This Week's Obsession: Draft Men Comment Count

Seth

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We didn't see Mundy coming either

"People tell you who they are, but we ignore it because we want them to be who we want them to be."

--Don Draper

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The Question:

Ace: Which Michigan alum—aside from Tom Brady—most surprised you with his NFL/NBA/NHL success, and which most surprised you by not panning out?

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The Successes:

David Nasternak: Jamal Crawford. This is probably a controversial choice for several reasons. A). He only played about half a year at M. 2). His M career ended rather notoriously. C). He's kinda the forgotten man, associated with M, that just keeps churning out respectable NBA years.

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The thing I remember most about Jamal Crawford is the way the NCAA handled him was the moment that separated me from the NCAA party line on extra benefits, as it was so obvious the NCAA was way more the bad guys than the players they went after.

Never known for his defense, Crawford has found his niche coming off the bench and providing instant offense, over the last half-decade or so. He's a career 35% 3PT shooter, hits 86% of his FTs, and has never averaged less than 13.9 ppg since 02-03, his third year in the NBA. Crawford has been a little hard to keep track of because of the six different uniforms that he's worn. He reinvented himself with his stellar bench play in 09-10 with Atlanta, winning the 6th Man of the Year. He also won it again in 13-14 and was highly considered two other times (10-11 and 12-13). Crawford also passed Reggie Miller for most career 4 point plays...he is sitting at 44, currently. Until 2010, he had the record for longest tenured player to never make the playoffs. Once breaking into the postseason, Crawford showed he belonged, averaging 15.0 ppg off the bench in 42 games.

I don't think that Jamal Crawford is/was one of the best players in the NBA at any time during his career. He was never an elite shooter. But he could always find a way to score the ball. After embracing his 6th man role, Crawford became a very credible asset. His numbers have continued to remain steady with the Clippers in his 16th (!!!) year in the NBA (only one significantly shortened to 11 games). Jamal Crawford has been M's longest presence in the NBA since Juwan Howard (who somehow managed to play 19 years??? Although, the last 7 years of Howard's career didn't touch any of Crawford's stats, including Games Played). Watching him play, I still think Crawford has a couple solid years left...even at the young age of 35. Love him or hate him, Dude just keeps contributing.

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Ace: Mundy isn't a star by any means, but he's started 28 games over the last three seasons, including all 16 last year for Chicago. Anyone who remembers Mundy's much-maligned stint as a starting safety—before he played his fifth year at West Virginia—is probably surprised by this. While the Bears defense was bad last year, Mundy managed to be something of a bright spot with over 100 tackles and four interceptions. Just by remaining in the league this long, he's surpassed most expectations; not many undrafted players get starts at age 30.

[After the jump: what's a safety, and Don Draper]

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Seth: You mentioned Ryan Mundy; the same breath usually carries Stevie Brown. Both were liabilities in coverage with the rare explosive moment to justify the recruiting stars. But where Mundy turned into an NFL safety under Tony Gibson of all people, Stevie struggled until Michigan made him a Spur, a two-parts-linebacker/one-part safety hybrid space player in the 2009 3-3-5. This he was pretty good at, but setting the edge and fighting tight ends said nothing about his ability to cover NFL receivers over the top.

That he turned into an NFL safety may say things about Michigan's coaching when he was here, but that was the same Tony Gibson who fixed Mundy. And except for some coffee cups (Jamar Adams, the older Curry brother), Michigan's safety representation in the NFL was non-existent before two guys this fanbase remembers as the goats of the late aughts. I am ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.

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Brian: Cato June! How am I the last person to answer this and Cato June is still on the board? June's main contribution at Michigan seemed to be standing over guys other people tackled, looking fierce. Then he makes the Pro Bowl in the NFL. 

As a linebacker. He obviously should have been playing there all along, but Michigan's recruiting then was the opposite of what Miami did. Miami took the fastest guy they could find and moved him down; Michigan took big guys and put 'em wherever. I'll never forget June getting smoked by Jason Witten in that Citrus Bowl hammering. Witten turned out to be a really good tight end, but having your safety lose five yards on a TE is just.... woof.

Stevie Brown doesn't fit in this category because his last year at Michigan was actually very good.

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Adam: Charles Woodson.

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If you'd kindly take a step back and lower your torch and pitchfork I think I can explain without getting more of my eyebrows singed off. I'm judging success (and failure) on two components: one is temporal and the other achievement-based. Woodson has surpassed expectations in both.

