Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Gerald Everett
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May 8, 2017 at 10:12 am #68485znModerator
Rams rookie TE Gerald Everett goes from overlooked to ‘beast’
Alden Gonzalez
LOS ANGELES — Gerald Everett’s mother was sitting way up in the nosebleed section, but eventually he spotted her from the stage down below. And once he did, Everett never took his eyes off her. This was December, the day of his college graduation. He thought back to the promise he made as a high school senior — that he would finish his degree no matter where this football thing took him. He thought about that junior year, when the scouts finally started showing up and his name kept popping up and he actually considered leaving the University of South Alabama a year early.
Briefly, until he ran it by his mom.
“She just gave me that look,” Everett said, laughing. “I went back and told my mom that I wasn’t coming out early; that I would stay and graduate first.”
Everett, who turns 23 on June 25, eventually earned his degree in communications, four months before the Los Angeles Rams selected him in the 2017 NFL draft. Everett was the 44th overall pick; the fourth tight end off the board — after O.J. Howard, Evan Engram and David Njoku, respectively — and the very first player the Rams chose.
Back when he made that promise to his mother, Alicia Wise, his path to the NFL was severely muddled.
Everett didn’t play high school football until his senior year. He pursued basketball as a sophomore and junior, changing course because he remained 6-foot-3 and the Division-I offers weren’t coming.
They never arrived in football, either.
Everett took his SATs late, about a week before National Signing Day, and major programs were put off by the thought of giving him a scholarship that he wouldn’t eventually qualify for. Everett instead committed to Bethune-Cookman, but never liked the fit. He left, was cut from a community college in Kansas, transferred to another one and quickly lost two years. He transferred again to the University of Alabama at Birmingham, roughly 150 miles from his home in the Atlanta metropolitan area, and finally played an entire season in 2014. Then the program was shut down.
Everett kept going.
“I just wanted to prove those doubters wrong,” he said in a phone conversation. “I knew the talent that I had, and I just knew that I was one of those late bloomers in football. And I just needed a little more time to truly find myself at that hybrid, wide-receiver-tight-end position. It just took some time, I guess.”
In two years at South Alabama, Everett caught 90 passes for 1,292 yards and 12 touchdowns over a stretch of 24 games. He was an All-Sun Belt Conference selection each season, forcing 46 missed tackles from 2015 to ’16, more than any tight end in the nation according to Pro Football Focus. He is freakishly athletic, a monster after the catch and a mismatch nightmare for linebackers and safeties. He can stretch the deep middle of the field, can line up anywhere — inline, backfield, slot, outside — and can create immediate separation. But he is also raw.
The Rams, who interviewed Everett at the scouting combine and during a top-30 visit, like the dynamic he can form with Tyler Higbee, another athletic move tight end who was taken in last year’s fourth round.
They don’t care that Everett came from a smaller school; they don’t care that it took him so long to even find that smaller school.
“What I saw out of it was a guy who was persevering — that’s how I looked at it,” said Rams national scout Ted Monago, who started to closely follow Everett immediately after the 2016 draft. “I looked at it as someone who has some grit about themselves, who wants to prove he can play at a higher level.”
South Alabama’s head coach, Joey Jones, first knew Everett was a legitimate NFL prospect in the fall of 2015, after he added 40 pounds of muscle and was thus no longer a tweener. But Everett, 243 pounds at that point, still needed refinement. He wasn’t blocking well initially. So at one point, Everett asked the following question: “If I told you you had the rest of the year to block your ass off, and somebody’s going to pay you $2 million, would you do it?”
Everett dedicated himself to blocking for the rest of that winter and ensuing spring. When he showed up for his senior year, Chase Smith, who had switched from coaching offensive linemen to tight ends, saw Everett as a willing blocker with elite strength.
That’s when Smith knew.
Everett knew on Sept. 19, 2015, his third game for South Alabama. The Jaguars played against San Diego State, and Everett caught eight passes for 164 yards and a touchdown in an overtime win. The other signature game was the opener of the 2016 season, which ended with Everett catching the winning touchdown to give South Alabama its first victory against an SEC school.
“If you can find me a more athletic guy that can run routes, catch the ball, have these strong hands and get yards after the catch, I want to see him,” Jones said. “I’m not saying he’s going to be better than any tight end ever in the NFL, don’t get me wrong. I’m just telling you this guy’s a beast.”
When rookie head coach Sean McVay got on the phone to congratulate Everett on being drafted, Everett told McVay he wanted to be his new Jordan Reed, which is precisely what the expectation is, unfair as that might be.
