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Tribal Warfare
04-11-2007, 10:09 PM
http://californianewswire.com/2007/04/11/CNW194_205815


Reception Leader Excels at Pro Day -

Prepares to Visit NFL Teams
Wed, 11 Apr 2007 20:58:15 -0700 PDT
by Cindy Holden


IRVINE, Calif. — Despite not being invited to the NFL Combine, Maurice Price, the nations leading receiver in 2006, has impressed NFL scouts. His agent, Bert Briones of Hip Athletics, reports that a number of clubs have invited him to visit their facilities and hope to draft him. Next week, Price will visit the Kansas City Chiefs and also attend an additional individual workout.

Briones reports that Maurice has impressed a number of NFL teams in individual workouts and at the Pro Timing Day held March 27 at South Carolina State. Price recorded an 11-foot broad jump, a 41-inch vertical leap, and a low 40 time of 4.43 on a slow surface. One scout reported his 40 time at 4.47 and noted it was outstanding considering Price actually stumbled on the run.

“In the game of football often receivers will be forced to stumble by a defender, so to see that type of time recorded indicates Maurice runs strong with his feet in the ground with football speed and running ability,” said Briones. In the position drills Price excelled, displaying excellent hands and explosive moves in his routes. Ten NFL clubs interviewed Price that day.

Price is training in Orlando, Florida, with Tom Shaw, which has given him the opportunity to workout with Calvin Johnson (considered the top receiver in this draft). Previously, Price was training in California with Todd Norman of the Cutting Edge, where in five weeks, the 21 year-old Price’s weight increased by 11 pounds while seeing no increase in his impressively low body fat of 4.7%. At the same time Price’s speed, explosiveness, and quickness was not compromised. Price improved his 6-1 frame from 194 to 205 pounds.

Price has also trained with Coach Bill Cunerty. Mr. Cunerty reports that Price “is an exceptional talent. He runs a 4.43 40-yard dash and has smooth and fluid moves in his route progressions. He “snatches” the ball out of the air and is a very physical presence on the field. He runs disciplined patterns and understands route adjusting and converting routes according to the coverage. He has a strong vertical jump and large hands and long arms. He is both a deep threat and a possession receiver with dynamic “run-after-catch” skills. He is a very likeable and hard working young man who really took coaching suggestions and immediately produced the desired results.”

“Maurice is in a good position at this point,” reports Briones, “His physical attributes combined with his productivity of 103 catches are exceptional. NFL scouts have gone out of their way to work him out in his hometown of Orlando. Also, he played well all week in an All-Star Game with most of the league attending. I am willing to compare him with players considered to be first round picks. Look at Dwayne Jarrett, who like Maurice, also caught 202 passes in the past three years; Maurice is much faster and a tougher more physical athlete. He is also faster than Sidney Rice.”

“If they are drafted early, Maurice should be close behind. His 10 and 20 yard times compare with the top handful in the country and he has great hands. Most importantly he is a strong character kid; a non-drinker, non-smoker, who attends church regularly. When people talk about value in this draft, Maurice should be considered in the third or fourth round. Maurice offers teams with wisdom an excellent option in drafting a young player with tremendous upside.”

jiveturkey
04-12-2007, 07:04 AM
I wonder what round he's expected to drop to?

tomahawk kid
04-12-2007, 07:34 AM
Anymore info on this kid?

This is the first I've heard of him.

BigChiefFan
04-12-2007, 09:18 AM
Maurice Price
Height: 6-1
Weight: 189
Position: Wide Receiver
College: Charleston Southern


Copyright NFLDraftScout.com, distributed by The Sports Xchange


OVERVIEW
The Buccaneers' first bona fide NFL prospect might have only played in 26 games at the school, but the speedy receiver rewrote most of the school and Big South Conference receiving records. Over the last two seasons, the only Division I receivers to have more catches than Price's 175 are Davone Bess of Hawaii (185) and David Ball of New Hampshire (180).

Price was a four-year starter as a wide receiver at Olympia High School. As a senior, he was named his team's Most Outstanding Player, earning first-team all-county and second-team All-Central Florida honors. He also played in the Central Florida all-star game. As a senior, he led the team to a 7-4 record, as he caught 44 passes for 750 yards and seven touchdowns.

Price enrolled at Charleston Southern in 2004, choosing the school over Howard University, Tennessee-Martin and Illinois State. The advantage for Charleston Southern in the recruiting process was distance from home, the type of offense they ran and a young receiver named Eddie Gadson, who served as Price's host during his visit to campus. The two would become good friends and talk often of how good the offense would be as each player matured.

Gadson caught more than 70 passes in 2004 while Price, the freshman understudy, caught 27 for 401 yards (14.9 avg.) and two touchdowns in seven games. The untimely death of Gadson during the summer of 2005 in a car accident was quite a setback personally for Price. With Gadson's death, the pressure on Price to become the main man was evident from the first day of fall camp his sophomore year.

