Posts tagged Chris Polk

Reads Listens Views 8/17/2012

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It’s fitting that this video tribute to Carl Pickens was set to the song made famous by the movie “Deliverance.” Because when Pickens went to Tennessee his demise made the Titans fans want to SQUEEEEEEE…

It’s okay, Carl. You were a terrific receiver.

Scavenger Hunt – Win a Free 2012 RSP

Somewhere in this blog is a page with a photo of a former high school football player who is a future Hall of Famer in the Continue reading

2012 Post-Draft Skill Player Impressions Part-I

Find out why Browns WR Carlton Mitchell is potentially a beneficiary of the Browns draft. Photo by Hank.

I don’t believe in grading the draft. Many of my colleagues, ones I respect a great deal, will be providing draft grades this week. Some of them will say that they don’t believe a draft can be graded accurately for a few years, but two paragraphs later they are grading away like they’re teaching middle school. The reason is they believe they are giving readers what they want, and they’re right.

In this case, I don’t care. I’m not indulging in that practice. Although some may want to read it, perpetuating a practice that none of my writer brethren believe in but do it anyway is not something I have to do here. This is when I love having my own blog. I’m going to try something a little different and discuss what I think teams are trying to do with certain picks and whether I can see the logic. Continue reading

No-Huddle Series: RB Chris Polk, Washington

Chris Polk may need to keeping working to attain that Photo Shop build most current NFL runners have, but he has a good Football IQ.

I lied to you.

The RSP No-Huddle Series was something I initially created to write about prospects likely to get drafted in the late rounds, if at all. I’m still going to do more of those players, but sometimes there are plays you remember that you want to share with people.

One of these plays is a pass involving Chris Polk that reveals more to his game than usually meets the eye and continues an observation I had about the play I profiled yesterday of NIU’s Chandler Harnish.

If you don’t live in the Pacific Northwest, then you probably don’t realize that Chris Polk was a wide receiver in high school. It’s not common to see a player switch from wide receiver to running back when he transitions from high school to college. Usually it’s the other way around: Hines Ward, Jeremy Ross, and Marvin Jones are all good examples. The last time I saw a college receiver transitioned running back it was when Lou Holtz did it with Ricky Watters, who I though was one of the best short-yardage running backs in the league because of fantastic footwork in tight spaces.

This play below is what separates the 5’10”, 215-pound Polk from many of his peers. It begins Continue reading

RSP Combine Contest: Guess the 40 Times

Can you guess RGIII's 40 time at the 2012 NFL Combine? If you do, you could win a free RSP. Photo by cmiked.

I’m not big proponent of 40 times. They have their place, but I’ll take a 4.6 RB with great vision, good initial acceleration and balance any day over a 4.3 guy with a lot less of those other three qualities. So to make the 2012 NFL Combine more interesting, I’m holding another contest.

Your job is to guess the 40 times of Robert Griffin III, Chris Polk, and Alshon Jeffery. The closest person to guess any of these times correctly (the first person for each player)  wins a free copy of an issue of the Rookie Scouting Portfolio from 2006-2010. Here’s the details:

  1. Go to my Rookie Scouting Portfolio Page on Facebook.
  2. “Like” my Facebook page.
  3. List the 40 times under each wall post I’ve created (How fast will Robert Griffin III run the 40? How fast will Chris Polk run the 40?, etc.) .
  4. Don’t post the times on my personal Facebook wall, in a Twitter response, or on this blog – those entries will be disqualified.

If one of you guesses all three correctly (to the 100th of a second), I will give you this year’s and 2013’s RSP free.

Are you ready to be a human stopwatch? Go to my Facebook page and give it a shot.