There's no way you move Sewell if you take him. Jackson moves to LG like CK suggested, or moves to RT with Kindley to LG and Hunt RG.
Sewell is the LT if he's drafted. Has to be.
Sewell is the LT if he's drafted. Has to be.
In this context RT is more important that LT.He is a star left tackle. You don’t move him to right tackle.
Who's is the better pass blocker...Jackson or Sewell?There's no way you move Sewell if you take him. Jackson moves to LG like CK suggested, or moves to RT with Kindley to LG and Hunt RG.
Sewell is the LT if he's drafted. Has to be.
Agree 100%. Move Jackson to LT, Hunt to RG, Kindley to LG...keep Jesse as swing and Dieter as backup when needed.There's no way you move Sewell if you take him. Jackson moves to LG like CK suggested, or moves to RT with Kindley to LG and Hunt RG.
Sewell is the LT if he's drafted. Has to be.
Not necessarily. Blindside protection is primarily necessary when you line up under C And turn your back to the LOS for a 5 or 7 step drop.Who's is the better pass blocker...Jackson or Sewell?
The answer to that question should be lined up on Tua's blindside.
No. You don't.In this context RT is more important that LT.
So yes, you do.
BingoI wrote what I wrote. I stand by it. I think it's foolish and risky to take a #3 overall guy who became a star playing left tackle and move him to right tackle, which he hasn't played. Could work out beautifully. Could be a massive waste of resources.
The blind side thing, having spoken to several coaches about this, just not necessarily convinced it's the thing everyone makes of it. It's not cut and dry. I think the reality is he needs two good tackles. You didn't see the Bengals moving Anthony Munoz to right tackle. Didn't see the Jaguars moving Tony Boselli to right tackle.
I think Tua has seemed more bothered by left side pressure than right side pressure anyway.
I wrote what I wrote. I stand by it. I think it's foolish and risky to take a #3 overall guy who became a star playing left tackle and move him to right tackle, which he hasn't played. Could work out beautifully. Could be a massive waste of resources.
The blind side thing, having spoken to several coaches about this, just not necessarily convinced it's the thing everyone makes of it. It's not cut and dry. I think the reality is he needs two good tackles. You didn't see the Bengals moving Anthony Munoz to right tackle. Didn't see the Jaguars moving Tony Boselli to right tackle.
I think Tua has seemed more bothered by left side pressure than right side pressure anyway.
There's no way you move Sewell if you take him. Jackson moves to LG like CK suggested, or moves to RT with Kindley to LG and Hunt RG.
Sewell is the LT if he's drafted. Has to be.
What???Not necessarily. Blindside protection is primarily necessary when you line up under C And turn your back to the LOS for a 5 or 7 step drop.
When you operate out of the gun, the QB sees the entire defense and sets protection accordingly.
This "blind side" protection is 1980s thinking in a 2020 world.
For sake of discussion, let's say Grier and Flores decide Sewell is their guy.There may not be a bigger Sewell fan here than me and i would love to have him.
But OT is just not a big enough need to using such a high pick.
Not with huge needs at WR and LB.
IF you take Sewell or Parson with the Houston pick then you either have to settle for a WR outside the top 3 or trade up to get one of them.
It will be interesting to see if Miami dabbles(or splashes)in the FA WR pool.That could change their 1st round strategy to where they could ignore WR and then take one in R2 or R3.
It's a fair point. Moving Sewell to RT would require a lot of switching on the line. Hunt to RG, Kindley to LT most likely.I wrote what I wrote. I stand by it. I think it's foolish and risky to take a #3 overall guy who became a star playing left tackle and move him to right tackle, which he hasn't played. Could work out beautifully. Could be a massive waste of resources.
The blind side thing, having spoken to several coaches about this, just not necessarily convinced it's the thing everyone makes of it. It's not cut and dry. I think the reality is he needs two good tackles. You didn't see the Bengals moving Anthony Munoz to right tackle. Didn't see the Jaguars moving Tony Boselli to right tackle.
I think Tua has seemed more bothered by left side pressure than right side pressure anyway.