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Maurice and the Combine (MERGED)

osugrad21 said:
Found this on BN:

Link


Any more excuses?
Seing as Mo knew the 40 was the most important thing standing between him and the NFL you would think he would have done everything that he could in order to have a good time.
That being said if I'm an NFL GM and MoC is on the board in the 7th round I draft him. If he's a bust all you lose is a 7th round pick.
 
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BuckeyeNation27 said:
and you get to be remembered as the retard who drafted clarett.
Better than the GM who used the 2nd pick in the draft for Ryan Leaf, a 5th round pick on a long snapper, or any other draft by Butch Davis. Who is going to remember the guy who uses a 7th round pick on a RB who was one of the best in CFB for a year?
 
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exhawg said:
Seing as Mo knew the 40 was the most important thing standing between him and the NFL you would think he would have done everything that he could in order to have a good time.
That being said if I'm an NFL GM and MoC is on the board in the 7th round I draft him. If he's a bust all you lose is a 7th round pick.
I'm just hoping that come draft weekend, he isn't Mr. Irrelevant. He doesn't need another forum for publicity, after all...
 
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It is going to be at his old high school. I have to say, I am surprised McDaniels is letting him.

http://www.dispatch.com/football/football.php?story=dispatch/2005/03/25/20050325-D8-03.html&chck=t

WARREN, Ohio (AP) — Ohio State won’t allow Maurice Clarett back to appear before NFL scouts, but his former high school will.

Clarett will work out at Warren G. Harding High School on Thursday, said his agent, Steve Feldman.

Feldman knows it will be a critical day for Clarett, who bombed at the NFL combine in late February with times of 4.72 and 4.82 seconds in the 40-yard dash.

"He could have slipped completely out of the draft," Feldman said. "He needs a good workout."

Clarett has changed his trainer and is doing less weightlifting and more cardiovascular work, Feldman said.

Scouts from several teams plan to attend the workout, but Feldman wouldn’t say which ones. He also said he wouldn’t rule out another workout before the April 23-24 draft.

Ohio State excluded Clarett from participating in "pro day" workouts with his former teammates earlier this month. Clarett alienated himself with allegations that administrators and coaches broke NCAA rules by arranging perks for players.

Harding coach Thom McDaniels, however, is willing to help his former player.

"With all my heart I hope he has a great day," McDaniels said. "In the absence of two years of college competition, it boils down to what he does next Thursday in terms of what NFL scouts know about him and how they think of him going into the draft."

Clarett set Ohio State freshman rushing and scoring records in 2002, leading the Buckeyes to their first national championship in 34 years. He was suspended before the next season for lying to NCAA and university investigators and never played another college game.

He then sued the NFL for early admission to the league’s draft but, after an early victory in federal court, lost on appeal and several subsequent appeals.
 
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Matt Richardson will oversee the workout today. Matt was a brusing FB for Tressel at YSU.

Judgment Day

Published: Thu, Mar 31, 2005

Today's private workout
could be Clarett's last chance to win over NFL scouts.

By JOE SCALZO

VINDICATOR SPORTS STAFF

WARREN — On the morning before the biggest day of his newest client's life, Jeff Luchs was walking through an Arizona airport talking to a reporter by cellphone when he noticed something odd.

A few feet in front of him, a prisoner, being escorted by a federal marshal, began fighting with the marshal.

And winning.

"The guy was kicking the marshal's [butt]," he said.

So Luchs — who stands at 6-foot-3, 260 pounds — quickly got off the phone and, along with his fellow agent Steve Feldman, jumped into the mix, held the prisoner down and helped the marshal get control.

Minutes later, he called the reporter back and continued the interview.

"I've never seen that in an airport," Luchs said, laughing. "Here's your headline: Clarett's agents subdue prisoner."

It's a true story. Really. It happened on Wednesday morning, the day before Luchs and Feldman are scheduled to join former Ohio State running back Maurice Clarett in Warren for a private workout in front of NFL scouts.

"My wife thinks I'm crazy for getting involved with that," Luchs said, referring to the fracas, not Clarett's situation. "But you have to be crazy to do what we do."

Well put.

Overhauling his image

Luchs and Feldman, who signed on with Clarett just weeks before February's NFL combine in Indianapolis, are keeping their fingers crossed that the former Warren Harding standout can do today what he didn't do in February — run strong 40-yard dash times — and continue to do what he did do in February — namely, repair his image.

So far, so good.

"He's growing up every day," Luchs said. "People forget how young he is. He's younger than the seniors coming out. But he handled himself with class at the combine.

"This is a guy who, after his workout, when he didn't do as well as he hoped, still sat down with the NFL Network for an interview because he had already made the commitment. The whole weekend he was mature, humble, classy and respectful and those are words you wouldn't historically put in the same sentence when you were talking about him before."

Of course, those things mean little if the 21-year-old Clarett of Youngstown's South Side can't impress scouts today. After posting disappointing 40 times ranging from 4.7 to 4.8 seconds in Indy, Clarett needs to run closer to the 4.5 range today to have a chance of being selected on the first day of April's draft.

