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Cast - Ben Whishaw; ; Genres - Horror; Directors - Jessica Hausner; Release Date - 2019; 6,5 / 10 Star. Watch Full Length Kwiat szczęś.

 

Witam ! Nie mogę znaleść wiadomości jak pielęgnować pilea depressa i senecio archeri to nazwy spisane z doniczek. Jak by pani mogła ze dwa słowa napisać mi o tych roślinach to byłabym wdzięczna. Bardzo dziękuje i pozdrawiam. Super wygląda. A co robię nie tak, że mój się marszczy.

Jabłoń znów wydała swe wykwintne owoce. The movie is ok. Minimalist and slow sci fi, which would work well enough if not for the absolutely awful score. A somewhat interesting take on Invasion of The Body Snatchers with botany run amuck. The suspense and action you might expect has instead been replaced with an incredibly ill timed and obnoxious score. Ok to watch. Difficult to listen to. Wygryzły jej oczy dopowiedział każdy kto nie wyniuchał clickbaitu. Jezu. jakie to śliczne <3. Watch full length kwiat szcz c4 99 c5 9bcia karaoke. Witam, trafiłam na kanał przypadkowo ale zostanę już chyba do końca życia: REWELACJA, jest Pan lekiem na całe zło u roślin, super zdolności pedagogiczne i oratorskie. DZIĘKUJĘ i pozdrawiam.

 

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[Full Watch Kwiat Online. Watch full length kwiat szcz c4 99 c5 9bcia pubg. Muzyka jest za glosna Lubie ciebie sluchac ale niewyraznie bo przeszkadza glosna muzyka. Hey guys. I posted my three-round mock a couple days back and it went pretty well. In doing so, I came with a big board and explanations for each player and I thought I would share to supplement it. It's a Top 53 big board; that number has nothing to do with NFL rosters or anything, it's just that's the point that I had to cut it off. I wanted to stop at an organic point that made sense. I'll also add comps to current NFL players for the most part. Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State: What is there to say? He's the most dominant edge rusher I've seen in some time and has elite pass-rushing traits to pair with elite level production on the biggest stage in college. I guess he's a little one-dimensional at times but if I could just casually jog around opposing OTs, I wouldn't worry about my number of moves either. I'm not overthinking this. Pro Comp: Danielle Hunter Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson: In the modern NFL, off-ball linebackers really aren't at a premium position and don't tend to be terribly difficult to replace in terms of production. That is not the case with Isaiah Simmons. A nightmare to block, create separation from, break a tackle from, or just generally gameplan against, I've never seen a defensive player at his size do what he can do athletically. I think he's a once-in-a-generation type of player and we should appreciate him while we have him. Pro Comp: I'm not even going to try Jeff Okudah, CB, Ohio State: Jeff is one of the most pro-ready CBs I've seen come out in a while. Some have gotten on about his 40 time but I think that's wildly overblown. He excels in man coverage and is silky smooth and fluid. He plays high level, mistake-free football and cancels out anyone he's covering. He has the length and positional understanding to play zone as well making him very valuable to DCs running mix coverages. He has All-Pro potential. Pro Comp: Marshon Lattimore Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn: If you're a stat whore, you are going to completely miss the appeal of Derrick Brown. For anyone who watched Auburn's defense last year, you know instantly the type of impact Derrick Brown has. He was able to blow up the run against constant double and sometimes triple teams often using nothing more than his brute force and sheer athleticism. He's never going to be a 6 sack per year guy, but that's not why he's on the field. He's one of those guys who "magically" makes everyone else's job easier. He sets 'em up, they knock him down. He won't go as high as #4, but there's no way he gets out of the top 10. Pro Comp: Linval Joseph Joe Burrow, QB, LSU: I was one of the most skeptical Joe Burrow Stans at the beginning of the year. I refused to believe that same QB I watched in 2018 was any better than the year before, the new offense just made it easier to put up numbers. I watched every game from Florida onward and as much as I tried, it's been hard to pick him apart. He's really fucking good. He may not wow with any single trait except pinpoint accuracy and elite pocket presence, but he does everything at a very high level. Teammate quality be damned, Joe's the real deal. Pro Comp: Tony Romo CeeDee Lamb, WR, Oklahoma: CeeDee is one of those players that grows on you the more you watch him. He doesn't have elite speed, let's get that out of the way. But everything else he does at an elite level. He's a silky smooth route runner with a good catch radius and hangs on to nearly everything. I think a large part of Baker, Kyler, and Jalen's success has had some part to do because of how easy Lamb made it for them. His numbers don't pop out necessarily, but that's due to how Oklahoma plays. Make no mistake, he'll be a #1 for a long time. Pro Comp: Deandre Hopkins Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa: I'll be honest, I really didn't get the Wirfs hype to start the season. The first game I watched was the Michigan game live and all I noticed was Nate Stanley getting the ball and then proceeding to run for his life every down. As I've watched more, I've noticed he was largely the only good thing about that OL. Hyper athletic, silky smooth in pass pro, and a nasty player in the run game, he's the entire package. I don't really care that he allowed 2 sacks last year or that he's only played RT; when you have the traits Wirfs does, you jump on it right away. Pro Comp: Lane Johnson AJ Epenesa, DL, Iowa: Epenesa is one of the most misunderstood players in this draft. Any team that drafts him as a 3-4 edge rusher is going to be sorely disappointed when he becomes a (consistent) 7-8 sack per season kind of guy. Epenesa's best work comes on stunts and breaking down double teams on the inside to work his way to the QB. Players with his kind of power, speed, and length combination are rare. Play him on the edge at your own risk; play him inside at the 3 or 5T and you may have an All-Pro. Pro Comp: DeForest Buckner Jedrick Wills, OT, Alabama: After Wirfs, I think Wills has the highest ceiling out of all the tackles in this draft. I've actually followed Wills since he was tearing up the Lexington high school scene in Kentucky and his progression has been insAane. He continues to get leaps and bounds better every season. Always a very physical player in the run game, he's been very good in the pass game