Didn't I tell you all you got something draft day? Great Highlight Vid Of Brad mms://a1272.v10869e.c10869.g.vm.aka.../archive09/091805_mis_mfb_showbsmith_400k.wmv
Thanks, seen it before but still entertaining. He has that great natural ability to make tacklers miss. His best moves seem to come from behind the LOS , so playing him at WR seems odd to me , better as HB??? The one criticism that I have of him is that he HAS to cover the ball up or we will lose it in the NFL , easy to correct though.
from the recaps we've been getting he seems to be makingat least one spectacular catch every day. I hear more about him than anyone - maybe Cotchery is giving him a run. But I don't think we'll see him make more than 20 catches this year. Next year, though....
Anyone think he may line up in the backfield from time to time if Curtis is done, and be a part of the RBBC?
Great article on Brad Smith in this morning's Star-Ledger, fellas. I was going to make a separate thread, but then noticed this thread and it belongs here instead. This kid was a real find: http://www.nj.com/sports/ledger/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/11550987806210.xml&coll=1 Jets' Smith Showing Great Versatility Wednesday, August 09, 2006 BY DAVE HUTCHINSON Star-Ledger Staff HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. -- As quarterback Chad Pennington dropped back to throw during yesterday's morning practice at Hofstra, he spotted rookie wide receiver Brad Smith streaking toward the corner of the end zone on a post pattern. Pennington, who is showing surprising zip on his deep balls, uncorked a perfect spiral. Smith, surrounded by three defenders, then made a sensational leaping grab for a 40-yard touchdown. It was easily the play of the day and one of the best catches in training camp thus far. Smith, the quarterback-turned-wide receiver taken in the fourth round out of Missouri, has started to get the offensive coaches excited. In an offense devoid of a big-time playmaker -- someone who keeps opposing coaches up at night -- Smith has become a wild card. "I got in position and I was able to come down with it," said Smith, who is as modest and soft-spoken as he is talented. "Chad put the ball out there for me. I'm just trying to do my job, trying to make a play for the team. That's all I think about." The Jets envision Smith as their version of Antwaan Randle El, the former quarterback at Indiana who helped the Steelers to a Super Bowl victory last season as a return specialist and crafty receiver who occasionally lined up at quarterback. Smith (6-2, 210 pounds) has been given a special package of plays which include many of the things Randle El, now with the Redskins, did in Pittsburgh last season. Randle El finished the 2005 season with 35 catches for 558 yards and a touchdown, 12 carries for 73 yards and completed 3-of-3 passes for 67 yards. He also returned 44 punts for 448 yards and two touchdowns. "It's a lot of live up to," said Smith, who has had a chance to throw off reverses, line up at quarterback and is getting reps as a return specialist. "(Randle El) is a great player. He has made a lot of plays. I don't think I'm going to model anything after him. I'm just going to do what I can to fit on this team. It might be a totally different thing." At Missouri, Smith, once thought to be a better quarterback prospect than Texas' Vince Young, was a play-making machine. As a four-year starter, he became the first quarterback in Division 1-A history to pass for more than 8,000 yards and run for more than 4,000. Initially, Smith was disappointed at not getting an opportunity to play quarterback in the NFL but he's over it now. "I'm a wide receiver," he says. Smith, who has also made a pair of circus catches in camp, had his growing pains as well, dropping consecutive balls during one practice. But he'll make the team as the fifth wide receiver behind Laveranues Coles, Justin McCareins, Tim Dwight and Jerricho Cotchery. Smith said his biggest challenge in making the transition to receiver is getting off the line of scrimmage when a defender tries to jam him and knowing how to line up correctly with the right splits. "Each day is a little bit better," coach Eric Mangini said. "Each day you capitalize on the opportunity and it's not, 'Well, who is that guy?' It's 'Did you see what he did?' or 'He's really making progress here.'" Yesterday was a did-you-see-what-he-did kind of day for Smith, and he hopes to have many more.
This guy is a good soldier. You can see why Mangini was looking for guys with character and the right attitude. For someone with Smith's skillset but holding a "me-first" attitude, the headlines in the daily papers might be quite different, "I can't believe they aren't letting me play QB," said Smith, "that's why I was brought here to throw the ball, not to be a WR." Who knows? In a year or so this guy could be a credible #1 threat, ala Randy/TO. Does he have the consistent speed? Is he a burner? I'm sure that he's not fast, ala Santana fast, but I'll take something close to it.
Definitely someone to be excited about, but I'm holding judgement until I see him in a few real games first...
This guy has such a great QB record in college, is it not possible he could fit into some kind of dual, back-up QB role at some point in time? I say he makes the team not only on his WR abilities, but on the other wild possibilities he brings to the table. And he IS a "Mangini guy," as you say.
Probably only when they play the bills. There is always the internet though or sports bars with directtv....