The NFL says that the average career length for a player who makes a Pro Bowl is 11.7 years; Woodson's already played 50% longer. More impressive is that his role hasn't decreased as his age has increased. He's still a corner/safety/hybrid space player worthy of starting, and those numbers don't include his 113 tackles, four interceptions, and eight passes defensed from 2014.

I'm acutely aware of Woodson's accomplishments while at Michigan, and I expected him to have a successful NFL career. To say, however, that I expected him to play almost twenty high-quality seasons is like saying I know how Mad Men is going to end; there may be hints, but the end result is axiomatically unpredictable.

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Surprised he didn't pan out:

Seth: I'm sorry Adam, but Mad Men has been telling you how it's going to end at the start of every single episode. No, I don't know this like we knew from his freshman year that Woodson would be one of the greatest football players of all time, but the foreshadowing was apparent bordering on blatant. Weird things happen to upset expectations, but I believe in arcs, in spirals, in factors of Pi, and meaning in the things that went before to the transpiration of things after. Charles Woodson was destined to rise. Don Draper is going to fall.

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(perhaps just metaphorically)

There are genuine surprises, but when a solid prediction goes sour we tend to rediscover the warning labels. I thought Braylon Edwards would have a Larry Fitzgerald-like impact his first year with the Browns. Perhaps the problem was the Browns because Browns problems usually are—rooming him with Kellen Winslow Jr. and sending him to LeBron's favorite night clubs was courting Brownsness. But there was always either a contract dispute, or injury, or off-field incident, or something limiting him to half the production he was capable of.

Twitter and that most Americans now carry a broadcast studio in their pockets exposed us to the personalities of our gladiators, so we now know things about Braylon's personality that he airs. Fairly, he's now the number one source for eye-rolling comments by Michigan football alumni. Even before that, the whole campus knew of Carr's acrobatics to keep Braylon focused—the jersey promise was only one (ha!) part of a constant effort to maintain page sameness.

I knew Braylon's friends in college, and know some of his teammates now. And I know a guy who started a business with him in California. All of these people talk about a side of Braylon he doesn't tweet: a guy with extraordinary everything who wants to be everything, but most of all wants to do something good for everyone he's ever around. Jim Harbaugh and then Pete Carroll took fliers on him. One Pro Bowl season tempted all the things we could have had. I'm surprised it didn't work out. Also sad.

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Brian: The other dominating wide receiver Michigan sent to the top ten of the draft who flamed out in no small part because of personality issues. That would be David "Bomb-Ass D" Terrell, who tore up Alabama's secondary in his final game, a game in which I spent most of the first half moaning "throw it to Terrell" to myself as Michigan pounded its head against the brick wall of the Tide's front seven.

But Terrell was too much of a diva to be an NFL wide receiver, which is just... how does Michigan have *two* guys with enormous talents that are too unstable to be wide receivers?

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Ace: Tyrone Wheatley entered the NFL as a first-round pick with commensurate expectations, and even as a child learning about football for the first time when he was a senior, it wasn't difficult to see why: his combination of size and track-star speed made him the rare home-run threat that could also take an every-down pounding between the tackles.

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What happened to the ones of yesteryear? [Jonathan Daniel /Allsport via CBS]

While Wheatley stuck around for ten years—no small accomplishment—he never made the expected impact, breaking the 1000-yard barrier just one, after he'd gone from the Giants to the Raiders, and surpassing four yards per carry only twice. He did have a mid-career breakthrough sharing time with Napolean Kaufman for the Raiders, but on the whole his career was a disappointment, especially for those who remember his dominance at Michigan.

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David Nasternak: David Terrell. Terrell had a good sophomore year in 1999, a huge breakout game in the 2000 Orange Bowl (definitely one of my Top 5 M games of all time...maybe Top 3?), and great junior year in 2000. He was the first M receiver to have back-to-back 1,000 yard receiving years. I'll never forget that catch against Wisconsin in 2000 (start at 7:15 mark).

Quite the career at the Big House. Granted, he was on a couple of the most talented offenses that M has ever fielded. But he never really got anything going in the NFL. He had decent size (6'2" 216lbs). After being the 8th overall pick in the 2001 Draft for the Chicago Bears, he only managed to play 3 full seasons -in 2002 he only played 5 games with 9 catches but 3 TDs (!!). He tried out with the Broncos, Patriots, and Chiefs between 2005-2009...he was actually ironically beat out by Amani Toomer in 2009 in Kansas City. He also had some off-the-field issues. It's really too bad that he didn't have a longer NFL career. I sure did love watching him in Maize and Blue. That 2000 Orange Bowl was a performance for the ages.