on his way to allowing just one sack last year. He didn't always face the opposition's best rusher, but it doesn't matter. Projecting to LT shouldn't be a problem. Pro Comp: Taylor Lewan Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama: Jeudy is arguably the most established collegiate receiver in this draft. The 2018 Biletnikoff winner has had a ton of hype around him even before Tua won the starting job at Alabama. An unreal route runner with a sneaky gear change in his acceleration, he's certainly a threat to take it to the house on every play. I have questions about his play strength and his ability to win outside against the NFL's best, but we'll let his unbelievable production against the SEC's best CBs speak for itself. Pro Comp: Amari Cooper Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama: Tua has to be the most famous player in the draft, right? There's good reason for it: he's put together arguably the greatest statistical two-year run of any college QB since what? Tim Tebow? Ever? He's small in stature but makes up for it with a quick release, good footwork, insane deep ball accuracy, and fantastic timing. There are obviously concerns about his injury history but people bring up valid complaints against his composure playing from behind and his ability to compete without elite supporting members. I won't dismiss them, but they're certainly not enough to knock him any lower. Pro Comp: Drew Brees Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina: There may not be a more imposing physical specimen outside the Top 5 than Javon Kinlaw. Standing 6'5" and 325 (the same size as Derrick Brown) but moving like a defensive end, Kinlaw is a matchup nightmare for anyone on the interior OL. He is tenacious in getting into the backfield and has been productive as a pass rusher. I question his effort and consistency in production at times but not to the point that it's a major problem. If he can keep that motor on even 15% more often, he's going to be hard to pass up. Pro Comp: Chris Jones Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia: AT has to be one of the safest picks in this entire draft. A multi-year starter at LT for the Dawgs, he's been consistent in pass protection and very physical in the run game throughout his time. I think he lacks the foot speed to excel against the absolute fastest speed rushers but he has very good technique and does little poorly. He may never been a top 5 OT but he'll be a left tackle you won't have to worry about replacing for 10 years. Pro Comp: Mitchell Schwartz Jonathan Taylor, RB, Wisconsin: Taylor has been a workhorse at Wisconsin the last 3 years as they continue to churn out yet another elite RB. Superficial scouts may see a 4. 39 and think he's just a speed runner but he's much more. Very physical, hard to tackle, fantastic balance and vision, and developed nicely in 2019 in the pass game, he's become a do it all back. I'm personally not worried about the workload and I think you take the best back first. That shouldn't be controversial. They don't make many like JT and we may look back and wonder why we didn't put him in the conversation with Zeke, Saquon, and Fournette. Pro Comp: Adrian Peterson Kenneth Murray, LB, Oklahoma: In another draft where you didn't have some superhuman lab creature ahead of him, Murray would be getting a lot of attention for his play at linebacker. Far more than just a mike/sam who can play downhill, Murray is a very effective pass rusher and has all the twitch you need to be successful covering RBs and TEs to boot. Having been the pulse of an improved Oklahoma defense over the past season, a lot of that starts with Murray. Pro Comp: Demario Davis Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE, Penn State: One of the currently most slept on edge rushers in the class in my opinion. Many will cite YGM's lack of discipline in the run game but I think it's well overblown. He sets a very good edge when he's patient and has arguably the best size/speed/power combo outside of Chase Young. There isn't a more consistently productive edge rusher in this class at the P5 level despite drawing lots of attention from teams all year long. I really hope people keep sleeping on him because he fits my Titans perfect at #29. I think GM's will wise up by April though. Pro Comp: Chandler Jones Henry Ruggs, WR, Alabama: I have been one of Ruggs' most vocal critics over the past few months as I was curious how fast he actually was. I had a strong feeling he wouldn't break the record but I though anything between 4. 28 and 4. 35 was in play. He exceeded those expectations. I still think he may be relegated to the slot often and I question his ability to win outside and grow on his limited production. He has insanely quick feet to match that top end speed, though, and has done a good job hanging onto the football. Ultimately, dude's fast. And speed sells. Pro Comp: Desean Jackson K'Lavon Chaisson, EDGE, LSU: Chaisson is one of the most intriguing prospects in this draft to me. There might not be a rusher that is more disruptive in terms of just running at you and beating you after Chase. Injuries have slowed him down and he didn't really produce until midway through the season. He finished very strong, though, and I would bet on him to continue that trend in the league. His athletic gifts are undeniable and will give him continued opportunities to succeed. Pro Comp: Shaquil Barrett Trevon Diggs, CB, Alabama: Brother of Stefon, Diggs clearly has some of the good family genes in him. His ball skills are possibly his best attribute and he attacks the ball like a wide receiver. Beyond that, he has all the measurables you want with great size and length and good speed for the position. He's tailor-made to play outside and has a good punch and is sticky in man coverage. People cite how JaMarr Chase wrecked him, and he did. But Joe Burrow and JaMarr Chase wrecked everyone and that's a high standard to hold him to. Ultimately, he's coming off a great year and will be a great press-man CB at the next level. Pro Comp: Xavier Rhodes (before he sucked) Justin Jefferson, WR, LSU: Coming off a fantastic year on the title-winning Tigers team, Jefferson has gained a lot of notoriety since December. Thanks to three high level postseason games- where he racked up 30 catches for 448 yards and 5 TDs- and a very good combine performance, JJ is skyrocketing up boards. What people forget though is that he's been doing it all year. He's got great size and uses it very well attacking the ball aggressively (he won a ridiculous 92% of contested catches last year, almost double any other receiver in the class) and rarely drops passes. He has very good top speed, is a smooth route runner, and has a good