draft, the edge guys, starting with Winovich

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  • #99769
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Michigan EDGE Chase Winovich is more than just a scouting cliché

    AUSTIN GAYLE

    https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/draft-michigans-chase-winovich-is-more-than-just-a-scouting-cliche

    He’s the first guy in, last guy out. He plays with his hair on fire, plays every play like his last. Blue-collar, high-motor, brings his hard hat and lunch pail to work every day – Chase Winovich is all of that, all of the scouting clichés media and fans alike have been quick to label him as throughout the pre-draft process.

    But he isn’t just a walking cliché. Winovich ranked inside the top-10 in two-year overall grade (92.3) and pass-rush grade (91.2) among qualifying FBS edge defenders because he’s so much more than that.

    And he is eager to prove he’s, in fact, a rare combination of all the oft-used clichés and legitimate, translatable pass-rush ability.

    “I think people just kind of labeled me or were worried that I was just this try-hard white guy or just a high-motor guy,” Winovich said in a March interview with Pro Football Focus. “I don’t understand why it has to be mutually exclusive. Having athletic ability and being able to fly around. I am that guy, but at the same time, I’m that guy that can run a sub-4.6 40 but do it every play. That rare combination is what, in my eyes, makes me special, what makes a difference on the football field.”

    Winovich took significant strides toward stripping himself of lazy narratives when he ran a sub-4.60 40-yard dash and crushed the agility drills at the 2019 NFL Scouting Combine in February.

    Weighing in at 6-foot-3, 258 pounds in Indy, Winovich finished the series of athletic testing. Ranked fourth in the 40-yard dash (4.59s), third in the three-cone (6.94s) and first in the 20-yard shuttle (4.11s) among participating edge defenders at the Combine. All three times breached the 90th percentile at his position, per MockDraftable.

    Winovich’s surprisingly surgical pass-rush ability displayed on tape and further reflected in his grades and advanced stats also stands in favor of the argument that his game goes beyond his motor.

    In the play above, Winovich executes a first-rate push-pull move to beat the Notre Dame right tackle for the sack, one of several moves he leaned on in what was a spectacular 2018 season for the Michigan standout.

    Winovich this past season ranked 10th among the 104 FBS edge defenders with at least 300 pass-rush snaps in pass-rush grade (89.2). He also ranked fourth in pass-rush win percentage (21.7%) and eighth in total pressure percentage (16.7%).

    Surprising no one, Winovich doesn’t attribute his pass-rushing success to his motor or hard hat but rather the oft-overlooked mental aspect of rushing the passer and needed technique.

    “The biggest thing for a pass-rusher really is you’ve got to be on top of everything,” Winovich said. “You’ve got to be on top of the snap count, making sure you get a good get-off on the ball. You’ve got to be on top of knowing who you’re going against, knowing what your strengths are… It goes back to film study. It goes to what moves you’ve worked on in practice the week before.

    “You’re constantly just trying to be more well-rounded pass-rusher and have this arsenal of tools. I know at any given week, if someone’s vulnerable to a certain move, I’ve got to be able to do it and exploit that or otherwise it’s going to be a long day for me.”

    In just the past two seasons, Winovich has shown dramatic improvement in all the areas he speaks to, leading to his 88.3 pass-rush grade in 2017 and 89.2 pass-rush grade in 2018. Winovich’s two-year pass-rush grade (91.2) ranks tied for eighth among the 133 edge defenders with 400 or more pass-rush snaps since 2017. He ranks 12th in pass-rush win rate and tied for 18th in total pressure percentage, as well.

    And he has far from reached his ceiling.

    “I only have so many years as being groomed as a pass-rusher,” Winovich said. “I wasn’t a pure pass-rusher back in high school… In terms of technical stuff, like a stab-club, how to counter, how to set up a counter, I didn’t necessarily have that expertise or training.”

