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Moncrief Released!!!!

I truly believe the only reason they keep him around is that he doesn't fumble punts or KR. Yeah, he's going to do absolutely nothing with the ball, but he'll catch it. I no longer hold my breath on punts and kr anymore due to the high possibility of a fumble. Now I just worry about flags. lol



Speaking of penalties, when was the last time a Bubbles led ST had a complete game without any penalties......................... for some reason it seems like forever. Switz's catching ability is a dime a dozen for ***** sake. It's the ones who can catch and then actually run forward that are tough to find............. Sure hands at the price of 0 return, com'on, how do other teams find return men????




Salute the nation
 
Speaking of penalties, when was the last time a Bubbles led ST had a complete game without any penalties......................... for some reason it seems like forever. Switz's catching ability is a dime a dozen for ***** sake. It's the ones who can catch and then actually run forward that are tough to find............. Sure hands at the price of 0 return, com'on, how do other teams find return men????




Salute the nation

I didn't say I liked it. I'm with you man, Ole' Double Bubble is the problem with that unit and has been for years.
 
I didn't say I liked it. I'm with you man, Ole' Double Bubble is the problem with that unit and has been for years.



I totally hear yaz !!!!!! We have much better on the roster and I'd consider even if we need to put JuJu or Washington or DJ back there as its a facet of the game that needs BIG improvement. Any of the mentioned can catch and down it but also any of the mentioned could possibly ignite something with the threat of a return. NO team out there is actually worried about a Switz return.





Salute the nation
 
Wouldn't be surprised to see Eli Rogers back in town when Connors is good to go again. There might be some better free agent options, but Rogers could hit the ground running,
which would be an advantage. Of course Switzer hits the ground running just after he catches the ball and that's not an advantage.

Yesterday when I saw Switzer was going to return a kickoff, the first words out of my mouth were, "Uh Oh".
 
<samp class="EmbedCode-container"><code class="EmbedCode-code"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Panthers claimed former Steelers’ WR Donte Moncrief In waivers, per source.</p>— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) <a href="https://twitter.com/AdamSchefter/status/1191463713691328513?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 4, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> </code></samp>
 
Steelers saved $700,000 owed by Carolina picking him up, another win!



HELL yea and NOW you're talking. I am curious t see how he does there but more than likely NOT going to take the time to track it. I'm just glad for Moncrief RELIEF !!!

I was a proponent of his initially but thinking back I think it was more wishful thinking in hopes of "tony" replacement to a degree





Salute the nation
 
<samp class="EmbedCode-container"><code class="EmbedCode-code"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Panthers claimed former Steelers’ WR Donte Moncrief In waivers, per source.</p>— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) <a href="https://twitter.com/AdamSchefter/status/1191463713691328513?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 4, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> </code></samp>

I think they obtained him solely to become Cam's personal foot masseuse. That would make him just the 2nd masseuse specialist in the league, behind Kraft's pecker scratcher.
 
Close but I think Ladarius Green edges out Goodgrief for first place.

Ladarius at least caught some balls, scored some points and made some explosive plays. I seem to remember his 5 or 6 games matched the output of Jesse James in 16 games that year. We at least got a sample of what Green could've been for us in a full season if he hadn't concussed his way out of football. With Montcrief, we never got to see anything besides some broken fingers.
 
Close but I think Ladarius Green edges out Goodgrief for first place.

Week 13 of 2016, Green had 6 catches 110 yards, and a TD. In one game Green was better than Moncreif. And I thought it was going to be a solid yet unspectacular signing.


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With 27yds on 8 catches. How does Ryan Switzer still have a job?

Dude's going to be on IR if he doesn't learn to call for a fair catch or take a knee every now and then.
 
I had high hopes for him when he signed, but would have cut him weeks ago. Sometimes it is not your fault, the injuries get ya.
 
His drops were injury related, and probably became mental at some point. If it weren’t for the comp pick, I would have kept him. But alas, business is business.


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Hmmmmm.....could make a sneaky good pick-up and give us a legit downfield threat.

Gary Jennings WR, Unsigned Free Agent

[h=3]Seahawks waived WR Gary Jennings.[/h]
After an aborted waive of Jennings in September, the Seahawks did all they could to keep the No. 120 overall pick on the roster. They ran out of options after claiming Josh Gordon off waivers. Jennings possess blazing speed to go along with a 6-foot-1, 216-pound frame, but it is a major red flag that he could not get on the field for (then) receiver-needy Seattle. Still only 22, Jennings' athletic profile will undoubtedly earn him a second chance.
 
I'm bored, so I'll post this article digging into Jennings a bit, maybe the Steelers will take a whiff...or add him to practice squad. Seems to me we could use another WR with his speed & athleticism, and the kid's all of 22 years old.

4 reasons the Seahawks’ Gary Jennings Jr. could be one of the draft’s best receiver picks
https://www.sbnation.com/2019/4/4/18277669/gary-jennings-wvu-receiver-scouting-draft

Gary Jennings Jr. spent his first two years at West Virginia getting little offensive action. He had 17 catches between 2015 and ‘16, while he mostly sat behind more experienced receivers who were catching balls from a good but not great quarterback.

