River Dog wrote:Running back Rashaad Penny is retiring from the NFL after six seasons.
The Panthers placed Penny on the reserve/retired list Tuesday and signed undrafted rookie wide receiver Tayvion Robinson in a corresponding move.
Penny, 28, signed with the Panthers in May, reuniting him with coach Dave Canales. He had his best season with the Seattle Seahawks in 2021 when Canales was the passing game coordinator and new Carolina offensive coordinator Brad Idzik was an offensive assistant. He rushed 119 times for 749 yards and six touchdowns.
Penny, 28, played last season for the Philadelphia Eagles, but he appeared in just three games and rushed 11 times for 33 yards.
Selected by the Seattle Seahawks in the first round (27th overall) of the 2018 draft, he has rushed for 1,951 yards and 13 touchdowns in his career.
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/406 ... ix-seasons
I'll say yes, he was a bust, but will put an asterisk by his name indicating that his career was at least influenced by injuries. But I never have liked spending high draft picks on running backs, something that Pete was notorious for doing and seldom worked out.
Stream Hawk wrote:Sadly, yes, Penny was a bust. I thought he finally broke out at the end of 2021. But maybe drafting K9 and injuries led to his final demise. I also was shocked that he got nothing going in Philly last year.
Penny had some horrible bad injury luck that was not foreseen when drafted. While hindsight says Chubb was the better choice, Chubb also had more of an injury history at Georgia - and tore his ACL again last year. RB is a tough position to excel in.
Sidebar. My 11-year old attended the Kenneth Walker camp this summer. I met him a few times and volunteered with the hydration crew. He is a very nice guy and a crazy elite athlete. After seeing K9 upclose I expect him to flourish in Grubb's offense.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Injury bust like Tubbs. Great talent, but couldn't stay on the field. Not much you can do when your body can't handle the NFL beating and it's hard to foresee when drafting.
4XPIPS wrote:I wouldn't go as far to label him a bust, but considering where he was drafted it's arguable. Injuries can seriously derail a player's career. When he was in peak form he did play pretty well, and had some decent games. I would lean on more towards not being a bust, but wish we didn't waste a 1st rounder on him. I think a bust is someone drafted in the first round and doesn't have any injuries to justify the poor performance, sort of like Aaron Curry.
Stream Hawk wrote:Don't forget our very own Rick Mirer and Aaron Curry. Mirer was #2 overall - I was young but always thought that was a huge reach. Curry was the ultimate "can't miss" prospect. Huge whiff.
I-5 wrote:There's different kinds of busts, like highly drafted guys who never produced in the NFL (Ryan Leaf). At least Penny produced when healthy. He was way above average when healthy, but yeah since he couldn't stay on the field much, it has to be called a bust of some kind. I feel bad for him.
Here’s a trivia question few fans will get right: Among running backs with at least 300 carries, who has the highest yards-per-carry average in NFL history?
The answer is Rashaad Penny.
Penny, who retired this week after a brief stint in training camp with the Panthers, had 348 carries for 1,951 yards in his NFL career, an average of 5.61 yards per carry. That’s the highest of any running back in NFL history with at least 300 carries. Bo Jackson, who averaged 5.40 yards per carry in his NFL career, ranks second.
NorthHawk wrote:I don't think he was a bust, but I do think he was cursed by injuries.
Here's a comment from PFT about Penny's career:
Here’s a trivia question few fans will get right: Among running backs with at least 300 carries, who has the highest yards-per-carry average in NFL history?
The answer is Rashaad Penny.
Penny, who retired this week after a brief stint in training camp with the Panthers, had 348 carries for 1,951 yards in his NFL career, an average of 5.61 yards per carry. That’s the highest of any running back in NFL history with at least 300 carries. Bo Jackson, who averaged 5.40 yards per carry in his NFL career, ranks second.
That's not a bust in my opinion. Just bad luck.
NorthHawk wrote:It's still a statistic that shows he wasn't a bad player but was felled by injuries thereby distancing him from those that don't have the desire or physical ability to compete at the NFL level.
NorthHawk wrote:I don't see Penny's play as being bad. His inability to be available to play was a huge disappointment and I believe that it's a necessary distinction.
Procise (sp) was also in that same boat but he never got healthy enough to really show if he was capable of playing. Was he a bust? His desire was there and his talent was there, but he couldn't get healthy for any stretch of play to really determine.
Penny showed he could consistently play at the NFL level if not felled by injury. He also showed he could be quite productive. His only bad trait was getting injured and from my viewpoint, that separates his career from being a bust.
