wiuhusker
New member
My guess is that he probably could. No way coaches let it happen though. Kid is definitely athletic enoughCan he play 3 sports for us?
My guess is that he probably could. No way coaches let it happen though. Kid is definitely athletic enoughCan he play 3 sports for us?
Lets not get carried away here, Bo was a different animal than Monte.If Monte stays N, which at this stage is anyones guess, he'll be the closest thing nebraska's had to a Bo jackson with that kind of eye popping athleticism
For those who get excited if he ends up going in the 3rd round, regardless of what round he gets drafted in, he can still get offered 1st round money. It is rumored that Boldt turned down an offer close to 7 figures from Boston after being drafted in the 22nd round.Rumor has it that he is looking for first round money and that he will probably go in the second round. First round he is gone, second round is the fence, third or later he will be a Husker.
Bingo bango.For those who get excited if he ends up going in the 3rd round, regardless of what round he gets drafted in, he can still get offered 1st round money. It is rumored that Boldt turned down an offer close to 7 figures from Boston after being drafted in the 22nd round.Rumor has it that he is looking for first round money and that he will probably go in the second round. First round he is gone, second round is the fence, third or later he will be a Husker.
True but baseball has something similar, just not as specific. You get a certain amount of money based on what pick(s) you have. You can use more or less than that on that pick but any extra you use on one player is that much less you have for everyone else. So it kind of depends on how well that team likes the rest of their draft as well.Baseball is a whole different animal when it comes to rookie contracts. Basketball and football (maybe hockey? I have no clue) have slotted pay scales for rookies so they know about how much they are going to get based on where they are drafted.
You are correct. I just meant that the #1 pick can only sign for 4 years and 22 million like Cam Newton with Carolina. The year before, Sam Bradford got like close to 80 million over 6-7 years I believe. I just meant that it wasn't a set deal per spot.True but baseball has something similar, just not as specific. You get a certain amount of money based on what pick(s) you have. You can use more or less than that on that pick but any extra you use on one player is that much less you have for everyone else. So it kind of depends on how well that team likes the rest of their draft as well.Baseball is a whole different animal when it comes to rookie contracts. Basketball and football (maybe hockey? I have no clue) have slotted pay scales for rookies so they know about how much they are going to get based on where they are drafted.