After starting well against The Citadel, Price missed the next three games with a rib injury. But once he returned, Price proved that he was the best pass catcher in the Big South. He led the conference in receptions (72) and yards (1,043), scoring seven touchdowns. He did not play in the required 75 percent of his team's games to qualify for a national ranking, but his average of 9.0 receptions per game would have led the NCAA Division I-AA ranks, and his average of 130.38 yards per game was surpassed by only Laurent Robinson of Illinois State (133.18 ypg).

Price was on the field for all 11 games in 2006, earning All-America and All-Big South Conference honors. He was the only Division I receiver (I-A, I-AA) to catch more than 100 passes that year, coming up with 103 receptions for 985 yards (9.6 avg.) and 10 touchdowns. He also became the seventh receiver in Division I-AA history to grab more than 100 passes in a season.

In 26 games at Charleston Southern, Price started 19 times. He holds the school and Big South Conference career records with 202 receptions for 2,429 yards (12.0 avg.). His 19 touchdown catches rank second in conference annals. His average of 7.77 catches per game set an NCAA Division I-AA all-time record. He also carried six times for seven yards.


ANALYSIS
Positives: Has a lean, solid build with a well-defined musculature … Has a tight waist and hips, long arms and legs, cut up, with room on his frame to carry at least another 10 pounds of bulk with no loss in quickness … Shows suddenness and balance coming off the snap, demonstrating the flexibility to change direction without having to throttle down … Very quick and shifty in his patterns, running tight routes while making sharp cuts … Has valid field instincts and vision, doing a nice job of riding up on a defensive back to gobble up the cushion … Will compete for the ball in a crowd and likes challenges, responding well to one-on-one matchups … Works hard to get open and is a strong team leader with a solid work ethic … Moves with a quick burst off the line and does a good job of using his hands to avoid the press … Never takes false steps in his route progression, running at a good pad level and flashes acceleration to get behind the defender in an instant … Doesn't have the strong hand punch to shock the opponent vs. a physical press, but gets most of his success there when he pushes off the ball with suddenness … Has the quick feet to redirect, showing good hip wiggle when changing direction … Gets in and out of his breaks with no wasted motion … Shows good awareness for the sticks and sidelines, keeping good eye contact on the pocket to come back for the ball when the quarterback is pressured … Has nifty feet and sells his routes, as he can stab and stem to set up the defensive back … Can stick his feet into the ground and burst in and out of his breaks, carrying good depth, as it is rare to see him cut his patterns short … Steady and sure-handed receiver who can pluck the ball away from his frame and even snag the one-hand catch … His hip wiggle and burst lets him separate after the catch with consistency and is elusive enough to make the initial tackler miss.

Negatives: Has lean muscle tone, but lacks overall strength to defeat the press (more effective avoiding rather than trying to use his hands to get a clean release, but is able to push off if the defender is eight-to-10 yards off the line) … Runs precise routes in the short area, but will drift or take soft angles going long distances … Can catch away from his frame and shows good leaping ability, but needs to improve his timing, as he doesn't always win jump ball battles due to not getting to the pass at its high point (will prefer to body catch than battle for the ball in a crowd and needs work in exploding up for the high ball) … Flashes a good short burst, but nothing extended … Too light in his pants to be an effective blocker at the next level, as he might get decent hand placement, but lacks the strength to eliminate his man … Has good run-after-catch speed, but fails to generate the leg drive and strength to break tackles … Has never faced top-level competition and, while he has impressive receiving totals (202 catches in 26 games), you would expect him to be more of a big-play specialist and average more than 9.6 yards per catch (2006) as a junior and 12.0 yards for his career … Can accelerate and get deep, but needs to do a better job of looking the ball in (eyeballs the quarterback too long at times).

Compares To: Donte' Stallworth, Philadelphia -- Like Stallworth, Price is a slippery runner who might not have the strength to power through the press or break many tackles, but he has the loose hips, second gear and wiggle to elude … His best ability is to drive off the coverage and come back for the short ball … With his sharp change of direction, he quickly separates after the catch … Price has never faced anything other than marginal competition and needs to fill out his frame more, but he has soft, natural hands and with his nifty foot moves, he can make things happen with the ball in his hands.


HIGH SCHOOL
Four-year performer at Olympia High School in Orlando, Fla. … Team finished 7-4 in 2003 … Caught 44 passes for 750 yards and seven touchdowns as a senior, earning first-team all-county honors and second-team All-Central Florida … Played in the Central Florida all-star game and was named his team's most outstanding player.


PERSONAL
Born on Sept. 11, 1985 in Orlando, Fla. … Son of Monica Gadson … Majoring in business.

Direckshun
04-12-2007, 10:36 AM
Love it as a late round pick.

BigChiefFan
04-12-2007, 11:15 AM
Taken from the article I supplied..."When people talk about value in this draft, Maurice should be considered in the third or fourth round."

bdeg
04-12-2007, 01:40 PM
Taken from the article I supplied..."When people talk about value in this draft, Maurice should be considered in the third or fourth round."

I would take that as saying he's a 5th or 6th round prospect.