Jake Locker

white lightning

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I'm a big Tim Tebow fan but this kid might be even better without nearly as much hype. I watch the Pac Ten Games on a regular basis. He doesn't get seen as much by the people out east because the games are so late.

Jake Locker used to be a running back. He is by far the fastest quarterback that I have ever seen in my life. Faster than Matt Jones, Tim Tebow,R.Cunningham,Steve Young, and even M.Vick. This kid has wheels on him and power to go with it. You guys have to watch this kid. He ran for 100 yards in the first half alone last week against the AZ Wildcats.

It's too bad he is on a terrible team. He will be a great qb but I can't help but wonder if he could be another Sam McGuffie type but only bigger. This kid has to run a 4.3 easy. They need to time him this year and he is a true freshman. Check him out guys.
 

Don Wassall

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I've seen portions of a few Washington games and Locker is an amazing athlete.
 

jared

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I saw him rip off a nice 20-ish yard run against ASU when I was at the game. He's certainly fast, especially considering how big he is. I haven't seen what his wheels look like over a longer distance and it's always tricky to gauge how fast those taller guys are moving. Matt Jones didn't really look like he was running that fast in his videos, but he was smoking all the opposing DB's.
 
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I think he might end up being a better QB than Tebow also. Just doesn't have the talent around him yet to get the recognition.

When I watched the Ohio State/Washington game this yr I remember an anouncer saying something to the effect of Locker having "Above Average" speed for a QB & runs a 4.65 forty. Then he ran around the end for something like a 10yrd 1st down & I about jumped outta my seat, dude ran the fastest 10yrds I've ever seen. Hell of a lot faster than 4.65 & he has wicked fast speed not "Above Average" speed.Edited by: Doc Holliday
 

white tornado

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Don't think he's faster than Jones or vick but he looks to be a far better passer than both. I agree with you W.L. that he might be better than Tebow. Looks to have the making of an all time great.
 

white lightning

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Here is an article from earlier on this year will they list him as running a 4.5 in the 40 and they oompare his skills to a running back! He ran a 4.6 in high school but I guarantee he is faster than a 4.5 in the forty. This kid is easily a 4.4 or lower athlete. I'm not joking. He can flat out fly. On another note, Jake accounted for around 491 of the 534 yards total offense last week with 157 yards coming by the ground and well over 300 through the air.

All I know is that the NFL better not ignore Tim Tebow and Jake Locker down the road. They claim to want athletic qb's. You can't do any better than these 2 studs! I don't trust the NFL though. Look at Eric Crouch, Matt Jones and the kid out of Col.State a few years back. All of these guys can flat out run but were not allowed the chance to be a nfl qb.

Here is the article.

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3006067Edited by: white lightning
 

sunshine

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Locker is also a pro baseball prospect. He is faster than Tebow and his speed is legit. He ran a 6.4 60 yard dash for baseball scouts so his long speed is better than nearly all other college football players. He is a 4.4 runner and should be a future first round draft pick.
 

Colonel_Reb

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I posted this in the Washington thread, but I thought it should be posted here as well. Jake Locker won't be playing until next year.
SEATTLE (AP) - Washington coach Tyrone Willingham says injured quarterback Jake Locker is likely out for the rest of the season.
<DIV ="in_info__btm">


Locker broke his right thumb against Stanford on Sept. 27. For weeks, Willingham left open the possibility Locker could return, but Monday said the quarterback won't play against Washington State in the Apple Cup on Saturday and is likely out against California on Dec. 6.


Locker had surgery last Friday to remove stabilizing plates from his thumb.


The Huskies (0-10) are the only winless team in the country. (No doubt this would be different with Locker, a tremendous athlete. I wishJake the best and look forward to watching him next year.


http://msn.foxsports.com/cfb/story/8809206/Willingham:-Locke r-unlikely-to-play-again-in-2008
 

celticdb15

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"That's the best quarterback we've played in nine years here," Carroll said when told Washington has beaten only Idaho and USC the last two years. " Jake Locker has ridiculous talent, and had he remained healthy last year, Tyrone [Willingham] would still be coaching there."