In 2017, Florida transfer Will Grier became eligible at QB. Jennings moved up the depth chart, and working with one of the best QBs in college football, Jennings became a star. He had 97 catches for 1,096 yards and (weirdly) just one touchdown as a junior, then followed it up with 54 catches for 917 yards and 13 TDs as a senior — a much different profile, but a productive one in its own way.

Now he’s a fun NFL Draft pick for the Seahawks, who took him 120th overall, in the fourth round.

Jennings few somewhat under the draft radar. NFL.com pegs him as a potential backup or special teams player. I think it’s way more likely he becomes a quality pass-catcher for his pro team.

Advanced stats say Jennings is one of the best receivers in the draft.

Jennings’ traditional numbers at WVU were great, though they flipped from his junior to senior year. First, he had tons of catches for not that many yards per catch and no TDs. Then he had fewer catches, but for more TDs and more yards per catch.

Let’s focus on his senior year, the one NFL evaluators will give the most attention.

Jennings ranked third among FBS receivers in the draft class in Marginal Efficiency.

That stat, from by SB Nation’s Bill Connelly, tracks how efficient a play based is on the exact game situation. (For instance, a 12-yard catch on third-and-18 is less valuable than a 7-yard catch on third-and-5.) Jennings ranked 11th in Marginal Explosiveness, which similarly measures how successful those plays were.

He was fourth in catch rate (74 percent) and first in Success Rate, which judges how often throws to a receiver keep an offense on schedule.

(On first down, a successful play gets half the necessary yardage for a first down. On second down, 70 percent. On third and fourth down, 100 percent.)

He was fourth in yards per target.

Jennings’ big-play ability hasn’t come at the expense of everything else.

Recall that, among FBS receivers in the 2019 draft class, he ranked even higher in Marginal Efficiency than Explosiveness in 2018. Also recall that he caught his targets at a higher clip than almost every receiver in the class, including many who didn’t go deep as often. Holgorsen used him as a screen option on a lot of the Mountaineers’ run/pass options, trusting Jennings to catch the ball and run if the defense dictated a perimeter throw.

“I define myself as someone who’s dependable,” he said.

According to MockDraftable, Jennings’ combine showing was similar to Martavis Bryant’s in 2014. Though Bryant’s had an up-and-down career, he’s one of the most physically gifted receivers the league’s seen in years.

Jennings has the college production of a really good prospect. To me, he seems to have the physical gifts of a really good prospect, too.

 
any idea why he struggled in SEA?

Seems it was a numbers game, more than anything. It is concerning he hasn't been active at all this year for games, hence why I mentioned the PS.

Teams don’t tend to move on from valuable rookie draft picks unless a player struggles big time or a need arises elsewhere.

Days after picking up former Pro Bowl receiver Josh Gordon off waivers, the Seahawks have waived rookie fourth-round pick Gary Jennings.

A breakout performer during offseason activities, Jennings never caught on during the regular year. The West Virginia product has not been active for any of Seattle’s first nine games.

The addition of Gordon coupled with the tremendous play Seattle has seen from rookie D.K. Metcalf made Jennings expendable.

https://www.yardbarker.com/nfl/articles/seahawks_release_rookie_wr_gary_jennings/s1_12680_30458330

Jennings, a fourth-round pick out of West Virginia, has struggled to find his footing with the team this season and was not active on game day for any of the first nine games of the season.

The addition late last week of Josh Gordon gave Seattle eight receivers, three of whom were inactive on game day (Jennings, Gordon and John Ursua) and it seemed a given that the Seahawks would not go too much longer with eight receivers on their 53-man roster.

https://www.seattletimes.com/sports...tivating-ol-phil-haynes-to-the-53-man-roster/

Seahawks waive Gary Jennings amidst glut of WRs on roster

In April the Seattle Seahawks went heavy drafting wide receivers, taking DK Metcalf out of Ole Miss in the second round, Gary Jennings from West Virginia in the fourth round and then trading back into the seventh round to keep John Ursua.

That was back in the spring, and just last week the Seahawks wide receiver group received a potential jolt when former New England Patriot Josh Gordon was awarded to the Hawks on waivers. That waiver claim left Seattle as the most wide receiver heavy team in the NFL, with an offensive line that was struggling and in need of depth and help.

Thus, the roster moves the Seahawks made today.

https://www.fieldgulls.com/2019/11/...-on-roster-josh-gordon-phil-haynes-john-ursua

One team's trash another team's treasure?
 
Seahawks Bizarrely Cut 2019 4th Round Pick WR Gary Jennings
https://www.12up.com/posts/seahawks-bizarrely-cut-2019-4th-round-pick-wr-gary-jennings-01dryqst11b9

On Tuesday, the Seattle Seahawks activated rookie guard Phil Haynes from the PUP list, and with veteran receiver Josh Gordon being claimed off waivers recently, Seattle's wide receiver room apparently became too crowded, leading to the team cutting rookie wideout Gary Jennings.

