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Ahkello Witherspoon, CB

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Originally posted by Dshearn:
Seeing as how he was by far my favorite pick in the draft....that video was...a red flag.

Either A he has a very strange sense of humor, and it will be obvious....or B this pick might be a huge mistake.

What we don't see might be telling to us.... He did not go from High school to a major medical school. There has been no mention of his college GPA in his scouting reports.

Have we heard at any point he is a serious doctor candidate? The Last NFL guy that was going to be a brain surgeon they talked over and over and over about his classroom prowess. I have not heard that about Ahkello. Did I just miss it?

I am concerned, I really hope he loves being a CB and is great as I hope he can be.

He's kind of a weird dude. I don't know what to make of his comments or his interest in med school. Too early to be concerned about him, its not like he's done anything wrong. When you watch him he's very competitive in coverage, but very passive in the run game. Overall I like what I saw from him in college, I think he enjoys the game.
WR Trent Taylor. The 49ers' second fifth-round pick beat the 49ers' first third-round pick, Ahkello Witherspoon, twice during one-on-one drills. First, Taylor beat Witherspoon with a quick out route and caught the ball near the sideline before Witherspoon finished his break. Next, Taylor ran a hard curl route and Witherspoon tripped and fell.
Originally posted by ComeOnDeberg:
WR Trent Taylor. The 49ers' second fifth-round pick beat the 49ers' first third-round pick, Ahkello Witherspoon, twice during one-on-one drills. First, Taylor beat Witherspoon with a quick out route and caught the ball near the sideline before Witherspoon finished his break. Next, Taylor ran a hard curl route and Witherspoon tripped and fell.

Assuming Taylor was playing the slot, Witherspoon has no business playing slot CB. He's too tall, and his legs to freaking long for him to shadow a quick twitch small receiver. Witherspoon's place is on the outside against larger receivers where he has a fighting chance.
I hope that video was taken a couple years ago when he was a freshman in high school
Originally posted by SofaKing:
Originally posted by thl408:
Originally posted by NorthBay49er:


LOL at 0:38
wth. That's not good. But who is Sean Lee?

dafuq!? Seems like he was joking......I hope lol

Also did he say Sean Lee? I think he meant Chris Borland

Overall, this video gets a grade
Yeah, maybe it's just a dry sense of humor?

I'll say though, if he is serious, that is so over-the-top stupid to admit that I still find it funny, just because of how ludicrous it is. That's pretty ballsy to be that candid.
If Lynch was willing to take Williams off the board for a MH decision that resulted in him leaving the team, I can only imagine how fast he'd take Witherspoon off the board in seeing this video esp. given he plays self-preservation style like Reid on the field and clearly, has other 'bigger' aspirations after football (gotta preserve those hands)!
Ahkello Witherspoon vows to address biggest concern: soft tackling
BY MATT BARROWS
mbarrows@sacbee.com

SANTA CLARA
John Lynch was the type of safety who put ball carriers on their backs, whose hits snapped chinstraps, who made receivers crossing the middle of the field hear phantom footsteps.

Running back Ricky Watters' infamous short-armed catch attempt in 1995 when he was with the Philadelphia Eagles – which led to his even more dubious "For who? For what?" quote – came with Lynch and another Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive back bearing down on him.

So when Lynch watched Ahkello Witherspoon in run defense and tackling at Colorado, the 49ers general manager didn't like what he saw. And he told Witherspoon exactly that when the cornerback visited the 49ers facility last month.


"It's something that we raised to him and we didn't hide from it," Lynch said of the rookie's tackling style. "I said … that bothers me, help me out here."

Witherspoon's response: It will get better.


The 49ers drafted the Sacramento native in the third round last week for his pass-protection skills and for his potential. Witherspoon has quick feet from having been a standout soccer player, has long arms to knock away passes and was a fast learner after only taking up football seriously as a senior at Christian Brothers High School.

The physical aspects of the game have been slower to coalesce, Witherspoon said.

"It's just something I have to be more consistent with," he said Thursday when he and the rest of the 49ers' 10-man draft class arrived for a three-day minicamp.

"Every team I spoke to said they've seen it in (spurts) in my game, and to just bring it all the time," he continued. "I think just playing the game, it's going to continue to come. I think it's just experience and being exposed to new situations. It will continue to be a more effective part of my game."

That's what reassured Lynch as well. Overall, Witherspoon's tackling and hitting was poor. But there were instances when he used his fast feet and big frame to his advantage, like on a goal-line play in which he zoomed in from the end zone to knock an opposing runner out of bounds last season.


Lynch showed Witherspoon those examples when he visited Santa Clara last month.

"He pulled up clips of me doing it well and doing it poorly," Witherspoon said. "And he told me, 'This is what's kind of encouraging to me. It not a fear thing. You're willing to do it.' "

Lynch said he got a similar report from Colorado coach Mike MacIntyre. Witherspoon was the type of person who wills himself to succeed in everything he does, MacIntyre said. For example, Witherspoon aspires to be a surgeon when his NFL career is over, and he said no amount of NFL success or riches will keep him from his goal.

