The Los Angeles Chargers are getting a fun player.
The Chargers continued to add pieces to the offensive side of the ball with their fifth-round pick wide receiver Joe Reed.
It remains to be seen if he can thrive on the outside at the next level because of his lack of route-running ability.
But he does have the ability to serve as a gadget player and high-upside return specialist, winning with his yards after the catch ability to turn short gains into big ones.
Take a look at what Los Angeles is getting in Reed:
How do you all feel about the Los Angeles Chargers’ selection of wide receiver Joe Reed?
It’s clear that the Chargers are making the offensive side of the ball the key focal point in this year’s draft.
After the selection of running back Joshua Kelley, Los Angeles selected wide receiver Joe Reed.
At Randolph-Henry High School, Reed played wide receiver, running back and safety at Randolph-Henry High School. He rushed for 2,100 yards and 38 touchdowns as a senior.
Utilized both inside and outside during his three-year stint at Virginia, Reed finished with 4,679 all-purpose yards in 50 career games, including 3,042 on kick returns, 1,465 receiving and 172 rushing.
For the Chargers, Reed will serve as a gadget player – playing as a wide receiver, lining up in the backfield and returning kicks and punts.
I believe Reed adds a unique element to the offense. I give the selection a solid B. What about you guys, Chargers fans?
The Los Angeles Chargers landed a great receiver in the fifth-round of the 2020 NFL Draft.
Addressing the wide receiver group was an absolute must for the Chargers. Even though they had Keenan Allen and Mike Williams who flourished last season, there was no one else that stepped up and produced.
Travis Benjamin struggled when he was on the field and he had injury issues. The one thing that Benjamin offered that others didn’t have at the position was speed.
The selection of Reed brings the much-needed speed to the position. He is great vertically and dynamic after the catch, showing the ability to turn short gains into big ones. At 6-foot and 224 pounds, Reed uses his size to box out defenders and pull in any ball thrown, displaying his strong hands.
His lack of route savvy and separation skills holds him back from being a complete receiver, but he offers a lot of value as a returner and in yards after the catch situations.
According to The Athletic’s Daniel Popper, the Chargers have told him he’ll play wide receiver, line up in the backfield, return kicks and punts. Reed will push Andre Patton and Darius Jennings for snaps at No. 3 unless the team views him as a gadget type of player.
Joe Reed had 25 red zone targets, 3rd most among draft-eligible WRs
The Los Angeles Chargers upgraded the wide receiver with the addition of Joe Reed.
The Chargers finally addressed the wide receiver position in the fifth-round with former Virginia WR Joe Reed.
Speed was the main focal point with whoever Los Angeles drafted and Reed possesses just that. He is an explosive athlete with great hands who should thrive as a deep threat and return specialist.
Let’s see how Twitter reacted to the Bolts’ selection of Reed:
Joe Reed is basically what we all wished Travis Benjamin was. Solid deep threat despite bad QB play, with said QB having a weak arm.
Joe Reed also took almost every return at LEAST 30 yards. Solid returner. Best returner in the draft maybe.
#Chargers fifth-round pick WR Joe Reed was utilized both inside and outside for the Cavaliers. I would like to see him sharpen up his route-running, but he offers above average size and speed (4.47) to win on the outside, along with return ability.
Joe Reed is pretty damn good with the ball in his hand. I'm watching tape on him rn, he's the best player on that entire offense. Loving his tape so far.
The Los Angeles Chargers add a wide receiver and return specialist in the fifth-round.
The Chargers selected former Virginia wide receiver Joe Reed with the No. 151 overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft.
Reed finished with 4,679 all-purpose yards in 50 career games, including 3,042 on kick returns, 1,465 receiving and 172 rushing in 50 games played (29 starts).
Reed was named First Team All-American kick returner and recipient of the Jet Award, given to the country’s top kick returner. He averaged 33.2 yards per return, while also amassing 77 yards for 679 yards as a wide receiver this season.
Reed is second all-time in the ACC for kick return yards (3,042) and third for kickoff return (28.7).
Breaking down the draft profile of Virginia WR Joe Reed, a potential pick for the Packers in the 2020 NFL draft.
The Green Bay Packers must use the 2020 NFL Draft to provide the finishing touches on a team that won 13 regular-season games and got within one game of the Super Bowl during Matt LaFleur’s first season as head coach.
Between now and the draft, Packers Wire will periodically break down one top prospect fitting the Packers’ roster needs.