release. Sure, he only ran at #2 CBs for a lot of the year, but he is a ridiculously complete receiver and, honestly, I may have him too low. Pro Comp: AJ Green CJ Henderson, CB, Florida: Henderson is one of my favorite CB prospects in this draft and the sky is the limit on his potential. Often lumped together with failed Florida CBs of yesteryear (Quincy Wilson, Hargreaves, Teez Tabor, etc), it's foolish to gloss over this guy. He's an absolutely unreal springy, twitchy athlete with all the size and length you could want. He does a great job staying in front of 90% of plays and has the make-up speed you want in your OCB. He delivers a great hit when running downhill as well. You may knock him due to some big plays allowed in 2019, which he needs to correct, but is due partially to randomness, IMO. If he averages anywhere close to his 2018 play, he'll be a great pickup at #21. Pro Comp: Marlon Humphrey Tee Higgins, WR, Clemson: Higgins has been one of the most productive receivers in CFB over the last 3 years and has made life very difficult for opposing CBs. Using his impressive size constantly to his advantage, he's an elite jump ball winner and an eraser for inaccurate QBs. I have questions over his top speed after he declined to run at the combine, but he certainly looks fast enough to get the job done in the NFL. He doesn't always separate but when you have the catch radius and sticky hands he does, you can get away with it. He'll never be the best receiver in the league but he's very safe and you'll never have to doubt having an option on the outside. Pro Comp: Mike Williams Josh Jones, OT, Houston: I'm a big Josh Jones Stan as well. At Houston, he excelled in both pass protection and run blocking on a team that didn't have much to play for early on in the year. He's a pretty athletic tackle prospect with an opportunity to play at either spot. He needs to improve his anchor to not get off balance but I think experience and anticipation will help. I think people saying he's this year's Andre Dillard may be right; he doesn't have the highest pedigree but when you have a guy that big who can play like he does, you take him. Pro Comp: Jake Matthews Zack Baun, OLB, Wisconsin: Baun may not be the most naturally gifted athletes but he's one of the most productive defenders in this class for good reason. He's a very complete defender who excels at doing a variety of things. Largely ask to play as an edge rusher at Wisconsin (but off-ball as well), he is exceptional at getting after the passer. He came in light to the combine all but confirming the move to OLB, but a team wanting to use him like Seattle used Bruce Irvin could see a lot of success. He has good instincts, a few good rush moves, and is fast enough to cover out of the backfield. Some say he's a so-so tackler but I haven't seen it. Take him and be prepared to get a little creative. Pro Comp: Clay Matthews JK Dobbins, RB, Ohio State: What a career Dobbins has had at OSU. Two years ago he was already on draft boards as a potential scat back in the NFL. After a not-as-hoped progression in '18, he really showed his colors last year. Dobbins has developed into an electric and dominant runner who excels at finding a crease and smacking the hole. He ran like a man possessed this year on his way to a 2, 000 yard and 21 TD season. He still retains that scat back ability though, flipping out of the backfield to constantly hoard free yards by being a nightmare for opposing LBs. He's a little undersized but he's bulked up in recent years. And his breakaway speed is may not as good as you'd think. But he's a wicked player and will have a long career. Pro Comp: Dalvin Cook Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU: I was a critic of Fulton early on in the evaluation process but he's slowly started to prove me wrong. Besides a tough game against a very potent pass attack in Clemson and a so-so one against Alabama, Fulton was one of the best lock-down CBs all year. He had one of the best pass-defense ratings in CFB all year. The large questions for me around Fulton have to do with him staying in front of the football. He didn't seem to get his head turned around quick enough on film and that gives me pause for someone moving on to the next level. Still, he did it against CFB's best last year and he certainly has the speed to do it. A little undersized, he still has a good press and will be successful. He reminds me of another LSU CB who came out a couple years ago with similar concerns. Pro Comp: Tre'Davious White Patrick Queen, ILB, LSU: Arguably no player improved their stock more through the national championship game than Patrick Queen. On many radars already, he exploded onto the scene after they called his name again and again against the nation's best. A very physical mike linebacker who loves playing downhill, he possesses elite athletic traits you want in a modern linebacker and delivers a ferocious boom when he times it right. He struggles with gambling at times, though he will develop as he becomes more experienced. Discipline can be taught, but that type of athleticism can't. Pro Comp: Rashaan Evans Denzel Mims, WR, Baylor: After an extremely impressive combine, Denzel Mims is rapidly ascending draft boards across America right now. If you weren't already looking, though, that's on you. After putting up nearly 3, 000 yards the last 3 seasons at Baylor, Mims has been one of the most established threats in the Big12 for a while. A very long receiver with obviously great top speed and a great catch radius, there's very little that Mims can't do. There's very few receivers who come into the draft so pro-ready as blockers as well. I have concerns about his drop rate (8% is a little high) but he was reliable in 2019 and I forsee that not being a big issue in the leauge. Pro Comp: DeVante Parker Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon: Herbert has been one of the most polarizing prospects throughout this past season. Depending on who you ask, what he was able to achieve at Oregon may be very impressive or somewhat underwhelming. Same for his performance at the Senior Bowl. I don't feel as strongly, but I don't think Herbert will be a top 10 QB. He has the tools: a very good arm, good mobility, solid mechanics, is accurate for the most part. But, as many note, the game still looks like it moves too fast for Herbert. He's slow to process a lot of reads and struggles under pressure at times. I don't think he'll be horrible, for the record, and I think he has a big will to win. He's still worth a top 10 pick for a QB-needy team because he can lead a lot of teams to very be successful. But for all his good traits, there's just obviously something missing and I'm not sure if he'll ever acquire it. Higher floor, but lower ceiling than many think. Pro Comp: Sam Darnold Xavier McKinney, S, Alabama: McKinney moves on from a great career at Alabama as a hyper-athletic, hard-hitting safety who finds the ball well. Don't let his combine fool you: he's much faster than 4. 