"Med school is happening, there's no doubt," he said. "Whether it's in a year or 12 (years), I can't say. It's my passion. I've always been interested in how things work. And I think the body is a great place to jump into, to figure it out."

Lynch said he thought Witherspoon would take the same type of goal-oriented approach when it comes to tackling. And with rough-and-tumble players like NaVorro Bowman, Solomon Thomas and Reuben Foster in the 49ers locker room, Witherspoon will have no option but to get better.


"I always believe when you put people in a room that are exhibiting the way we want to play, the other guys have no choice if they want to be on the field," Lynch said.

Matt Barrows: @mattbarrows, read more about the team at sacbee.com/sf49ers.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/sports/nfl/san-francisco-49ers/article148743394.html#storylink=cpy
Originally posted by NYniner85:

Good to hear...there are quite a few players that have a legit chance to become cornerstones for a "long time to come."

Fingers crossed...
Originally posted by 49erThrowback:
Originally posted by ComeOnDeberg:
WR Trent Taylor. The 49ers' second fifth-round pick beat the 49ers' first third-round pick, Ahkello Witherspoon, twice during one-on-one drills. First, Taylor beat Witherspoon with a quick out route and caught the ball near the sideline before Witherspoon finished his break. Next, Taylor ran a hard curl route and Witherspoon tripped and fell.

Assuming Taylor was playing the slot, Witherspoon has no business playing slot CB. He's too tall, and his legs to freaking long for him to shadow a quick twitch small receiver. Witherspoon's place is on the outside against larger receivers where he has a fighting chance.

one on one drills are designed for the WR to win. Out routes in one on one drills with no pass rush is easy for a wr and qb to pull off.
Wish I didn't see that video
the video is smuck.
McIntyre called his former defensive back a "late bloomer," but noted that Witherspoon's size and footwork are a rare combination.

"He has the quickness that he had when he was 5-foot-9 – being able to bend his hips, flip his hips, bend his body – so he's a tall guy who can really rip and move," McIntyre said in his scouting report. "It's very unusual. He has a long, long reach and can really track a ball. He has great ball skills."

The knock on Witherspoon coming out of college was his lack of physicality. A few things contribute to that, McIntyre said. For starters, Witherspoon has only played football since high school. He was a multi-sport star at Christian Brothers High School. Secondly, he's still filling out his wiry frame. The coach told 49ers fans to give the corner 18 months to work with the team's strength and conditioning staff.

Then Witherspoon will have the strength to match his skillset as a cover corner.

"He has a lot of confidence when he's out there covering," McIntyre said. "He enjoys that battle. Some guys are afraid of it; he wants quarterbacks to throw it his way. And if he gets beat, he'll bounce right back. He's not going to shy away, which I think is a critical factor."

John Lynch referenced his conversations with McIntrye after the 49ers selected Witherspoon on Day 2 of the 2017 NFL Draft. San Francisco's GM said that McIntyre's insight proved to be very helpful in the 49ers evaluation process.

"He wanted to know where I think he's headed," McIntyre said. "He wanted to find out about his work ethic. He wanted to find out about his football intelligence. He wanted to know what his tool set was.

"Every team is looking for the tall corner who can bend and move."

Witherspoon will be a player to watch in order to see how he develops under defensive coordinator Robert Saleh and defensive backs coach Jeff Hafley.

http://www.49ers.com/news/article-2/Mike-McIntyre-Gives-Scouting-Report-on-49ers-CB-Ahkello-Witherspoon/e8f527c1-c5b3-4212-a2b7-302e2a6ffb0b

"Sometimes people mistake smart football players … they question, can smart guys love football, and I don't think just because you have other interests and because you do well in school doesn't mean that you don't love football," Lynch said. "And we talked a lot about why he loves football. I think you can ask any player, 'Do you love football?' And they're going to say, 'Yeah, I love football.' But I find it intriguing to say, 'Why do you love football? What is it about the game?' And Ahkello really communicated his love for the game and why he did, and [coach] Kyle [Shanahan] and I both got really comfortable with it."

If Witherspoon can become at least a serviceable tackler, he should have a chance to play early in a secondary that has an opening for a starting outside corner. Witherspoon had 22 pass breakups last year, best in the nation, so the Niners believe his coverage skills can translate quickly.

"I think people say a big upside, and I really believe with Ahkello that there is," Lynch said. "But yet, I think we can throw him out there next year and he can play. He's demonstrated that he can hang with big-time receivers."

http://www.espn.com/blog/san-francisco-49ers/post/_/id/24952/cornerback-now-surgeon-later-ahkello-witherspoon-is-49ers-renaissance-man
"Sometimes people mistake smart football players … they question, can smart guys love football, and I don't think just because you have other interests and because you do well in school doesn't mean that you don't love football," Lynch said. "And we talked a lot about why he loves football.

I love this comment.
Originally posted by GoldenGateGlory:
"Sometimes people mistake smart football players … they question, can smart guys love football, and I don't think just because you have other interests and because you do well in school doesn't mean that you don't love football," Lynch said. "And we talked a lot about why he loves football.

I love this comment.

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