Not sure if anyone posted this....
Second look puts Hightower on draft boards
Thursday, Apr 24, 2008 - 12:07 AM
By PAUL WOODY
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
For a young man who seemingly was off NFL draft boards two months ago, Tim Hightower has been to a lot of NFL cities in the past few weeks.
"Let's see, Detroit, Jacksonville, St. Louis, Miami, Cincinnati, Houston, Philadelphia, Green Bay, San Diego and Baltimore," Hightower said.
Hightower, 6-1 and 225 pounds, was the star running back at the University of Richmond last season. He gained 1,924 yards, averaged 5.9 yard per carry and scored 20 touchdowns.
But when the list of players attending the NFL combine was released, Hightower's name was not on it.
"The NFL scouts came in when he was a junior, and he ran something like a 4.69 40," UR running backs coach Charles Bankins said.
The 40-yard dash is one measure NFL scouts use in assessing a pro prospect's merit. A running back needs to be in the 4.3-to-4.5 range. Anything above that moves a player from prospect to suspect.
"Sometimes, we get caught up in numbers," Bankins said.
At his "pro day" on the UR campus this spring, Hightower ran a 4.51 40-yard dash.
The NFL scouts saw that number and put it together with Hightower's numbers from the 2007 season, and a player who had been consigned to the free agent category moved into the draft-choice category.
Hightower is a rare blend of size, speed and versatility. He became a star running back. He had been a solid fullback. Even when he was a star running back, he continued to be a standout special teams player.
The real story on Hightower, though, is not so much what he did during the 2007 season but what he did to get ready to have an outstanding 2007 season.
"Tim's goals were to increase his flexibility and his lower body and core strength," said UR strength and conditioning coach Brandon Hourigan. "Some guys write things down and take them to heart. Some guys say they're going to do something and never do. Tim gets it. He was awesome."
To improve flexibility in his hip flexors and hamstrings, Hightower took yoga and pilates classes.
"He worked to get himself into better speed positions and to lengthen his stride," Hourigan said.
"He always had good turnover, but he needed to open his stride length."
In the process of doing that, Hightower opened the eyes of many in the NFL.
"He's productive, hard-nosed and can catch out of the backfield," ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper said. "His versatility is a plus.
"If he had game-breaking speed, I'd see him going in the late second round or early third round. As it is, I'd say the best scenario would have him going in the fourth round."
Hightower has heard he'll go anywhere from the third to the fifth rounds.
"I'm controlling what I can control," Hightower said.
One thing Hightower, 21, could control was his academic standing. He graduates this spring with a degree in religion.
Hightower, once overlooked, now might find himself in the right place at the right time.
Many teams are searching for a complementary back who can be effective for 10 to 15 carries per game, taking pressure off the starter and contributing on special teams.
"I've been preaching for years that you can find running backs late in the draft, and it's the only position you can say that about on a consistent basis," Kiper said.
Hightower, a native of Waldorf, Md., is not concerned so much about what round he is selected. He just wants to be selected.
"All the teams say they have me on their draft boards," Hightower said. "They all tell me they want to draft me, and that they hope they can do it before someone else does."