Koolblue13 Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 TEs who take pride in blocking first are becoming harder and harder to find. Surprised with his size and speed, he never tried OLB. From the very first game last year, the Steelers were double and triple covering Reed in the redzone. Sprinkle makes that more dangerous to do, along with improving the running game. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Audible_Red40 Posted May 25, 2017 Share Posted May 25, 2017 Another segment of: Why the slide? Charlie Campbell from walterfootball.com: http://walterfootball.com/ws2017jsprinkle.php Quote Why the Slide?: Jeremy Sprinkle The 2017 NFL Draft was loaded at the tight end position, and one of those quality prospects was Arkansas' Jeremy Sprinkle. For the Razorbacks, Sprinkle was a well-rounded player as he contributed to their ground-based offense as a blocker and also showed some receiving ability. Sprinkle totaled 10 touchdowns over the past two seasons and recorded more than 300 yards receiving each year. Considering he split targets with other tight ends like Hunter Henry, Sprinkle performed well as a receiver. With good size and athleticism, Sprinkle (6-5, 252) surprisingly slid to the fifth round. According to sources, Sprinkle slid for a few reasons. One was the overall depth of the tight end class, which pushed Sprinkle down. In a typical year, he could have easily gone a round or two higher. Also, Sprinkle didn't interview well with teams regarding some off-the-field issues from college. That also hurt Sprinkle as they had character concerns with him. A third reason is that some teams that were down on Sprinkle had him graded as a fifth-rounder, so to them where he went off the board was appropriate. The Washington Redskins ended Sprinkle's fall in the fifth round. The Redskins don't have a serious need at the position with veterans Vernon Davis and Jordan Reed. Reed is the feature tight end, but Sprinkle offers them rotational value. He has more blocking ability than Reed, so he can be a Y tight end in double-tight end sets. Sprinkle also is a receiving threat who should benefit from defenses focusing their coverage on Reed. With Davis returning to Washington, Sprinkle will have to make the team as the third or fourth tight end, but Davis is obviously not a long-term contributor at this stage of his career. In a year or two, Sprinkle could form a nice tandem with Jordan Reed, but at the moment, Sprinkle offers the Redskins some immediate depth if Reed gets injured again. Sprinkle was a good value pick in Washington's excellent draft, and he should carve out a role with the Redskins. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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