He went up against two top 100 edge rushers against Notre Dame and dominated them. Went against Clemson as well. Went against FSU.
If you were talking about Ezra Cleveland, I'd agree, he hasn't gone against top competition.
Julian Okwara has an outside shot at being a 1st rounder....Becton dominated him.
Limited technique? Dude it sounds like you are talking about a JC lineman here. He played in the freaking ACC, not the Big Sky Conference. There is a reason that a number of highly respected scouts are listing him as the top lineman on their or board or second best lineman.
He has freakish ability and though he needs to clean up some of his technique, he crushed people. 17% body fat. He tested better than Andrew Thomas in nearly every category.
Last year you very smartly disregarded the lack of rep argument against Murray. Lack of reps dont matter if you crush it on the reps you do have.
And you champion Isaiah Simmons for ILB and he had......70 snaps at ILB?!?!
I'll try and take these one at a time:
Notre Dame: I think the ND tape is not his reality. In fact, I wouldn't use the word "dominated" in regards to it. ND had 4 sacks, allowed only 3 points in the last three quarters, and the Cardinals still didn't throw the ball more than they ran it.
This offense was a running offense. Not wishbone Navy style, but Very RUN HEAVY. Even when they cant score.... they still run 60% of the time.
Clemson: Another destruction. Clemson won 45 to 10 and the only Cards TD came in junk time against the third string. Louisville allowed 6 sacks (Simmons had 2). And wait for it..... they ran it 43 times to Passing only 22. IN A BLOWOUT they preferred to run it. And still allowed 6 sacks.
Florida State: Same story..... Lost by 11. Still ran it 47 times to only 27 passes. Another 6 sacks allowed by a team who only passed it 27 times.
Like a Navy offense, its almost impossible for a D end to pin his ears back and rush relentlessly when 1. the team your playing runs it 60 to 70% of the time, and 2. You are up so big that the other team benches you in favor of 2nd and third stringers.
Teams are so surprised when they do pass (Like playing Navy) that they couldn't have figured it was coming, need to stop setting and edge, and now must rush.
Freakish Ability: So did Nkemdiche. And that is exactly where you take a risk on a player with his physical attributes. The end of round 1.
If he gets his hands on you, and in the right place.... He can be great. I just think he's nowhere near ready yet.
Smartly disregarded reps argument for Kyler: Kyler had hundreds upon hundreds of pass attempts at Oklahoma. Becton has 73 measurable pass protection sets in 2019 with 8 pressures allowed (11%). And his 2018 tape was super sloppy. In the ACC...... as supposedly dominant as he was..... that's pretty Ugly.
PFF Noted:
The reason we’re still relatively low on Becton despite his absurd physical traits at 6-7, 369 pounds is that we haven’t seen them translate consistently to the football field yet. Louisville’s offense this past season was extremely run and play action heavy. Among PFF’s top five tackles, Becton’s 73 true pass sets were 40 fewer than anyone else. On the flip side, his 8 pressures allowed though on those true pass sets were the most. Having had to flip sides based on the strength of the formation as a freshman and sophomore didn’t help Becton’s development, but that’s still more projection than we’d like at the top of the draft.
Isaiah Simmons: Like Kyler..... his position is so truly un-matchable, I don't know how it can be debated. 98th percentile physically, and production that matches and exceeds his physical attributes. He was the best player on the field in every game he played this season. And that includes the LSU game IMO. Only Stingley & Burrow come close IMO