It would be awfully strange if he didn't. . . :question:
If you had to pick just one player from both sides of the ball (so 2 in all), who would you pick and why?
Now for the purposes of this discussion, I want to loosely define "break out season." I consider it to be a player that puts up stats (tackles, ints, rush yds, etc) that greatly exceed their numbers during previous seasons and that of their peers in the same season, regardless of expectations. For instance, it my not be surprising for Jalen Hurd to rush for 1500 yds but if he did, it would certainly be a break out season, IMO.
Here's a question, I don't know the answer to it.
The NFL rules on eligibility for the draft go something along the lines of, "eligible once the player's high school class has been graduated for two years." Something like that, anyway. Written that way because (1) you don't have to go to college to join the NFL (just, most do) and (2) you don't even have to graduate from HS to play in the NFL.
But here's the question: if you're an EE, and you personally graduated from HS in December to join the team by start of Spring semester...wouldn't you then be eligible for the NFL after your sophomore season?
Do the EEs completely change the complexion of the equation?
(p.s. don't remember if Josh Malone was an EE or not...question is not necessarily specific to him)
Here's a question, I don't know the answer to it.
The NFL rules on eligibility for the draft go something along the lines of, "eligible once the player's high school class has been graduated for two years." Something like that, anyway. Written that way because (1) you don't have to go to college to join the NFL (just, most do) and (2) you don't even have to graduate from HS to play in the NFL.
But here's the question: if you're an EE, and you personally graduated from HS in December to join the team by start of Spring semester...wouldn't you then be eligible for the NFL after your sophomore season?
Do the EEs completely change the complexion of the equation?
(p.s. don't remember if Josh Malone was an EE or not...question is not necessarily specific to him)
the rule is 3 years. So after this season, True Juniors and Redshirt sophomores are eligible for the draft
Josh Dobbs - 3200 yards passing, 800 yards rushing, 40 combined TDs
Jalen Hurd/Alvin Kamara - 2000 yards rushing, 20 TDs (combined)
Marquez North - 1000 yards receiving, 10 TDs
Kahlil McKenzie - 8 sacks, 15 tackles for loss (All-SEC 1st team)
Todd Kelly Jr. - 7 ints (leads SEC)
Thanks, LWS. So it must be a matter of counting the number of seasons of football passed. Otherwise, that redshirt sophomore wouldn't quite have hit 3 years since HS graduation yet, since the draft comes every April and most high schools don't graduate until May.
Right? Or am I missing something?
If that's right, then there's no "NFL advantage" to being an Early Enrollee. Three football seasons is still three football seasons.