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Meet Brandon Jackson

The Packers traded down to the end of the 2nd round to reach for Nebraska RB Brandon Jackson. This will either be a great move or come back to haunt GM Ted Thompson and the Packers because they passed on RBs Kenny Irons, Chris Henry, and Brian Leonard.

It might be easy to compare Jackson with fellow Nebraska RB Ahman Green, but there really is no comparison. Green put up monster numbers at Nebraska while Jackson only started the last half of 2006.

Back in March I began considering which running back the Packers should select if they were unable to select either RB Adrian Peterson or RB Marshawn Lynch in the 1st round. I only got as far as evaluating RB Michael Bush before I realized that I really didn't like any running back after Peterson or Lynch, at least not enough to consider drafting in the 2nd or 3rd round. I was hoping that Jackson or Notre Dame RB Darius Walker might be available in the 4th or 5th round to provide some competition, but apparently Thompson thought much higher of Jackson then I did.

What everyone should really like about Jackson is that he is a very good receiver out of the backfield. There some running backs such as Ohio State RB Antonio Pittman who are very good running, but very few that proved that they are quality receivers too. Most of Jackson's production came in his last nine games because he was in a running back committee for the first five games (Nebraska played 14 games in 2006?), so his stats deserve a little boost overall to reflect a full season. Plus his stats weren't padded by weak early season games.

Still there is plenty not to like about Jackson. He can't stay healthy (he missed a lot of time during 2004 and 2005) and he didn't start a lot of games in his college career. Last summer Jackson was sharing playing time with three other running backs at Nebraska. One year later he has a chance to start in the NFL? Seems like a longshot.

This is Thompson's second consecutive reach. I don't think reaching for a player that isn't projected to be taken so early isn't a big problem, but it does take away the opportunity to add some additional picks and still draft the player you wanted all along. Since all draft choices don't work out, adding more picks helps increase the chance that more players will work out and the overall roster won't have any holes. However there are lots of examples of players who appear to be a reach until they play in the NFL. For example Mike Sherman reached to select LB Nick Barnett, but that worked out pretty well.

Jackson has his flaws, but he really is a complete running and receiving back. I considered him my third favorite running back, but there is a big drop-off after Lynch and Peterson. If he had gone back for his senior season and repeated his junior performance, he would have been a 1st round talent. Unfortunately that is a big if. It would have been better to seen the Packers take a chance on Jackson later in the draft.

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not sure what to think.
I'm not sure if I like this pick.  On one hand, Jackson seems like a great fit for a zone-running, West Coast-passing team like the Packers.  He has great vision and cut-back ability, and he comes from a college team that uses a pro-style West Coast offense.  His receiving numbers were pretty good.  And the Packers have had success "reaching" for players to fit the zone-running system, like Colledge and Spitz last year.  But I have major reservations.  If he couldn't be 'the guy' at a good but not great college team (the Huskers certainly don't have the backed-up talent pools like the Hurricanes or Buckeyes do) and if he can't stay healthy, then why take him in the 2nd round?  Additionally, he's not as fast as I prefer in to see in a running back.  Not as huge a deal as some will make - 40 times are waaaaaay overrated, but he lacks that extra gear that Ahman Green had to take a 20 yard gain and make it a 60 yard TD.  I understand that when the Packers picked, they were only impressed by two available RBs, Pittman and Jackson, and they were concerned that neither would be available for their first pick in round 3.  But Jackson has a lot of question marks around him.  I'll consider this my 'in Ted Thompson I trust' pick of the draft.  He nailed Harrell in the first round pretty well, so he earns a little leeway from me in the second round.

by NiceGuyJoey on Apr 29, 2007 10:39 AM CDT reply actions   0 recs

He's a product of
a zone scheme. That's about all I can see from picking this guy, which is a positive I guess. I know they had a hard time teaching the zone scheme to some of the running backs they had last year. He had some nice highlights from what I saw, but something tells me Morency starts.
"I'm in town to play the Dolphins you dumbass"- Brett Favre

by TkGoUWGB on Apr 29, 2007 9:42 PM CDT reply actions   0 recs

Morency Starts
This is like 2005 when McCarthy was the offensive coordinator in San Francisco and Kevin Barlow started but rookie Frank Gore was right behind him. From memory, it seems like McCarthy gave Barlow a lot of chances to produce, but finally gave way to Gore at the end of the season. Morency's better than Barlow, but if he doesn't produce, it seems likely that McCarthy will give Morency a few chances before he would turn to Jackson.

I'm still not 100% sold on Jackson, but he could be the Frank Gore of this draft. A running back who had all the talent, but couldn't stay healthy in college.

by Brandon on Apr 30, 2007 1:37 AM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

i love the gore comparison
Obviously getting Jackson to produce like Frank Gore by year two would be 'best case scenario,' but the two running backs share a compact, energetic, focused running style.

by NiceGuyJoey on Apr 30, 2007 8:28 AM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

not sure who will start at RB
I see this year's training camp like a Denver Broncos running back competition - wide open and the team is willing to look at anyone capable of getting the job done.  Morrency, Jackson, Noah Herron, 7th rounder DeShawn Wynn, Arliss Beach (the coaches loved this kid last year!), and P.J. Pope all duke it out.  The team will keep three, probably, with maybe one more guy stashed on the injured reserve, like Beach in 2006, and another on the practice squad.  Obviously Morrency and Jackson are locks for the roster, barring catastrophic injury.  But anyone can start, and I think we may be surprised at who carries the load this year for the Packers.

by NiceGuyJoey on Apr 30, 2007 8:37 AM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

Brandon Jackson
I'd done a story on Jackson before the draft.

I thought it was a big high at round two, but Jackson is a good back. Also good at blitz pick-up.

Beer - Cheese - Nebraska Football
Corn Nation

by cornnation on Apr 30, 2007 12:24 PM CDT reply actions   0 recs

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