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Andrei Iosivas is an All-American track star for Princeton with a 6.71 60m and a 39-inch vertical at 6-foot-3 and 200 pounds. If you could build the ideal wideout prospect, it’d look something like Iosivas. He’s a guy who can get his in a lot of different ways. Down the field, Iosivas uses his physicality and speed to separate and has the fluid body control to high-point the ball or release off the defender for the back shoulder ball. On his out-breaking routes, Iosivas displays an innate ability to break his routes without losing any speed, making him a matchup nightmare for corners throughout their entire phase. When Iosivas has the ball in his hands his strength and acceleration make him a threat for chunk yards after the catch and has the hip fluidity and foot speed to make defenders miss. To check the final box, Iosivas’ hands are extremely strong — he finishes through contact really well and attacks the ball in the air. The only deficiencies I can find in his game is a little stiffness in his bend at the top of his stick and comeback routes. I’d also like to see him be a more competitive and physical blocker on the perimeter. |
From Prineton.....should check the Smart box, from smart, tough and dependable
Add a giant OG and DE/DT.
Another LBer and TE.....I would be happy
All good questions. On the pro playbook, he did go to Princeton, so he should be able to handle that.
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the kid's got size and speed. Questions still need to be answered. Like: 1. How good are his hands. 2. Is he a hands or body catcher? 3. Can he run a full route tree? 4. How well can he handle press coverage? And 5. How fast can he absorb a pro playbook?
All good questions. On the pro playbook, he did go to Princeton, so he should be able to handle that.
Generally true, but not always. I went Ivy and was never able to master the playbook in high school. As an OL. Our QB on our state championship team had no problem with the playbook (which despite being high school ball was quite complicated). He was not bright at all in terms of school work. Sometime a strong kinesthetic sense, or lack thereof, can outweigh general intelligence. In some sense DJ is an example of this. DJ is clearly a very bright guy. Yet processing speed seems to be the biggest negative on him.
he could not separate from press corners
he could not separate from press corners
I read the same - no separation, just size and straight line speed.
It definitely can be taught. Look at Hodgins. He's not all that quick but he credits his route running from Diggs and Davis and it is definitely a skill that can be learned.
Two, he can't be that smart. He doesn't wear gloves. Lol. I'm curious to hear about his hand to see his drop rate. Almost all WRs wear gloves now. I'm curious why he doesn't.
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A day 3 pick if they like him.
Writing a piece about Iosivas is acknowledgement of his talent. Connecting the dots to the Giants just gets more local interest.
j/k of course.
Teams and coaches stand around when players have drills. So lets say Daboll and Kafka were standing nearby when he was doing drills. That gets reported as
" Giants show interested "
Agents of players talk to reporters. Agent makes it known
" Giants have shown interest"
" Giants show interest in Isaiah Foskey " could easily be reported.
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He doesn't look all that fast on the field, considering the competition level.
I think I prefer going to the draft on WRs as opposed to getting a pricey free agent when DJ and Saquon are going to redestroy the cap