Junior Hemmingway runs a 4.50 40 yard dash

Submitted by big10football on

Pretty good time.  I was fearing worse for him. 

da3mite

February 26th, 2012 at 11:28 AM ^

He was probably thinking FLOYDFLOYFFLOYDFLOYDFLOYDFLOYD the entire 40 yards. Oops that was supposed to be going in the section about Floyd and his 4.42. Correction: Hemingway was not thinking FLOYDFLOYDFLOYDFLOYDFLOYD while he was running.

yoopergoblue

February 26th, 2012 at 11:28 AM ^

Couple of good tweets about Junior:

Dion Caputi@nfldraftupdate

WR Junior Hemingway is a thicker receiver with a nice build. Ran a good gauntlet and made nice grabs away from body on the move. 

Dion Caputi@nfldraftupdate

Another smooth gauntlet run for WR Junior Hemingway. Toes the line nicely and moving well with a thicker upper body.

 

 

 

Perkis-Size Me

February 26th, 2012 at 11:54 AM ^

Good for him. I desperately want to see him get drafted. He's definitely a project wherever he goes, but he can be a big, physical receiver, with some great hands no less, and a lot of teams would kill for that kind of guy.

He won't go before the sixth or seventh round if he does get drafted, but his stock is rising for sure.

bronxblue

February 26th, 2012 at 12:47 PM ^

Good for him.  I don't put much stock in the combine numbers because they are so artificial (guys run shirtless/muscle tees with track shoes on) or irrelevant (bench-pressing is fine and all, but usually breaking tight coverage has less to do with raw strength and more with quick hands and leg strength).  Still, nice to see Hemingway put up some decent numbers.  Hi vert was 35.5", which is good (but seems a little low to me).  

ppToilet

February 26th, 2012 at 1:39 PM ^

                                               Hemingway                    Posey

  • Height                              6'1"                              6'2"
  • Arm Length                      32 1/2"                        31 5/8"
  • Weight                             225 lbs                         211 lbs
  • Hands                               9 5/8"                          9 5/8"
  • 40-yard dash                     4.53sec                       4.50sec
  • Bench Press                      21 reps                       14 reps
  • Vert Jump                        35 1/2"                        36 1/2"
  • Broad Jump                      124"                            123"

FWIW, Posey is projected to go a couple rounds higher than Junior.

Mr. Yost

February 26th, 2012 at 2:53 PM ^

They have similar measurables, but there is no injury history, route running, catching ability, playmaking ability or leadership attached to those numbers.

It's interesting to see how close they are, but let's leave it at that. Measurements and numbers.

Posey, IMO is the better WR. Hemingway has the better hands and jump ball skills.

I actually think they compliment each other quite well on the collegiate level. Put those two on the outside and give me a speed/change of direction demon in the slot with some good hands and that's a WR corps I wouldn't want to mess with.

In terms of playing style...Posey/Hemingway would be comparable to Manningham/Arrington IMO.

ppToilet

February 26th, 2012 at 6:12 PM ^

I was a bit short in that post. The point was that there is more to it than just combine numbers. On the other hand, if you have two players of similar size and physical ability then how much of this difference could be taught/coached?

I also agree that they complement each other nicely.

NoMoPincherBug

February 26th, 2012 at 1:55 PM ^

Didnt Jerry Rice run a 4.6 at his combine? and then 22 years and many yards and TDs later, he retired.

I think Junior will be an effective NFL receiver.  Honestly, he has more skills than Jason Avant and Avant has had a solid career with the Eagles.  If Junior can stay healthy, he can make a roster.

JamieH

February 26th, 2012 at 2:36 PM ^

I think you are seriously undervaluing Avant's hands.  Dude has velcro.  He was never a deep receiver, but he made some absolutely unreal catches on badly thrown balls while he was at Michigan.  He's a very solid possession receiver. 

As for Hemimgway's speed, I'm not sure that's it fair to say he looked slow while playing for us.  Remember, he had a rather inaccurate QB throwing to him.  Very rarely was there a situation where he could just take off and catch a ball in-stride that was delivered perfectly to him.  A lot of his catches involved coming back for the ball or adjusting in some way, which doesn't really allow you to run full speed.

Mr. Yost

February 26th, 2012 at 2:58 PM ^

Look up "dropping passes" in the dictionary. Then scan down to the antonym - it'll read "Jason Avant."

