NFC South Draft Review

NFC South Draft Review

The Saints had four picks and three of them can actually help a team that seems like it is on the verge of a Super Bowl berth. They have had some bad beats the last few seasons but they are on the cusp and perhaps these guys push them over the hump. Carolina is entering a rebuild under Matt Rhule and they drafted some nice long-term pieces to make them better over the next five years or so. Tampa Bay had one thing in mind, make the team better right now for Tom Brady, they did that quite well. He will love Tristan Wirfs and Tyler Johnson especially. The Falcons made a questionable move up top with AJ Terrell, but he could turn out to be one of the better CBs in this draft. The rest of the draft was solid but they need a little more than solid if they want to get back into the thick of things in this division with New Orleans and Tampa Bay going for it right now.

Atlanta Falcons

(16) AJ Terrell    CB    Clemson
(47) Marlon Davidson    DL    Auburn
(78) Matt Hennessy    C/G    Temple
(119) Mykal Walker    LB    Fresno St.
(134) Jaylinn Hawkins    S    California
(228) Sterling Hofrichter    P    Syracuse

Immediate Impact: CB AJ Terrell
The Falcons cut Desmond Trufant in the off season and they waited until the draft to address that hole in their defense. They apparently couldn’t move up so they waited and took AJ Terrell at 16. This was a bit of a reach by most standards but as I said before the draft, after Okudah and Henderson there was wide variety of opinions about who the third CB was. Clearly, the Falcons like Terrell the best. He will have an impact because he will need to start and will likely be the #1 CB pretty quickly.

Best Value: C/G Matt Hennessy
Hennessy was one of the more underrated interior offensive linemen in the draft. It probably has to do with the fact he isn’t a physically imposing prospect. Hennessy is a technician who is best suited to play center, guard usually requires more physicality. The Falcons have Alex Mack at center and while he’s been a rock during his career, he is also turning 35 this year. Mack can still play and his presence will allow Hennessy to work on his strength and for now he can compete with James Carpenter at guard, but eventually he should be Mack’s replacement in a year or two.

Sleeper: S Jaylinn Hawkins
Hawkins played in the shadow of Ashtyn Davis at Cal but he’s got some skills himself. He has size, instincts and range that make him a sleeper prospect. It helps that he Falcons defense needs as much help as it can get. They had injuries all over the secondary last year and it really took a toll on the safety position. Hawkins can fill in a need if injuries occur again and if not, he’s great depth and a special team’s guy.

Overall Analysis
For most analysts AJ Terrell felt like a reach and he may have been but given the uncertainty at CB after the top two he has as good of a chance as any of them to become a legit #1 CB. He played high-level competition his entire career at Clemson so the transition to the NFL shouldn’t scare him. Is he a lockdown CB? Probably not. But other than Okudah I’m not putting money on any of the other CBs to be one, including CJ Henderson. The Marlon Davidson pick was a great one for the Falcons. On a team with plenty of issues up front on defense Davidson’s versatility is a good investment. He can play DT in their base 4-3 but he has experience as a DE so he can swing outside in some packages. Given the team’s plans to use Takk McKinley and Dante Fowler Jr. at DE, Marlon Davidson could see plenty of time outside on obvious running downs. Hennessy is an excellent pick down the road and that could be as early as the 2021 season as Alex Mack is aging. Love that pick. Mykal Walker is a LB with good straight-line speed but a little stiff side to side. He has the speed the Falcons like on defense I’m just not sure he uses it effectively. I really like the Hawkins pick, especially for a team that had so many secondary injuries last season. I normally don’t rag on a team for taking a punter in round seven but they have Ryan Allen already so Sterling Hofrichter is going to have to really puny well to make the team.

Carolina Panthers

(7) Derrick Brown    DT    Auburn
(38) Yetur Gross-Matos    DE    Penn St.
(64) Jeremy Chinn     S    Southern Illinois
(113) Troy Pride Jr.    CB    Notre Dame
(152) Kenny Robinson Jr.    S    West Virginia
(184) Bravvion Roy    DT    Baylor
(221) Stantley Thomas-Oliver III    CB    FIU

Immediate Impact: DT Derrick Brown, S Jeremy Chinn
Carolina’s defense hasn’t kept pace lately and they have really fallen behind on the defensive line. The team has gone from a 4-3 to a 3-4 and now likely back to 4-3. They needed help next to Kawann Short inside and they eventually need his replacement since he’s on the wrong side of 30. Brown is a power player with explosion and he makes the entire d-line better. The team cut Eric Reid in the off season which weakened the secondary even more. They drafted Chinn to replace him and he should do just that. Chinn is a superior athlete who’s only issue is he comes from a smaller school so there will be a period of adjustment.

Best Value: DE Yetur Gross-Matos
Gross-Matos could have easily been picked in the middle of round one and no one would have questioned it. He isn’t a fully developed player but he has plenty of potential. He also fills a huge need for the Panthers with Brian Burns the only true pass-rushing threat. Gross-Matos should complement Burns quite well as he has all the talents to be a good two-way DE, playing the run and pass well.

