Working back Thomas Tyner will arrive at Oregon come early july with the future of Oregon basketball on his shoulders. Sound somewhat overstated? Well, perhaps not if you read up on the accolades a child will bring with him to the Ducks. Or if you think about the extraordinary physical methods he'll be putting straight away to the Oregon backfield. Include the fact that he's a local kid who's been following Ducks for years now, and well, you have a formula for a potential celebrity. At 6'0" 220 pounds (he is added weight based on an upgrade from oregon.247sports), he has the figure to literally manhandle defenders whether it's utilising the stiff-arm or bulldozing his way forward. Arm discusses are not going to assist Tyner. In addition to his larger frame, he produces first class rate, which written down, is faster than LaMichael James or Kenjon Barner. Feel De'Anthony Thomas if he were a few inches higher and about 30-35 pounds weightier. He may not have these quick pieces in his collection that we have become accustomed to viewing from DAT, but his speed alone has supporters giddy with excitement. Therefore with all that from the way, the only real important question is what sort of impact can Tyner have in his freshman season? All things considered, hype can only just get you to date. You can find men like Jadeveon Clowney who arrive with enormous nonsense and right back that up from the moment they step on campus. Then you will find others, like Bryce Brown (who, to be honest, has found an invest the NFL), who never appear to fit in on a college campus. Let's begin by taking an analytical method of predicting what type of data Thomas Tyner might have in year one. Between Kenjon Barner, Marcus Mariota, De'Anthony Thomas and Byron Marshall, the Geese totaled 563 bears. Barner had 278 of these carries, and he is alone of that foursome not on the group any further. So where can those bears go? Well, De'Anthony can obviously get a decent share of them, let's say 165 for the time being. That sets him at just 12-15 per game (in 12 games), and 's almost double what he had last year. Byron Marshall may also be seeing much more carries, and for him is right around 200 a safe prediction is thought by me. That might be almost 17 holds per game, more than twice his total from 2012. Then there is Marcus Mariota, and I really do not realize that he'll be owning a many more in 2013. The reason needless to say, is that he could have a heavy number of receivers to throw to, and while the crime might not seem dramatically different, I'd be surprised if the passing attack wasn't used more frequently. That leaves approximately 90 rushes from Barner that continue to be unaccounted for, and that's where Tyner is available in. What he does with these carries will mainly be determined by when he is getting them. I do believe he can set up some decent totals, If they occur in the initial half with the overall game still close. But, when the protection knows what the Ducks are going to do if they occur in waste time, he may not find as much space. Then there is the matter of receptions, but I do believe that's anyone's guess. So without further ado, here is what I really believe will (roughly) be Tyner's data his freshman season: 95 Carries for 750 yards and 9 TDs, 12 grabs for 101 yards and 2 TDs, 1 fumble I added in the fumble because there is sure to become a "welcome to college football" moment where Tyner enables one fall away. So much of this could change by the full time Nicholls State occurs in Eugene, but I am forecasting a great, not magnificent begin to Tyner's job. Must the offense be grasped by him quickly, then he'll positively have a go at 1000 yards. However for right now, I'm enjoying it rather safe and choosing the totals you see above. Needless to say, I will be happy if he shatters these numbers to be wrong. With the sort of expertise Thomas Tyner has, there is not much he can not do in his time at Oregon.
Via: Pandurii Targu Jiu - Gloria Bistrita - Romanian League 1
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