    NFL teams praised Winovich’s leverage among other strengths tied to his pass-rush ability in meetings at the combine but were also eager to coach him up and build on his technique. He also said teams he had formal meetings with weren’t as shocked at his athletic testing as other teams were given what they’d seen on tape and liked him for more than just his motor – NFL interest in Winovich is gaining for the right reasons

    #99775
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    PFF’s top-15 edge defenders in the 2019 NFL Draft

    https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/draft-top-15-edge-defenders-for-2019-nfl-draft

    Ohio State’s Nick Bosa and Kentucky’s Josh Allen both tick every single box from athletic and production standpoints that make you think they’re top-five talents in this class. From there, there is Boston College’s Zach Allen, Florida’s Jachai Polite, and Michigan’s Chase Winovich as the only other top prospects who earned grades over 90.0 this past season. Clemson’s Clelin Ferrell, Mississippi State’s Montez Sweat, Louisiana Tech’s Jaylon Ferguson, and Florida State’s Brian Burns are all firmly in the first-round mix but have to answer why their production was a step behind.

    1. EDGE NICK BOSA, OHIO STATE
    Bosa had a higher pass-rush win rate as a true freshman than Brian Burns, Clelin Ferrell and Jachai Polite had this past season.

    2. EDGE JOSH ALLEN, KENTUCKY
    Allen had far and away the highest pass-rushing grade of any college edge defender this past season at 94.3.

    3. EDGE BRIAN BURNS, FLORIDA STATE
    Burns racked up the most pressures of any Power-5 defender in the country last year with 69.

    Related Article: Brian Burns is so much more than an explosive, athletic freak; he’s a technician committed to improving

    4. EDGE CHASE WINOVICH, MICHIGAN
    Winovich is coming off back to back seasons with grades over 90.0 overall – the only such qualifying power-5 player in the draft class that can boast that.

    5. EDGE CLELIN FERRELL, CLEMSON
    Ferrell racked up 14 sacks and 14 hits on the season and has ideal build to fit in any scheme.

    6. EDGE ZACH ALLEN, BOSTON COLLEGE
    Allen was one of the best run defenders in college football in 2017 before a 90.3 pass-rushing grade this past season. He was an ironman for BC, playing 107 snaps against Wake Forest this past season.

    7. EDGE MONTEZ SWEAT, MISSISSIPPI STATE
    Sweat’s 19.1% pressure percentage was top 10 among edge defenders in the draft class and the third-highest in the SEC last season.

    8. EDGE RASHAN GARY, MICHIGAN
    Gary’s production has yet to catch up to his freakish athleticism. He earned a 68.3 pass-rushing grade this past season.

    9. EDGE ANTHONY NELSON, IOWA
    Nelson has been one of the most productive edge defenders in college football over the past two seasons and has the size to kick inside at times as well.

    10. EDGE L.J. COLLIER, TCU
    Collier improved every year at TCU and then went to the Senior Bowl and had the highest win rate of any player in the one-on-ones.

    11. EDGE RONHEEN BINGHAM, ARKANSAS STATE
    Bingham’s 31.7 percent win rate was the highest among all defensive linemen in college football this past season.

    12. EDGE MAXX CROSBY, EASTERN MICHIGAN
    Crosby has some of the best bend of any edge rusher in this class. He earned grades of 88.2 and 90.6 the past two seasons.

    13. EDGE CHARLES OMENIHU, TEXAS
    Omenihu was much more of a run-first player at Texas, but he flashed pass-rushing ability when he was given the green light to attack. Not many pass-rushers have his combination of size, length, and athleticism.

    14. EDGE JACHAI POLITE, FLORIDA
    Polite came out of nowhere to notch the second-best pass-rushing grade among Power-5 edge-rushers. His lackluster testing drives him down this board, but his production in 2018 keeps him from falling completely out of the top-100.

    15. EDGE BEN BANOGU, TCU
    Still learning the position, TCU’s Banogu earned just a 72.1 overall grade playing edge defender for the Horned Frogs in 2018 but has unparalleled with his ideal size and athleticism.

    #99782
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    i like everything about winovich except for his disproportionately short arms. if only they were an inch longer.

    on the other hand i love that his major was evolutionary anthropology.

    #99831
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    what is so great about a guy that studies the evolution of ants? They haven’t changed in 60 billion years. Wasps are much more interesting.