Comments

EGD

April 30th, 2015 at 11:47 AM ^

I was surprised things didn't work out for Henson after he gave up baseball and went to the NFL. Evidently all the years out of football was too much for him to overcome.

JoeyFootball19

April 30th, 2015 at 11:48 AM ^

I like this topic. My choice success...David Harris. I knew he was a good player wearing the Maize and Blue but to be this solid year after year and anchor down that Jets defense is awesome.

 

Under achiever- DeShawn Sims. I thought for sure DeShawn Sims was going to be a really solid 4 in the NBA. Athletic, good shooter, tough. A little shocked he didn't pan out.

MC5-95

April 30th, 2015 at 11:52 AM ^

While I'm not 100 percent surprised Chad Henne has not been super successful in the league (with quarterbacks, it's always a crapshoot), I am surprised that he's become such a joke over the past couple of seasons. I literally flinch whenever I hear some NFL commentator on TV or the radio snigger at the mention of his name. It's sad.

UMQuadz05

April 30th, 2015 at 1:38 PM ^

Henne is the worst thing you can be, in some ways:  too good to be a backup, but not good enough to be a starter.  Dude looks just good enough in summer camp that the team thinks, "maybe he could be a game manager for us", but is continually found out during real games.  Don't feel too bad though, he's made good bank in the league. 

Qmatic

April 30th, 2015 at 1:47 PM ^

Henne has pretty much become the guy you start for the first few games until you feel it's time to start the rookie you drafted. I've always been ambivalent on Henne as a quarterback; both here and in the pros.



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ND Sux

April 30th, 2015 at 12:01 PM ^

A standout player in both baseball and football, excelled at neither beyond college.  Left UM for the Yankees, didn't pan out, then had a brief stint in the NFL that fizzled quickly as well.

jbibiza

April 30th, 2015 at 12:06 PM ^

I know he had a great career as a return man, but this guy was lights-out fantastic as a college receiver but never made much impact as one in the NFL. 

jbibiza

April 30th, 2015 at 2:59 PM ^

I believe I already did say it: a major disappointment... As a Receiver.  How many people thought this electric Heisman winner, who was a first round draft pick, would make zero impact in the NFL As a Receiver.

The Claw

April 30th, 2015 at 12:20 PM ^

Brendan Morrison. Hobey Baker winner in 1997. I thought he'd be a superstar. But was never an All-Star. Best year was 25 goals and 71 points. Still a great 14 year career but was expecting more. He was a stud.



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JeepinBen

April 30th, 2015 at 12:22 PM ^

However, to quote Terrell, he would have given up a testicle to have played with Jay Cutler as his QB. If we're giving Braylon some leeway for having been drafted by the Browns, my Bears' QB ineptitude must be mentioned.

ST3

April 30th, 2015 at 12:48 PM ^

I'd go with Steve Hutchinson. I know he was a consensus All-American and first round draft pick, but a few years into his NFL career he was being called the greatest offensive lineman in the game. I knew he was good, I didn't know he was THAT GOOD.

BTW, I was not surprised at all by Brady's success. Part of that is a result of my irrational fandom (my first MGoBlog post compared Cam Gordon to Ronnie Lott), but part of that was I was really impressed by the way he handled the QB controversy and the way he led a few big 4th quarter comebacks in his senior year.

I guess for dissappointment, I'd go with Lytle or Leach, but only because I was very young and those guys were superstars to me. Lytle had a meh career with the Broncos and Leach chose baseball.

RIP Tractor T

April 30th, 2015 at 12:50 PM ^

Ty was first-team All-American (as a junior) with 154 tackles and 6 INTs for his Michigan career. I wish I could say that I expected him to be a future Hall-of-Famer, with 53 INTs and 3 Super Bowl Rings (and could have won Super Bowl 36 MVP) but I can’t. That’s an amazing career for the 23rd overall pick. On the other end, I think Jake Long has to be up there. He was the #1 overall pick in an admittedly weak draft class, but played only 5 healthy seasons. I know you can’t control for injuries but I expected twice that.

MC5-95

April 30th, 2015 at 1:20 PM ^

Don't know how you can have Jake in the disappointment category. As far as I'm aware, he hasn't retired. He's a free agent coming off of two season ending ACLs though so maybe not a star anymore. But that's due to injury, not performance.

west2

April 30th, 2015 at 12:51 PM ^

dates me but a failure in several ways was Antoine "the judge" Jobert. He was the state of Michigan Mr basketball in the early eighties coming out of HS but never really developed into the star at Michigan that everyone thought he would be.  He was drafted back when the NBA drafted more than 2 rounds but I believe he never played in the NBA. 