6. In a class where there aren't any great surefire safety prospects, McKinney will make some team very happy with his consistency in play. He needs to get better in coverage but he's the level of athlete that you believe it's teachable. He's not the sexiest pick but you can count on him as a good, versatile safety for years to come. Pro Comp: Shawn Williams D'Andre Swift, RB, Georgia: Many may scoff that I have Swift as the RB3 in this class but I still have him as one of the best 32 players. It's a testament to the depth of this class. Swift played in tandem with a combination of Sony Michel, Nick Chubb, and Elijah Holyfield for his first 2 seasons but really burst onto the scene as the guy in '19. He's a very twitchy, patient back who is expertly able to make defenders looked stupid with some violent cuts and spins. He's a very good back catching balls out the backfield and one of the best route runners in the class. Less so than the others, he doesn't have one thing that I think he's elite at but he does everything proficiently. It doesn't matter as much to me, but some teams will fall in love with the fact that he's only seen 400-odd touches in college, too. I don't think he's dominant, but he's certainly a feature back for most teams in the league. Pro Comp: Miles Sanders Cole Kmet, TE, Notre Dame: There's our first TE on the board. When I watched through Kmet's tape at first, I'll be honest: I was a little bored. Kmet isn't exactly the flashiest player in this class and you won't see him wowing fans week-after-week with highlight plays. He is, though, extremely polished coming into the league. He obviously very big and moves well for his size. He's very sure-handed and is a very good in-line blocker. He only burst onto the scene this season, so there will be some doubts whether he can keep it up. But if you want sound TE play and a guy that just quietly does what you need him to, he's your man. Pro Comp: Mark Andrews Grant Delpit, S, LSU: I really feel for Grant Delpit because it's very tough to go from a top 5-10 pick to a fringe first rounder. He hasn't done himself any favors this year, though. Infamous for many missed tackles this year, he also didn't flex his incredible ball skills the way he did in '18 and struggled with a nagging ankle injury. Despite all of this, he's still one of the best athletes in the draft and has all the size you want for someone playing safety. He's rangy with good make-up speed and still can deliver a pop when he does find the ball carrier. For all his problems tackling, I don't see it as an effort problem and that's important to note. He may hurt you, but he's also worth a significant gamble and can be a perennial Pro-Bowler. Pro Comp: Marcus Williams Chase Claypool, WR, Notre Dame: Chase is one of my draft crushes since the middle of the season. If you want to watch a guy take over, just watch his 4th quarter performance against a good Virginia Tech secondary (I think it was before their starter got hurt). Claypool is a big guy for the position but I was stunned when he came in at 238. Still, he moves very fluidly and has great hands. He's an underrated route runner with great YAC ability. Of course, he also uses his size very well and is a proficient jump ball winner. I have questions about his hands in the past but in 2019 he was reliable. He was the only offensive threat and helped carry that Notre Dame offense to a 11-2 record. He needs a little polish but his God-given ability is off the charts. Pro Comp: Kenny Golladay Mehki Becton, OT, Louisville: Becton is an absolute freak. A guy standing at 365 lbs has no business running a 5. 1 forty. That's just stupid. He paved the way well all year for a resurgent Louisville rushing attack and just moved guys as he wanted all year long. You also can't help but notice how well he moves for his size: he won't win Dancing with the Stars, but he he's got good footwork. The only issue I have with Mehki lies in his effort/conditioning. It's hard to tell if he took some plays off because he was gassed or if it was because he didn't have effort, but he can't do that in the NFL. He may also struggle with the absolute best speed rushers. But guys with his size, quickness, and long arms are rare. He's still likely a first rounder. Pro Comp: Donovan Smith Terrell Lewis, EDGE, Alabama: Terrell Lewis is a lab-creation on the edge. The blend of his length, speed, and power is special. On his day, he is able to effortlessly glide through, around, over, etc opposing tackles at will. He struggled in the 2nd half of the season for Alabama and failed to register a sack after the Tennessee game. He plays undisciplined often and shows a poor repertoire of counters when his first move doesn't work. He weighs in well but is very lanky and looks very thin out there. He's missed a lot of time due to injury in his career each season he's played. It doesn't matter. When Lewis gets downhill and gets a step to a tackle, it's over. He's not my favorite prospect and comes with much risk, but there's no denying his top level ability if he can grow and stay healthy. Pro Comp: Montez Sweat James Lynch, IDL, Baylor: I'm one of the biggest James Lynch fans in this draft. Lynch may not have the athletic profile of some of the other players on this list but by George is he not one of the most effective and refined players you have to choose from. After bursting on the scene as the best player on a dominant Baylor defense in 2019, he was a load to handle in the middle for opposing defense all year on his way to 13 sacks. He has a nasty initial punch that takes guards off balance and lives in the backfield. He won't get that at the NFL but for a 3 or 5 technique, he'll excel and is a very balanced defender. Very high floor on this one. Pro Comp: Cam Heyward Neville Gallimore, DT, Oklahoma: On the complete opposite end of the spectrum, you have an absolute freak in Neville Gallimore. Gallimore was able to shed 30 lbs last offseason to transition from a nose tackle to a more effective 3T and boy did it pay off. He was good before but he looked much more explosive this season and that showed through at the combine. Able to use his elite get off to get you off balance and his natural power to push through, he was able to live in the backfield. His only questions lie in the consistency of his effort. But if he can find another level in his motor and continue to condition, the sky's the limit. Able to play either a 3T or shade nose position at the next