Obviously, Jennings failed to make much of an impression since April.

The 2019 fourth rounder has already been briefly placed on waivers before, but the Seahawks were able to keep the rookie wideout around a little while longer.

Jennings never saw the field for a team that's been in desperate need of a wide receiver up to this point. Now that they have Gordon, Jennings became expendable.

Even though this isn't a good look for Jennings, the 22-year-old should get a second opportunity, as he has NFL size at 6-1 while also running a 4.42 40-yard dash at the combine. His athleticism alone should get him on a new team looking for a project at wide receiver.

A glimpse at his struggles back in August...

With Jennings, however, that assumption is based solely on the fact that he’s a fourth-round pick.

Because the West Virginia product was awfully quiet through the first two weeks of camp and in Seattle’s preseason opener against the Denver Broncos. Jennings didn’t have a single reception on two targets despite playing more snaps (36/69) than any other Seahawks receiver.

That’s why Monday’s practice felt like such a big deal. Jennings was a stud. He showed well in every period of practice and made several highlight-reel receptions. The best was a one-handed, 40-yard catch in traffic on a throw from Russell Wilson.

“He really needed it, I think, just to be honest with you,” Wilson said of Jennings’ monster practice. “I think just to make some plays, get the ball in his hands and one, show himself that he can be great in this league hopefully and two, I think ultimately just to (show) the team and everything else, the ball hasn’t gone his way much for whatever reasons.”

Jennings admitted he was bogged down early on by the depth of Seattle’s playbook. Transitioning from a spread offense in college to Seattle’s pro-style system, with all new verbiage and more intricate concepts, is not easy.

The rookie spends hours each night studying his playbook, and he can finally feel himself turning the corner from a mental standpoint. Offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer said that progress has been evident.

“He was one of those guys that it kind of took him a while to pick some stuff up for us,” Schottenheimer said. “Now I think he’s kind of relaxed a little bit, ‘Oh, these plays make a little bit more sense.’ You see the natural speed, and size and athleticism.

“(Monday was) probably one of the best practices any receiver has had all camp, yesterday. It was borderline dominant some of the plays he made, and it wasn’t just one period it was every single period.”

Jennings has done his best to not let himself press despite the slow start. He understands this is a process, and he’s playing the long game. Additionally, Jennings knows that patience is vital for any wide receiver. Opportunities come sporadically with 11 guys splitting reps.

Finally, and most importantly, Jennings knows he belongs in the NFL.

“I can ball,” he said assuredly.

And he’s right. Jennings posted 1,096 receiving yards as a junior at West Virginia and scored 13 touchdowns as a senior. He can also fly, evidenced by his 21.56 MPH play speed at the Senior Bowl and 4.42-second 40-time at the NFL Combine.

“I don’t really feel pressure,” Jennings said. “I just go out and do what I know I can do.”

https://www.nbcsports.com/northwest...s-settling-after-borderline-dominant-practice


Okay, that's more information on Gary Jennings than any of us needed. I just remembered him from the draft and figured he could be a nice project for us, being WR is a seemingly barren spot right now on the depth chart. ;)
 
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So who knows anything about this Terry Wright kid from Seattle. Looks fast.

Yeah, he's a speed demon running 4.38, smaller guy at 5-10 best suited for the slot.

I'd rather they replace this undrafted former Seahawk with the 4th-round-pick former Seahawk. ;)
 
One team's trash another team's treasure?

can be sure. there is a fine line between success and failure with a lot of these guys. I mean, as long as he has it above the neck and the stage isn't too big for him, then they should be able to coach him up and things of that nature.

LOL. sorry. I'm not even drinking (yet).

Size would bother me a bit. Did I see he is 5'10". that is switzer size. If the guy can return kicks then he is definitely worth a look, and I am not against him based on size. It just makes me nervous. Nothign wrong with a PS look though.
 
can be sure. there is a fine line between success and failure with a lot of these guys. I mean, as long as he has it above the neck and the stage isn't too big for him, then they should be able to coach him up and things of that nature. LOL. sorry. I'm not even drinking (yet). Size would bother me a bit. Did I see he is 5'10". that is switzer size. If the guy can return kicks then he is definitely worth a look, and I am not against him based on size. It just makes me nervous. Nothign wrong with a PS look though.

Hoot, we're talking about two ex-Seahawk WR's here. The 5-10 guy is Terry Wright, 4.3 speedster who we just signed to the practice squad. The guy I've been posting about is Gary Jennings, former 4th rounder released by the Hawks today, is 6-2, 220 and runs a 4.4.
 
Hoot, we're talking about two ex-Seahawk WR's here. The 5-10 guy is Terry Wright, 4.3 speedster who we just signed to the practice squad. The guy I've been posting about is Gary Jennings, former 4th rounder released by the Hawks today, is 6-2, 220 and runs a 4.4.

I stand corrected.

I will now commence the walk of shame.

(good news is there is beer at the end of that walk).


Thanks for straightening me out.

edit: and I do like the size there. I say get his *** in house and see what he has
 
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