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Message

Phil Taylor DT Baylor
Posted on 1/26/11 at 11:13 am
Posted on 1/26/11 at 11:13 am
The Saints were noticed spending particular attention and time with him. Some scouting reports to get familiar...
from 10/22-
Phil Taylor is making the most of his senior season to upgrade his draft status. As a freshman and sophomore he was down the depth chart a little ways on a stellar Penn State defense. However, the 6-4, 340 pound defensive tackle did see some playing time as a freshman for the Nittany Lions and that is an uncommon occurrence in Happy Valley. Taylor spent 2008 as a redshirt waiting to be eligible to play at Baylor in 2009. His junior campaign was not too bad as he started nine games, but a turf toe injury limited his production and he ended the season with a mere 25 tackles and just 2.5 tackles-for-loss.
Taylor has the physical tools to be a solid tackle at the next level, but he needs to be productive during his senior season with the Bears to boost his draft stock. So far Taylor is doing just that. Through seven games he already has tallied a career high 28 tackles and added 5.0 tackles-for-loss, one sack and one forced fumble. Taylor is Baylor's clog in the middle of the defense and is beginning to live up to his potential.
He will need to keep it up the rest of the 2010 campaign to make scouts take notice. Taylor has decent quickness and strength at the point of attack, but it is likely that he will need to have a good NFL Combine to really grab some attention. He can move up to the third round area if all goes well, but he will probably stay a late to mid-round prospect.
----------------
Positives: Reasonably good quickness... Good first step... Violent hands... Strong lower body... Does a nice job shredding blockers... Very good strength at POA... Plays with good power... Gets a good push... Can bull his way into the backfield... Good swim move... Good closing speed... Good balance... Plays the run well... Can be unblockable in one-on-one situations... Can anchor... Space eater... Can be difficult to move... Occupies double teams... Good upside... Selected All-Big 12 second team for the 2010 season... Schematic versatility, fits as 3-4 NT, many Gabe Watson similarities.
Negatives: Marginal lateral mobility... Seems to struggle trying to maintain low pad level, plays a little too high at times... Rises almost instantly off the snap... Doesn't always keep his head up as he pushes into the backfield... Inconsistent... Not very instinctive... Lacks range... Doesn't always give a good effort... Not a hard worker... Conditioning issues, wears down late in games... Gets too heavy, has been as high as 385 lbs... Durability concerns, missed first nine games of 2007 season with knee injury... Dismissed from Penn St. with academic issues and for his involvement in an off-campus fight... Rebuilt draft stock following poor 2009 season (played through turf toe)... Still raw, a boom or bust type prospect.
-----------
I’ve been a huge fan of Phil Taylor since I saw him play for the first time earlier this season. I believe he is a true nose tackle in every sense of the word and deserves to be a 1st-round pick. I currently have him as my 4th-rated defensive tackle, ahead of some much bigger names such as Marvin Austin, Drake Nevis and Allen Bailey.
Based on the reports out of Mobile, it sounds as though others are starting to fall in love with Taylor as well. Here’s what others are saying about Taylor as the Senior Bowl:
Shane P. Hallam – DraftCountdown.com - ”He wasn’t ripped and didn’t show a six-pack like many of the other players, but he carried his 337 pound frame EXTREMELY well. You would never guess he was that heavy, but he still has the size to eat up space”
Scouts, Inc. – “[S]howing great feet through the bags for a 6-4, 337-pounder.”
Tony Pauline – DraftInsider.net - “The massive interior defender ate up double-teams and clogged the middle of the line. He also displayed a very nice swim move while rushing the passer.”
from 10/22-
Phil Taylor is making the most of his senior season to upgrade his draft status. As a freshman and sophomore he was down the depth chart a little ways on a stellar Penn State defense. However, the 6-4, 340 pound defensive tackle did see some playing time as a freshman for the Nittany Lions and that is an uncommon occurrence in Happy Valley. Taylor spent 2008 as a redshirt waiting to be eligible to play at Baylor in 2009. His junior campaign was not too bad as he started nine games, but a turf toe injury limited his production and he ended the season with a mere 25 tackles and just 2.5 tackles-for-loss.
Taylor has the physical tools to be a solid tackle at the next level, but he needs to be productive during his senior season with the Bears to boost his draft stock. So far Taylor is doing just that. Through seven games he already has tallied a career high 28 tackles and added 5.0 tackles-for-loss, one sack and one forced fumble. Taylor is Baylor's clog in the middle of the defense and is beginning to live up to his potential.
He will need to keep it up the rest of the 2010 campaign to make scouts take notice. Taylor has decent quickness and strength at the point of attack, but it is likely that he will need to have a good NFL Combine to really grab some attention. He can move up to the third round area if all goes well, but he will probably stay a late to mid-round prospect.
