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Of the 338 invites, did they say how many declared for the draft early?
I think Render has a good shot at sticking, especially if you count the practice squad. He's able to play center or guard, and could be a useful guy to bounce on and off the 53.So what do people think about the odds of the graduated Hawks in finding their way onto an NFL team. If you had to rank, how would you order them most likely to least: Gervase, Easley, Render, Reynolds, Hesse, M. Nelson?
I think Render has a good shot at sticking, especially if you count the practice squad. He's able to play center or guard, and could be a useful guy to bounce on and off the 53.
So what do people think about the odds of the graduated Hawks in finding their way onto an NFL team. If you had to rank, how would you order them most likely to least: Gervase, Easley, Render, Reynolds, Hesse, M. Nelson?
If James Ferentz is still practice squading it up in the league. Render and Reynolds can do no less than that...
I'm curious about Gervase and how he'd might do. He might be a special teamer in the NFL. M Nelson should get a shot as well but the defensive line in this class is ridiculously deep. Hesse's measurables won't endear him to the NFL I'm afraid. And Easley it just depends on how fast he might be. I thought McAaron would do well especially with Brady when he went to NE but he's struggled. And he's fast ran a 4.3 something. I'm not so sure Easley can get close to that..
Hesse is smaller than Mitch King by a country mile.So what do people think about the odds of the graduated Hawks in finding their way onto an NFL team. If you had to rank, how would you order them most likely to least: Gervase, Easley, Render, Reynolds, Hesse, M. Nelson?
Is Nelson even interested? He's on a path to be a surgeon.I would rate him #1 as well, probably followed by Matt Nelson. I would kind of lump the rest in a similar, lower tier, but probably give Reynolds and Easley the slight advantage within that tier.
I'm sure he's done his homework, or will before the time comes to decide, but I would hate operating at 6' 8".Is Nelson even interested? He's on a path to be a surgeon.
Why, don't the tables go up and down?I'm sure he's done his homework, or will before the time comes to decide, but I would hate operating at 6' 8".
Why, don't the tables go up and down?
As for robotics, I believe he's said he wants to go into orthopedics, in which case I think robotics are a long ways off for many procedures.Only one person in a big team around the operating table; doubt the others will be 6' 8". No problem, though, it will all be robotic soon, and it will be much easier to adjust his robot controls.
Hesse is smaller than Mitch King by a country mile.
Like King, he's a hell of a ball player, a stand up guy, and a great Hawkeye that I'll be a fan of forever, but he has zero chance of playing in the NFL.
NFL ball is the great equalizer of the entire sport, more so than the MLB or even NBA in baseball and basketball respectively. You could have the highest motor on the planet and hip sled 2,000 lbs, but--as put so eloquently by big block motor fans--there's no replacement for displacement. Gravity wins every time and NFL OTs have plenty of it.
With his amount of smarts and talent, genetics fucked Parker Hesse and didn't even buy him dinner. Give the kid 2 inches and 25 lbs. and he'd be getting drafted. And yes I know Yannick Ngakoue is smaller, but Parker Hesse ain't Yannick Ngakoue.