Plans change

Originally, Clarett wanted to use Ohio State's facilities for his private workout, but the Buckeyes' brass turned him down. As did Youngstown State and Akron. Akron, incidentally, was already planning on holding a pro day on Friday for standout quarterback Charlie Frye, but wasn't interested in getting involved with Clarett.

So Clarett's agents turned to Harding and coach Thom McDaniels. McDaniels said yes, despite not having talked to Clarett in more than 11 months.

"All we required was for them to sign a waiver that said we wouldn't have liability if he gets hurt," said McDaniels, who will miss the workout because he's vacationing in Florida. "He's our player. And I did everything I could to help set it up and make sure all the I's are dotted and the T's are crossed before I left."

Problem is, Harding doesn't have world-class facilities for an NFL workout. The closest all-weather track is at aging Deemer Park — where the Raiders hold track meets — which is, needless to say, not the best place to hold a workout on the last day of March in Ohio.

"We're going to do anything we can to help him get ready," said Harding assistant Matt Richardson, who will oversee the workout. "We would do the same thing for any other former player."

If it rains, the workout will be moved indoors to Farmer Jim's soccer complex in Cortland, which might actually be better suited to running a fast 40 time. Both places will be closed to media, although Clarett might speak to reporters afterward.

Key day

Since Clarett has not played college football in two years — he was suspended his sophomore year and missed his junior year after losing a lawsuit against the NFL that would have allowed him to enter the draft early — he needs to show he's got the necessary speed to play in the pros.

Luchs and Feldman adjusted his training over the past few weeks, working mainly on speed and agility, rather than strength, but no one knows if it's helped.

"We'll see what happens," Luchs said. "But the bottom line is, no matter where he's drafted, it's going to be far below his true value. He's capable of so much more.

"We're not so concerned with this draft as we are with getting Maurice ready for minicamps and playing at the NFL level."

McDaniels has been openly critical of the people advising Clarett the past two years — "Justifiably so," he said — but said he feels "much better" now about Clarett's choice of agents and lawyers.

NFL ability

McDaniels, who coached at Canton McKinley before coming to Harding, has coached several eventual NFL players, including former Ohio State standouts Mike Doss (safety, Colts) and Jamar Martin (fullback, Dolphins). In addition, his son, Josh, is the quarterbacks coach for New England.

He knows NFL talent when he sees it.

"I can't speak for him now, since he missed the last two seasons, but when he played for me and for [Buckeyes] coach [Jim] Tressel and for me, he demonstrated NFL ability," McDaniels said. "And I think if he had played three years at Ohio State, and then ran the times he did in Indy, he would still have been drafted high."

But that's in the past and Clarett can't change his past. He can, however, change his future.

And today's workout is the first step.

"All the cards are on the table," McDaniels said. "He needs a very good workout to sustain any interest he has from NFL teams."

No matter what happens, though, Clarett will be welcome in Warren, Richardson said.

"He's done a lot for our community and for our football team," Richardson said. "He'll always be a Raider."

[email protected]

Judgment Day
 
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"He's growing up every day," Luchs said. "People forget how young he is. He's younger than the seniors coming out. But he handled himself with class at the combine.

"This is a guy who, after his workout, when he didn't do as well as he hoped, still sat down with the NFL Network for an interview because he had already made the commitment. The whole weekend he was mature, humble, classy and respectful and those are words you wouldn't historically put in the same sentence when you were talking about him before."

Yeah, except for that part where he quit right in the middle. Way to handle yourself with class.

If it rains, the workout will be moved indoors to Farmer Jim's soccer complex in Cortland, which might actually be better suited to running a fast 40 time.

:lol: couldn't have happened to a better guy.
 
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Maurice supposedly ran in the 4.67-4.68 range today. His short shuttle time was around 4.30 and his long shuttle was around 12 flat.

The Bengals are putting Maurice through a running abck workout as we speak.

More updates as they come across Scout's draft coverage...

He weighed in at 236.
 
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Latest from NBC4:

Clarett Works Out For NFL Scouts ... Again
Running Times Not Much Better

POSTED: 2:51 pm EST March 31, 2005
UPDATED: 3:34 pm EST March 31, 2005

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Former Ohio State tailback Maurice Clarett worked out for NFL scouts Thursday at his former high school football field, NBC 4's Joe Weasel reported.

Scouts from six NFL teams showed for the workout at Warren G. Harding High School in Warren, Ohio. High winds forced the workout indoors at a nearby soccer arena, according to the Associated Press.

Clarett weighed in at 236 pounds and ran the 40-yard dash twice, recording times of 4.68 and 4.72, Weasel reported.

SLIDESHOW: Clarett At Combine

Clarett posted times of 4.72 and 4.82 in his two tries at the NFL combine in late February.

The teams that showed for the workout were Cleveland, Cincinnati, Baltimore, New England, Indianapolis and Miami.

The NFL Draft will be held April 23-24.

Clarett was excluded from participating in Ohio State's "pro day" workouts earlier this month.

Stay with NBC 4 and nbc4i.com for more information

Latest 40 times
 
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