One of the best WR prospects at the catch point and winning leverage mid-route. He consistently sets up defenders to put them on his back, locates the ball, and attacks it at the highest point.
Rashee Rice was drafted with pick 55 of round 2 in the 2023 draft class. He scored a 9.53 #RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 145 out of 3062 WR from 1987 to 2023. https://t.co/lwD9tvVPvvpic.twitter.com/YjucxErSE1
First of all, rashee was a great pick and we should have zero regrets taking him.
At the same time, we haven’t let rashee loose like puka and zay have been. some of that is because Reid hasn’t but should, but also because rashee is still more raw. They’re being asked to do more things and run a complete route tree, where rashee is doing less things exceptionally well. As of this minute we probably need a puka/zay outside and downfield threat more than we need rice who is more a slot catch and run option on a team that for some reason is overflowing with slot catch and run options. The best comparison is that rashee right now is a better version of Jayden reed who is himself having an exceptional season.
Long term once we get some even normal outside WR options… maybe I’m a homer but I absolutely love rashee over puka once we’re set. I think zays an excellent player but it’s not worth comparing because he was never in our range anyway [Reply]
Originally Posted by chiefzilla1501:
First of all, rashee was a great pick and we should have zero regrets taking him.
At the same time, we haven’t let rashee loose like puka and zay have been. some of that is because Reid hasn’t but should, but also because rashee is still more raw. They’re being asked to do more things and run a complete route tree, where rashee is doing less things exceptionally well. As of this minute we probably need a puka/zay outside and downfield threat more than we need rice who is more a slot catch and run option on a team that for some reason is overflowing with slot catch and run options. The best comparison is that rashee right now is a better version of Jayden reed who is himself having an exceptional season.
Long term once we get some even normal outside WR options… maybe I’m a homer but I absolutely love rashee over puka once we’re set. I think zays an excellent player but it’s not worth comparing because he was never in our range anyway
Best post in thread and a perfect understanding where things stand. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Monticore:
Kupp being out helped .
Whats intriguing about rashee is, like kupp, I could see him playing power slot. Rams can run 11-personnel because kupp blocks like a TE. I like Noah gray but as a pass weapon, it's better to have a natural receiver out there in his place. It allows you to have great passing personnel while also being a threat with run blocking. We can't run 11 personnel because it means putting 2 cardio guys in at WR. Hell, even in 12 packages we have to put WRs on the field who add no value to the passing game. this year has felt a lot like last year's rams. Kupp got abused with usage because he was the only guy reliable for Stafford to throw to by a country mile. kupp is a stud but he also kind of needs help. We saw last year what that looks like. He still cooked but the rams offense was bad and kupp was targeted so much it was almost abusive.
And so the Rams gave kupp help. They finally landed a RB. Puka is a physical WR while tutu atwell is the guy who stretches the defense. It turns out DeMarcus has been an wven better option than tutu which makes sense since he is actually a great guy to play off of other WRs (but he can't be the guy himself).
Maybe this is a blueprint for where we're going. and it probably fits what some were already thinking. Getting some kind of swiss army knife on the outside and a speed option and then let rashee really settle in to that power slot role. it's something to get excited about but rashee needs help for this to work [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
You let your fandom control any rational thought. I step back and think about how I can keep my amazing streak of being wrong on over 40,000 consecutive posts intact.
Originally Posted by O.city:
Rashee is an outside guy that can play in the slot. Don't try to pigeonhole him in the slot.
I see it as the opposite. I think rashee is absolutely elite in the short catch and run stuff and I can see him really thrive as a run blocker. I love him in the cooper kupp role although kupp runs a way more diverse route tree. I want to see our outside guys win with a little more speed and right now we're not asking him to do that. Again, is that a Reid trust thing or rashee being raw? I think it's both. It's such a missing element in our offense even with rice and you can see that in how our solution is to ask mahomes to throw to open intermediate/deep WRs and just cross his fingers. It still remains to be seen if rice can be a consistent field stretcher but I feel like if he's elite doing what he's doing, does that even matter?
The rams is a little intriguing because in puka you have some overlap between him and kupp. So maybe thats an option as well to have similar WRs and then interchange a little bit. [Reply]
He brings more value winning outside, even if he isn't a burner. He wins with size and body control. He's not gonna stretch the field, you don't need him to do that outside to be effective. Winning in the intermediate zones are where the big boys win anyway. [Reply]
Originally Posted by O.city:
Rashee is an outside guy that can play in the slot. Don't try to pigeonhole him in the slot.
Just a born X receiver. Everything Sammy was supposed to be soon enough he'll be more than that.
I'll say what I said the day we drafted him, I just cannot for the life of me understand how anyone didn't like this pick. It just seemed so obviously perfect from the moment it was made. [Reply]
Originally Posted by DJ's left nut:
Just a born X receiver. Everything Sammy was supposed to be soon enough he'll be more than that.
I'll say what I said the day we drafted him, I just cannot for the life of me understand how anyone didn't like this pick. It just seemed so obviously perfect from the moment it was made.
Yeah, it's a pretty ideal fit with his physical skill set.
They need to find the Z, but I imagine Aiyuk will fit there nicely. [Reply]
Originally Posted by DJ's left nut:
Just a born X receiver. Everything Sammy was supposed to be soon enough he'll be more than that.
I'll say what I said the day we drafted him, I just cannot for the life of me understand how anyone didn't like this pick. It just seemed so obviously perfect from the moment it was made.
Posted in May
Originally Posted by JohnnyHammersticks:
This is going to be a fun thread to revisit over the next 10 years and laugh at all the morons who doubted this kid. :-)
such as...
Originally Posted by oaklandhater:
what a reach yo...
Originally Posted by oaklandhater:
this
Veach blows when it comes to picking WR's
Originally Posted by oaklandhater:
I wanted Hyatt :-)
Originally Posted by emaw1979:
I hate this pick. And they traded up for him.
Originally Posted by Kiimo:
If Hyatt turns out to be great that's it, Veach can't draft wide receivers pure and simple.
A possession receiver with average speed who wins contested catches OVER HYATT?
Originally Posted by ChiefsFanatic:
I don't like it because we traded draft capital for a player who would have been there at 63, and probably quite a few picks after that. I would have disliked it at 63, but now I FN hate it.
And this isn't revisionist history. I liked Rice before the pick was made. And like a few others who know how to evaluate college WRs, I wasn't a fan of Hyatt.
Originally Posted by JohnnyHammersticks:
Mingo or Rice.
I'm just not a fan of Hyatt anymore, and I liked him a lot early in the college season last year. However the more I watched him, the less I liked him.
Originally Posted by JohnnyHammersticks:
Might not be a popular opinion but if we're taking a 170lb WR I'd rather it be Mims than Hyatt.
Originally Posted by JohnnyHammersticks:
I really like Downs too. Would prefer him over Hyatt
Originally Posted by JohnnyHammersticks:
There were a handful of us who tried to tell people throughout the draft process that Hyatt was very overrated. It was pretty easy to see.