level easily. Pro Comp: Kenny Clark Michael Pittman, WR, USC: Sometimes being an elite football player is just in your DNA. Pittman was a star at USC this past season after the team was relegated to their 3rd(? ) starting QB early in the year. Slovis played well but it was in no small part to Pittman. Making highlight catch after highlight catch, he also wowed me with his quick feet and ability to get separation as well. He has an incredible contested catch rate and rarely drops the ball, creating a formula that makes almost any receiver successful in the league. There will be some questions about PAC12 DBs he faced, but it's silly. Pittman is one of my favorite receivers in the draft and wherever he lands in the 2nd round will be getting a steal. Pro Comp: Mike Evans Ross Blacklock, DT, TCU: Ross has been a r/nfl_draft favorite for several months now but his stock in the public eye is finally starting to match perception. Blacklock excelled as a 3T at TCU last season and was able to use his tremendous athleticism to get in the backfield. He's very natural as a pass rusher and when he beats the guard to the first step, he's gone. A little small, he does get off balance at times. And there will be some concerns about injuries that have derailed him in the past. Still, when he's on his game, there are few better. Now that I think about it, I feel sorry for the talent that Big 12 guards saw last year. Pro Comp: Larry Ogunjobi Jeff Gladney, CB, TCU: Another Horned Frog makes his way onto the board here and it's for good reason. Despite his size, Gladney feasted last year with TCU on his way to a productive 2019 campaign. A very intelligent player with very good speed, it takes quite a bit to get past Gladney in either man or zone. There will be some concerns whether his lack of size will keep him from playing OCB in the NFL but smaller CBs have done it and regardless there is a great future for him in the nickel as well. Physical and consistent, there's always a place for those CBs. A so-so combine doesn't deter me. Pro Comp: Kyle Fuller Justin Madubuike, DT, Texas A&M: I. Love. Madubuike. My board is mostly set but he may continue to go up because the more I watch, the more I love. The guy has elite get off on the defensive line and has elite production in the SEC to match. 11 sacks and 20 TFL in the last 2 seasons is nothing to sniff at. He uses his great burst and mean punch to quickly accelerate past guards like they're not there. He's an efficient run defender and a great pass rusher. He needs to improve his work against double teams and add some to his frame but come on. The guy's a stud. Pro Comp: Gerald McCoy Ashtyn Davis, S, California: Another favorite of people on the sub, Ashtyn Davis has everything you could want out of a prospect. To match his top-level athleticism, he's a safety with great instincts and ball-skills with very high character that appears very coachable. I have soft spot for former walk-ons and he's one of those guys that's grinded to get where he is. He has good size, to boot. He doesn't have many primary areas he struggles with but he can continue to develop against the run. He's a guy that can certainly sneak into the first round if the right team lands in the right situation. Pro Comp: Kevin Byard Jalen Reagor, WR, TCU: The 3rd Horned Frog in 5 spots, but Reagor finally settles in. I was a huge fan of Reagor when I started on the film and it's hard not to notice his incredible burst and top speed. Some will cite his so-so combine but I have no problem believing he's much faster than that. IMO, there's two things that separate Reagor from your traditional speed-demon prospect. First, he is one of the better 50/50 ball winners in this class and that's saying something. He has not let his height/weight keep him from attacking the ball catching it at full extension. Second, he is an extremely poor cutter for his natural speed. There's a lot of wasted movement and he nukes his own acceleration. Looks a little uncoordinated even. Still, he has a future in this league even with his limited route tree and drop problems. You can't take your eyes off him for one second. Pro Comp: DK Metcalf, minus a few inches Laviska Shenault, WR, Colorado: Very receivers in CFB the last two years have been as electric as Laviska Shenault. Able to play out wide, out of the slot, out of the backfield, or even in the wildcat, Viska uses his large frame and athleticism to power through defenders at will. As a receiver, he lacks quite a bit of polish. His route running can be sloppy and his hands can be questionable. But his YAC and running ability in general will keep him in the league for a long time. He's the type of guy you want to get the ball in space and let him go. Tackle at your own risk. Pro Comp: AJ Brown Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State: The last in a very difficult group of WRs for me to sort through, Aiyuk isn't far behind the others. After coming through the junior college ranks, Aiyuk burst onto the scene for ASU posting nearly 1200 yards and 8 TDs last year with an absolutely stupid 18 yards per catch. He is able to beat press on the outside (if you can get your hands on him) and use his incredible speed and acceleration to glide in between defenders rather effortlessly. He's pretty sure handed, though I wouldn't bank on him to go for many jump balls. Still, even if in the slot, Aiyuk will be a problem for opposing DCs for several years due to his ability to break one at any given time. He's a top 20 pick in most drafts. Pro Comp: DJ Moore AJ Terrell, CB, Clemson: AJ is another in a long line of Clemson CBs that are really great on paper but on tape you just don't know about. Few had a more impressive showing at the combine and he assured scouts of his legit OCB size to match with elite athleticism. On film, he shows to be a very willing tackler and can deliver some pop on unsuspecting ball carriers. Still, you have to worry about Terrell as a gambler at times and he does seem to get lost in coverage. He was beat pretty badly in the NCG but I don't hold that against him. Ultimately, I think his level of play held him back and I'm confident he can adapt at the next level. Whether he will is up to him but there's no doubt he has all the tools to do it. Pro Comp: Byron Jones Albert Okwuegbuman, TE, Missouri: The Big O was arguably the most heralded TE prospect coming into the past season but, like many flashy players before, he was exposed a little on film throughout the year. An absolute terror in the red zone with incredible big-play ability and obviously elite top-end athleticism, Albert has a lot of traits you want in a feature TE. He is, of course, a very inconsistent blocker and his lack of effort at times is