Pete Carroll's words after USC's loss to Washington Courtesy of draftdaddy http://espn.go.com/blog/pac10/post/_/id/3061/carroll-calls-locker-the-best
 

Highlander

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Good article on Jake Locker deciding to stay for his Senior year.

I think having Sarkisian as his coach instead of Willingham for his Junior and Senior years will be a huge plus for him.

Many think he'll be the number one pick in next year's NFL draft.

http://www.omaha.com/article/20100429/SPORTS/704299736

Quarterback Jake Locker thrived in 2009 after Washington hired
Steve Sarkisian, the offensive coordinator at Southern Cal, as head
coach.




THE ASSOCIATED PRESS




Published Thursday April 29, 2010</span>

<h1 id="articleContainer">College Football: Locker passes on NFL</h1>


<div style="width: 165px;"><div style="width: 150px;">




</div>
</div>



SEATTLE â€" It was before the NFL draft, a night when some thought
that Jake Locker would become the No. 1 overall pick and sign a contract
worth something toward $50 million in guaranteed money.

His name
was called.

"Hey, Jake Locker!"Â someone shouted. But it was not
that of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, and Locker was not at New York's
Radio City Music Hall.

It was just a sunny spring day on the
campus of the University of Washington. Locker was on his way to Smith
Hall for History 212: Military History of the United States. The voice
belonged to a fan asking to take a picture with the strapping star
quarterback.

When the draft began last week, Locker was finishing another spring
practice with the Huskies. He planned to watch and listen for his name
not to be called.

Just who does Jake Locker think he is? What kind
of 21-year-old turns down millions of dollars to sit through another
lecture on battle formations during the Civil War, to live with two
buddies in a well-worn bungalow, to sleep in a bunk bed in a room shared
with the dog bowl, to sweat through months of preparation and risk his
professional career for a team that went 5-7 last season?

"Don't
get me wrong,"Â Locker said. "I really look forward to the NFL. But it's
not going anywhere. You can never go back and play college football."Â

So,
with simple reasoning and a stiff-arm to presumptions, Locker will
return for his senior year and try to lead the rebuilding Huskies to
respectability. One of those steps will be a Sept. 18 home game with
Nebraska, a team that finished 10-4 last season and pounded the Pac-10
Conference's Arizona Wildcats 33-0 in the Holiday Bowl last December.

He
will take his chances in next year's draft and hope he does not need
the insurance policy he has that will pay him millions if he has a
career-ending injury with the Huskies.

"Let's just say I wouldn't
have to worry about anything for the rest of my life,"Â Locker said,
declining to disclose the possible payout.

Carefree and
strong-armed, Locker is doing what he wants to be doing, ignoring those
who second-guessed his decision the moment he made it.

"I know
exactly why I didn't go to the NFL,"Â Locker said. "So it doesn't bother
me."Â

The 6-foot-3, 225-pound Locker's style is often compared by
old-school observers to that of the fleet-footed Hall of Fame
quarterback Steve Young. A more contemporary comparison is to Florida's
Tim Tebow, who was selected by the Denver Broncos in the first round of
last week's NFL draft, but Locker has more speed and a superior right
arm. Someone in between, like Donovan McNabb, might be more apt.

Locker
had until Jan. 15 to declare for the draft. But more than a month
earlier, he drove his Chevy pickup to the football offices and ambled
into coach Steve Sarkisian's office. Offensive coordinator Doug
Nussmeier was there, too.

Glad you're both here, Locker said. He
wore his off-field uniform of jeans and a cap, and held his chocolate
Lab, Ten (for Locker's uniform number), on a leash. I'm staying, he
said.

"It was shocking, just the way he did it,"Â Nussmeier said.
"But that's Jake."Â

Sarkisian was ecstatic.

"Forget four- or
five-star recruits,"Â he said at the time. "We got a 10-star recruit
today."Â

Others were thrilled, if not floored, by Locker's quick
decision, too. Fans will have their favorite player to cheer. There was
an immediate spike in season-ticket requests. The marketing department
is working up a Heisman Trophy campaign.

