With the new rule in place, I think the coaches will look more seriously into bigtime transfers. Jevan Snead or a Ryan Mallett for instance. The downside of course, is that it works both ways. LSU has lost a few. I remember WR Lavelle Hawkins who signed with LSU & then tranferred to Cal. The story the media put out, was that he was homesick. But the rumor floating around Campus, was that he felt he had beaten out Xavier Carter soundly. And looking at what Hawkins did at Cal...I tend to believe Saban seriously goofed. Not really crazy about a lot of transfers..sort of feels like free-agency in a way to me. But it might become more popular because it doesn't break the 28 max rule. And it's managable as long as were at 85 or under.
And there's potentially a big difference in your age. You may have been 16 and then 18. You can naturally gain speed in that period. It's harder when you are 18 going on 19. Not much physical maturing as it relates to speed going on then.
thats not true, I ran a 4.6 as a senior in high school, by my sophomore year in college, I was clocked at 4.49
.11 is a lot different than .3. Not saying you can't improve, you just can't improve as much from 18-20 as you can from 16-18 typically speaking.
New video and we get to see his catching some passes: [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3sS93ErHBg[/media]