George Pickens, the highly touted Georgia wide receiver, impressed many scouts when he clocked a 4.43 time in the 40-yard dash at the Draft Combine.He's less than a year removed from tearing the ACL in his right knee during his junior season with the Bulldogs, but looked explosive in his return to the public eye.Pickens missed the first 11 games of the season and was limited in his four appearances last in the season.It makes sense that people were impressed to see Pickens clock a good time in his first action since early 2021, but he still has some hurdles to clear in his ACL recovery, said Dr. David Chao, ProFootballDoc.While the speed is certainly impressive in a 6-foot-3, 200-pound wide receiver, the real key to his ACL is the ability to cut and decelerate on routes, Chao said.Teams will get another look at Pickens at Georgia's Pro Day on March 16, nearly a full year after Pickens underwent surgery.That will be key date for him to show that he's ready to go, Chao said, but he will certainly have more cutting ability when the season starts. The 21-year-old impressed in his freshman year with 49 receptions, 727 yards and 8 TDs. He followed that up with a 513-yard, 6-touchdown season in 8 games in 2020.He missed two games in 2020 with an unspecified upper body injury, but that injury shouldn't affect his draft stock.Pickens currently projects as an early-to-mid second round pick, but he could jump up to the late first round with an impressive Pro Day.Injury history data provided by the 2022 rookie injury guide written by Dr. Ethan Turner, PT, DPT. Twitter @ETurnerFF. If you'd like to learn more about the injury histories of the 2022 class you can pre order your copy here