----------------
Positives: Reasonably good quickness... Good first step... Violent hands... Strong lower body... Does a nice job shredding blockers... Very good strength at POA... Plays with good power... Gets a good push... Can bull his way into the backfield... Good swim move... Good closing speed... Good balance... Plays the run well... Can be unblockable in one-on-one situations... Can anchor... Space eater... Can be difficult to move... Occupies double teams... Good upside... Selected All-Big 12 second team for the 2010 season... Schematic versatility, fits as 3-4 NT, many Gabe Watson similarities.
Negatives: Marginal lateral mobility... Seems to struggle trying to maintain low pad level, plays a little too high at times... Rises almost instantly off the snap... Doesn't always keep his head up as he pushes into the backfield... Inconsistent... Not very instinctive... Lacks range... Doesn't always give a good effort... Not a hard worker... Conditioning issues, wears down late in games... Gets too heavy, has been as high as 385 lbs... Durability concerns, missed first nine games of 2007 season with knee injury... Dismissed from Penn St. with academic issues and for his involvement in an off-campus fight... Rebuilt draft stock following poor 2009 season (played through turf toe)... Still raw, a boom or bust type prospect.
-----------
I’ve been a huge fan of Phil Taylor since I saw him play for the first time earlier this season. I believe he is a true nose tackle in every sense of the word and deserves to be a 1st-round pick. I currently have him as my 4th-rated defensive tackle, ahead of some much bigger names such as Marvin Austin, Drake Nevis and Allen Bailey.
Based on the reports out of Mobile, it sounds as though others are starting to fall in love with Taylor as well. Here’s what others are saying about Taylor as the Senior Bowl:
Shane P. Hallam – DraftCountdown.com - ”He wasn’t ripped and didn’t show a six-pack like many of the other players, but he carried his 337 pound frame EXTREMELY well. You would never guess he was that heavy, but he still has the size to eat up space”
Scouts, Inc. – “[S]howing great feet through the bags for a 6-4, 337-pounder.”
Tony Pauline – DraftInsider.net - “The massive interior defender ate up double-teams and clogged the middle of the line. He also displayed a very nice swim move while rushing the passer.”
Posted on 1/26/11 at 11:15 am to blueslover
like i said in the other thread
we need to make a strong move to get him in the early 2nd round, i'm convinced, i'm a phil phanatic
we need to make a strong move to get him in the early 2nd round, i'm convinced, i'm a phil phanatic
Posted on 1/26/11 at 11:28 am to blueslover
sounds like another BJ Raji type player. we really need one like that next to ellis.
Posted on 1/26/11 at 11:44 am to DBG
still a lot of miles to determine their stock value. See how he does during the game and then the combine meat market.
You can move around in the draft trading but more so you're pegging guys that might fit into your pick spots. The Saints have been on the more active trading side. Most often they make a move to nab a player that has dropped so much relative to where they rated him they decide to go for it.
Perfect example, Matt Tennant C-G, he was a solid 2nd, 3rd at worst value. He's still there at #27 in the 5th Rd. The Saints didn't even have a pick so they traded this year's 4th. Great move IMO! 2nd-3rd value for a 4th a year later.
Gotta think they scout Taylor with their picks in mind...
#56 maybe, but no incredible value if so
#72 much better value and reasonable range
#88 getting to wow, can't pass on territory
Ayodele had a much better year than most give him credit for. Still, the idea of adding a real giant plugger could help the run D tremendously and take a level of pressure off the LBs.
------------------
more fresh notes from Mobile...
Defensive tackle Phil Taylor can absolutely be a one-man wrecking crew when the guy plays with proper leverage. At the start of practice he came out of his stance too high, lost the leverage battle and was stonewalled at the point by a smaller offensive lineman. However, after that point he did a much better job staying low off the ball and absolutely overwhelmed opposing blockers through contact. Combine his power with his impressive initial first step for his size and violent club, and the guy can be an absolute bear to block one-on-one inside. An intriguing defensive line prospect who will get looks both inside and out in both a 34 and 43 front.
You can move around in the draft trading but more so you're pegging guys that might fit into your pick spots. The Saints have been on the more active trading side. Most often they make a move to nab a player that has dropped so much relative to where they rated him they decide to go for it.
Perfect example, Matt Tennant C-G, he was a solid 2nd, 3rd at worst value. He's still there at #27 in the 5th Rd. The Saints didn't even have a pick so they traded this year's 4th. Great move IMO! 2nd-3rd value for a 4th a year later.
Gotta think they scout Taylor with their picks in mind...
