hookemholds Posted Monday at 02:54 AM Posted Monday at 02:54 AM I know Jalen Lott was supposedly being looked at as a CB by Texas. But he is ranked at the #6 WR on 247 and On3, is there a shot he would play both sides? If he would play some offense, how would he fit in to some other targets? Thanks @Gerry Hamilton @Bobby Burton @CJ Vogel @Jeff Howe Quote
Moderators Gerry Hamilton Posted Monday at 01:02 PM Moderators Posted Monday at 01:02 PM Corner is where he is most likely to play long term at the next level. But some teams will try to recruit him as a WR to offset favorite Texas recruiting him at CB 3 1 Quote
Moderators CJ Vogel Posted Monday at 02:55 PM Moderators Posted Monday at 02:55 PM I have seen plenty of WR tape from Lott that leads me to think he would be more than fine playing wide receiver at the next level. But I think his skillset at cornerback creates a larger gap with other prospects than it would with him at wide receiver. More valuable at CB. 2 1 Quote
taxsaver Posted Monday at 04:36 PM Posted Monday at 04:36 PM I'm hoping college, and even pro football starts moving more towards positionless instead of concentrating on JUST one position. Maybe it's my mindset since I played competitive golf and, as golfers, we have to have a WHOLE game. We don't concentrate on just putting, or just driving, or just trouble shots. We have to have a whole game. Football seems to pigeonhole players into just ONE position once you hit college. JMO Quote
graemakin Posted Monday at 09:46 PM Posted Monday at 09:46 PM Play him both ways ala Travis Hunter! 🤘 Quote
qaertyisthatdude Posted Monday at 09:48 PM Posted Monday at 09:48 PM 5 hours ago, taxsaver said: I'm hoping college, and even pro football starts moving more towards positionless instead of concentrating on JUST one position. Maybe it's my mindset since I played competitive golf and, as golfers, we have to have a WHOLE game. We don't concentrate on just putting, or just driving, or just trouble shots. We have to have a whole game. Football seems to pigeonhole players into just ONE position once you hit college. JMO Sounds great in theory, but players that can play both positions effectively for a full season don't grow on trees. Travis Hunter, Deion Sanders, Troy Brown, Charles Woodson are all names that come to mind for me. 1 Quote
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