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OVERVIEW

Most people spend their lives trying to get to Hawai'i at least once, but Davis decided that two years in the Rainbow State was enough, especially after head coach Norm Chow was let go. He had started 10 times in his two years with the Warriors, racking up 45 receptions for 601 yards and five touchdowns. After sitting out a redshirt season in 2013, Davis became an all-purpose threat for the Bears, making plays as a receiver (24-399, five TD) and returner (424 kickoff return yards, 70 punt return yards) as a junior. He had 40 receptions in 2014 (one of six players hitting that mark) that covered 672 yards and two scores, and had 686 kickoff return and 45 punt return yards as well. Those sort of receiving/return numbers won't go unnoticed by NFL scouts.

ANALYSIS

STRENGTHS

Quality return man specializing in kick­offs with two touchdowns under his belt while at Cal. Former high school long jumper and sprinter with build­up speed to challenge deep safeties from the hash. Competitive runner after the catch with ability to make defenders miss and finish his runs with some authority. Hands are adequate.

WEAKNESSES

Track speed doesn't translate underneath. Needs runway to get going and can't hit jets out of his breaks for separation. Needs to improve hard vertical push to clear space for comebacks and outs. One­-speed, rounded routes need work. Struggles to release cleanly against quality press coverage.

SOURCES TELL US

"He's a pretty good returner. I don't see him being drafted, but he could make a team as a return man and last receiver on the depth chart." -- NFC West scout

BOTTOM LINE

Wiry catch-­and-­run specialist whose NFL value rests in his return ability. Davis could be a difficult sell because he's not an NFL­-ready receiver, but a big combine could create late-round interest or elevate his stock as a priority free agent.

Great ideas rooted in love.(R)

Last edited by Rusty
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SOURCES TELL US

"He's a pretty good returner. I don't see him being drafted, but he could make a team as a return man and last receiver on the depth chart." -- NFC West scout

 

http://www.nfl.com/draft/2016/...vor-davis?id=2555413

 

ROTTT = Reaching on Turds Ted Thompson

Last edited by mr21mr21

Some stats on Davis: 2,300 career all-purpose yards. Led the Pac-12 with a single-season school record 32.6 yards per kick return average.
by Tom Silverstein 3:12 PM


Eliot Wolf : 4.3 guy, really good hands. Big hands. Some production in a passing offense. We had him in the mid-4.3 range.
by Tom Silverstein 3:13 PM

I know as much about this guy as I do about anybody else they drafted but the synopsis above strikes me as a receiver TT usually doesn't go after. The key word is 'wiry' which I cannot recall a Pack receiver is recent memory being.

To be fair TT has a pretty good track record with WRs:

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/...than-college-players

Trevor Davis, WR, California

If I had to pick one receiver with the potential to be a great mid-round find in the Emmanuel Sanders orMike Wallace mold, it would be Davis. The 6-1, 188-pound Davis has flown under the radar a bit as a transfer from Hawaii to Cal. He set a career high with 40 catches last season (672 yards, two scores), but I think he could explode in the NFL if given the opportunity. He has the quickness to work the middle of the field, and his ability to snatch the ball from the air during his combine workout was impressive. Davis is expected to be on display again on Friday, as Cal will be holding its pro day.

Last edited by mr21mr21

Janis! is ****ed. Jordy's back, then Ted goes and drafts a faster guy FROM CAL for crying out loud.

Rodgers will be laughing all through camp as he makes his buds look good and screws The People's Choice™!

This is really the first speed guy the Packers have had at WR in a long time. I asked Wolf if he was comparable to Corey Bradford, the last really fast guy they had, and he said he's much more flexible than Bradford.
by Tom Silverstein 3:22 PM

cuqui posted:

This is really the first speed guy the Packers have had at WR in a long time. I asked Wolf if he was comparable to Corey Bradford, the last really fast guy they had, and he said he's much more flexible than Bradford.
by Tom Silverstein 3:22 PM

Is there a mistake on his time or is the photo rong because the picture is a white guy?

If Janis wants an NFL career, he better get on the same page as AR and put down the video game controller. Being a special teams demon only counts for so much for so long before you're on the street like Jarret Bush.

Sounds like a nice pick. cant teach speed. Plus, although we have a lot of young WR's, this is some insurance in case of injury during training camp. Abby especially has been prone to injury. Competition for kick returns will be fierce. 

YATittle posted:

If Janis wants an NFL career, he better get on the same page as AR and put down the video game controller. Being a special teams demon only counts for so much for so long before you're on the street like Jarret Bush.

Bush played 9 seasons in the NFL as a ST ace.  What's the average NFL lifespan, 3 years?

cuqui posted:

This is really the first speed guy the Packers have had at WR in a long time. I asked Wolf if he was comparable to Corey Bradford, the last really fast guy they had, and he said he's much more flexible than Bradford.
by Tom Silverstein 3:22 PM

LOL, Bradford.  Run fast just forgot to catch the ball.

chickenboy posted:

I know as much about this guy as I do about anybody else they drafted but the synopsis above strikes me as a receiver TT usually doesn't go after. The key word is 'wiry' which I cannot recall a Pack receiver is recent memory being.

Agreed, this seems like TT giving Elliot a pick of his own 

For all the hyperbole about JJ's WR potential, would it be a stretch to say he's the one of the best gunner's in the game?

Love the guy, but feel like Abby's role and injury history will have him fighting hardest.

Cal ran a true spread. 6 players caught at least 40 balls, and none caught more than 52. Not too worried about the production.

He's one of the fastest athletes in this WR class that follows 8 months of talking about how slow the GB receiving corps is.

cuqui posted:

They just showed Davis' highlight package on ESPN. 

HOLY CRAP IS HE FAST

Indeed he is fast,he would have made a great kickoff returner if the NFL had'nt basically outlawed the return due to safety concerns. we will miss returners making nice runs but the memories will forever last.

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