šŸˆ Te’O’s Draft Stock Tumbled When Irish Did

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Te’O’s Draft Stock Tumbled When Irish Did

By TIM ROHAN

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Manti Te’o’s season, filled emotional highs and lows, ended with a thud Monday night.

After a season in which he dealt with the deaths of his girlfriend and his grandmother and put together enough memorable plays to finish as the runner-up for the Heisman Trophy, Te’o left the college stage on the wrong end of Notre Dame’s embarrassing rout in the B.C.S. championship game.

It had been a dream season for Te’o and the Irish, up until they ran into the Crimson Tide. Asked after the game about this Notre Dame team’s legacy, Te’o acknowledged that, ā€œWe’re close; obviously we’re not there.ā€

ā€œI hope that the legacy we left was a dream season, but I don’t know,ā€ Te’o said.

Te’o racked up 103 tackles in the regular season, yet missed tackle after tackle Monday night. Alabama took full advantage in its 42-14 victory.

The Irish defense, a unit that Te’o had personified and which had defined Notre Dame’s undefeated regular season, allowed 529 yards. If Te’o did not measure up, neither did the Fighting Irish.

The consequences could stretch beyond Monday night, beyond one final loss. It could haunt Te’o when N.F.L. teams are considering their draft boards.

ā€œThis was the type of performance that could push him out of the first 32 picks,ā€ said Rob Rang, an N.F.L. Draft analyst for CBSSports.com. Rang added, ā€œStruggling on the biggest stage of his life is not going to help his cause.ā€

Of any college football team, Alabama most resembled an N.F.L. team, Rang said, so video from Monday’s game could be considered a good predictor of Te’o’s ability as a pro. That video will show the Crimson Tide exploiting both Te’o’s weakness (speed) and his strength (tackling).

ā€œHe slipped off of players, didn’t bear down well in space, and just didn’t have the speed to beat the running back to the edge,ā€ Rang said, although it did not take an expert to see that.

How Te’o’s performance will affect his draft stock is, of course, uncertain. But Notre Dame also faces a somewhat ambiguous path ahead.
Te’o will be gone. So will the senior tight end Tyler Eifert, Notre Dame’s top receiving threat; Theo Riddick, one of the Irish’s top rushers; and center Braxston Cave, among others. Running back Cierre Wood, who has a year of eligibility left, is considering making himself eligible for the draft.

Coach Brian Kelly could also be contemplating such a move.

On Saturday Kelly said of coaching in the N.F.L.: ā€œIt’s flattering if there is interest, which I don’t know that there is, but again, that is such a secondary topic for me right now. It’s all about this game.ā€

If Kelly stays his work will most likely start with quarterback Everett Golson. On Monday, Golson threw 36 passes, many of which fluttered or sailed, and finished with 270 yards, most coming after Alabama was comfortably ahead.

With Te’o gone, Notre Dame’s prospects should center even more around Golson’s development. The senior left tackle Zack Martin, who has a year of eligibility remaining, will be back, and the defensive line will return two stalwarts, Stephon Tuitt and Louis Nix III.

Trailing by 28 points at halftime Monday, hardly any of Te’o’s teammates had played well. But it is his draft status that could have been damaged the most.

ā€œObviously I have a lot of things to get better at,ā€ Te’o said. ā€œAs far as draft stock, I’ll leave that up to the experts. I’m just going to be the best me I can be.ā€

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/09/s...-when-irish-did.html?emc=tnt&tntemail1=y&_r=0
 
Manti declined the Senior Bowl as well.

I'm interested to hear the reasoning on this one. I can think of a few, but would love to hear it straight from Manti.

The combine gives guys a chance to show off their athleticism. He can show that. Hell, their entire defense can. But, the combine doesn't get into technique.

I'm still left wondering what to say at times. When I watched the few games before our match-up I saw things we could exploit and felt we could run on them successfully.

I didn't expect us to be able to run through them.
 
The combine gives guys a chance to show off their athleticism. He can show that. Hell, their entire defense can. But, the combine doesn't get into technique.

I'm still left wondering what to say at times. When I watched the few games before our match-up I saw things we could exploit and felt we could run on them successfully.

I didn't expect us to be able to run through them.

Yep, the dominance of the running game and just how susceptible their corners were both surprised me, mostly in how we were able to exploit both from the outset.
 
