Sunday, March 27, 2011

2011 NFL Draft: Jonathan Baldwin?the Best of the Rest

The entire country witnessed the sorry state of St. Louis receivers during their 2010 prime-time season finale against the Seattle Seahawks. 

The Rams and Seahawks played head-to-head in Seattle with the division title at stake, and they were only able to accumulate 155 passing yards. The leading receiver for the Rams that game was running-back Steven Jackson, who had only four catches for 39 yards. 

Quarterback Sam Bradford was able to hit the team's only down-field threat, Danario Alexander, with the deep ball on two occasions—only to have Alexander drop both of the passes. Both of the drops were lost opportunities that could have changed the outcome of the game. It was a smudge on an otherwise superb rookie effort by Alexander throughout 2010.

At the end of the fiasco, the Rams longest reception was a 20 yard catch by Jackson (their biggest offensive play of the game). The anemic offense scored only six total points, which resulted in a flat-out embarrassment on national television with the final score of 16-6.  

The Rams' inability to throw downfield was not only a problem in the Seattle game. It was an epidemic all season.  

Every single game the Rams lost in 2010 was at least in part due to a predictable offense,  stemming from their lack of play-makers at the wide-receiver position. It is probably safe to say that their receivers lost more games for the team than any other position. Without question it is by far their biggest need.  

The Rams need to correct this problem through the draft, especially since there may not be any free-agent signings this spring (due to the CBA—or lack there-of).  

AJ Green is the best option in the draft. He has drawn comparisons to Calvin Johnson, and may become the next elite receiver in the league. But the Rams would be foolish to expect to come away from the draft with Green unless they plan on trading up.  

Julio Jones would be the next best option. His size and athleticism could make him a suitable number one receiver in this league.  

However, Jones had a fantastic combine. He ran a 4.34 second 40-yard dash—blazing speed for someone his size—and he also jumped over 11 feet in the broad jump. Those numbers, combined with his game film, make it hard to believe he will make it out of the top 10.  

So, if those two guys are out of the picture, what are the Rams supposed to do with their pressing need at receiver? Two words: Jonathan Baldwin.  

Baldwin measured in at 6'4" and 228 pounds at the combine, and that size comes with an incredible leaping ability. His physical skills are exactly what the Rams need in the red-zone, and for the deep ball.  

Baldwin had terribly inaccurate quarterbacks at Pittsburgh in Bill Stull and Tino Sunseri, as it seems like Baldwin had to jump, or leap for every pass thrown his way. Yet he was still able to put up impressive numbers in 2009 (57 receptions for 1111 yards) and 2010 (53 receptions for 822 yards) which begs the question: what is Baldwin capable of with an extremely accurate quarterback like Sam Bradford?  

But, of course, there is a reason why Baldwin will possibly be available to the Rams in the second round. That reason? His off-the-field issues.  

In 2009, Baldwin was charged with indecent assault and harassment. To be fair, he was found innocent of the charges by a non-jury trial.  

It is also worth mentioning that Pittsburgh ranked No. 1 in Sports Illustrated's list of programs with the most criminals. So if you take a guy like Baldwin out of an environment like that and stick him with the Rams—filled with high-character players (thanks to coach Steve Spagnuolo's 'Four Pillars' philosophy)—then he just might be able to thrive.  

Outside of the legal incident, he is mostly just known as childish. He was caught on video once admitting to staying up until 3:30 AM playing video games the night before team activities.  

Baldwin was also caught speaking a little too frankly about his team before his final game at Pittsburgh in 2010. When asked if he would enter the 2011 draft, Baldwin replied, "Heck yeah, I'm leaving. It can only get worse. They had me running a lot of deep routes [this year] and yards were hard to come by. I barely ran intermediate routes; it felt like they were purposely disrupt my draft stock."  

It was a childish quote, of course, but it was also a true quote (other than the part about the team purposely disrupting his stock). Baldwin was never allowed to reach his potential at Pittsburgh.aft stock

There is no question that he has a bit of maturing to do, as is true for so many 21-year olds. It probably would be fair to compare him to Dez Bryant in that department: not overly venomous, just immature. But so far, it has worked out for Dez.  

The Rams need to decide if he is worth the risk. If the teams exits the first round of the 2011 draft without a new wide-receiver, then Baldwin could very well be worth it. There are other options, like Leonard Hankerson and Torrey Smith: but neither of them have the monstrous size of Baldwin—size that the Rams sorely need.

There are numerous occasions where "questionable character" athletes crumble and fail, but on occasion (Mike Williams and LaGarrette Blount, for instance) the gamble pays off. 

Christina Milian Kelly Brook Robin Tunney Kate Groombridge Dania Ramirez

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