The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2tobe watched at Tech’s pro day

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

The 16 former Georgia Tech football players who will take part in the school’s pro day workout this morning will bring the usual sets of dreams and hopes to keep their football careers alive. At least two should have particular attention of NFL scouts in attendance at the on-campus session.

Former defensive end Anree Saint-Amour is the most likely ex-Yellow Jacket to be selected in the NFL draft beginning April 25, possibly as a late-round pick. He augmented his candidacy Saturday by posting a 40-yard dash time of 4.60 seconds at an NFL regional combine in Kansas City, Mo.

That follows a senior season when he displayed his explosiven­ess playing defensive end in former defensive coordinato­r Nate Woody’s 3-4 defense. In a new scheme, Saint-Amour had four sacks, 12 tackles for loss, nine quarterbac­k hurries, three forced fumbles and two intercepti­ons.

His 40 time would have tied for sixth among defensive linemen and edge rushers at the NFL draft combine in Indianapol­is earlier this month. “It felt great when I learned about my numbers,” Saint-Amour said.

Saint-Amour could be considered as both an end in the 4-3 defense or a rush linebacker in a 3-4. He has been tutored by former Falcons star Chuck Smith, who is now a trainer for players from high school through the pros.

“He knows a lot about the game, knows a lot about the position, knows a lot about the (draft) process,” Saint-Amour said.

Another participan­t of note is former quarterbac­k TaQuon Marshall, who has made the transition to wide receiver.

“He’s just ready to perform at the next level,” said Marshall’s agent, Leo Jackson.

Marshall is trying to take the same quarterbac­k-to-receiver route that Tech great Justin Thomas has attempted. Thomas spent parts of the 2017 season on the Pittsburgh Steelers roster and is now playing with the Atlanta Legends in the AAF. Perhaps the most successful recent example of the switch is New England Patriots wide receiver Julian Edelman, who was a quarterbac­k at Kent State.

Marshall has received position training from Charles Collins, perhaps best noted for coaching NFL greats Chad Johnson and Steve Smith in junior college.

“We just thought, ‘Hey, this is a guy that definitely made plays at Tech,’ ” Jackson said. “We can see him in open space making some linebacker­s miss in the slot, making some nickel (backs) miss.”

Jackson is hopeful that Marshall can run a 40-yard dash time in the low 4.5-second range, possibly faster.

The other Tech participan­ts in the pro day are linebacker Victor Alexander, defensive lineman Desmond Branch, offensive lineman Will Bryan, defensive lineman Kyle Cerge-Henderson, running back J.J. Green, safety Jalen Johnson, running back Clinton Lynch, defensive lineman Antonio Mallard, offensive lineman Andrew Marshall, kicker Justin Moore, safety Malik Rivera, long snapper Zach Roberts, running back Qua Searcy and wide receiver Brad Stewart.

The pro day is closed to the public.

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