Top end speed is important but it is more about control and change of gears. Hyatt controls his speed better than anyone in the draft which is why he is the most open on tape.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑08 Apr 2023 07:59I think you’re thinking of the other Packers fan favorite Rice. Mingo has his own problems (concentration drops, limited production), but can’t separate and too many contested catches aren’t them.
I like Mingo for what he can be at the next level (projection), how well he fits this offense specifically, and how irreplaceable his skill set is in this draft class. If you miss on Mingo, there’s no other 220 pound 4.46 player who can line up in the slot, backfield, TE, or out wide to select.
If you miss out on Hyatt there are literally three other guys who have shoe deep speed and catch point. Trey Palmer. Marvin Mims. Tyler Scott. Hyatt is a product of Tennessee’s offense. GPS on field in game timing showed that Mingo is actually faster (using an average of their 5 fastest recorded times).
Hyatt is the most overrated player in this class by a mile. He’s a deep threat only, no experience beating press coverage, needs to be schemed, is thin/weak. I just don’t understand why people are so convinced he’s special when both the 40 times and the GPS tracking show that his speed is completely run-of-the-mill fast guy, not rare or elite. And when his speed is his only major selling point.
He’s Tyquan Thornton but thinner. He’s Mecole Hardman but thinner. He’s Will Fuller but thinner.
These guys have a role for sure. They’re useful. But they’re not special or elite.
Over 1400 yards 15 Tds in sec ... over 200 yards and 5 tds against bama.
Also all teams scheme for their number 1. Look at Jefferson.
Mingo is slow and plodding on tape.