NFL Combine Participants (1 Viewer)

I Like reading the Analysis ,seen Sidney Jones name @11 for the Saints in few Mock Drafts

Overview

The Huskies' defense is full of NFL talent, but Jones could be the highest-rated of them all. Washington has made a living recruiting out of California, and this Golden State native was almost an instant starter as a freshman (he started 12 of 13 games, two interceptions, seven pass break-ups). As a sophomore, league coaches named his first team all-conference after he led the Pac-12 with 14 pass break-ups in addition to picking off four passes and forcing three fumbles. While not knocking away as many passes in 2016 (six, also three INT), Jones was a first-team All-Pac 12 pick for the conference champions.
</SECTION><SECTION id=yui_3_10_3_1_1487179329344_375>Analysis

<ARTICLE>Strengths

Competes all over the field. Doesn't play pitty-pat with his jam from press. Throws stiff lead right into the shoulder of receivers like a boxer. Maximizes contact with receivers within first five yards. Eyes are top notch. Balances between quarterback's eyes and his man from all off coverages. Ready to close on throws anywhere near his area. Route magnet. Pattern anticipation allows him to map receivers path and undercut route. Prioritizes ball over man and attacks catch point with slaps and rips. Has nine career interceptions and got a hand on 21.3 percent of balls thrown his way over last two seasons. Early ball tracker with length and leaping to attack the high point. Mirrors receiver acceleration out of their breaks. Twitchy feet for click-and-close transitions and instant change of direction from shuffle technique. Solid recovery quickness. </ARTICLE><ARTICLE>
Weaknesses

Carries slender frame. Needs to add upper body strength in preparation for NFL size. Was jostled around by JuJu Schuster-Smith out of press coverage and at the top of the route. Scouts like his quickness but worry about his ability to carry speed down the field. Gets impatient from press. Loses positioning by reaching and lunging to get hands on receiver rather than letting the release come to him. Can still improve his transition footwork. Fights his hips a little when flipping to change direction in open field. Physical receivers can wall him out of tackle action in run support. </ARTICLE><ARTICLE id=yui_3_10_3_1_1487179329344_374>
Sources Tell Us

"I think he picked up all of (Marcus) Peters' good traits as a player without the personality defects. He marries that great FBI (football intelligence) with an explosive close-out and that will win in the pros just like it wins in college. You will always wish he was 198 pounds, but he won't be." -- NFC East regional scout </ARTICLE><ARTICLE>
NFL Comparison

Marcus Peters </ARTICLE><ARTICLE>
Bottom Line

Jones is a "casino cornerback" who has the ball skills and instincts to tilt the odds in his favor when quarterbacks look his way. His toughness and desire to make plays on the ball is remarkably similar to his friend and off-season workout buddy, Marcus Peters. Jones has lockdown corner talent but will have to prove he can add muscle without sacrificing speed. His football character and play traits should make him a long-time starter with Pro Bowl potential.
 
I Like reading the Analysis ,seen Sidney Jones name @11 for the Saints in few Mock Drafts

Overview

The Huskies' defense is full of NFL talent, but Jones could be the highest-rated of them all. Washington has made a living recruiting out of California, and this Golden State native was almost an instant starter as a freshman (he started 12 of 13 games, two interceptions, seven pass break-ups). As a sophomore, league coaches named his first team all-conference after he led the Pac-12 with 14 pass break-ups in addition to picking off four passes and forcing three fumbles. While not knocking away as many passes in 2016 (six, also three INT), Jones was a first-team All-Pac 12 pick for the conference champions.
</SECTION><SECTION id=yui_3_10_3_1_1487179329344_375>Analysis

<ARTICLE>Strengths

Competes all over the field. Doesn't play pitty-pat with his jam from press. Throws stiff lead right into the shoulder of receivers like a boxer. Maximizes contact with receivers within first five yards. Eyes are top notch. Balances between quarterback's eyes and his man from all off coverages. Ready to close on throws anywhere near his area. Route magnet. Pattern anticipation allows him to map receivers path and undercut route. Prioritizes ball over man and attacks catch point with slaps and rips. Has nine career interceptions and got a hand on 21.3 percent of balls thrown his way over last two seasons. Early ball tracker with length and leaping to attack the high point. Mirrors receiver acceleration out of their breaks. Twitchy feet for click-and-close transitions and instant change of direction from shuffle technique. Solid recovery quickness. </ARTICLE><ARTICLE>
Weaknesses

Carries slender frame. Needs to add upper body strength in preparation for NFL size. Was jostled around by JuJu Schuster-Smith out of press coverage and at the top of the route. Scouts like his quickness but worry about his ability to carry speed down the field. Gets impatient from press. Loses positioning by reaching and lunging to get hands on receiver rather than letting the release come to him. Can still improve his transition footwork. Fights his hips a little when flipping to change direction in open field. Physical receivers can wall him out of tackle action in run support. </ARTICLE><ARTICLE id=yui_3_10_3_1_1487179329344_374>
Sources Tell Us

"I think he picked up all of (Marcus) Peters' good traits as a player without the personality defects. He marries that great FBI (football intelligence) with an explosive close-out and that will win in the pros just like it wins in college. You will always wish he was 198 pounds, but he won't be." -- NFC East regional scout </ARTICLE><ARTICLE>
NFL Comparison

Marcus Peters </ARTICLE><ARTICLE>
Bottom Line

Jones is a "casino cornerback" who has the ball skills and instincts to tilt the odds in his favor when quarterbacks look his way. His toughness and desire to make plays on the ball is remarkably similar to his friend and off-season workout buddy, Marcus Peters. Jones has lockdown corner talent but will have to prove he can add muscle without sacrificing speed. His football character and play traits should make him a long-time starter with Pro Bowl potential.

Though I see everyone comparing him to Peters I don't see the same pre-snap intelligence from him that I saw from Peters.

You could see Peters pointing out formations like a LB when you watched his college film. I think Jones just has natural find the ball in flight skills but not necessarily route combination anticipation skills. Call it a hunch but he seems more of a fit as a Press Man corner with good ball skills that can play some off/zone while Peters was more off man/zone CB will ball skills AND the ability to know what was coming based on down/distance/formation/and splits that could play some press man because of his length.


I haven't watched much of Sidney though so maybe he displays those same things on tape but I recall Marcus Peters impressing me with that on the very 1st vid i put on of him.
 
I've watched a lot of Sydney Jones and I would be happy with him at 11. I don't think he's made some of the flashy plays that Marcus Peters did his that year UW but I think he's every bit as talented. I'd call him the safest pick at corner in the entire draft.
 

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