concerning. There's no reason a TE that big and that athletic doesn't dominate on every play. You put Kmet in Albert O's body and you have a top 10 pick. Still, you have to hope the right coaches and environment can bring the best out of him. I wouldn't want to line up across from him on any given play. Pro Comp: Jimmy Graham Kyle Dugger, S, Lenoir-Rhyne: Dugger is one of the great mysteries of the draft to me. Coming from a D2 school where he looked like Ed Reed playing against Pop Warner kids, it's really hard to judge how good this guy actually is. He had a great combine and that was one of the first benchmarks I needed to see him hit. He measured well, ran well. He clearly has good ball skills and has big plus upside as a return man at the next level. He's very powerful and used his size well. It's hard to say much more because right now he's mostly a blank canvas. But he's an incredible athlete and we could be talking about a future Pro Bowler. Pro Comp: Rayshawn Jenkins Cesar Ruiz, IOL, Michigan: Our first interior lineman sneaks on the board and it's well deserved. Cesar Ruiz starred in the middle of the Michigan OL the past couple seasons and is known for his consistency. He may not wow you with his athleticism but he's a very willing run block and very consistent pass protector. He's a cerebral player in the middle who plays very physically. It may not sound like the most glowing recommendation, but consistency is what you want the most from your interior lineman. He has as good a shot as any player to be a consistent Pro-Bowler. Pro Comp: Rodney Hudson Kenny Willekes, EDGE, Michigan State: One of my favorite prospects in an otherwise rough edge class. Another former walk-on for MSU, Willekes has been one of the most productive edge defenders the last 3 seasons on his way to 50(! ) TFLs and 23. 5 sacks. Knocked for his athleticism, I don't totally understand why. He looks a little slow footed at times but at others is quick to blow right through tackles and even tight ends. He's very disciplined in the run game and his sack totals have gotten better each season. He's an absolute terror to block and projects best as 3-4 strong-side OLB. Pass on him because of his size if you want, I hope he suits up for my team next year. Pro Comp: Jordan Jenkins Antoine Winfield, S, Minnesota: He may be pint-sized but he packs a mean punch. Playing safety for the Golden Gophers the last 4 season, Winfield burst on the scene this year after recording 7 picks on the year. Despite his small stature, he is not afraid to deliver some physical hits and plays very downhill. He excels in zone coverage but isn't to be picked on in man either and has little trouble reading the play. I have questions about how he will hold up after injuries derailed his previous two seasons, but he has football in is blood. I don't know if he'll hold up in the league, but he'll be damn good when he's out there. Pro Comp: Tyrann Mathieu Julian Okwara, EDGE, Notre Dame: The last on the list is an explosive edge rusher who comes downhill as well as on the list. I am pretty critical of Okwara's lack of production- just 15 sacks and 20 TFLs in the last 3 seasons- and 2019 wasn't his best. He struggles to stay on the field. He gets stonewalled too easily. But when you turn on the tape, you know why he's so highly sought after. When he gets going at tough speed, you can't adjust to him. You almost can't see him coming. There's nothing gradual to his game. He either gets there quickly, or he doesn't at all. He needs to work hard on adding counters and becoming more physical. But if he can supplement that at all, he can be a dangerous pass rusher in the NFL. Pro Comp: Harold Landry That's it guys. Hope you can glean something from it. Let me know where I screwed up in the comments. Lol. Cheers.

 

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Watch Full Length Kwiat szczęścia factbook. Witaj Moniko Piękna piosenka i fantastyczne video Pozdrawiam Weekendowo. Watch full length kwiat szcz c4 99 c5 9bcia new. A zamiokulkas też czy nie. A New Decade. A New Dawn On Dec 30 2019, the Washington Redskins fired President Bruce Allen, after 10 years of reign, following the latest of countless 4 game skids to finish the 2019 season. Owner Dan Snyder pulled the plug mere hours after one of the weirdest "interactions" DC media has seen in sometime. The 47-16 loss to Dallas capped off a decade long saga of deceit, misdirection, backstabbing, cronyism, self preservation, and most importantly ego inflation. The 2010s for the Skins finished the decade a woeful 62-91-1, good for 4th worst in the NFL. However, the failures on the field pale in comparison to all the drama off the field despite Allen's famous "Winning off the field" quote following the dreadful 2014's dreadful 4-12 post season press conference. 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Going back to that November day. Down 17-7 half way through the 3rd Qrt, Alex Smith drops back and is sacked. That play will be a moment that will be on Youtube's worst sports injuries of all time. 30 years to the day that the most famous injury in Theismann. That day changed everything for not just Alex but Bruce & Dan. For an ever growing contingent of fans the team had started going in circles. Alex was another move to solidify that thought. Every year something flashy was done to keep the fans interested in buying Tix and gear. Anything to distract the marks that the FO thought we were. Especially following the Debacle that was the Kirk contract. The fans saw through it and it showed. Fed Ex was a ghost town. The trend had been set but 2018 had seen it explode. Worst Season opener attendence in Fed Ex field history. The redskins limped to a 7-9 record following the aforementioned 6-3 start. The way the season started and ended dived many fans with the state of the team. Were they good with horrible injury luck? Were they just lucky with the record to begin with? To the Redskins their goal for competing for 2019 had taken a hit. They were going to be committing to 11% of their cap to their only starting caliber QB who we just learned within the past couple of weeks almost lost his life. Jay Gruden headed into this second to last year of his deal. He needed to win. He had one play off appearance in his his previous 5 seasons with zero wins with a sub 500 record. The Redskins needed to win. Honestly the 2019 season was a debacle from the minute they forced a Rookie QB onto a HC that needed to win to save his job. It was a disaster than anyone could see coming. Skins started off 0-5 rarely looking competitive. Jay was fired. OL coach Bill Callahan was hired and they looked slightly better. The Run game was more cohesive with the passing game. More commitment to it