Up next is Virginia WR Joe Reed:
What he can do
– Receiver in a running back’s body. 6-0, 224. Has shorter arms and not much length, but muscle-bound and built low to the ground
– Athletic and strong. Ran 4.47, hit 38″ in the vertical and 10-3 in the broad and did 23 reps on the bench. Another high RAS player
– Potentially explosive gadget player. Has experience catching the ball out of the slot, receiving manufactured touches in the passing game and runinng the ball in a variety of ways. Could thrive in the right scheme
– Maybe the best returner in the draft. Scored five kickoff return touchdowns and averaged almost 29 yards per return on over 100 career returns. Returned two kicks for scores in both 2017 and 2019. Excellent vision and open-field creativity. Could be a Pro Bowl returner at the next level
– Far from a polished receiver, but dangerous after the catch. Forced 15 missed tackles in 2019, per PFF. Running back skills shine through here. Runs through arm tackles and has plenty of wiggle in the open field
– Produced next to nothing down the field. Almost all of his receiving production came underneath, between 1-10 yards
– Not a precise route runner. Doesn’t really show physical traits getting into routes or getting out of breaks. Inexperienced running a full route tree. Needs a lot of development here if he wants to be anything more than a gadget player
– No wasted motion when the ball gets to him. Secures the ball and gets upfield. Not going to dance around
– Can change direction without losing much speed
– Caught 77 passes but averaged only 8.8 yards per catch in 2019
How he fits
Plug him as the new kick returner to start, and then let Matt LaFleur and his staff find creative ways of getting him the ball on manufactured touches, both as a runner and receiver. Reed may never be anything more than a niche player, but his versatility and playmaking ability with the ball in his hands can have value in the right situation. The Packers employ an offensive scheme that fits what Reed does well and can be molded to cater to playmakers, and Tyler Ervin’s emergence as a gadget player late in the 2019 season showed how an explosive athlete can create chunk plays and open up space for others. Reed fits the role. He projects as a special teams stud and specialized offensive weapon at the next level.
NFL comp
Ty Montgomery. Reed has a ton of kick return value and will be hard to tackle at the next level, but teams might want to skip the long development curve ahead of him at receiver and plug him in at running back. Like Montgomery, Reed’s skill set translates.
Where Packers could get him
On Day 3. Reed isn’t a highly refined player as a receiver and might not have a sure-fire position, but he’s athletic and versatile, and smart teams will find ways to get value out of his skillset. He could come off the board at any point between Rounds 4-7.
Get to know one of the most versatile playmakers in the 2020 NFL Draft, Virginia’s Joe Reed
Some NFL teams would line Virginia receiver Joe Reed up out wide at the pro level; some would rush him out of the backfield. The Charlotte Court House, Virginia, product is game for anything. Heck, if teams want to use him at quarterback, safety, or on kick returns, he’s got experience doing that, too.
Reed leaves Virginia as a true do-it-all threat, with a team-high 77 receptions in 2019 (and seven touchdowns) and two kicks returned for touchdowns, tied for second-best in the FBS. Though he lit up the field at running back his senior year at Randolph-Henry High School (2,100 yards, 38 touchdowns), the Cavaliers astutely thought he’d be even better with the ball in his hands as a pass-catcher.
“Throughout my recruiting process, Virginia was the only camp I even attended. I always knew I wanted to go to Virginia,” Reed says by phone.
“I wanted to go to multiple camps a year and try out multiple positions, and let the coaches know they could put me in anywhere and also find myself and find out what I wanted to do. I committed to Virginia my sophomore year, and I had a fast recruiting process. When I got to Virginia, I was a receiver.”
Though Reed didn’t see much action on offense his freshman season with the Cavaliers, he made an immediate impact on special teams, returning 28 kicks for 678 yards total, a 25.1 average.
The following season, Reed was an honorable mention All-ACC pick as a kick returner. His return average of 29.7 ranked eighth in the FBS, and his two kicks returned for touchdowns were tied for fifth. It was in this season the Cavaliers started to call his number more on offense; in 12 games, he tallied two touchdowns on 23 receptions and a rushing score on 21 carries.
In 2018, Reed was named third-team all-conference as a returner and set Cavaliers records for career kick-return yards and touchdowns. It was just a prequel to his senior campaign that would see him earn first-team All-ACC honors as an all-purpose player and return specialist.
When all was said and done, Reed, who graduated with a major in American Studies with a focus on pop culture, sports, and gender, and started a graduate program in Educational Psychology, finished his Cavaliers campaign as the all-time leader in multiple categories: kick return yards (3,042), kick returns (106), kick returns for touchdowns (five) and tied for longest return (100 yards).
He also holds the distinction of being the only player ever in the FBS to have more than 3,000 career kick return yards and a career return average exceeding 28 yards.
Now, Reed is ready to take everything he’s honed and package it up with a bow for the NFL team that calls his name at the draft later this month. He knows he will have to earn his keep on special teams, but more than an obligation, it’s a thrill.
“Kickoff returns and special teams in general is something I use to my advantage to help my team out,” Reed says.
“I have a unique combination of size, speed, vision, just being fearless when I have the ball. My biggest thing when I’m returning kicks is I just go. I love changing the game through special teams, even more so with returning the ball. I treat it just like I treat offense. I watch film; in practice I’m taking it seriously, I take extra reps after practice.”
