Signed up with this forum to address White and WVU's offense, since there's not much to see of him aside from his highlights and a few game tapes. I've seen every snap he's played over the past two years and I highly doubt there are any Bears fans on here who are also fanatical WVU fans.
Since everyone seems to worry about his limited route tree and him lining up on only the right side of the formation, here's the explanation for that. For as long as he's been an offensive coordinator, Dana Holgorsen has always had his #1 WR line-up on the same side as his QB's dominant hand. He did it with Justin Blackmon, did it with Michael Crabtree, did it with Stedman Bailey, the only WR I can recall that moved around alot is Tavon Austin, and he's the exception because of his versatility. His reasoning for that is to develop a better rapport between the QB and WR and make the game easier on both of them. There's only about 15-20 plays in Holgorsens playbook, but there's alot of different options and reads the QB and WRs have to make on the fly (there's a a run-pass read built in to almost every play and the WR normally has 3-4 different route options to run based on the defense's coverage), and there's tons of different personnel groups and formations they're ran out of. Having that one constant helps the QB make quicker reads knowing exactly where his #1 guy is at all times and helps the WR in knowing when and were he'll get the ball.
As far as White's route tree goes, here's mostly what he ran:
*2 screens. 1 was what I call a "tunnel screen" (no idea what the actual name is). Where he fires straight down the line of scrimmage, the center, right guard, and right tackle all go second level immediately, and depending on how it's picked up he either has the option to cut across the field and bounce it outside or slice between one of the lineman and cut it up (go watch his Maryland highlight, it's the play he scored a 60-yard TD on). The other was a classic WR screen (yet again no idea what most people call it. I've always referred to it as x-ray, because that's what it was called by my team when I played highschool ball), where he'd take a hard jab, face the QB, catch the ball, and turn up field following the other WRs blocking for him.
*9-route / fly / vertical / whatever the hell you want to call it. Normally had an outside release, had the option to come back towards the sideline or curl and sit in a gap in the coverage, but if he had 1-on-1 and no safety help, he was goin' deep every time with it. Most plays had a hot route option built in, where he'd go deep if he had 1-on-1, regardless of what was originally called. If he did have 1-on-1 running a nine, and the ball was well-thrown, he either caught it or was interfered. I don't think I ever remember him dropping one.
*Both 5 and 10-yard curls and 15-yard comebacks. Don't know how many were called vs how many were optioned into. I know alot of people say he needs to work on his curls, he wastes too much time chopping or his hips aren't fluid enough. But I also know he got open alot in college doing them, of course alot of that can be probably be attributed to other teams being terrified of him going deep, but that's a different story. He was also very good at getting extra yards on curls. Even in fairly tight coverage, he was able to slip out of tackles and get up field fast.
*Slants and posts. Didn't run 'em as much as the first three, but they were done occasionally. I've heard complaints that he rounds them instead of cutting them sharp, but makes up for it with his size and speed.
*Drags and shallow crosses. Yet again, not much, but they were there. We had problems with pass-protection, especially at tackle late in the year, so alot of the slower stuff over the middle was scrapped in favor of more quick-hitting curls, screens, and designed flys.
*Things I didn't see him run (at least not to my memory): fish-tails, post-corners, stop and go routes, routes with double moves, outs. It's not that he can't run 'em, it's just not part of the offense. Never was. Even Stedman Bailey, who was by far and above the best route-running WR a Holgorsen offense has ever had only did them sparingly.
As far as people worried that he's only a two-year player, here's my take. He only played highschool ball for a year or two, sat the bench his first year at Lackawanna and played well his second, was an average player who showed flashes his first year at WVU (was also mired with poor QB play that year, had one who dirtballed everything, one who had 2 starts panicked the first time he saw pressure and was shut down after he tore his pec muscle, and one who never grasped the offense and tore his labrum in his first start), and was arguably the best WR in college football in his second year. By all accounts he has a great attitude on and off the field, plays agressively and violently every play, works his ass off in the weight room and in practice, and responds very to coaching (as evidenced by his huge leap after his first full year in the program). He's already at a very high level with less than two years of quality coaching. If he's good enough to be a consensus top-10 pick with that little coaching, imagine the upside he has with NFL coaching on a team with a veteran QB and paired with a very good young WR in Alshon Jeffery.