The sad part, the talking heads spun that front 7 up as the strength only to let everyone down. What was being billed as two powerhouse programs turned out to be Alabama playing a scrimmage while in Miami. When was the last time in a BCS NC game did a team play their 2nd team (I don't remember watching the other teams close enough to recall)?


side note...

What about Manti's parents going after the newspaper back home for a less than desirable "photo" on the front page.

http://deadspin.com/5975416/manti-t...printed-a-picture-of-his-son-missing-a-tackle
 
TerryP;755539 I didn't expect us to be able to run through them.[/QUOTE said:
The conundrum was, at least from my perspective, was that on the face of it, when taking into account their compared seasons, stats, game scores, opponents, close call victories (and against whom they came)... etc... how could Bama not easily, and embarrassingly eradicate the Irish by the end of the first half. It was, on the very face of it, a no-brainer and how could anyone see otherwise.

On the other hand... the Irish were ranked number #1. So I found myself wondering oddly.. is their something going on that i wasn't aware of? Were Holtz and Corso privy to secret pre-game information held from the rest of us? Am I not doing the math on the Irsh season correctly? Was their overtime win against lowly Pitt a fluke f*ck-up? The answer was NO!. The resolution was simply that the whole affair was all just a superlative example of a screwed up, trumped up BCS system that allows the meek and meek teams to inherit the earth.... at least until January when they get blown out in record fashion. In short... it was as obvious as I thought.. but dared not get too cocky about just in case. LOL.
 
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The sad part, the talking heads spun that front 7 up as the strength only to let everyone down. What was being billed as two powerhouse programs turned out to be Alabama playing a scrimmage while in Miami. When was the last time in a BCS NC game did a team play their 2nd team (I don't remember watching the other teams close enough to recall)?

I thought about that very point Weds or Thursday of game week. My guess was USC probably did when the blew out OU because there were records in that game we didn't break. (IE: AJ's four TD passes versus Leinart's five.)

When I looked at the box score all I saw were starters listed—guys who had been contributors all year in 2004.

After Lendale White scored to make it 55 about halfway through the fourth quarter they did pull him. Leinart played the entire game fumbling, in fact, on the next possession.

So yes, in a sense, USC did play their second teamers and scrubs—up 55-10 with around 7 minutes left in the game.
 
It's got to be tough for the guy. He probably went into the game thinking he was pretty elite. Now, he has to have his confidence shaken.

Agreed. I kinda feel for the guy. He was predicted as a top 5-10 draft pick but his stock has definitely taken a hit, despite all the awards he won and praise he earned. First, no Heisman and then that NC performance .. I dunno, I feel like anyone would lose some confidence over that .. I feel like he is better than he played. He almost looked kind of lost on the field?
 
Agreed. I kinda feel for the guy. He was predicted as a top 5-10 draft pick but his stock has definitely taken a hit, despite all the awards he won and praise he earned. First, no Heisman and then that NC performance .. I dunno, I feel like anyone would lose some confidence over that .. I feel like he is better than he played. He almost looked kind of lost on the field?


If I were to be a star defensive player nominated for the Bednarik Award next year and I might possibly play Bama in the BCSCG. I would take myself out of the running. On the Honey Badger, how the heck did he win the best Defensive Player when he wasn't even the best DB (Thorpe)?
[TABLE="class: tablehead"]
<TBODY>[TR="class: stathead"]
[TD="colspan: 3"]Chuck Bednarik Award
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR="class: colhead"]
[TD="colspan: 3"]Defensive Player of the Year
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR="class: oddrow"]
[TD]2012
[/TD]
[TD]Manti Te'o
[/TD]
[TD="width: 30%"]ND
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR="class: evenrow"]
[TD="width: 7%"]2011
[/TD]
[TD]Tyrann Mathieu
[/TD]
[TD="width: 30%"]LSU
[/TD]
[/TR]
</TBODY>[/TABLE]
 
I think his stock will drop both from his lack of effort in the championship game (yes, guys certainly do have off days, but this was the biggest game of his career and everyone was watching) and yesterday's events. I can't see him moving out of the 1st or 2nd though. I predict an early 2nd round pick.
 
As I've said in another thread, for every team that looks and says "I don't want him in our organization" there will be three or four teams with later picks waiting to scoop him up.
 
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