

Picture Smash throwing up the U hand sign and smiling.

Smash played the way Duke does, so this is a great match. Duke Johnson’s name is Duke, very “smash-ish”. Lets face it, Smash would have loved to play football at the “U”, and the U would have loved him. Your welcome Tyler Varga, I’m not sure there’s a better compliment one can pay to another. The ladies love him, and the guys want to be him. But Tyler Varga is Canadian, and so is Taylor Kitsch! If you’re Canadian, you must love drinking beer right? #TexasForever Riggins was easily the most popular character on the show. No father of the year awards in his future. Not the service to his country stuff, but you know. Hopefully Conner Halliday’s dad was the opposite of Henry Saracen. “Lanky system quarterback that makes good decisions”, yeah sounds like “7” to me! Connor just looks like a Matt Saracen, bit of an under-dog for the draft, definitely the type of guy that might stutter through a date at the Almo Freeze with Julie Taylor. Sean Mannion is likely thinking, “This is great and all, but how about Minka Kelly?” Can’t help you there, Sean. If Jason Street had of went on to college it looked like there was going to be a great chance he goes pro.
#Buddy garrity pro#
Mannion is a 4-year starter at OSU and a pro style QB that teams covet. I really hope Sean Mannion doesn’t end up in a wheel chair… maybe this was a bad idea. Lets compare some of the 2015 NFL draft eligible players to the stars of critically acclaimed television drama, Friday Night Lights.įollow Friday Night Lights on twitter – Our Poll The opposite of what scouts attempt to do. I am about to blur the lines between fact and fiction. It is a way of showing the audience what they can expect from a player they very likely have never seen play. Kevin White is the next Julio Jones, Danny Danny Shelton plays like Haloti Ngata.

When reading mocks, or expert rankings you will often find, “the comparison”. I watch footage of players I didn’t see many times during the season, prepare mock drafts, and attempt to broaden my knowledge of the college players who are about to introduce themselves to the common professional football fan. I spend a lot of spare time from January to April preparing for the NFL Draft. It is the basis for this challenge I am about to tackle. Hopefully you at least binge watched this unbelievably well written television drama which told the stories of more than just young men playing football. If you didn’t spend several years of your life vicariously living in the town of Dillon, Texas, I am sorry.