WestQuad

April 30th, 2015 at 1:10 PM ^

I was an RA and made John Madden and his dad dump their beer after he scored his first goal in his first game. I regret that.   I did let them keep the case they had in his room and asked them to shut the door.  (I also showed Steve Sheilds how to use a computer mouse when I worked in the computer center.)

 

Todd Collins was the biggest disappointment for me.  He had like 20 years as a back up, but I thought he was a lot better than Elvis in college (and Greise and Brady for that matter).  I thought he had the goods to make it.

GotBlueOnMyMind

April 30th, 2015 at 1:28 PM ^

Marcus Ray. He was awesome in college, just crushing people. And the fact that he's been such an amazing alum to the program just makes me wish he had had a more productive NFL career even more.



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KingRJ

April 30th, 2015 at 1:43 PM ^

JIM ABBOTT.... 10 year MLB career and won 87 games.  I think what he did was amazing.  

Long time fan and reader of MGOBLOG.  Never commented but I just had to join to give my man props.  New to the board so be gentle. 

BursleyHall82

April 30th, 2015 at 2:13 PM ^

Can't quibble with Braylon and Terrell, but I agree with those who say Henson should be No. 1 on the surprised-they-never-panned-out list. Even with his detour into baseball, once he got back into football, I thought he'd become at least a semi-star. Not Brett Favre, but at least Matthew Stafford. On the flip side, I totally agree with the Jamal Crawford pick. Didn't see this career coming.

Trebor

April 30th, 2015 at 2:22 PM ^

As far as disappointments go, I'd throw Jack Johnson up there. 3rd overall pick in the Crosby draft, a fantastic junior and college career, and all the offensive talent you could imagine in a defenseman. His college career reminds me a lot of how PK Subban plays now. Unfortunately he never really grasped the overall game, and now he's the punchline for hockey's advanced stats.

CoverZero

April 30th, 2015 at 2:42 PM ^

David Terrell was an idiot off the field.  However people forget that he had a stress fracture in his foot when he went in to the NFL which hampered his progress and he never recovered. 

DY

April 30th, 2015 at 3:43 PM ^

Terrell famously announced at the end of the Orange Bowl that his performance was the official launch of his Heisman campaign for the 2000 season. I remember glancing over at my buddy and both of us saying, "yeah, right."



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MaizeJacket

April 30th, 2015 at 2:54 PM ^

is one that I'm pleasantly surprised how his pro career has gone.  I did think he would stick on a roster and contribute for 5-6 seasons, but he is still under contract with the Kansas City Chiefs and figures to be on the field in 3-4 WR sets.  Just goes to show that if you can get open, have great hands, and show a little grit and desire, you can make a decade-long career in the NFL.

jmblue

April 30th, 2015 at 3:08 PM ^

Henson, Terrell, Walker . . . odd that the 1998 class produced so many great college players who didn't pan out in the pros.  

A lot of our running backs could go on that list.  Wheatley was serviceable as a pro but I expected more, and I thought for sure that Biakabutuka and Perry would be good pros. 

 

dragonchild

April 30th, 2015 at 4:28 PM ^

Sigh. . . I know everyone wants to claim the same thing, but I wasn't surprised by Tom Brady's success at all.  I was surprised that everyone else was so surprised.  I remember him trying to engineer that comeback against Michigan State and while it pains me that they lost because the D couldn't slow down Plaxico Shootmyselfinthefoot, his last drive was a thing of beauty.  Just a horrible situation for a QB to be in -- no time, tough defense that knows what you're doing, the D unable to get you a break -- and he just kept making the decisions and hitting NFL windows and doing whatever he had to keep the chains moving and the clock not.  Michigan lost because MSU's last drive kept him off the field.  Only other QB I saw do so well in such a horrible situation was Drew Brees vs. Michigan.  I was screaming with frustration at how he just kept hitting passes with a paw in his face.  He turned out to be pretty dang good too.  And I don't mean these guys might have a shot.  I was like, "These guys are gonna be like the Joe Montana or John Elway of my adulthood," and I was stunned on Draft Day.

The guy who surprised me?  Dhani Jones.  I considered him a very good college linebacker, All Big Ten but not All-American, not the kind of guy that took over games by himself, was drafted late and never blew up the NFL but lasted ten years.  Frankly I had no idea how any of the '97-99 linebackers would do.  Sam Sword and Ian Gold were similarly prolific with All-Big Ten honors but Sword went almost nowhere and Gold went in the 2nd round.  I just can't even.  I'm actually pretty darn good at projecting QBs, but apparently I'm terrible at evaluating linebackers.