#56 maybe, but no incredible value if so
#72 much better value and reasonable range
#88 getting to wow, can't pass on territory
Ayodele had a much better year than most give him credit for. Still, the idea of adding a real giant plugger could help the run D tremendously and take a level of pressure off the LBs.
------------------
more fresh notes from Mobile...
Defensive tackle Phil Taylor can absolutely be a one-man wrecking crew when the guy plays with proper leverage. At the start of practice he came out of his stance too high, lost the leverage battle and was stonewalled at the point by a smaller offensive lineman. However, after that point he did a much better job staying low off the ball and absolutely overwhelmed opposing blockers through contact. Combine his power with his impressive initial first step for his size and violent club, and the guy can be an absolute bear to block one-on-one inside. An intriguing defensive line prospect who will get looks both inside and out in both a 34 and 43 front.
This post was edited on 1/26/11 at 12:58 pm
Posted on 1/27/11 at 9:02 am to blueslover
-bumping for more support ot the beast train, check the Wed practice reports
he does commercials on the side
he does commercials on the side
Posted on 1/27/11 at 9:47 am to blueslover
Let's just sign the Miller High Life guy. I like his attitude.
Posted on 1/27/11 at 3:19 pm to blueslover
Thing is does he lean more toward his positives or negatives? Looks promising but will be interesting to see if he lands somewhere around one of our draft picks.
Posted on 1/27/11 at 3:24 pm to whodatfan
check the Sr Bowl Reports, in practices thus far he's prolly made as big of an impression as anyone and helped his stock. A lotta evaluating left to tune his value. I was just excited to see it reported that the Saints were giving a lot of individual attention to him. Just like how our D back end has evolved from poor to both young and very solid it would be spectacular to see the front 7 have that same kinda evolution.
Posted on 1/27/11 at 3:43 pm to blueslover
Yes. We need a young, aggressive front 7 bad. Vilma needs some talent around him quick. He's not exactly the fountain of youth ya know. While he's still prime he needs some playmakers on his sides and in front.
Posted on 1/27/11 at 3:54 pm to whodatfan
quote:
We need a young, aggressive front 7 bad.
bullshite. We need a 1st Rd RB!!! Now!!!
No really this is truth. DE, DT, and LB.
Posted on 1/27/11 at 9:49 pm to NS Who Dat Nation
the full story on him...
MOBILE, Ala. - Phil Taylor shed more than just weight when he left Penn State.
The Baylor defensive tackle left behind his Maryland buddies and the trouble they often seemed to get in together.
Unfettered from both, Taylor blossomed in Waco, Texas, over the last two-plus years and has become a legitimate draft prospect. His combination of size (6-foot-4, 337 pounds) and quickness off the ball impressed NFL scouts during Senior Bowl practices this week.
The Eagles, always in the market for defensive line help, were one of those teams. Whether he fits into their plans come draft day in late April is anyone's guess. But the league-wide interest shows just how far Taylor has come since August 2008, when Penn State coach Joe Paterno kicked him off the team.
"I just moved on with it," Taylor said, "and made the best out of a second chance."
Taylor, of Clifton, Md., was part of Penn State's decorated 2006 recruiting class. Many of those freshmen came from the fertile ground of Maryland and had forged relationships in that close-knit football community.
While that may have seemed like a good reason to attend Penn State, the decision backfired on Taylor and several of his classmates.
"When you get a whole lot of buddies that have been playing high school all together for four years and then come up to Penn State, you're going to get in trouble," Phil Taylor Sr. said. "So they're running all together and they're acting crazy."
In October 2007, about a dozen football players were involved in a brawl at the campus student center. Taylor was among several Lions who were arrested. He pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct misdemeanor.
Taylor hardly played the rest of his sophomore season and was put on probation by Paterno the next spring. Unable to use the team's workout facilities, Taylor said he started to pack on extra pounds.
The weight gain was the least of his problems, however. That summer, Taylor and fellow defensive tackle Chris Baker were involved in a minor pool party fracas. The incident occurred right around the time that ESPN's Outside the Lines chronicled the Penn State football program's troubles with the law.
Just days after the program was televised, Taylor and Baker were booted off the team. Baker enrolled at Division I-A Hampton, but Taylor opted for Baylor, where former Penn State defensive backs coach Brian Norwood was the defensive coordinator.
Taylor had to sit out a year.
"I worked on the scout team and did morning workouts with the freshman team," he said. "It was humbling. But you just can't come in as a transfer and just think you've got it made. You have to earn it."
Taylor tipped the scales at 385 pounds when he arrived in Waco. When he was permitted to play the next year he was down to 365, but he failed to deliver on some lofty expectations. By his senior season, though, the slimmer Taylor started to raise some pro eyebrows.