Avant also had a better WR skill set than Hemingway. However, what Hemingway can do is box out ANYone and go get ANYthing. And he does that well. He's also a solid blocker.

IMO Hemingway will make a roster, he'll be somewhere between Avant and Marquise Walker in the eyes of scouts.

The thing I really like about Hemingway is his frame...I think he can play a little H-Back and you can split him out like a Dustin Keller to get him on a LB.

I don't know if he's an every down WR, but he's got a role...I'd certainly want him because I think he can play that role VERY well. Touchdowns and First Downs.

Career wise, I think he'll be like Adrian Arrington who is with the Saints and does see the field.

BVB

February 26th, 2012 at 3:12 PM ^

Kudos to him - didn't think he was that fast. Clearly a hard worker and will get a good shot if he keeps it up. Measurables get you drafted, but performance helps you stick in the league

Gameboy

February 26th, 2012 at 3:14 PM ^

Junior ran the fastest cone drill, 20 yard shuttle and 2nd fastest 60 shuttle today.

He just moved up from undrafted to 4th round (3rd, if he is lucky).

Dailysportseditor

February 26th, 2012 at 3:26 PM ^

My guess is that few NFL teams would ever pick Keshawn over Junior, whether Junior outperformed him at the combine or not.  This is just icing on the cake.  Junior has proven is he is a big play type of performer.  He will make the most of his chance with any NFL team and we will see him playing plenty on Sundays.

jsa

February 26th, 2012 at 3:40 PM ^

People seem to dog Roundtree for the dropsies, but JR Hemingway is the most bizarre case of a guy who had that amazing jump ball ability, strong hands, big plays, etc, but his routine drops make no sense. He's always seemed like a 50/50 guy. Never know what you're going to get, so you might as well chuck it up and see what you come down with.

That said, someone will grab him in the NFL. I could see him making an impact, albeit not really in a #1 type of role.

Good luck, JR.

jsa

February 27th, 2012 at 5:20 AM ^

As a receiver coach, I tell my guys if they get 2 hands on a ball, it has to be a catch. Sure, you'd love the timing to be right on the money, but you have to make plays when given the opportunity. Most of Junior's drops, that I've seen, are just mindboggling, especially when you  see the great downfield, high-pointed catches he makes. 

Maybe it's focus issues, maybe it's trying to make a play before securing the ball... whatever it is, that's not on the QB.

Johnny Blood

February 26th, 2012 at 3:41 PM ^

Wouldn't it be cool if they modified the combine to incorporate some of the measurements they do in the Sports Science show?  They seem to be more indicative to how someone's skills will translate onto the field.

BlueLotCrew

February 26th, 2012 at 7:48 PM ^

Wow! Ok, you'd be right except Hemingway is taller and has longer arms than Wisconsibs center. Not to mention he weighs 75 pounds less than him.

Sione's Flow

February 27th, 2012 at 12:18 AM ^

Great for Junior, you have to feel good for the guy especially after the speech he gave when he won the MVP for the Sugar Bowl.  I think it's fitting that Jr wore the number of the first Michigan legend Desmond Howard.   Junior may not have won a Heisman, but he did great things for the team.  He deserves all the successes he will have in the NFL.

triangle_M

February 27th, 2012 at 9:20 AM ^

Hemingway is a big and explosive senior who has started regularly for three years, catching balls from Denard Robinson at Michigan. Hemingway is a big-framed guy who is an athlete and will do everything in his control to go up and make plays on the ball. He is thick and an effective run blocker; reliable in all facets of his game.

 

ANALYSIS STRENGTHS Hemingway is a talented receiver who might have been hindered throughout his career by not playing with a natural quarterback in Denard Robinson. Playing with him, Hemingway has developed a good field awareness and will be as ready as any rookie to make plays that happen during broken-down opportunities when the quarterback is scrambling. He knows how to exploit defenses and find open holes in the zone, which he did a lot at Michigan. He is reliable to catch the ball in a crowd and is also a threat deep. A very good athlete when the ball is in the air. WEAKNESSES Hemingway is a slow mover off the line and can get jammed up at times. He is a decent route runner but hasn't run many pro-style routes while working in Michigan's offense. He is not a very quick-twitched player and lacks speed variance and explosion in his routes.
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