
“Unveiling the Top Cornerback Gems: Which Prospects Could Revolutionize NFL Pass Coverage?”
The great strength of Hunterâs game as a wideout is his movement skills, and ability to high point the football and make people miss him, and his strength as a cornerback is the inverse: his extreme stickiness to the receivers heâs covering. Hunter let up just 1.1 burn yards per snap, among the lowest rates of any cornerback now in the draft, and posted a low burn rate despite mixing in his 316 coverage snaps with a full receiver workload.Â
The most notable stat, though, is the one about how little Hunter worked. Opposing quarterbacks targeted him a mere 11.7% of the time on his coverage snaps, a much-lower rate than anyone else on this list and a stunningly low figure for any No. 1 corner in college football.
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