    Agamemnon

    #99953
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    From Brugler’s draft guide: http://theramshuddle.com/topic/link-to-bruglers-pdf-2019-draft-guide/

    9. CHASE WINOVICH | Michigan 6026 | 256 lbs. | rSR. Jefferson Hills, Pa. (Thomas Jefferson) 4/19/1995 (age 24.03) #15

    BACKGROUND: A four-star linebacker recruit out of high school, Chase Winovich (WIN-o-vich) was a three-year starting linebacker at Thomas Jefferson in Jefferson Hills, which is a southern suburb of Pittsburgh. He posted 57 tackles, 13.0 sacks and three forced fumbles as a senior, finishing his prep career with 149 tackles, 22.0 sacks and one interception. Winovich also saw time at running back and added starting quarterback duties to his resume as a senior, recording 210 passing yards, 981 rushing yards and 20 total touchdowns. He also played basketball all four years at Thomas Jefferson. Winovich was the No. 24 rated linebacker in the 2014 recruiting class and committed to Michigan over Ohio State and Pittsburgh. He signed as a SAM linebacker, but was moved to tight end before moving back to defense and the defensive line as a junior. Winovich’s father (Peter) played basketball at Bethany College (1977-81); his mother (Nina) received the presidential fitness award; his older brother (Peter) played tight end at Bowling Green. Winovich accepted his invitation to the 2019 Senior Bowl, but was unable to participate due to a foot injury.

    YEAR (GP/GS) TKLS TFL SACK FF PD INT NOTES
    2014: Redshirted
    2015: (6/0) 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0
    2016: (13/2) 35 9.5 5.0 1 0 0
    2017: (13/13) 77 18.0 8.0 2 0 0 Second Team All-Big Ten
    2018: (13/13) 69 17.0 5.0 0 1 0 Second Team All-American; First Team All-Big Ten
    Total: (45/28) 183 44.5 18.0 3 1 0

    HT WT ARM HAND WING 40-YD 20-YD 10-YD VJ BJ SS 3C BP
    COMBINE 6026 256 32 3/4 10 78 1/2 4.59 2.69 1.57 30 1/2 09’08” 4.11 6.94 18

    PRO DAY N/A (stood on Combine numbers; positional drills only)

    STRENGTHS: Times the snap well and finishes with closing burst…arc speed and flexibility to win the corner…violent swipe and effort allow him to stay unattached mid-rush…his tape is a clinic of chasing down plays from the backside…competes with consistent play speed through the whistle…matured play recognition and nose for the ball…balanced in space…drops his pads and drives through his target as a tackler…toughness isn’t a question mark and plays through pain…crazy competitive drive and won’t take a snap off, playing with a touch of insanity to him…consistent production as a starter.

    WEAKNESSES: Doesn’t have ideal size or length by NFL standards…relies more on timing than natural explosiveness as a rusher…inconsistent edge-setter and can be knocked off-balance…tunnel vision in pursuit and doesn’t anticipate speed bumps…lacks ideal range and redirection skills at linebacker and inexperienced dropping in coverage…will attract flags in the NFL with his propensity to arrive at the quarterback out of control, diving below the knees or hitting late…wasn’t voted a senior captain and it isn’t in his nature to dial things back (NFL scout: “he’s an attention grabber and that act wears thin on some teammates and coaches”)…suffered foot injuries against Ohio State (November 2018) and Florida (December 2018) and underwent thumb surgery (March 2019).

    SUMMARY: A two-year starter at Michigan, Winovich grinded his teeth on the scout team for three years (including some reps at tight end) before becoming a fulltime starting defensive end the past two seasons, standing up and putting his hand on the ground. He finished his career ranked No. 8 in Michigan history with 44.5 tackles for loss. Winovich’s ability to rush with angled bend while fending off blockers is the key to his game, crediting his training in ballet, jiu-jitsu and boxing to his growth as an edge rusher. His extroverted personality will rub some the wrong way, but his competitive drive also fuels his disruptive effort. Overall, Winovich doesn’t have the size, length or explosive traits that NFL teams desire on the edge, but he finds ways to detach from blockers with his flexibility, active hands and relentless play style, projecting as a stand-up rusher in a 3-4 scheme.

    GRADE: 2nd-3rd Round (#60 overall)

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