overall. In the end none of it really mattered. All eyes were squarely on Dan Snyder. A big move was needed. To most fans, a firing of Bruce Allen was the most wanted move. Well the most attainable one as Dan isnt going anywhere. Changing out a HC wasnt going to be enough and no HC worth his salt was coming with Bruce still in charge. Im not going to get into a game by game take. They were mostly all run together games of bad play and coaching with few bright spots on the roster but largely unimportant. One game in particular though is important. On Dec 1st the Redskins beat the Kyle Allen led Carolina Panthers. To Redskins fans, we are well aware of losses to the Redskins usually means one thing to opponent coaches. After an 8 year tenure, the Panthers fired HC Ron Rivera. A well respected HC had run its course and with a new owner in place in Charlotte change soon was expected sooner or later. Roughly 2 weeks after the firing of Ron Rivera, Dan Snyder reached out to his last known Ally within the football world. A legendary HC and HoFer, now in two sports. Joe Gibbs. The two time ex HC of the Redskins resides in Charlotte. Dan knew massive change was needed. He had recruited Joe for advice before and was doing so again. "Talk with Ron and let me know". After a nearly month long courting process held in near secret until week 16-17 Dan had found his man to lead the Redskins into the new Decade. Ron Rivera, one of the most well respected HC and people in the entire league was hired as the new Head man of the "head coach driven" Washington Redskins. Ron so far has completely rebuilt the coaching staff with only 2 being held onto from the previous staff. The most important of hires was the Defensive Coordinator. The 2010s for the Skins were mired by horrific Defenses and even worse Coordinators. Jim Haslett to Joe Barry to Greg Manusky. BLEHHHH. Ron named Jack Del Rio DC 1 day after his own hiring. A long tenured HC and DC with a fantastic reputation for defense. Bruce Allens firing wasnt the only moves within organization that made waves. Culture isnt set by just one man and isnt changed by removing one person. It needs massive sweeping changes and we got just that. Long known Dan Snyder LTs were moved on from in executive VP Eric Schaeffer and Head Trainer Larry Hess. Both of which had been employed for over 17 years. Doug Williams has been moved from Player personnel to player development. Kyle Smith while young is well regarded and the son of long time Charger GM AJ Smith, was promoted to VP of player Personnel. It is unknown currently how many more changes will be made post draft but I expect more people to be moved out by Ron Kyle and a possible new GM that will lead more non player acquisition roles. As far as 2020 is concerned with scheme and plans, little is known. The team has numerous possible Cap casualties like Jordan Reed and Josh Norman. Add in the Trent Williams contract situation and there are a million of different ways that Ron can take this. Will he try and win as much as he can this year with bringing Trent back or will he try and build for his tenure by trading Trent among other possible trade capital return players like Ryan Kerrigan and eating a bunch of Cap in one year like Alex Smith? At this point its impossible to speculate. The Redskins do have some good pieces to build around. There is still argument to this day as to how "Close" they are and what does close exactly mean? Close to me is close to competing for championships and they are no where close right now. Even then its hard to really evaluate how good this team and the players even are given how poor the coaching staff has been over the past couple of years. They have drafted ok over the past couple of years. For the player evaluations Im getting help from u/the-zarate-kid 2018: Round 1 Pick 13; Daron Payne, IDL, Alabama: This is a pick that attracted a lot of criticism from within and without, particuarly given immensely promising players like Tremaine Edmunds and Derwin James who went soon after this Redskins selection. However, given the Redskins' (terrible) history with injuries and tendency for injury-prone players, you can at least see the rationale behind bolstering an already strong unit, which at that time had an exceptional position coach in the now-departed Jim Tomsula. Overall this is a pick that a lot of people bemoaned the positional value of, and I myself am torn. On the one hand, the Skins DL is now a force, with Payne alongside former Bama teammate Jonathan Allen and the phenomenally underrated Matt Ioannidis. On the other hand, there are a solid handful of really good players at other Redskins needs that slipped the net; Edmunds, James, Alexander and Vander Esch being the most obvious candidates. Payne has performed well, earning the dubious honour of a Brett Kollman feature and racking up 7 sacks and 9 TFLs in his first two years in the league. His 21 pressures (per PFR) is also impressive for a nose-tackle. As a whole this is a solid pick; Payne has done fairly well and fits the obvious Bama/Ohio State culture that the brass were trying to emulate, but it's easy to look enviously at burgeoning superstars elsewhere and wish we could make the pick again. I'd grade it a solid 6/10 Round 2 Pick 59: Derrius Guice, RB, LSU Derrius Guice, LSU's devastatingly physical and mercurial RB (best used in a 1-2 punch with Leo Fournette), had a surprising fall through the draft. Allegedly due to interviews where he was asked provoking and insulting questions, perhaps more realistically due to a laundry list of injuries, he wound up coming to DC in a trade down. Flashing in training camp and pre-season and raising morale with off-field charity work and fan engagement, he unfortunately suffered a pair of brutal injuries that have meant you can count his starts on one hand. Most impressive was versus his new HC Ron Rivera's Carolina Panthers, where he gashed them for 129 yards and a pair of touchdowns on only 10 carries; including a vicious stiff arm that introduced Shaq Thompson to the turf and would have had given many an LSU fan nostalgia pangs. At this stage he is hard to grade due to his limited snaps, and if he can't put together a solid season in the next few years will likely be looked on as injury-wasted talent. One to watch in an ACL-injury-laden Skins backfield that also features Adrian Peterson and Bryce Love Round 3 Pick 74: Geron Christian, OT, Louisville A fairly curious pick at the time given that the Redskins (at that stage) had a solid tackle tandem in Morgan Moses and Trent Williams. Since then, Trent has taken an extended leave of absence over medical grievances that I'm sure my fellow fans have already covered, and Moses has regressed to a replacement-level