"I had a smile from ear
to ear,"Â Athletic Director Scott Woodward said. "I wasn't surprised, but
I was very excited."Â

Locker has long had that effect in
Washington. He grew up in Ferndale, a town of about 11,000 north of
Seattle near the Canadian border. He led Ferndale High to the Class 3A
state championship in 2005. He threw 27 touchdown passes (and three
interceptions) and rushed for 24 touchdowns as a senior.

He was
the top recruit during former coach Ty Willingham's four seasons at
Washington. The university began selling No. 10 jerseys before Locker
arrived, and they instantly became the most popular. When Locker made
his debut, as a redshirt freshman in a game at Syracuse in 2007, some
fans who trekked there wore shirts that read, "Jake 3:16."Â Locker
completed 14 of 19 passes for 142 yards. He scored two touchdowns and
rushed for 89 yards. The Locker Era opened with a 42-12 victory.

Locker
hurt his thumb four games into the 2008 season. The Huskies went 0-12,
and Willingham was fired before the season ended. Last June, Locker was
drafted by baseball's Los Angeles Angels in the 10th round. He signed a
contract worth about $250,000, he said, that gives the Angels his
baseball-playing rights for six years, and there is some debate about
his obligation to play minor league ball this summer.

But Locker,
especially after last season, sees baseball as a fall-back option.
Football, no doubt, is the priority.

Washington hired Sarkisian,
the offensive coordinator at the University of Southern California, to
replace Willingham. Locker thrived.

Working mostly from under
center rather than the shotgun, he completed 58 percent of his passes
for 2,800 yards, with 21 touchdowns and 11 interceptions.

He also
rushed for 388 yards and seven touchdowns. In September, he led the
Huskies past No. 3 Southern California with a dazzling game-winning
drive.

By the time of the season finale, Locker was being
projected atop the NFL draft boards. Washington beat ranked California,
42-10, as Locker completed 19 of 23 passes for 248 yards and three
touchdown passes. He ran for two scores.

Fans chanted "One more
year."Â Locker answered their prayer.

"I got to the point where I
put the money and all that stuff aside and said, ‘In 20 or 30 years,
what will I wish I did?'"Â Locker explained over a burger and a couple of
microbrews at The Ram, his favorite hangout near campus. "I always
would have wondered what we could have done my final year."Â

Nothing
gets Locker animated more than talking about growing up. Locker's
father, Scott, is a former football player at Western Washington (as are
three uncles) and earns a living as a drywall finisher. Locker's
mother, Anita, is an office manager for a plumbing company. Locker and
his two younger sisters grew up near grandparents, aunts, uncles and
cousins. Locker has no doubt he will live there again someday.

The
NFL draft will wait, although many have already penciled in Locker as
the first pick in 2011.

Sarkisian believes Locker will be much
better prepared for the NFL a year from now â€" better mechanically and
wiser in terms of understanding offenses and dissecting defenses.

"I
think they'll say, ‘This kid made a great decision,'" Sarkisian said.

Locker
has more immediate concerns.

"I think this team has a chance to
go to a bowl game,"Â Locker said. "It's up to us."Â






Edited by: Highlander
 

white lightning

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Great article. This kid has a head on his shoulders. He is far more mature than alot of college kids his age. He will be a star in the nfl. I would love to have a modern day Steve Young. Tebow could be as well if they allow him to stay at qb. There is no question about Locker. He was born to be a quarterback.
 

foobar75

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Heh, can you imagine if both Tebow and Locker turn into stud NFL QBs? This is a dream scenario for CF, and a nightmare for the DWFs and the media.
 

ToughJ.Riggins

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foobar75 said:
Heh, can you imagine if both Tebow and Locker turn into stud NFL QBs? This is a dream scenario for CF, and a nightmare for the DWFs and the media.