It’s that extra, intangible element that should seal the deal for scouts after Reed’s impressive performance at the NFL combine in February, where he did better than expected with a 4.47 40-yard dash, 21 reps on the bench press, and a 38-inch vertical.
It ended up being a boon that Reed met his goals at the combine, as Virginia canceled its April 8 pro day due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, though Reed will take virtual meetings with teams, he has no further events at which to impress scouts before the NFL draft opens on April 23.
“I was pleased about the combine,” Reed says. “I’m the type of guy where I like to see the outcome of my sacrifices, the training I went through, the social life I put on hold, the meal plan, the sleep, all those sacrifices, I think my testing went really well and I was pleased with the outcome.”
Reed’s combine training was, indeed, immersive. He spent weeks preparing at XPE Fort Lauderdale, working closely with agent Jon Perzley of Sportstars. After Virginia played in the Orange Bowl against Florida, Reed took about a week off to rest his body and regenerate with friends and family, and then it was off to work at XPE, where he overhauled everything from his diet to his conditioning to his sleep.
“I started off with a meal plan that was tough at first. It didn’t taste the best, but within two or three weeks I felt a big difference in my body,” Reed says. A typical day would include gluten-free mini pancakes and two eggs for breakfast, a turkey burger on wheat with sweet potato fries for lunch, and grilled chicken, rice, and broccoli for dinner.
“My only cheat day is Saturday,” Reed says, laughing. His cheat meal of choice? “I get a cheeseburger and fries, every time.” While in Fort Lauderdale, his go-to stop was BurgerFi.
In all, Reed reaped the benefits of his diet overhaul, gaining four pounds, decreasing his body fat, and getting stronger overall. His conditioning workouts, geared toward combine workouts like the 40 and vertical, were markedly different from college, where he lifted at a much heavier weight. The name of the game for combine training? Short-burst running and more reps at lower weight.
“Another thing that I really had to dial in on was my sleep,” Reed adds. “I would try to get 10 to 11 hours of sleep every single night, turn my TV off, turn my phone off. That really helped my body, as well.”
Perzley also helped Reed prepare for the whirlwind of NFL team interviews, setting up video chats with mock interviewers who asked him sample questions and gave him feedback on his performance.
Especially in isolation, there’s not much left for Reed to do now as he waits for the NFL draft to approach, except think about the ways he can contribute to a team next season. Over draft weekend, he’ll be in Charlottesville with his mom, dad, and brother. That was the plan even before the pandemic—Reed’s home is so remote that he doesn’t get cell service there, a somewhat crucial element during an entirely remote draft process—but with campus closed, the Reed family will now likely get a hotel suite.
Mom, who teaches kindergarten; Dad, who works security, and Reed’s brother “have been my biggest fans throughout these years,” he says.
“Whatever happens, I’ll be blessed either way.” He tries not to look at mock drafts or read too many projections; he’s confident there are enough teams with holes on their rosters he could fill. Reed touts his versatility in the slot, creating mismatches, motion, moving around, and running routes out of the backfield.
We discuss how the Super Bowl, in particular, with the way the San Francisco 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs use their pass-catching backs and offensive weapons, was a showcase for how NFL teams might use a player like Reed. “Just the way that they use their guys, I was looking at it and I was like, ‘That’s the type of player I think I can be at the next level,'” Reed says.
“Whatever the coaches ask of me, I have the ability to go out there and do it and just not be a one-dimensional receiver.”
The Bears have met with six prospects during East-West Shrine week, including two safeties, two receivers, a linebacker and a quarterback.
The offseason is in full swing with free agency and the NFL Draft on the horizon. The college All-Star games are about to kick off starting with Saturday’s East-West Shrine Bowl.
The Bears have met with six prospects during practice this week, according to Walter Football, including two safeties, two receivers, a linebacker and a quarterback.
Chicago was among a handful of teams that met with FIU quarterback James Morgan, who figures to be an intriguing developmental prospect for the Bears. He’s got an impressive arm with good size and mobility.
The Bears also met with a pair of speedy receivers in Virginia’s Joe Reed and Ohio State’s Binjimen Victor. Reed has excelled as a kick returner, but he’s established himself as a complete receiver. Victor is a big target at 6’4 and a playmaker in the red zone, which the Bears could certainly benefit from.
While offense figures to be a focus, defense has some needs of its own, including the need of depth in the secondary. The Bears met with two safeties in Auburn’s Jeremiah Dinson and SMU’s Rodney Clemons. Dinson is perhaps the most versatile player in Auburn’s defensive backfield, and Clemons is one of the more underrated players at his position.
Chicago also met with Miami linebacker Michael Pinckney, who has good size and speed to play linebacker. While at Miami, Pinckney played on the edge, and he projects to do the same at the pro level.