Gorney’s take: FACT. Quency Wiggins did not start playing football until well into his high school career and he has all the tools to be special – potentially the No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft. His physical tools are amazing, his drive to be great is there and he’s like a sponge who soaks up coaching and then goes on the field and delivers. The strong-side defensive ends in this class are really talented but Wiggins could end up being the best of the bunch.
Spiegelman’s take: FACT. If not for getting hit by a car in San Antonio, Wiggins might already be higher than No. 16 in the final Rivals250. At 6-foot-7 and 285 pounds facing double-teams and sometimes more, Wiggins accrued 13 sacks and 26 TFL and was dominating at the All-American Bowl. He has developed so quickly in two years so in three or four years from now we might be looking back scratching our heads for not viewing Wiggins as a top-10 talent. Nonetheless, his upside is through the roof.
Spiegelman’s take: FACT. If not for getting hit by a car in San Antonio, Wiggins might already be higher than No. 16 in the final Rivals250. At 6-foot-7 and 285 pounds facing double-teams and sometimes more, Wiggins accrued 13 sacks and 26 TFL and was dominating at the All-American Bowl. He has developed so quickly in two years so in three or four years from now we might be looking back scratching our heads for not viewing Wiggins as a top-10 talent. Nonetheless, his upside is through the roof.
Rivals.com - Fact or Fiction: Tetairoa McMillan should be the No. 1 WR in 2022 class
Five-star Tetairoa McMillan signed with Arizona in the Early Signing Period.
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