Yes, I'm pumped about this. And Looker has more speed than Tebow. I don't think he has quite the agility that Tebow possesses (close), but both these guys will probably do what Randall Cunningham and now Vince Young is starting to do in the NFL- and maybe even more. Maybe even Steve Young or Fran Tarkenton esque.
 

FootballDad

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Here is an interesting article about Jake Locker. One of the main points is that he "passed up millions" in order to stay in school and compete at the collegiate level. Now, I've seen many examples of white players (mostly QB's, as they're the only white players in demand) who have stayed in school, bypassing NFL big bucks, to continue their education and college career. Offhand, I can't think of any high-profile black players who have done this, although there doubtless are. It seems that blacks always bail out of racist whitey's school early, if given the opportunity, so that they can get the dollas and "make it rain" at strip clubs.


<DIV _yuid="yui_3_1_2_1_128343678657869" ="hd">
<H1 property="dc:title">Locker has unfinished business</H1>
<DIV ="byline">By Les Carpenter, Yahoo! Sports Aug 31, 11:25 pm EDT
<DIV id=ysp-preview-msg>SEATTLE â€" The big stadium stands decrepit in a summer squall. Long gone are those Saturdays when 72,000 people squeezed into the steel bleachers, when the huge grandstands literally shook and a joyous purple navy bobbed on Lake Washington just outside. A once-mighty college football program all but died.
<DIV ="bd">
<DIV id=copy>
<DIV ="_copy 0">


It has been seven years now.
<DIV style="WIDTH: 250px" ="inline_photo inline_photo_right">
1283308198.jpg

<DIV ="caption">Jake Locker returned for his senior season with Steve Sarkisian and they hope to start the season with a couple of big non-conference wins.
(Joe Nicholson / US Presswire)


And Jake Locker could have gone away. The senior quarterback of the Washington Huskies didn't need to stay for this. The NFL made it clear that he was welcome in its draft last spring. Teams loved the way he fired his passes downfield. They admired his elusiveness. One draft expert said he would have been the first overall pick. Others suggested he might not have gone in the first round, but there is little doubt he could have made at least $10 million once the bonuses were added up.
More importantly, he could have escaped the fallen football program with its 16 victories since 2003.


Except he couldn't leave. Not now, not while the once great Huskies still lay in ruins needing to be saved. When last season ended, he took his decision to stay or turn professional back to his apartment and studied it. He asked his parents for their opinion. He let the decision churn inside him. Only there wasn't much to dwell upon. The millions he could have made were all but guaranteed. Staying offered no certainty. A bad senior season or a strange twist of his knee and the money would be gone.


But turning professional also meant walking out on the group of players with whom he came in 2006. In the darkness he saw their faces. They had dreams together. They were going to win big. They were going to go to bowls. Then they felt the same grinding pain as Washington kept losing. Leave them? He couldn't.


"The thing about Jake is he is one of the most sincere, genuine guys,"Â￾ says senior linebacker Mason Foster. "I knew he was going to come back."Â￾


"We're all attached to each other,"Â￾ said another senior linebacker Victor Aiyewa. "We're like one big happy family."Â￾


He told the NFL no.


And suddenly Washington sensed it had a football future.


"No guy in that locker room has ever been to a bowl game as a player,"Â￾ Locker says. "I know they all had aspirations to. I know I did."Â￾


He is sitting in a small room not far from the stadium. The door is open and he can see his teammates shuffling down the hall, coming from lunch. For a moment he stares at them. Then for the slightest moment his voice appears to crack. He looks down.


"I'll never have the opportunity to play college football ever again, I'd never be able to come back here again. To have the opportunity to play with this football team "¦."Â￾


His voice trails off.


There was no decision about the NFL draft. He was coming back.


Great college football programs do not fall overnight. They take years of neglect and mismanagement to crumble and then once dead it takes many seasons to build them back. Rick Neuheisel brought the Huskies down and neither Keith Gilbertson nor Tyrone Willingham could bring them back. The losing started in 2004 and never stopped.
<DIV style="WIDTH: 250px" ="inline_photo inline_photo_right">
1283308183.jpg

<DIV ="caption">Jake Locker's decision to delay his NFL career could cost him millions when a new labor agreement is reached.
(Mark J. Rebilas / US Presswire)


But there was also hope last year. It came with Locker and a new coach Steve Sarkisian. The Huskies beat USC. They won five games. Then when Locker said he was coming back there was rejoicing. It was the best news the program had heard in years.