He recorded 45 tackles, seven of which were for losses, and was named second team all-Big Twelve.
"I think it was the weight that was holding him back," his father said.
There might have been something else.
"I think for Phil, getting away from everybody changed everything," Phil Sr. said. "He went down to Baylor, a Christian school, and had no incidents for three years. He was at Penn State for - what, two years? - and had two incidents."
Taylor weighed in as the heaviest player at the Senior Bowl, but scouts noticed his solid build. Despite his size, he displayed quickness, but he wore down toward the end of practices.
"He's an inconsistent player like a lot of defensive linemen coming out of college football when they're 300-plus pounds," NFL Network analyst Mike Mayock said. "They don't play hard every snap. . . . He flashes. He's a big, strong kid that flashes."
Many mock drafts have Taylor being picked in about the second round. Another unanswered question is what position he'll play in the NFL. Some envision him as a nose guard in a 3-4 defense. Others think he's quick enough to play one of the tackle positions in a 4-3.
"I like playing on top of the center," Taylor said. "It's closest to the ball."
LINK
MOBILE, Ala. - Phil Taylor shed more than just weight when he left Penn State.
The Baylor defensive tackle left behind his Maryland buddies and the trouble they often seemed to get in together.
Unfettered from both, Taylor blossomed in Waco, Texas, over the last two-plus years and has become a legitimate draft prospect. His combination of size (6-foot-4, 337 pounds) and quickness off the ball impressed NFL scouts during Senior Bowl practices this week.
The Eagles, always in the market for defensive line help, were one of those teams. Whether he fits into their plans come draft day in late April is anyone's guess. But the league-wide interest shows just how far Taylor has come since August 2008, when Penn State coach Joe Paterno kicked him off the team.
"I just moved on with it," Taylor said, "and made the best out of a second chance."
Taylor, of Clifton, Md., was part of Penn State's decorated 2006 recruiting class. Many of those freshmen came from the fertile ground of Maryland and had forged relationships in that close-knit football community.
While that may have seemed like a good reason to attend Penn State, the decision backfired on Taylor and several of his classmates.
"When you get a whole lot of buddies that have been playing high school all together for four years and then come up to Penn State, you're going to get in trouble," Phil Taylor Sr. said. "So they're running all together and they're acting crazy."
In October 2007, about a dozen football players were involved in a brawl at the campus student center. Taylor was among several Lions who were arrested. He pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct misdemeanor.
Taylor hardly played the rest of his sophomore season and was put on probation by Paterno the next spring. Unable to use the team's workout facilities, Taylor said he started to pack on extra pounds.
The weight gain was the least of his problems, however. That summer, Taylor and fellow defensive tackle Chris Baker were involved in a minor pool party fracas. The incident occurred right around the time that ESPN's Outside the Lines chronicled the Penn State football program's troubles with the law.
Just days after the program was televised, Taylor and Baker were booted off the team. Baker enrolled at Division I-A Hampton, but Taylor opted for Baylor, where former Penn State defensive backs coach Brian Norwood was the defensive coordinator.
Taylor had to sit out a year.
"I worked on the scout team and did morning workouts with the freshman team," he said. "It was humbling. But you just can't come in as a transfer and just think you've got it made. You have to earn it."
Taylor tipped the scales at 385 pounds when he arrived in Waco. When he was permitted to play the next year he was down to 365, but he failed to deliver on some lofty expectations. By his senior season, though, the slimmer Taylor started to raise some pro eyebrows.
He recorded 45 tackles, seven of which were for losses, and was named second team all-Big Twelve.
"I think it was the weight that was holding him back," his father said.
There might have been something else.
"I think for Phil, getting away from everybody changed everything," Phil Sr. said. "He went down to Baylor, a Christian school, and had no incidents for three years. He was at Penn State for - what, two years? - and had two incidents."
Taylor weighed in as the heaviest player at the Senior Bowl, but scouts noticed his solid build. Despite his size, he displayed quickness, but he wore down toward the end of practices.
"He's an inconsistent player like a lot of defensive linemen coming out of college football when they're 300-plus pounds," NFL Network analyst Mike Mayock said. "They don't play hard every snap. . . . He flashes. He's a big, strong kid that flashes."
Many mock drafts have Taylor being picked in about the second round. Another unanswered question is what position he'll play in the NFL. Some envision him as a nose guard in a 3-4 defense. Others think he's quick enough to play one of the tackle positions in a 4-3.
"I like playing on top of the center," Taylor said. "It's closest to the ball."
LINK
Posted on 1/28/11 at 12:55 pm to blueslover
big phil needs another day of front page attention
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