That's probably where we view things differently. I think injuries for the most part disqualify a player from being a bust whereas not having the desire or talent does not.
NorthHawk wrote:I put not beating out Chris Carson in context in that Pete wanted another Marshawn and Carson played that style. It's another reason they missed the mark when bypassing Nick Chubb who is more in that style of player than Penny.
The overweight stuff is a bit of a red herring in that a lot of players add or subtract weight from season to season to try to stay healthy all year. It often doesn't work because it either slows them down or gets them pushed around depending of if they are adding or subtracting. I don't remember him being gassed in those years but I may be wrong. With his Eagles experience, I don't know what type of running Offense they deployed but Penny seemed to do well in a 1 cut and go type scheme when he played here. Good players in the wrong scheme won't do particularly well in most cases.
But getting back to the main point, I think injuries mitigate a lot of the reason to call someone a bust or not.
Your first two sentences don't make a lot of sense. If Penny didn't fit Pete's style, then why did we burn a #1 draft pick on him?
Since Carson was a 7th round draft pick, I don't think they had any plans for him except as a change of pace or insurance at that position. I don't think anyone expected him to beat out Penny.
NorthHawk wrote:But it's not Penny's fault where he was chosen and by whom. That's completely out of his control.
4XPIPS wrote:Not to segway from Penny, but talk about a bust on the current roster, is Dee Eskridge. I couldn't believe an article I read that says Dee has a total of 122 yards receiving in 3 years in the regulars season games. I know injuries have played a role, and he had a suspension and missed time, but goodness talk about crap return on a 2nd round pick.
If he is just reduced to a return man and some how makes the 53 roster, then I believe drafting him in the 2nd round is more of a bust than Rashaad Penny.
River Dog wrote:
Yeah, that was another pick I hated. Eskridge was our first pick in the draft having pissed away two first rounders on Adams.
4XPIPS wrote: I know this is off topic of the OP post, but you know how you did the scouting write up on Riq Woolen, do you have the one on Dee Eskridge? I am just curious what his draft profile was.
Recent article from fieldgulls
https://www.fieldgulls.com/2024/8/6/242 ... ining-camp
And speaking of drops...
It’s seemingly over for Dee Eskridge
Again, from Bell:
Tuesday, Howell threaded a pass between two defenders down the center of the field at the goal line. Eskridge went up between them for the well-placed throw. It went through Eskridge’s hands, incomplete. On the same possession, Howell threw to Eskridge breaking open in the back left of the end zone. The pass thudded through Eskridge’s hands off his stomach. Another incomplete pass instead of a touchdown.
There’s no need to hang onto slim hopes at this point if the 2021 second-round pick continues to struggle in second- and third-team looks.
time to cut him loose, holding onto Dee Eskrige is like keeping that gift card that has $0.87 left on it, and you know there is some value in that gift card but you know you have no intentions ever to redeem it or it's worth your time.
River Dog wrote:
Here ya go! As with the Woolen report, it's from Walter Football, and all I'm quoting is what's listed as his weaknesses:
Weaknesses:
Very undersized
Short
Light
Needs to develop route running
Lacks strength; can get pushed around
Too many drops
A bit straight line
Could be limited to the slot
Eskridge is very undersized for the next level. He is short, light, thinly framed, and lacking strength. He could struggle with the length of NFL cornerbacks, and his small size could lead to him having issues maintaining possession through contact, and he can get pushed round to get knocked off routes. Eskridge needs to improve his hands, as he had too many drops, and he has refine his route-running for the NFL.
https://walterfootball.com/scoutingrepo ... kridge.php
Interesting in that the scouting report mentioned his problem with dropped passes.
4XPIPS wrote:thank you for that. I really questioned what team operations were looking for at this time. We wasted our first pick of the draft in the 2nd round on D Eskridge when we already had Freddie Swan and Penny Hart on the roster who by most reports fit that speedy undersized deep threat type of player. Could have used this pick on someone more useful. Well it's in the past and can't fix it now. It will look all but certain that he isn't making this team this year.
4XPIPS wrote:time to cut him loose, holding onto Dee Eskrige is like keeping that gift card that has $0.87 left on it, and you know there is some value in that gift card but you know you have no intentions ever to redeem it or it's worth your time.
NorthHawk wrote:If I remember correctly Eskridge was expected to be a slot receiver and maybe a Deebo type and take the occasional handoff.
The catch issue and his head injury his first year seemed to put an end to it.
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