IPukeOregonGrellow
New Fish
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Good for him...
He can still change his mind I think as long as he doesn't sign with an agent. It might be wise for him to hold up on that. The bowl game showed he has some skills still to develop, because the NFL is a tough place for body catchers.
Somebody on educk posted that with Mitchell, Oregon would be at the level of the 91 huskies next year.
Somebody on educk posted that with Mitchell, Oregon would be at the level of the 91 huskies next year.
I get the kid wants to make his money. But how much does a 5th round pick actually make?
Yeah, he won't be the only target next year, but if he starts catching with his hands and drops fewer balls, I don't see how that doesn't help his draft profile. There might be a few GM's that look primarily at stats, but most NFL teams are pretty astute when it comes to understanding a player's skill set. Dillon's size and speed has him as a possession receiver in the NFL. How can you be a good possession receiver if you drop 30% of the passes thrown your way? If you're 6'4" and have 4.4 speed, you can drop a shit ton of passes and still get paid. Not when you're 6'1" and closer to 4.55 speed.
Only oregon receiver worth a damn
Somebody on educk posted that with Mitchell, Oregon would be at the level of the 91 huskies next year.
I saw that. How does keeping Mitchell make our O line and defense anything close to the 91 Huskies? Such a bizarre, nonsensical comparison.
Clearly, with Mitchell, Oregon would be on par with the 2000-01 Miami Hurricanes, duh!
I get the kid wants to make his money. But how much does a 5th round pick actually make?
Yeah, he won't be the only target next year, but if he starts catching with his hands and drops fewer balls, I don't see how that doesn't help his draft profile. There might be a few GM's that look primarily at stats, but most NFL teams are pretty astute when it comes to understanding a player's skill set. Dillon's size and speed has him as a possession receiver in the NFL. How can you be a good possession receiver if you drop 30% of the passes thrown your way? If you're 6'4" and have 4.4 speed, you can drop a shit ton of passes and still get paid. Not when you're 6'1" and closer to 4.55 speed.
Fifth round pick is probably $200,000 to $300,000 worth of guaranteed money. If he makes a roster for a year, add another $600,000 to $700,000 to it. Not world beater money. But for a 21-year-old kid, it's more money than he's ever had plus he doesn't have to have to play school and can devote his every waking hour to football.
And I think yore underestimating what Mitchell's skill set is. In the Warshington game this third and six...
![]()
doesn't happen without this one...
![]()
I get the kid wants to make his money. But how much does a 5th round pick actually make?
Yeah, he won't be the only target next year, but if he starts catching with his hands and drops fewer balls, I don't see how that doesn't help his draft profile. There might be a few GM's that look primarily at stats, but most NFL teams are pretty astute when it comes to understanding a player's skill set. Dillon's size and speed has him as a possession receiver in the NFL. How can you be a good possession receiver if you drop 30% of the passes thrown your way? If you're 6'4" and have 4.4 speed, you can drop a shit ton of passes and still get paid. Not when you're 6'1" and closer to 4.55 speed.
Fifth round pick is probably $200,000 to $300,000 worth of guaranteed money. If he makes a roster for a year, add another $600,000 to $700,000 to it. Not world beater money. But for a 21-year-old kid, it's more money than he's ever had plus he doesn't have to have to play school and can devote his every waking hour to football.
And I think yore underestimating what Mitchell's skill set is. In the Warshington game this third and six...
![]()
doesn't happen without this one...
![]()
He needed a pick to get open on that play but he is a good player with NFL talent. Glad he's gone. Oregon's WR corps is trash without him. Hope Dye is next.
I get the kid wants to make his money. But how much does a 5th round pick actually make?
Yeah, he won't be the only target next year, but if he starts catching with his hands and drops fewer balls, I don't see how that doesn't help his draft profile. There might be a few GM's that look primarily at stats, but most NFL teams are pretty astute when it comes to understanding a player's skill set. Dillon's size and speed has him as a possession receiver in the NFL. How can you be a good possession receiver if you drop 30% of the passes thrown your way? If you're 6'4" and have 4.4 speed, you can drop a shit ton of passes and still get paid. Not when you're 6'1" and closer to 4.55 speed.
