Janoris Jenkins
Jenkins was recently kicked off the UF team, earlier this year Todd McShay had him going 15th overall, but he decided to go back to school.
The way the supplemental draft works: team with 6 wins or less are in the first group and based on wins are given certain weights. there is then a lottery to decide which teams can submit a pick first. If two teams submit a pick from the same round, the team that wins the "lottery" gets the player.
Would you take Jenkins in the supplemental draft and forfeit a 1st round pick the following year?
about 1 year ago
iCowboy
9 comments
0 recs |
Comments
There's already a fanshot on this.
"The Angels are like the villain in the movie that isn't dead until he's been stabbed 150 times in the bath tub, yet he still might come back up one more time." - Eric Nadel
And no to your question.
I’d give up a second though.
"The Angels are like the villain in the movie that isn't dead until he's been stabbed 150 times in the bath tub, yet he still might come back up one more time." - Eric Nadel
And Lose Out on Andrew Luck?
Just kidding.
Have to believe we will bid a pick…but doubt JG would consider our 1st rd pk.
Screwing up is gonna be expensive for him.
Golden Rule: He who has the gold makes the rules.
Since JJ
tends to have ZERO interest in any players with drug issues, I dont see any way this will happen. And I’d be willing to bet no team will submit anything higher than a 4th rounder
by sportsfanatic21 on Apr 27, 2011 9:21 AM CDT reply actions
you have to take that with a grain of salt.
JJ said that but he also signed Adam Jones who had a pretty clear history with marajuana.
by Fan in Thick and Thin on Apr 27, 2011 10:11 AM CDT up reply actions
if he was in the real draft
he would be a top 15 player on my board
dude is really good in off coverage
by Archie Barberio on Apr 27, 2011 1:14 PM CDT reply actions
I would have no problem
Giving up next years second round pick to get what would have been a first round pick if he finished this next year at Florida.






















