There's nothing Daniel Thomas can do on the field that Damien can't. He has a little experience over him, but none of it has been positive, so I don't see how Thomas makes this roster over Damien.
If Damien can ever improve his vision, which I doubt he can, he goes from being a a short yardage utility back to being a true #1. He has that kind of ability, just no vision.
As for Tripp, I'm just not remotely sold on the guy. If he wasnt physical in college I don't see how e gains that in the NFL.
He will. You can see the difference in just about every player that enters the league after a year or two...they get much bigger. The ones that end up being really good though, are the ones that keep their speed. Unfortunately, many don't keep that balance...
For what it's worth, Damien Williams led all RB in the 2014 draft class in Speed Score (Football Outsiders metric based on size/speed).
The former Sooner is a one-cut runner with patience and skill to find the cutback lane in a zone-blocking system. Technically sound, Williams demonstrates good pad level and second effort with his legs after contact. He even displays a nice-looking straight-arm.
The technique is all there, but the strength is lacking.
Williams added the weight and still has the speed
[However] I need to see that Williams’ size is translating to power.
If it is, Williams is the best back of the [top Speed Scores] quartet and capable of earning this sleeper moniker. If it doesn’t, Williams has the skills to earn a roster spot and contribute because of his speed, acceleration, agility, skill as a receiver, and potential as a blocker.
Sure, but like Lamar Miller, he doesn't break too many tackles.
Size doesn't always translate into power. For example, Lamar Miller (224 lbs), Damien Williams (222 lbs), Daniel Thomas (235 lbs) are all big guys. But none of them run with nearly as much power as 215 lb Marshawn Lynch, who is actually smaller.
That said, I hope Damien Williams makes the team.
Looked to me like he was pretty physical against Atlanta