Who is the most surprising UM bust in the NFL to you?

Submitted by drz1111 on February 27th, 2024 at 9:46 AM

Who are the guys you thought would be great at the next level, but busted? 

I'll start the bidding with Devin Bush.  I guess I knew it was possible that being undersized could be an issue for him, but his speed and tackling and football IQ were so insanely high in college that I never seriously considered that he'd spend his NFL career getting paved by 320lb guards who are also insane athletes.

NotADuck

February 27th, 2024 at 1:01 PM ^

"Just couldn't get his act together. Unfortunate.  Being drafted by the Browns didn't help."

I said it was at least partially his fault just before mentioning the Browns.  In no way did I say it was a one-way-street.

However, just as the Lions were where top draft picks went to die, so were the Browns for a time.  I believe that has changed for both teams now.

My name ... is Tim

February 27th, 2024 at 10:01 AM ^

He was definitely not a "bust" - maybe his pro career was not as good as expected, but he played 8 years, made a Pro Bowl and had 5500 career receiving yards and 40 TDs. He also had some big moments for the Jets in the playoffs. That's a solid, albeit far from legendary, NFL career.

David Terrell on the other hand played essentially 4 years and had a quarter of those stats.

energyblue1

February 27th, 2024 at 10:13 AM ^

Agree, not a bust but also not the career we thought Braylon would have.  Terrell yes, bust but also think he was a guy that maxed out in college and skills didn't transfer.

Devin Bush, I thought he got injured in the osu game and wasn't quite as explosive after.  I could be completely wrong but I never thought he looked good for the steelers.  Also never thought that was a good fit for him in that style of defense. An undersized inside lber in a 3 front defense isn't ideal.  Which is why I was surprised the steelers took him. 

BKBlue94

February 27th, 2024 at 4:32 PM ^

Bush looked good his first year for the Steelers, but never got back to form after his ACL tear early in his second year. Weirdly, it wasn't that his knee didn't ever work again, but rather that he totally lost his great instincts and instead looked hesitant and slow to move at the start of each play after the injury.

Was super disappointing to me, as a big Michigan and Steelers fan

mgoblue_in_bay

February 27th, 2024 at 10:51 AM ^

You may have a different definition of bust than others.

Top 3 picks from those years, compared to Braylon's stats.  First number is players that were better than Braylon (only counted until I got lazy)

  • 2004 (2) - Eli Manning, Robert Gallery (much worse), Larry Fitzgerald
  • 2005 (1) - Alex Smith (better than Braylon), Ronnie Brown (same or worse), Braylon
  • 2006 (1) - Mario Williams (better), Reggie Bush (same), Vince Young (same or worse)
  • 2007 (2) - Jamarcus Russell (much worse), Calvin Johnson (better), Joe Thomas (better)
  • 2008 (3) - Jake Long, Chris Long, Matt Ryan (all better)
  • 2009 (1) - Stafford, Jason Smith (much worse), Tyson Jackson (worse)

That's 10 out of 18 players that definitely had better outcomes, and 4 or so that had definitively worse careers.

If your definition is "below the median" then yes Braylon had a bad career.  But there are many other definitions of "bust"

maizenblue92

February 27th, 2024 at 9:53 AM ^

The reason Devin Bush failed surprised me, it wasn't size, he basically could really read a play or do zone drops.

Good answers so far, I'll add Jake Long just being an average tackle was surprising to me. 

bluesalt

February 27th, 2024 at 11:08 AM ^

Yeah, I don’t think injuries causing a player to not meet expectations should “surprise” anyone.  Football is a violent sport, and injuries cause rapid declines sometimes — we know it’s going to happen, we just don’t know to whom.  Jake Long was a cornerstone tackle until he got hurt and wasn’t.  Not a bust, just a what-might-have-been.

The surprise busts are the ones whose talent just wasn’t good enough to cut it.  David Terrell, oft-mentioned here, is the number 1 for me.

mGrowOld

February 27th, 2024 at 9:54 AM ^

David Terrell.   

Dude was an absolute stud WR and was selected 8th overall in the 2001 draft.  Never did anything in the pros and was out of the league five seasons later.  I thought for sure we was going to be the next Anthony Carter and it never worked out for him.

Tom Brady's longtime brotherhood with his receivers - Sports Illustrated

energyblue1

February 27th, 2024 at 10:16 AM ^

Manningham was never the same after that knee injury.  Just didn't get it back.  He devastated defenses before that.  They said it was just a the meniscus and maybe so.  That also hurt as the 06 offense already lost Bass.  Manningham and the nfl, idk.. 

MgoHillbilly

February 27th, 2024 at 9:54 AM ^

Not so much a bust because of getting hurt, but I expected a more prolific career from Jake Butt.

All around good dude it would seem though and I love that he's now in broadcasting. Definitely seems suited for the job.

Perkis-Size Me

February 27th, 2024 at 11:30 AM ^

I live down in Atlanta, and the local media spent the better part of a year or two raking Mayfield over the coals any chance they got. 

In Jalen's defense, the Falcons as a whole have been pretty bad for the better part of the last five to six years, but I've never heard the local sports media down here give Jalen a pass on anything. 

Hail2020

February 27th, 2024 at 10:03 AM ^

I was young when he was at Michigan, but I thought Chad Henne would have had a better career in the NFL. Great career as a backup all things considered, but thought he was gonna be a longterm starter. 

Blau

February 27th, 2024 at 10:07 AM ^

I can get get behind this selection. He's created a nice little niche as a journeyman backup QB but I also thought he would set the league on fire given his cannon for an arm, good mechanics, and overall command of the offense.

Still he made millions in a backup role and is good enough to plug-n-play if needed. There are much worse ways to be considered a bust in the NFL.

Brian Griese

February 27th, 2024 at 10:25 AM ^

Henne had a problem where he played so much in college that I think he hit his ceiling at Michigan so there weren’t going to be too many areas that he could improve at in the NFL. I think that’s why you saw him drop into the 2nd round. 

For all of his physical tools, Henne was very slow coupled with a poor pocket presence, struggled with accuracy on intermediate routes (his completion percentage was basically the same in college as it was the NFL: 59.6% and 59.7%) and he also had a bit of the same problem Navarre had with batted balls - in fact I think I saw that when he started for Jacksonville in 2013 he “led” the league in the category.  

I’m not sure it’s fair to call him a bust but in retrospect I’m not exactly shocked he didn’t become a longtime starter in the NFL. 
 

mGrowOld

February 27th, 2024 at 10:52 AM ^

I would argue Chad Henne had the MOST successful career of any UM graduate.  Here's why:

1. He played for 16 seasons meaning he's going to rake millions from his NFL pension in retirement.  Their pension funds based on playing years so the more years you play, the more you take home.

2. As a career back-up he seldom got hit so his risk of CTE is low.  No fun having millions if you cant remember what to do with them

3. He never suffered any major injuries that would cripple him as he gets older.

Dude is my absolute hero.

oriental andrew

February 27th, 2024 at 12:02 PM ^

I believe Brian at one point said that being a long-time career backup QB is the best job in the NFL in reference to Todd Collins. If you need a reminder, Collins had a 16 year career in the NFL and started a total of 21 games - with 13 of those coming in 1997 as the Bills' first string QB. He has appeared in 51 total games and did not play in 4 full seasons while being paid as a backup. 

That's the gig right there. He definitely beats out Henne in terms of longevity vs. lack of playing time, although he was 10 years earlier and probably had smaller contracts as a result.