Jimmy Smith

CB, FS · Colorado
Smith isn't lacking for much, especially in the confidence department. A self-proclaimed shutdown corner, Smith said he likes comparisons to Raiders All-Pro cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha, except for one thing: "I think I have better ball skills than he does." NFL scouts don't dispute Smith's physical attributes. He's long, lean, runs well and can tackle. What personnel men do have questions about is a track record of off-field issues. Smith was twice arrested while at Boulder for minor in possession charges, and failed a drug test in 2007, according to The Denver Post. He points out those issues all came during his first two years, and by all accounts Smith assumed a leadership role on the field for Colorado last season. "I went to college and I made some mistakes," he admits. "I've told (NFL team) I'm a great person. I was a young player who made young mistakes. But I grew as a person." He has had no known off-field issues since 2007, although he did skip the Senior Bowl and switched agents from Peter Schafer to Drew Rosenhaus. "It's not that Peter Schafer is not a good agent, I just didn't want him to represent me because he didn't do what need to be done," said Smith, who declined to elaborate. He was certainly asked to elaborate by NFL teams at the combine, and his answers to that question and others regarding his past will go a long way toward determining how much it detracts from his obvious physical skills. Smith's size enables him to line up against an opponent's biggest receiver, and he allowed just 11 completions in man-to-man coverage over the past two years. He didn't intercept any passes in 2010, but that was mostly because teams virtually stopped throwing his direction. "I feel like the sky is the limit for me as long as I do what I know I can do out there," said Smith. Former NFL cornerback Ashley Ambrose was Smith's defensive backs coach at CU, and he believes the young California native has what it takes to make it at the next level. Scouts believe he has the physical tools, noting that his size and length are exactly what teams look for in top-50 picks to neutralize large playmaking receivers on the outside, as he did against Georgia's talented A.J. Green when they matched up in 2010.