Fifth round pick is probably $200,000 to $300,000 worth of guaranteed money. If he makes a roster for a year, add another $600,000 to $700,000 to it. Not world beater money. But for a 21-year-old kid, it's more money than he's ever had plus he doesn't have to have to play school and can devote his every waking hour to football.
And I think yore underestimating what Mitchell's skill set is. In the Warshington game this third and six...
![]()
doesn't happen without this one...
![]()
He needed a pick to get open on that play but he is a good player with NFL talent. Glad he's gone. Oregon's WR corps is trash without him. Hope Dye is next.
I get the kid wants to make his money. But how much does a 5th round pick actually make?
Yeah, he won't be the only target next year, but if he starts catching with his hands and drops fewer balls, I don't see how that doesn't help his draft profile. There might be a few GM's that look primarily at stats, but most NFL teams are pretty astute when it comes to understanding a player's skill set. Dillon's size and speed has him as a possession receiver in the NFL. How can you be a good possession receiver if you drop 30% of the passes thrown your way? If you're 6'4" and have 4.4 speed, you can drop a shit ton of passes and still get paid. Not when you're 6'1" and closer to 4.55 speed.
Fifth round pick is probably $200,000 to $300,000 worth of guaranteed money. If he makes a roster for a year, add another $600,000 to $700,000 to it. Not world beater money. But for a 21-year-old kid, it's more money than he's ever had plus he doesn't have to have to play school and can devote his every waking hour to football.
And I think yore underestimating what Mitchell's skill set is. In the Warshington game this third and six...
![]()
doesn't happen without this one...
![]()
He needed a pick to get open on that play but he is a good player with NFL talent. Glad he's gone. Oregon's WR corps is trash without him. Hope Dye is next.
I get the kid wants to make his money. But how much does a 5th round pick actually make?
Yeah, he won't be the only target next year, but if he starts catching with his hands and drops fewer balls, I don't see how that doesn't help his draft profile. There might be a few GM's that look primarily at stats, but most NFL teams are pretty astute when it comes to understanding a player's skill set. Dillon's size and speed has him as a possession receiver in the NFL. How can you be a good possession receiver if you drop 30% of the passes thrown your way? If you're 6'4" and have 4.4 speed, you can drop a shit ton of passes and still get paid. Not when you're 6'1" and closer to 4.55 speed.
Fifth round pick is probably $200,000 to $300,000 worth of guaranteed money. If he makes a roster for a year, add another $600,000 to $700,000 to it. Not world beater money. But for a 21-year-old kid, it's more money than he's ever had plus he doesn't have to have to play school and can devote his every waking hour to football.
And I think yore underestimating what Mitchell's skill set is. In the Warshington game this third and six...
![]()
doesn't happen without this one...
![]()
He needed a pick to get open on that play but he is a good player with NFL talent. Glad he's gone. Oregon's WR corps is trash without him. Hope Dye is next.
Maybe. But yore track record of being wrong 81% of the tim gives me faith someone steps up.
I get the kid wants to make his money. But how much does a 5th round pick actually make?
Yeah, he won't be the only target next year, but if he starts catching with his hands and drops fewer balls, I don't see how that doesn't help his draft profile. There might be a few GM's that look primarily at stats, but most NFL teams are pretty astute when it comes to understanding a player's skill set. Dillon's size and speed has him as a possession receiver in the NFL. How can you be a good possession receiver if you drop 30% of the passes thrown your way? If you're 6'4" and have 4.4 speed, you can drop a shit ton of passes and still get paid. Not when you're 6'1" and closer to 4.55 speed.
Fifth round pick is probably $200,000 to $300,000 worth of guaranteed money. If he makes a roster for a year, add another $600,000 to $700,000 to it. Not world beater money. But for a 21-year-old kid, it's more money than he's ever had plus he doesn't have to have to play school and can devote his every waking hour to football.
And I think yore underestimating what Mitchell's skill set is. In the Warshington game this third and six...
![]()
doesn't happen without this one...
![]()
He needed a pick to get open on that play but he is a good player with NFL talent. Glad he's gone. Oregon's WR corps is trash without him. Hope Dye is next.
Maybe. But yore track record of being wrong 81% of the tim gives me faith someone steps up.
dont worry, according to quooks true freshmen are instant difference makers