I'm starting to conclude he was just overdrafted, maybe way over drafted. He didn't have enough starts in college, and even when he was at Florida he was a total of 6-7, and his passing numbers were not impressive, at all, though he ran quite well. He was worse in college than Tre Lance. Maybe he should have been drafted in the 6th round, like another athletic guy with a big arm: Joe Milton.
I think overdrafted is an understatement. Other than his raw physical skills, I don't know what the scouts saw in him? Like you said, one year of college ball at Florida with unremarkable passing stats. Surprisingly, both McShay & Kiper Jr had him as a top 10 pick. His draft prospect grade was
6.4 ("Will Become Good Starter Within Two Years"). By comparison Daniels' grade was
6.7 ("Year 1 Starter").
OTOH, Milton, who also has elite size & a monster arm (threw
62 mph on the velocity test tied for the fastest ever with Allen, and can throw 65+ yards at a flick of the wrist) sanked to the 6th round. His draft prospect grade was is one of lowest on the scale:
5.8 ("Average Backup"). And Milton's throwing numbers at Tennessee were far greater than AR with both playing SEC competition.
This is one of the biggest dichotomies that I've ever seen. How can Milton, who has more arm strength than AR - and far better college stats - go in the 6th as an "average backup" prospect while AR goes freakin
#4 OA? Hard to believe Milton dropped that low where guys like Tanner McKee, Trace McSorely, Devon Leary, Jake Luton & Sam Ehlinger were drafted from. Lol. That being said though, NE is "toying with the idea" of trading Milton:
For other teams across the league who are desperate for a quarterback, they may find the Patriots shopping the former sixth-round pick around while they invest in Drake Maye’s future.
nypost.com
Watched a little of the TE action at the Combine. Unfortunately, the top 2 prospects, Tyler Warren & Colston Loveland, weren't there (note: Broncos are interested in Loveland as they desperately need a TE).
Interestingly, one of the analyst explained that the top 10 NFL TEs in pass receiving this past season averaged 6-4, 249 lbs & 4.61 speed. He states this is basically the standard now for TE prospects. Out of this bunch, only Terrance Ferguson from Oregon fit the bill. He looked good on both pass receiving & blocking drills. The best pass receiving guy, IMO, looks like Harold Fannin Jr, who had ridiculous numbers at Bowling Green. He looked really good in the Gauntlet drill & caught everything thrown at him including some bad passes.