And it forever sealed the UW fans' affection for Locker, perhaps even placing him ahead of quarterbacks such as Warren Moon, Chris Chandler and Mark Brunell â€" players who had great success and huge winning seasons.


Locker's father Scott tells of Husky fans who have stopped and hugged him and said that Jake's decision to stay was the "greatest moment of my life."Â￾ Their words gave the elder Locker pause. Washington has won a football national championship and been to several Rose Bowls. It beat Miami in Miami when Miami still mattered. There have been dozens of "greatest moments"Â￾ in Husky history. And these people thought his son's returning for a senior season was the finest of them all?


"This leaves a tremendous legacy for Jake,"Â￾ Sarkisian says. "I think there's something about being the class that was here when we turned it around."Â￾


Scott Locker never really thought his son was leaving school. "I know how he is wired,"Â￾ he says. Whatever Jake endeavored to take on, he would complete. When he was in high school, in Ferndale, just south of the Canadian border, Jake rose early three days a week, long before the sun, to meet a sprinting coach who worked to improve his speed. Scott looked at the coach's schedule, saw how aggressive it was and how Jake would have to wake so early and he doubted it would last for more than a few weeks.


Jake completed the entire program. After that, Scott Locker knew: his son would follow through on any commitment.


So if he said he would stay until the Huskies were revived then that is exactly what he'd do.


It's almost cruel the way the players have to walk through a long tunnel to the Husky Stadium Field. Along the wall hang signs celebrating each bowl game the school has played. Between practice and game day and private workouts, the players must pass these signs almost every day. Since 2002 there has been nothing. The players notice. They hear from fans. They are aware of their failure in this regard.


"It was tough to walk into the stadium every game when you knew you had no shot to beat anybody,"Â￾ Foster says. "That's what's brought us closer together and helped each other out."Â￾


There is a sense around the program that the winning might finally come. Beat BYU on Saturday and the country will notice. It will make Sept. 17th's game against Nebraska perhaps the biggest on campus in 10 years. Locker knows this. He smiles.


"I wouldn't trade the experience I've had here,"Â￾ he says. "It's made me a better person because of it. I know I'll appreciate [a bowl game] much more now after having gone through all the hardships."Â￾


He stops again for a moment, then smiles again.


"I guess I could dwell on the situation we're in. But how many people get to play college football?"Â￾


There is a lot that comes with staying for a senior year. After throwing for 2,800 yards and scoring a combined 28 touchdowns passing and throwing last season his name has emerged as a Heisman Trophy candidate. He is now the No. 1 quarterback prospect in next spring's NFL draft. This time many more people are declaring him the top pick. But there is also a price. A potential NFL lockout looms. No one knows exactly what the pay system will be when the labor dispute is resolved.


Veterans and league executives alike were outraged that this year's top pick, quarterback Sam Bradford from Oklahoma could get six years and $78 million as the No. 1 selection last spring. More likely the new system will have a more modest rookie pay scale. So if Locker truly could have been the top selection this past spring he may have cost himself tens of millions of dollars.


But sometimes it's not the money. Something Scott Locker learned when his son, then 17, was drafted by the Los Angeles Angels to skip college and play center field. He sat Jake down and said that the contract would be about $2 million and that he had been hanging drywall for 20 years and couldn't make the kind of money Jake would make with one swoop of his pen. His son, if he was smart, could be set for life.


Scott recalls him looking up and saying: "Dad, if I ever asked for something you've always been able to get it, so maybe the money thing isn't important."Â￾


Recalling this, Scott Locker laughs into the phone.