RT. Given these fall-offs, you'd think that Geron would be able to slot right in (especially under OL guru Bill Callahan, now departed). However, he's only had cameo roles and slid behind the aging FA Donald Penn, and still looks out of his depth two years on. It was obvious that opposing DCs were preying on his inexperienced, grabby hands and somewhat clumsy footwork; his size and length being negated by these glaring weaknesses. He'll have to improve to have any chance of earning either a starting berth or a second contract in Washington. One of the weakest picks so far Round 4 Pick 109: Troy Apke, S, Penn St Nicknamed 'white lightning' after his blazing fast 40 yard dash at the combine, Apke was snapped up by the Redskins to rotate with 'troubled' safety Montae Nicholson. Unfortunately, his exceptional athleticism hasn't yet been refined into good safety play and he remains mediocre in coverage, particularly zone tracking. Nicholson has been far from stellar in that time, so Apke not playing is a disappointment. He is a mainstay special teamer though, playing very well as a gunner in punt coverage. Look for him to get more creative usage in Jack Del Rio's defense. Round 6 Pick 197: Shaun Dion Hamilton, ILB, Alabama Another Bama pickup, 'SDH' has had a cameo role as the third choice off-ball 'backer, playing 34% of snaps. Clearly an intelligent player who called plays for Nick Saban's Tide defense, his athletic limitations relegate him to 'only' a decent spot starter and rotational LB. As such, he is most useful playing between the tackles to shut down run plays with exceptional play recognition and instinctive breaks on the ball; he had a solid 4 pressures and 1 sack on only 19 blitzes and also caused a turnover with a strip. His coverage was improved, only allowing 12 catches for an average of 5. 9 yards per play (although that is obviously unspectacular). At this stage, nothing more than useful depth and a potential culture boost. Round 7 pick 256: Trey Quinn, WR, SMU Another seemingly-special teams pick, Quinn has indeed mostly been used as a punt returner. Due to the weakness of the Redskins WR group, however, he was thrown into games and looked like you'd expect a Mr Irrelevant wideout to look; capable of a few moves but largely an uninspiring athlete who struggled vs any half-decent corner. Mainly a short option who has picked up about 200 yards and a pair of house calls in his 2 years in the league. Also already pushing 25, hard to see a future for Quinn that involves him doing much more than STs. 2019: Round 1 Pick 15, Dwayne Haskins, QB, Ohio St Oh boy. The big one. I could write 10 times this on the first Redskins day 1 QB since a certain iffin back in 2012. Sparing a thought for Pentt, who has to edit these ramblings, I'll keep it brief. Dwayne suffered from being drafted to a bitter and jaded fanbase with exacting standards, and a HC who was on the hotseat and determined to hang onto his job; the 1st round QB with the least college starts in recent history, Haskins wasn't granted first team snaps and looked understandably rough in cameo appearances vs the Giants and Vikings. Finally practicing with the first team rather than holding the clipboard in training sessions, he had a mixed first proper start vs the Buffalo Bills; passing for a very conservative 144 yards. That game followed with struggles vs the Lions and Panthers, although he did enough to lead his first ever game winning drive vs Detroit. Despite statistically average games vs Green Bay and Carolina, Haskins showed the arm, awareness and accuracy that made him a Heisman finalist in college. Against division rivals in New York and Philadelphia, however, he was on another level. Navigating the pocket with comfort, improvising on the run and spreading the ball widely (particularly to fellow rookie and Buckeye comrade Terry McLaurin) en route to 400 yards, 4 touchdowns and zero interceptions. Discussion about his future is rife but I think it would be foolish to give up on a 22 year old who finished so strongly, at least until he gets an offseason as the first string QB. Ron Rivera has publicly demanded more leadership out of #7, but his OC Scott Turner seems more positive which promises well for the Maryland native. Hopefully with a more comprehensive supporting cast around him, he can make strides in his sophomore year. Look for sharpened medium accuracy on placement/timing routes and better feel for the pocket. It would be nice to have certainty at QB in DC for the first time since RG3. Round 1 Pick 30, Montez Sweat, EDGE, Miss St Acquired in a daring trade up with Indianpolis, combine hero Montez Sweat (who ran an INCREDIBLE 4. 41 dash at 260 lbs) was selected as a late round pick to bolster an uninspiring pass rushing unit with sheer speed, length and athleticism. He looked much as you would expect; terrifying speed and pursuit can let him absolutely blow past tackles who misstep, but he lacks hand fighting and recovery ability and can get stonewalled by tackles who match his relentless pace and strength. That said, a 27 pressure and 7 sacks season as a rookie rushing against left tackles is nothing to sniff at particularly since he was viewed as a rawer prospect. Hopefully with Chase Young featuring on the other side, he should be able to mop up a few broken plays and maybe reach double digit sacks. Big compensation given up here, but the pick is certainly looking worthwhile. Don't be surprised to see him become the alpha dog in DC; they don't give just anyone an Old Spice commercial. Round 3 pick 87, Terry McLaurin, WR, Ohio St At first seeming to be a fairly average midround pick, with the possible upside of inbuilt chemistry towards Haskins, 'Scary Terry' quickly proved any naysayers wrong. Devastating speed combined with savvy route running to make him a fearsome burner. A debut of 125 yards and a house call versus the division rival Eagles caught people's attention; 300 yards and 3 scores in the next 4 matches would keep it. Despite only average QB play and no other receiving threats to occupy the best defenders he faced, Terry remaining a terrifying proposition for any CB he faced; just ask Darius Slay, who he notched 5 catches against, or Jalen Mills, who got torched for 130 yards and a TD on only 5 reception. Despite injury knocking him out for 2 games, the sure-handed burner also received a PFWA all-rookie team nod; and, if you extrapolate his stats out for the games he missed, he would have identical stats to OROY candidate AJ Brown. Hopefully with more consistent QB play and an innovative OC in Scott Turner, McLaurin could break 1000 yards in his next year in the league. Undoubtedly the standout pick of this class so far.

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