KTOWNFINFAN
Seasoned Veteran
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- Aug 13, 2005
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The ONLY way WR is stacked is with possession WRs.
Wallace -- 4.3 legit. Only true playmaker WR on roster (jury out on Landry)
Hartline -- 4.6 (closer to a 4.6 in pads than a 4.5 and plays much weaker than one might think)
Landry -- 4.6+ in pads (more quickness than Hartline but even slower downfield)
Matthews -- 4.55 slowfoot. Better body control than Hartline, but cannot make plays downfield consistently.
Binns -- 4.55 and limited, but w. decent size. Has the potential to be a redzone threat -- and perhaps more potential as number 2 than Hartline. Still not a true threat downfield, though.
Gibson -- 4.6 w. decent quickness but zero threat downfield.
Slowest stable of WRs in the NFL, across the board. And limitations for each WR.
One true playmaker as of right now.
LD
p.s. and this in a league where 4.5 is considered marginal for a CB. Which means that most of the time Miami's WRs are lining up against defenders quicker and more talented than them.
So are you just making up these numbers off the top of your head or what?? Brian Hartline ran a 4.52 at the combine and a 4.49 at his proday. He is deceptively fast and gets open deep quite easily. He is an underneath WR that catches most everything, and when he gets DBs cheating up he is very good at getting past them.
With Wallace's 4.2 speed combined with Hartline's 4.49 we are easily in the top half of the league in combined speed with our two starters. (not that that is such an important issue). And yes they are slower with pads on, but guess what, the numbers the DBs post are also without pads. Pads slow them down also.