Nobody got more yards out of his tight ends last season than McVay, the former offensive coordinator for a Redskins team that featured Reed and veteran Vernon Davis at tight end. The Rams, last in the NFL in yards each of the past two seasons, badly needed to add targets for Jared Goff but were without a first-round pick. Still, they traded down from 37th overall — and passed on the chance to take receiver Zay Jones or guard Forrest Lamp — because they wanted an extra third-round pick and because they liked the thought of drafting Everett a little bit later.
There are concerns about Everett’s blocking ability, but Smith will tell you he has the desire to someday excel at it.
There have been critiques about the crispness of his routes, but Jones sees someone who comes out of his breaks in one swift step and thinks those reports are “a little overblown.”
There are questions surrounding the fact that Everett played at a smaller university and didn’t consistently face elite-level collegiate competition, but Monago believes one should “be careful with saying that.”
“Yes, the NFL is big-school driven,” he said. “But let’s not lose sight of kids, of players, who make the transition because of what they have inside, knowing that they can play.”
May 14, 2017 at 8:56 am #68798znModeratorThe path was rocky, but Rams TE Gerald Everett is where he always believed he’d be
VINCENT BONSIGNORE
Every single one of the 30 or so dreamers lining the Rams practice field this weekend in Thousand Oaks has a story to tell. You don’t just pull up at an NFL rookie minicamp, a place where lifetime dreams are allowed to continue or meet their bitter ends, without toting an extraordinary amount of baggage the result of roads less traveled.
For every high draft pick with a lucrative contract on the way, there’s three undrafted free agents hoping to make enough of an impression to get a training camp invite.
For every former five-star recruit from USC or Alabama, there’s a former no-star recruit who flashed just enough at tiny Tarleton State to earn an NFL tryout.
Yet here they all wound up at the same place at the same time with the same singular objective.
“And it’s funny when you think about it,” Rams rookie tight end Gerald Everett observed. “We all want to end up at the same place, but everyone’s path is a little different. There’s really no one path to the NFL.”
But there is one common thread.
“You just have to keep working for your dream,” Everett said, “No matter where you start, or what obstacles are in your way. Just keep fighting.”
Everett is a case in point.
In the back of his mind he always felt he would find his way onto the NFL radar. The raw athletic ability was always noticeable growing up in Atlanta. From a physical standpoint, there were compelling components to work with.
On the other hand, he did set football aside when he got to high school to focus on basketball and track and field. At the time it seemed like the beginning of the end of his football career. But in retrospect it turned out to be a shrewdly brilliant decision.
The basketball skill-set he honed is one he he presently leans on to help beat defenders to the football. At 6-foot-3, Everett’s vertical leap enables him to outjump defenders for the ball but he can also box-out to secure his fair share of 50/50 balls.
“My basketball background really helps me on the football field,” he said.
A reality he soon learned upon circling back to football his senior year of high school after moving from Martin Luther King High to Columbia in Decatur, Ga.
It turned out to be one of those just-in-the-nick of time decisions that set him on his current path.
Albeit one with enough twists and turns to fill a page-turning best seller.
Everett earned All-State honors at Columbia after a breakout senior season, only his sudden arrival to the recruiting party was entirely too late to garner scholarship interest.
Bethune Cookman, an FCS program, did offer a scholarship and Everett immediately accepted. But as enrollment day drew near, he had a change of heart and decided he was better served taking the JC route, which is how he ended up at Juco powerhouse Hutchinson Community College.
Everett sat out the 2012 season, but in 2013 put together a standout season that eventually landed him a scholarship to Alabama Birmingham.
His first season resulted in 17 catches for 292 yards and a touchdown, a foundation Everett hope to build on over his final two seasons.
Only for a major roadblock to come crashing down in front of him.
Alabama Birmingham abruptly decided to cancel its football program, a crushing, shocking development that left more than a hundred players, coaches and staff members scrambling to figure out there futures.
The fact they announced it immediately after the Jaguars became bowl eligible was a particularly low blow.
“I was disgusted,” Everett said. “At the same time, it put it in perspective that this is a business and you don’t always have control over what happens.Everett allowed himself one day to mourn. If nothing else, just to process everything that just happened.
But not only was he determined to not let someone else’s decision be the reason his dreams got squashed, he instinctively knew every second counted in terms of getting his future back on track.
Any concerns were put to rest within a day or so.
“My phone started ringing. There were programs showing interest in me.” he said. “I knew I was going to be fine.”
Everett eventually followed his Alabama Birmingham offensive coordinator Bryant Vincent, to South Alabama.
“It turned out to be a great decision for me,” Everett said. “That’s when things really started to fall into place.”
And where the NFL began coming into better focus.
Everett arrived at South Alabama at 220 pounds, but at the urging of his coaches began putting on weight. The goal was to make a permanent move to tight end, with the added girth enabling him to be a better blocker but also be able to stand up physically against bigger defenders.
