2021 NFL Draft Prospect Profile: LB Micah Parsons, Penn State
Nick Falato breaks down the tape of Micah Parsons, a draft prospect who s been mocked to the Giants in the first round by some.
Author:
School: Penn State
The 2019 All-American who won the Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year award was a 5-star recruit out of Harrisburg High School in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. According to 247 Sports, he was the 64th all-time ranked recruit, and he was the number five recruit in the 2018 cycle.
Parsons opted out of the 2020 season after a dynamic 2019 campaign where he recorded 109 tackles, 15 for a loss, five sacks, five passes defended, and four forced fumbles while also pressuring the quarterback 26 times. He finished his two years at Penn State with 36 pressures, 191 tackles, 18 for a loss, 6.5 sacks, five passes defended, and six forced fumbles.
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Big Blue View mailbag: NFL Draft, offensive line questions
The mail’s here!
Mike Elston asks:
One of the latest media trends over the last couple years is to mock DG for having never traded down in the draft. I have been a Giant fan since my father told me I was a Giant fan when I was handed to him for the first time. I can only remember a couple of significant moves by the Giants on draft day, but I don’t think any of them were moving down. Have the Giants as an organization ever traded down? The draft didn’t have the same media coverage in the George Young days. Did he ever trade down? Accorsi? I don’t think Reese did.
Somerset County Council\ s Headquarters At County Hall In Taunton. CREDIT: Daniel Mumby. Free to use for all BBC wire partners. SOMERSET headteachers have clashed with the county council over possible cuts to special needs provision in schools. The council has been exploring ways to fund special needs provision through schools’ individual budgets, to make up for a shortfall in central government funding. Heads of secondary schools across the county have written to the council, claiming it is impossible to find £2.4M in savings without making redundancies, and stating their trust in the council is “at rock bottom”. Local MP Ian Liddell-Grainger has also called on the government to step in directly, branding director of children’s services Julian Wooster an “overpaid council overlord”.
Somerset County Council\ s Headquarters At County Hall In Taunton. CREDIT: Daniel Mumby. Free to use for all BBC wire partners. SOMERSET headteachers have clashed with the county council over possible cuts to special needs provision in schools. The council has been exploring ways to fund special needs provision through schools’ individual budgets, to make up for a shortfall in central government funding. Heads of secondary schools across the county have written to the council, claiming it is impossible to find £2.4M in savings without making redundancies, and stating their trust in the council is “at rock bottom”. Local MP Ian Liddell-Grainger has also called on the government to step in directly, branding director of children’s services Julian Wooster an “overpaid council overlord”.
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