And one more thing Dearborn, you may not want to make all your judgements based on stats alone or some blurb you googled. Two can play at that game. I've actually seen him play.
Here's one back at 'ya from ESPN:
Overall: Aromashodu started eight of the 13 games he played in during his true freshman season in 2002 and he played in all 13 games of the 2003 season. Aromashodu started all 13 games of the 2004 season, catching 24 passes for a total of 513 yards and four touchdowns. He also returned three kickoffs for a total of 85 yards. As a senior in 2005, Aromashodu finished with 494 yards and four TD's on 26 receptions. Aromashodu's biggest weakness is his unrealized potential, which could also be viewed as his biggest strength as an NFL prospect. While he has a very good combination of height, burst, agility and hands, he doesn't run great routes and he drops too many passes that he should catch. Aromashodu improved his value during his senior season, when he developed into Auburn's premier big-play receiver. He continued to improve his value with an outstanding
http://insider.espn.go.com/nfldraft/draft/tracker/player?id=9387&action=login&appRedirect=http%3a%2f%2finsider.espn.go.com%2fnfldraft%2fdraft%2ftracker%2fplayer%3fid%3d9387Yes, someone can say bullshit. I'll say it right now when it comes to thinking 83% catching eliminates the idea of the dropsies.
Derek Hagan = 94%
Chad Jackson = 96%