And while Everett’s body got bigger, he didn’t lose any of his athletic ability.
The result was a matchup nightmare for Sun Belt Conference linebackers and defensive backs.
As a junior, Everett caught 41 passes for 575 yards and eight touchdowns. He followed that up with 49 catches for 717 yards and four touchdowns last year as a senior to earn a spot at the Senior Bowl and the NFL Scouting Combine.
His postseason work immediately caught the interest of the Rams, specifically new head coach Sean McVay whose offense has a strong tight end component.
“I can tell you that through this process and you’ve gotten to know Sean, what his scheme requires and as you eluded to with the tight end, I have a feeling that Gerald’s one of Sean’s favorite players in the draft,” Rams general manager Les Snead said.
In Everett, McVay saw a tight end he could use as a complement to second-year tight end Tyler Higbee and perhaps even Temarrick Hemingway, who has impressed McVay so far in offseason workouts.
No surprise, then, the Rams made Everett their first selection of the NFL draft with the 44th pick overall, with the hope of developing him into the Rams’ version of Jordan Reed, a tight end McVay effectively utilized as the Washington Redskins offensive coordinator.
“Going back to just talking about Higbee and what (we) saw from Hemingway, those are encouraging things,” McVay said. “I don’t think you can ever have enough playmakers and if those guys merit it by the way that they compete in practice, then those guys will be on the field as well.”
In doing so, it proved a point that friends and coaches within Everett’s circle continually stressed to him throughout his long, winding road.“The NFL will find you no matter where you are,” Everett said. “You know, coming out of high school I wanted to go to a big-time program. But my path didn’t end up in that direction. But I want to be a testament that no matter where you are, if you keep working hard and believing in yourself, you’ll find your way.”
May 19, 2017 at 7:13 pm #69071znModeratorfrom MMQB
http://mmqb.si.com/mmqb/2017/05/16/nfl-notes-bears-trubisky-jets-49ers-browns-quarterbacks
Want an underrated rookie to look out for? Keep an eye on Rams second-round pick Gerald Everett, out of South Alabama. A couple other teams groaned when they saw him come off the board with the 44th pick, thinking he’d slip to them later in the second round. And the way the team sees it, Everett should fit new coach Sean McVay’s offense the same way that Jordan Reed did in Washington, which certainly wouldn’t hurt the effort to help Jared Goff make a big leap in his second year.
May 19, 2017 at 7:32 pm #69072AgamemnonParticipantMay 20, 2017 at 11:04 am #69088znModeratorPFF: GERALD EVERETT BRINGS NEW DIMENSION TO THE RAMS OFFENSE
https://www.profootballfocus.com/pro-gerald-everett-brings-new-dimension-to-the-rams-offense/
Everett forced 9 more missed tackles than any other tight end in college football last year.
The Rams used their first pick in the 2017 NFL draft on South Alabama TE Gerald Everett, who had no problem creating yards after the catch.
Everett was ranked second in yards after the catch over the past two seasons while still ranking 19th in 2014 on only 17 receptions.
In 2016, there were five tight ends to have more receptions than Everett and he still forced 17 more missed tackles than the next closest three. The Rams’ receivers and tight ends combined for 26 missed tackles in 2016.
Of the 1,593 receptions yards Everett had in three seasons at South Alabama, 63.5 percent of those have come after the catch.
May 20, 2017 at 11:24 am #69089znModeratorOf the 1,593 receptions yards Everett had in three seasons at South Alabama, 63.5 percent of those have come after the catch.
That’s really quite interesting.
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May 20, 2017 at 11:49 am #69095AgamemnonParticipantAugust 2, 2017 at 7:18 am #71699znModeratorfrom PFF: 32 teams, 32 rookies to watch
https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/pro-32-teams-32-rookies-to-watch
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LA Rams
Gerald Everett – Everett led tight ends in forced missed tackles in both 2015 and 2016, his 24 last season were nine more than any other tight end. Jared Goff struggled as a rookie last season but the presence of Everett, Cooper Kupp and head coach Sean McVay should go a long ways towards Goff making positive strides in year two.
August 24, 2017 at 7:57 pm #73175InvaderRamModeratoreverett is kind of a forgotten player in this offense. an x factor.
all the hype is around kupp and watkins and it’s not unjustified. the receiver corps looks like a good blend of talent and skills that should complement each other very well.
but everett could take this offense over the top.
he’s got very good size. great explosion and change of direction skills. his problems are that the tight end position is a hard position to learn. he and the other tight ends have a lot of work to do on blocking.
but if he can put it all together this offense could be a nightmare to match up with.
i just wish he had bigger hands. i’ve yet to see him catch the ball and hold on after a big hit. until then i will continue to worry about those miniscule hands.
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