- Ranked 2nd among charted prospects in success rate vs. man (75%) and press coverage (75.7%) - Led all prospects in success rate vs. zone coverage (88.1%) - He can play inside and outsidehttps://t.co/HbifB61JlJpic.twitter.com/HYsV8rlAzF
I am buying Skyy Moore is a more finesse version of Steve Smith. Steve Smith played with flat out attitude. On top of that he could jump through the roof. That stood out on tape. [Reply]
Originally Posted by ThyKingdomCome15:
I am buying Skyy Moore is a more finesse version of Steve Smith. Steve Smith played with flat out attitude. On top of that he could jump through the roof. That stood out on tape.
Skyy is a physical receiver, not a finesse one.
Don’t let his size fool you, he was a running back and a safety/corner before college and breaks Tom’s of tackles and gets off press with quickness and strength. [Reply]
Originally Posted by :
7. SKYY MOORE, Western Michigan (5-9 ½, 191, 4.44, 2): Third-year junior, three-year starter. “I compared him to Deebo,” one scout said. “He’s an athletic slot. He ran powerful, explosive routes. He has good hands. He can set a guy up once he had the ball in his hands. He had some games this year where he lit it up. It wasn’t just, you kind of chalk it up to kind of the MAC shit. He had good games against Pitt and San Jose State.” Finished with 171 receptions for 2,482 (14.5) and 16 TDs. “His hands were the biggest (10 ¼) in the class, which wasn’t surprising the way he catches the ball,” said a second scout. “He’s a tough guy, a smart player. He came on the radar late but he probably made a good decision coming out early. The combine helped him.” Compares favorably to D’Wayne Eskridge, Moore’s ex-teammate who was drafted in the second round by the Seahawks last year. “Eskridge was just a straight-line fast guy,” said a third scout. “This guy is the exact opposite. Knows how to play. He was their whole offense. I compared his run-after to a mini-Deebo Samuel because he breaks so many tackles. He’s just a player.” From New Kensington, Pa. “I ain’t seeing it,” a fourth scout said. “He’s a small slot receiver that doesn’t do returns. I don’t see an outside receiver because he’s not big or fast enough. I just don’t see the top-end speed, even at the pro day. I saw kind of an average guy.”
Originally Posted by ThaVirus:
This is kind of funny because Tyreek Hill is definitely in the 5'8" range.
Ah yes, Reek, forgot he was under 5'9". Two. In the history of the NFL. Wowee. That doesn't make it any less of a point. It's exceedingly rare. What's funny is why people can't admit that fact.
And no, DeSean was not under 5'9" and Steve Smith was exactly 5'9". Go on, search for more. [Reply]