2 min read • June 29, 2021
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A well-known saying is numbers don’t lie but people can. In the same vein, videos don’t lie but the way they are interpreted can be quite different. Is the optimism after Bud Dupree workout posts justified? No question Dupree is a supreme athlete and progressing well after ACL surgery. No question the Titans have enough confidence in his return to sign him to a 5-year, $82.5 million deal. No question to the lay person, Dupree looks great in his workout video. However, medical analysis should temper the current optimism. Dupree is coming along nicely but appears a long way away still and he is clearly nowhere near fully healthy yet. He clearly favors his right knee during the workout video. In the squat jump video, he favors the right side and does not stand, squat, jump or land symmetrically. The left takes more load. In the brief cone drill, he favors the right side as well, especially at the end of the sprint. With editing and selection, short clips like this can’t prove health (who would show a “bad” workout video). However, they can reveal deficiencies. Last month, an Odell Beckham Jr. workout video had fans excited, but we chimed in saying he has a ways to go. Beckham Jr. himself responded to us on Twitter and agreed with the assessment that cutting and deceleration were the key and he was not there yet. We are not saying that Dupree is recovering poorly or that the Titans shouldn’t have signed him. In fact, we think he will make a full recovery. Our only point is that it is asking too much to expect him to be 100% for the start of this season. With the video and the timing of a December injury/surgery, there is no way he will be his dominant self by Week 1. In fact, he may start camp on the PUP list but Titans fans should not worry as he will round into form. The team has a history of looking long term when it comes to health and have been patient in the past. When Jeffery Simmons fell in the draft after his spring ACL tear, the Titans drafted him and waited for him to be healthy. This strategy has paid dividends late in his rookie season and beyond. Perhaps the team can play Dupree selectively on the left side to start the season and use his healthy leg to get around the edge. It is harder for defensive players who have to react to return to full form. Our belief is he will be back but the early optimism is probably not realistic.
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