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Player Bio:
"Juice" Williams gained his nickname from his high school coach because of his infectious personality. One of the top 100 recruits in the country out of West Orange High School in Orlando, he saw the field as a true freshman for the Irish in 2015 (21 carries, 81 yards, 3.9 ypc, one touchdown rushing; one kickoff return for 20 yards in seven games). In August 2016, he was arrested with teammates for marijuana possession and possessing a handgun without a license; the latter charged was later dropped when a teammate confessed to the handgun possession. Williams was given one year of probation, playing in 12 games that fall (39 carries, 200 yards, 5.1 average, three touchdowns rushing; four receptions, 16 yards receiving; four kickoff returns, 67 yards, 16.8 average). He played in 10 games his junior season, missing three contests with an ankle injury but averaged 9.2 yards per carry (39 carries, 360 yards, four touchdowns rushing; two receptions, 13 yards, one touchdown receiving). Williams finally became Notre Dame's top rusher in his senior campaign, though he only played in nine games (eight starts) due to a suspension for undisclosed reasons that cost him the first month of the season. He rushed for 995 yards and 12 scores on 158 carries (6.3 per) while also catching 16 passes out of the backfield for 133 yards (8.3 average) and a touchdown.
 
Analysis:
 
 
Draft Projection: Round 4
NFL Comparison: Rashard Mendenhall
 
Overview:
Ascending every-down running back prospect who showed major flashes of becoming an NFL starter in his most active season to date. Williams runs with a good combination of feel, force and juice, which allows for a variety of methods in creating yards for himself. His evaluation could require additional character work and his relative lack of experience could mean a slower integration into an NFL offense; however, he offers exciting upside with the talent to become a productive, NFL starter.
 
Strengths:
  • Possesses adequate NFL size with good flexibility
  • Stepped into bell-cow role with ease
  • Had four games with 140-plus yards and averaged a touchdown run every 12 carries
  • Understands block development and where lanes will originate
  • Adequate decisiveness as interior runner
  • Presses line of scrimmage to set blockers up for success
  • Loose hips to flow where his eyes take him
  • Processes traffic quickly to work away from peek-a-boo gap-fitters
  • Impressive acceleration
  • Mashes gas to win foot races to corner or hit the home run
  • Runs with square pads and drops heavy, pre-emptive blows on tacklers
  • Small career workload for fresh NFL legs
  • Ball security has been excellent in relatively limited work.
Weaknesses:
  • Small sample size with limited tape against quality competition
  • Never more than 39 carries in a single season before 2018
  • Has an arrest (2016) and four-game suspension (2018) in his background
  • Slew-footed running style can affect balance through cuts
  • Needs to step in and square blitzers rather than defaulting to body rolls
  • Easier to upend in space because of narrow running base
  • Vision goes from good to average after he's past the line of scrimmage
  • Average elusiveness in open field

Great ideas rooted in love.(R)

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Last edited by Rusty
Original Post

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This young man has a huge opportunity in front of him.
I hope he's matured enough to leave his ghetto ways behind. If he's sincere about wanting to help his Mom, he now has a chance that very few others get.
Ditto for the team keeping him on a TIGHT leash. It shouldn't be EQ's responsibility, but he may be able to help with that. 

Well this is a ringing endorsement:

NFC scout: “He’s a complete train wreck of a human being. He was suspended the first four games of the year. They tried to have Josh Adams, the (Eagles’) running back, when he was a senior (in 2017) move in and rub off on him. Josh is a really good kid. Josh moved out after two weeks. Nowhere near our building if I have any say in it. He’s dumb. He’s a complete s—bird.” … “He was supposed to run 4.3 and he ran (4.53). He’s a one-cut runner. He does play fast. He’s got serious acceleration. He’s a one-trick pony. Can’t play in the passing game. Doesn’t have good hands. (Bleep) in pass pro.”

-From McGinn's site. 

#PackerPeople

The kid was a knucklehead, spoiled, Mamma’s boy. Very immature. But it sounds like he’s got his chance- and he better make the most of it. EQ St Brown seems like a good kid and could be the right guy to help him transition to adulthood- that’s what he needs. 

His Mom has all these rare diseases, living in WI near the UW medical facilities could be a godsend for her. 

Last edited by Music City

Wonder if the "NFC Scout" works for the Vikings.

He has already removed the bad people he originally had surrounded himself with. He's on his way, now he just needs to keep it up -- take care of Mom, focus on football & do some good things in the community. People can change. They simply must WANT to change. 

Pistol GB posted:

Possessed marijuana in college (along with other teammates).  Didn't get along with a roommate.

Oh the horror.

..and a unregistered hand gun.   Semantics though, right?   Yes, another kid came forward and claimed it, but he is still riding around with guys possessing  illegal handguns.   You got to be a special kind of dumb to do that as a college athlete with potential to go pro.

Last edited by BrainDed

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