Mel Kiper Jr.

Mel Kiper Jr.

Kiper's Home Page | Bio | Chats

Mel Kiper Jr. has served as expert analyst for ESPN's annual NFL Draft coverage since 1984. His pre-draft predictions are frequently the most accurate. Kiper is also analyst for College GameDay on ESPN Radio. He also contributes to SportsCenter and ESPN.com.

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7 Results for kiper

Under center: Gridiron Bash, license plates, financial aid

Ivan Maisel, ESPN.com

...of Arkansas, Jonathan Stewart of Oregon and Rashard Mendenhall of Illinois -- all took up residence on Mel Kiper's big board. Jeff Harwell/US Presswire Kent State's Eugene Jarvis ran for 1,669 yards...

Page | Conversation

Tigers must overcome themselves to reach title games

Ivan Maisel, ESPN.com

LSU's escape at Alabama offered evidence that the team the Tigers must overcome to reach New Orleans is wearing purple and gold.

Story | Conversation | November 03, 2007

Early departure analysis fuels flood of e-mails

Ivan Maisel, ESPN.com

Why is Ivan Maisel's inbox full? Start with his take on which teams were hurt by early departures. Then add columns on Vince Young and Marcus Vick.

Story | Conversation | January 19, 2006

UVa's Prince emerges as leading candidate

Ivan Maisel, ESPN.com

Virginia offensive coordinator Ron Prince has emerged as the leading candidate to become head coach at Kansas State, two sources told ESPN.com.

Story | Conversation | November 30, 2005

Chile receptions and option QBs in the mailbag

Ivan Maisel, ESPN.com

The mailbag goes global this week with letters from Chile and the Royal Air Force as well as a question about the top 5 option QBs of all time.

Story | Conversation | May 05, 2004

A great QB is now a luxury, not a necessity

Ivan Maisel, ESPN.com

It's becoming more and more obvious that you don' t need a superstar quarterback to win a national title.

Story | Conversation | August 07, 2003

Early departures help some, hurt others

Ivan Maisel, ESPN.com

Some early entries hurt more than others. The teams that took the big hits ... and those that will be OK.

Story | Conversation | January 22, 2003