Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Quinten Rollins, 2015 Second Round Pick

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Quinten Rollins, 2015 Second Round Pick

    Brad Biggs ‏@BradBiggs 16s17 seconds ago
    Terrific story on #Packers CB Quinten Rollins here from @MattBowen41 Super read. http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2...liest-prospect

    Packer Report ‏@PackerReport 35s35 seconds ago
    Rollins played football for one season. MAC Defensive Player of the Year
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  • #2
    Tyler Dunne ‏@TyDunne 2m2 minutes ago
    Here's what Quinten Rollins' coach at Miami (Ohio) said before the combine ... http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/sports/291103901.html
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

    Comment


    • #3
      Another Senior Bowl guy:

      Jason Wilde ‏@jasonjwilde 8s9 seconds ago
      Good story from our friend @PackerReport on #Packers second-round pick Quinten Rollins: http://gnb.scout.com/story/1520341-slam-dunk
      Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

      Comment


      • #4
        this is a guy thats gonna be a stud

        he's played less then our first round pick, but is less raw, with a higher upside imo

        Comment


        • #5
          QUINTEN ROLLINS
          Miami (Oh)
          4 Stars out of 5

          POSITION CB
          HEIGHT/WEIGHT 5'11"/195
          NO. 2
          VERIFIED 40 TIME 4.57
          COLLEGE Miami (Oh)
          HS Wilmington HS
          HOME Wilmington, OH

          SCOUT RANK 54
          POSITION RANK 07


          BIO
          As a basketball player, Rollins finished his career ranked second at Miami and 12th among Mid-American Conference career leaders in steals (214) and is one of only 15 players in MAC history to reach 200 career steals…Ranks fourth at Miami in career assists (391), seventh in games started (106) and ninth in minutes played (3,448)…Played in 116 career games and is the only player in Miami history to twice record seven steals in a game… Also owns four of the top six steal marks on the MU game-record chart…As a football player, Rollins recorded seven interceptions in 2014, tying the school’s season-record that was first set by Dick Boron in 1968 and matched by Dick Adams (1969 and 1970), Denny Costello (1972), Joe Spicer (1973) and Ron Carpenter (1990 and 1991)

          EVALUATION
          Considering that Rollins has played just one season of college football and was a high school running back, he showed that he could be a physical tackler who shows aggression taking on contact, and even though he played in the second/third level, he showed urgency moving down the line to tackle. He’s also physical in coverage, doing a nice job of reading the receiver’s eyes. That ability allowed him to gain the success he had going up and knocking the ball away with his back to the play.
          Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by red View Post
            this is a guy thats gonna be a stud

            he's played less then our first round pick, but is less raw, with a higher upside imo
            Not as much speed, more like Hyde, no?
            Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

            Comment


            • #7
              Report from NFL Scouting Services' Dave-Te' Thomas:

              Hollywood might call Quinten Rollins one day to do his life story, but until then he should expect a very early call from some NFL team in late April as a coveted cornerback. Just looking to continue his education at the university after a four-year career with the RedHawks basketball team, Rollins was also recruited by that school to play football but never stepped on to the gridiron until he concluded playing hoops.

              Rollins finished his basketball career ranked second at Miami and 12th among Mid-American Conference career leaders in steals (214), becoming one of only 15 players in MAC history to reach 200 steals. He ranks fourth at Miami in career assists (391), seventh in games started (106) and ninth in minutes played (3,448), having played in 116 games. He is the only player in Miami history to twice record seven steals in a game and owns four of the top six single-game steal marks at Miami-Ohio.

              Nobody on the coaching staff knew what they would get when Rollins first walked into the football office prior to the start of 2014 spring camp looking for an opportunity to suit up. He would go on to lead the league and rank third in the nation with seven interceptions, also breaking up nine passes. He finished fourth on the team with 72 tackles, making four stops-for-loss while also causing one fumble.

              For that performance, he received MAC Defensive Player of the Year honors and garnered first-team All-American accolades from The NFL Draft Report. Do not let this football neophyte’s lack of experience fool you – if you look at the updated rankings on Scout.com, he is rated among the draft’s elite cornerback prospects for a reason.

              Considering that Rollins has played just one season of college football and was a high school running back, he showed that he could be a physical tackler who shows aggression taking on contact, and even though he played in the second/third level he showed urgency moving down the line to tackle. He’s also physical in coverage, doing a nice job of reading the receiver’s eyes. That ability allowed him to gain the success he had going up and knocking the ball away with his back to the play.

              Rollins demonstrated good confidence in jump-ball situations (attained four of his pass thefts from jump-ball battles) and can hold up physically one-on-one on the outside. His basketball skills and overall flexibility show that he has the natural balance and footwork in coverage, along with demonstrating the ability to quickly get his feet under him and then click and close on the ball. Rollins has very good closing speed, along with generating functional power as a tackler when asked to drive on a receiver after the catch. He wraps up and finishes well, along with doing a nice job of turning and running with receivers downfield. He possesses good (not great) straight-line speed and uses his length and explosive leaping ability to high-point the ball.

              Rollins still needs some technique work, as he is not yet technically sound when it comes to his drop. He has a tendency to open up his hips too early in his backpedal, and due to inexperience he had to rely more on his athleticism to run with receivers from the trail technique. He appeared to be more comfortable when playing with inside leverage and take a side to ride the receiver on his way down field. He does have a crisp and quick closing burst but will need to work on his footwork, as he is not yet sharp in his attempts to get out of his breaks and undercut routes.

