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Michael Sam Drafted by St. Louis Rams

He was drafted near the end of the 7th and final round. The 249th player picked. It's no surprise when a player drafted that late does not make a team.

May 10, 2014 article :

Of those players at [Michael Sam's] position who had been rated as sixth-round picks before the draft — as Sam was — slightly less than 50 percent were chosen by an NFL team.

But some late-round draft picks turn out to be good enough to make a squad.

Central Catholic grad Dane Sanzenbacher went undrafted, but he made the Bears team his rookie season. After two years with the Bears, he played last year with the Bengals.

The late-round draft pick who has probably garnered the most attention over the past decade has been Tom Brady who got drafted in the 6th round. Brady was the 199th player selected, and he's headed to the hall of fame.

Two years ago when the Seattle Seahawks drafted quarterback Russell Wilson in the 3rd round, I doubt the team expected Wilson to earn the starting spot because Seattle signed a big contract with QB Matt Flynn from Green Bay through free agency. But Wilson won the starting job in preseason, helped Seattle make the playoffs and win a playoff game, and of course, Seattle won the Super Bowl this past season.

So who knows until they start practicing and playing pre-season games.

I think the math is simple for Michael Sam, regarding the NFL.

  1. If he's a good player, he'll make a team.
  2. If he's really good, he'll get to play a fair amount.
  3. If he's really, really good, he'll get to start.

If he's none of the above, then he'll be released.

I don't think an NFL team will waste a roster spot. If he's not NFL caliber, then he'll be scooped off the field with a spatula.

But Sam will get his shot.

"... the knock against him is that he is a bit undersized."

I guess it depends upon what position he will play. He might be undersized for defensive end, but allegedly, his height and weight are 6' 2" and around 260 pounds. That seems big enough for linebacker if he's fast, strong, and smart.

Sam Mills played linebacker in the NFL from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, and he was only 5' 9" and around 230 pounds. Even back then, that was considered small for a linebacker.

May 10, 2014 article about Michael Sam:

He played defensive end in college, but he's short for that position in the NFL and slower than most outside linebackers, the position he'll need to transition to at the professional level.

March 2014 article about Michael Sam:

Similar to his combine performance, [Michael] Sam's positional workout was mixed. It's clear he worked hard to prepare and he knew exactly what he had to do in drills and was precise executing them. However, he still looked stiff and robotic when bending his knees and changing directions.

I do not believe he could make the switch to playing linebacker full time, but could handle playing a rush-linebacker or inside linebacker position in a 3-4 defense.

At 260-plus pounds, Michael Sam could be big for inside linebacker if this February 2013 article is correct where the writer claimed that the trend in the NFL was for teams to draft lighter weight inside linebackers.

And with the NFL's increasing reliance on spread formations -- not just spread concepts, but actually widening a defense by lining up outside the numbers on both sides -- defenses are changing their games by using linebackers that, 10 years ago, may have been seen as safety prospects.

In the 2012 NFL Draft, only one drafted inside linebacker weighed in at over 250 pounds, and the rookies who set the pace at that position were not at all like the "thumper" templates of years past.

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