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Taylor A Longshot For NFL Draft

Football

Kevin Duffy

Issue date: 4/23/08 Section: Sports
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Larry Taylor's quick feet may find him a home in the NFL.
Media Credit: Ryan Sayers
Larry Taylor's quick feet may find him a home in the NFL.

On a rainy, Oct. 19 night at Rentchsler Field, Louisville punter Cory Goettshe boomed a punt to UConn's Larry Taylor. Taylor looked up into the sky and quickly waved his right hand in the air. Or did he?

Taylor's phantom fair-catch turned 71-yard touchdown scamper was played on every show on ESPN and written about in every major sports publication in the country. Millions of people witnessed Taylor's improbable punt return.

But perhaps Taylor's most important play of the year - at least for his draft stock - was made in front of just a handful of people.

The return specialist made a lasting impression on 17 NFL and CFL scouts at UConn's Pro Day on March 26 when he ran a 4.5 40-yard dash and pumped out an impressive 17 bench press reps of 225 pounds.

At just 5-foot-6, 175 pounds, Taylor credited his remarkable strength to a workout regimen he completed over winter break designed specifically to help increase endurance.

"I was maybe around six or seven [reps] going into the preparing and I got up to 17 with a lot of hard work, a lot of burnout repetitions, going until you can't go anymore," he said.

But despite the impressive showing - Taylor also looked good in pass and punt-catching drills - the "too small" label still follows him to the next level, as it did when he came to UConn.

Taylor enrolled in Storrs after a senior year at Glades Day high school in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., that saw him rush for 1,774 yards and 28 touchdowns and average a mind-boggling 43.9 yards per kickoff return. He finished fourth in Florida's Mr. Football voting. But somehow, when Taylor got here, doubts arose.

He was too small. He wasn't a running back. He wasn't a wide receiver. He didn't have breakaway speed. But it quickly became clear that Taylor had something that few others possessed-the uncanny ability to make people miss.

"It's just something you don't have to teach me," he said. "It's an instinct, just a blessing from God."

And Taylor's blessing carried him far throughout his career at UConn. As a true freshman, Taylor immediately earned the job as the team's punt returner and didn't take long to silence his doubters. Taylor finished his freshman season averaging 16.4 yards per punt return and 31.3 yards per kickoff return, which ranked second in the entire country. He scored on a 68-yard punt return in UConn's Motor City Bowl victory over Toledo.
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marco

posted 4/24/08 @ 9:45 PM EST

do you think larry taylor will get drafted in the nfl 2008 draft

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