon <Send E-Mail>
Date: 4/29/2003 12:47 a.m.

How Drew Rosenhaus sold the NFL on Willis McGahee The big lie began whenever Drew Rosenhaus answered one of his four cell phones these past two months, selling Willis McGahee to reporters as some medical miracle, telling NFL teams which rival worked him out last and guaranteeing everyone his client was a set-in-stone No. 1 draft pick, something the agent didn't believe himself. That and this report from The Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel's David Hyde

Even at the road's end Saturday, everyone was played for a stooge. Rosenhaus sat in his waterside home beside McGahee, just seconds from going live on ESPN as they still sweated where the draft would land them.

Suddenly, McGahee's cell phone rang. The running back's face twisted upon seeing the incoming number.

"Yeah, it's me," Rosenhaus mumbled into his phone, looking straight ahead into the TV camera with a pasted-on smile. "Pretend I'm an NFL team calling you. Look happy."

McGahee kept the phone to his ear.

"Maybe we can get some team that's watching to think we're talking to other teams," Rosenhaus said as ESPN displayed them on the screen.

It was all so staged you didn't know whether to scoff or laugh, hiss or applaud, call Rosenhaus a slimeball or a super agent. And this is how it was since February. It's how he manipulated the McGahee market to the point that when Buffalo made McGahee a first-round millionaire and the story of the draft, there were actually two stories.

First, there was the story everyone knew, the one that began with the University of Miami star blowing out his knee in the national championship game against Ohio State. Who didn't feel for him? And pity his lost draft status from top-three pick to projected fourth-rounder? And who wasn't impressed by his hard work after surgery or enjoy his cry for joy after Buffalo took him?

"Go ahead, let it out," his mother said, wiping a tear as it rolled down his cheek.

"Oh, man, oh, man," he said as the tears fell.

Then there was the story no one saw. The story of the big lie. It was the one where he created an image of desire out of thin air. He began by working the media like putty, playing off a writer's or camera's natural willingness to trade access for a feel-good story. That and this report from The Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel's David Hyde

"Everybody bought into this idea he was making a miraculous recovery," Rosenhaus said after the draft. "The media made it easy -- made it so easy -- by repeating what I was saying about him being a first-round pick. Remember, I guaranteed in February he'd be the first running back taken [he was]."

How much of that was just hopeful hot air?

"A lot of it," he said.

Oh, there were serious doubts where it mattered. Let's note that. At the Indianapolis combine, for example, a few team doctors huddled together in a rare moment of note-comparing. "Why's all this being written about him walking without a limp and being way ahead of schedule?" one asked.

"His knee looks like you'd expect -- a train wreck," another said.

Still, the headlines sparked talk. And the talk created a fans' debate. And that environment allowed teams to consider McGahee not as a risk but a reward. And Rosenhaus kept fanning every exaggerated angle.

One example: It was true New England coach Bill Belichick came to Miami and personally worked out McGahee, as Rosenhaus phoned in and everyone reported from New England to, well, the Sun-Sentinel ("McGahee Fit Enough For Tryout With Pats" read the April 3 headline).

"What I didn't tell everyone was Belichick was down to work out six Miami players and Willis was just one of them," Rosenhaus said. "So the perception was Belichick was here just for McGahee. See how it worked?"

He did it again when New England and Washington had their trainer examine McGahee. And he called ESPN, which featured McGahee's recovery before the draft -- "A miraculous recovery," Chris Berman called it Saturday.

His physical therapist, Ed Garabedian, watched and said, "The knee's ahead of schedule. But he's got a lot of work ahead of him. It's a long-term deal, not short-term."

Meanwhile, Rosenhaus watched the ESPN debate with glee. "This is great, believe me," he said to McGahee's silent mother. "The fact they're talking about him and we're at the 19th pick is terrific. Someone's going to grab him."

He then coached McGahee on what to say on ESPN to encourage a team to pick him: "Say everything's going great, that whatever team picks you is going to get their money out of you."

Then he pulled the phone trick, calling McGahee just before going on the air. After which, his lieutenant and brother, Jason, said, "That probably got a couple teams nervous."

"May have," Drew said.

Did any of this sway Buffalo into grabbing McGahee with the 23rd pick, a position not even mentioned weeks ago? Buffalo never checked McGahee's knee beyond the two NFL-scheduled dates. Never had a personal workout. Never called his doctor, his physical therapist or Rosenhaus.

Maybe it was playing a silent game of its own. Or maybe in a stage full of stooges, it just became the final one.

"Maybe they saw Belichick's interest and grabbed Willis," Rosenhaus said. That and this report from The Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel's David Hyde

http://www.sportsbusinessnews.com/index.asp?story_id=25419
 
B

Blackjack 1577

Guest
#16
It really doesn't matter what anyone thinks, Clarett is heading to tha NFL regardless, but personally I don't think he's ready for it....