"It's been refreshing for me at times,"Â￾ he says. "He's just got a unique way of looking at things that brings me back to reality."Â￾


No, it never was about money. It was about a promise Jake Locker made four years ago, when he left home in search of being Washington's salvation. Nearly every school in the Pac-10 wanted him and he visited almost all of them. But in the end he told his parents he wanted Washington.


He wanted to help save the Huskies.


"I know the tradition,"Â￾ he says. "I know what it was nationally. I thought it would be cool to be part of the process of bringing that back."Â￾


He smiles once more.


"I wouldn't trade the experience I had,"Â￾ he says. "Â￾ [The losing] has made me a better person because of it."Â￾
 

Colonel_Reb

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I wish Jake the best this year.
smiley32.gif
 

whiteathlete33

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This report, and all the others I've read, say that Jake Locker's stock has dropped dramatically. He could now possibly be a third round pick. From Rotoworld:

pixel.gif


pixel.gif


After watching him in Senior Bowl practices, FOX Sports' Adam Caplan gave Washington QB Jake Locker a third-round draft grade.
<div ="s_pNewsTextMain">
Caplan acknowledges Locker's "outstanding athleticism," but called his
poor accuracy and release point "alarming." Sporting News' Russ Lande
is on record as saying he "doesn't believe Locker will be a starting
quarterback in the NFL" due to "terrible accuracy." ESPN's Todd McShay
seems to be the only high-profile draftnik still confident in Locker's
NFL prospects.
</div>
 

snow

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Funny, I remember the same thing about Pat White, except his accuracy was absolutely terrible and he was 6'0 and about 190 pounds, he completed less than half of his passes in the game. White went in the 2nd. Locker is 6'2 - 6'3 and close to 230 pounds, just as athletic and can pass. I haven't seen him pass at the senior bowl practices yet but will watch, I doubt it is as bad as they are saying. Even it is Tebow had a poor senior bowl, and went in the first, he was still working on his mechanics though. Locker couldve put up ridiculous stats like Denard Robinson in a spread option type offense, but instead they had him running a pro style offense, which he did a great job in, even with mediocre blocking. The only problem was his receivers dropped a lot of catchable passes. Josh Freeman was less athletic, less accurate, just bigger. 1st round grade! Dwfs are so clueless. These scouts are supposedly so good at their jobs and spend hours scouting talent, yet more than half of the first round picks wind up being busts, and its usually the same teams picking in the top 15, the blacker teams.
 

celticdb15

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Locker will be fine in the NFL. If he's given time to learn the playbook he has great potential.
 

Colonel_Reb

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<div ="mod-inline full"> <cite>Christopher Hanewinckel/US Presswire</cite>Jake Locker is one of four cover candidates for "NCAA Football 12."</div>

Mobile
quarterbacks have been all the video-game rage ever since Randall
Cunningham (aka "QB Eagles") first took off downfield in "Tecmo Super
Bowl," and virtual defenses have been trying to catch up ever since.
From Michael Vick to Pat White, quarterbacks with wheels have proved
time and time again that speed kills on the cyber fields of both the
"Madden" and "NCAA Football" franchises.

Next in
line of the great "Madden" quarterbacks could be Washington's Jake
Locker. The speedy quarterback ran a 4.59 40 at the combine, upping his
stock with not only his Flash-like feet but by also showing great touch
on his passes and throwing a mean deep ball -- all essential
qualifications if you're looking to be the next big polygonal thing.

And
you can count EA Sports as just one company already jumping on the
Locker bandwagon, including the quarterback among four finalists who
fans can vote for when it comes to posing for the cover of "NCAA
Football 12." At the same time, the EA "Madden" team is already hard at
work creating Locker and fine-tuning his player ratings for when he's
drafted into the NFL.

"I hope people want to play as
me in 'Madden' this year," Locker tells me with a laugh. "At least I'd
like to think someone out there wants to."

With that speed? I look for him to be a sleeper pick among "Madden" players this year, depending on which team drafts him.

We could be talking about the "Madden" rookie of the year.http://espn.go.com/espn/thelife/vid...cker-running-ncaa-12-cover-your-madden-hearts
 
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