              There are times when Rollins will round off his breaks or gather himself, but he’s a valid, physical player who can tackle in the secondary, close on the ball and run with most of the speedy receivers down field. He has the upside to develop into a good starting cornerback, reminding me of a “young puppy” at Louisiana-Lafayette more than a decade ago with just one year of defensive back experience – Pittsburgh’s Ike Taylor.

              Rollins is the first to admit that he is still developing the quick thinking process to recognize routes and diagnose whether the receiver is the primary read by anticipating the opponent’s body language. Still, his interception success came from being alert to swing passes in the flat in zone coverage.

              He improved throughout the season and during 2015 Senior Bowl practices Rollins was quick to read receiver screens, avoid the block and close to make the play near or behind the line. There were times he was a step slow attacking in his zone or to chase plays, but that can be easily corrected once he feels more comfortable taking proper angles to the ball.

              Playing one-on-one with the receiver, Rollins has the size and hand skills to be a physical press coverage defender. His basketball skills are evident with his smooth hip transition from his backpedal, but he is best in press coverage, as he became comfortable in using his length and size to neutralize the receiver. He just needs to be more consistent getting his hands on his opponent before the receiver can get a release off the line.

              Rollins does a nice job for keeping contact with the receiver down field to prevent any sort of separation. He has the length and leaping ability to win jump ball battles, and as his interception rate increased he forced quarterbacks to look in other directions. His lone issue in man coverage is footwork, as he can lose his balance and footing on double moves. While he has the ability to be physical, he needs to be more disciplined in this area to prevent costly penalties.

              With 16 passes defended, it is safe to say that Rollins has excellent hands. He’s a ball-hawk in coverage and, along with his snatching ability, he is quick to find the ball thrown over his shoulder, especially when covering on vertical and fade routes. He won’t intercept every pass that hits his hands (four of his breakups appeared to be easy thefts), but he gets good hand placement defending the ball. He’s also become very aggressive at challenging for the sphere at its high point. It will be interesting to see if some NFL team tries to capitalize on his hands by using him on punt and kickoff returns.

              Quinten Rollins Scouting Combine measurables

              5-11/195 (4.67 forty)
              30 1/4-inch arm length
              9-inch hands
              14-reps bench 36 1/2-inch vertical jump
              10-foot-2 broad jump
              7.10 3-cone drill (right calf strain)
              4.28 20-yard shuttle
              11.53 60-yard shuttle
              Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

              Comment


              • #8
                LINDY'S had him as the #3 cb in the draft

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by pbmax View Post
                  Not as much speed, more like Hyde, no?
                  sounds fine to me, hyde looked damn good until we screwed up his growth last year by moving him to safety for the offseason

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 7m 7 minutes ago
                    Brian Gutekunst, Packers dir. college scouting, due to meet with media soon, I'll live tweet.

                    Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 2m 2 minutes ago
                    Gutekenust on only 1 yr in college for Rollins: i went to school in November and he was very very impressive. great length, ball skills ..

                    Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 2m 2 minutes ago
                    Probably their best player in Week 2 and only played since spring. fairly easy to evaluate.

                    Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 2m 2 minutes ago
                    On upside: really big. excited to see what he can do. harder worker, really good basketball player, 2 time captain.

                    Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 1m 1 minute ago
                    How BB help: spatial awareness, playing with back to ball.

                    Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 23s 24 seconds ago
                    What do for team taking CBs back to back: competition is great. any time guys challenged get best from them. that's a postive.
                    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 1m 1 minute ago
                      what kind of tackler: saw on film right away. timing element, learning when to shoot and not, showed up early in season he was tackling well

                      Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 1m 1 minute ago
                      how get on radar: chatter picked up quickly in fall, our scout went in there, excited about him, then I saw him, made Ted aware.

                      Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 24s 24 seconds ago
                      see rust: MAC defensive player of year, natural athlete, spatial awareness, very fluid

                      Packer Report ‏@PackerReport 2m2 minutes ago
                      Rollins ran 4.57 at Combine. "He plays fast enough."

                      Pete Dougherty @PeteDougherty · 9s 9 seconds ago
                      Talk of waiting on him or trading back: don't operate that way. Field calls but if he's player we like we're going to pick him.
                      Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by pbmax View Post
                            he's gonna be fun to watch

                            those first 2 plays should be enough to get any packer fan moist

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Phone interview:

                              Green Bay Packers ‏@packers 5m5 minutes ago
                              Rollins on returning to football: I had been itching to get back into it around my sophomore year of basketball. #PackersDraft

                              Packer Report @PackerReport · 7m 7 minutes ago
                              Rollins met with packers informally at combine. That was it.

                              Packer Report @PackerReport · 14s 15 seconds ago
                              Rollins won over new teammates with work ethic. Wasn't a boastful guy.

                              Packer Report @PackerReport · 4m 4 minutes ago
                              Lateral quickness is one of things that translates from basketball to cornerback, he said.

                              Tyler Dunne ‏@TyDunne 2m2 minutes ago
                              Rollins says some teams questioned how much he loves football. Explains that basketball was best option out of HS. Had lots of AAU exposure.

                              Green Bay Packers ‏@packers 2m2 minutes ago
                              Rollins says many skills translate from basketball to football: Keeping guys in front on defense, seeing the floor/field. #PackersDraft

                              Green Bay Packers ‏@packers 2m2 minutes ago
                              That's all from Quinten Rollins, who closes with: "Glad to be a Green Bay Packer."
                              Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X