Sleeper: CB Troy Pride Jr.
The team has a pretty big hole to fill after James Bradberry left for big money in free agency. I liked the three players they took before they took Pride but they didn’t draft a CB early. There are still some veterans on the market but if they don’t sign anyone significant Pride has a shot to start opposite Donte Jackson. He’s good athlete who lacks some ball skills but he can cover. At the very least he’s a third CB and he’ll play a lot for being a fourth-round pick.

Overall Analysis
The Panthers spent plenty of time in free agency addressing their offense signing Teddy Bridgewater and Robby Anderson and trading for Russell Okung. They needed to address their defense and they did, using all seven picks on defense. Brown is an immediate starter and probably the best defensive linemen on the team. Gross-Matos fills a major need and they got him at a bargain. S Jeremy Chinn has been called the poor man’s Isaiah Simmons but he might be as good in the NFL. He steps right in at SS and brings great athleticism and size to the secondary. I really like the Troy Pride Jr. pick especially in the fourth round. He has starter potential and if he had better ball skills, he would have gone much higher. S Kenny Robinson is also a very athletic pick for the secondary, I’m sensing a theme with new coach Matt Rhule around. DT Bravvion Roy is 6’1 333 lbs. so he is basically a fire hydrant who can plant in the middle. The team isn’t very deep at DT so Roy might just stick around. Stantley Thomas-Oliver is a WR turned CB, he has the ball skills Pride lacks but he isn’t exactly refined in coverage. He will have an uphill climb.

New Orleans Saints

(24) Cesar Ruiz    C/G    Michigan
(74) Zack Baun    LB    Wisconsin
(105) Adam Trautman    TE    Dayton
(240) Tommy Stevens    QB    Mississippi St.

Immediate Impact: C/G Cesar Ruiz
The Saints are becoming the envy of all teams when it comes to offensive linemen. Ruiz adds to an already impressive interior line with Andrus Peat and Erik McCoy. Peat is only 26 while McCoy is entering his second year and now Ruiz comes in at RG as a rookie. Ruiz is probably better suited for center but McCoy already took over that spot last season and played pretty well. The team cut Pro Bowl guard Larry Warford to save $7 million and open a spot for Ruiz. That’s a lot of confidence in an incoming rookie.

Best Value: LB Zach Baun
Baun had first-round potential and somehow the Saints got him in the third round. He is a guy with a non-stop motor and is an effective pass rusher. He can come in a learn from Demario Davis who has become a very effective LB and blitzer for the Saints. The team is looking to generate pass rush to help Cam Jordan and Baun can be a major help there. Also, he’s not just a pass rusher, he can play as a traditional LB because he’s smart and he never quits.

Sleeper: TE Adam Trautman
The team has Jared Cook who is an effective pass catcher and Josh Hill who does a little of everything but Trautman has some great skills. He is very fast for his size and he’s a heck of a pass catcher. He may not make a huge splash this year but he could be the eventual replacement for Cook as Cook is an aging player.

Overall Analysis
When your draft only has four picks it’s hard to pretend it’s a game changer for your franchise but the Saints roster was pretty set and these guys just fill a few gaps. Ruiz is another building block in front of Drew Brees and moving forward for whatever the team decides to do moving forward at QB. Baun and Trautman are guys who have excellent potential moving forward and can help situationally right now. As far as QB Tommy Stevens goes, that was a wasted pick. And the team traded back into the seventh-round to get him supposedly because Sean Payton wanted to keep other teams from getting him. That’s a waste as far as I’m concerned considering with Brees, Jameis Winston and Taysom Hill already on the roster there is no chance they keep Stevens and that means if someone really did want him as a seventh rounder or a undrafted free agent they can just sign him after the Saints cut him in the fall. The belief is that the Saints, along with other teams, see Stevens as a Taysom Hill type of player. That’s a reach because he isn’t the athlete Hill is, he doesn’t have a great arm and I doubt he’s really going to become a special team’s guy. Taysom Hill is a rare breed in the NFL and trying to replicate him is a fool’s errand. If you’re going to waste a seventh-round pick at least take a WR or a LB who might make the roster or actually help on special teams.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

(13) Tristan Wirfs    OT    Iowa
(45) Antoine Winfield    S    Minnesota
(76) Ke’Shawn Vaughn    RB    Vanderbilt
(161) Tyler Johnson    WR    Minnesota
(194) Khalil Davis    DT    Nebraska
(241) Chapelle Russell    LB    Temple
(245) Raymond Calais    RB    Louisiana-Lafayette

Immediate Impact: OT Tristan Wirfs, S Antoine Winfield
I’m not sure if you heard but the Buccaneers let Jameis Winston go and they signed some soon-to-be 43-year-old QB named Tom Brady. When your new QB is 43 and wasn’t ever considered fleet-of-foot you have to invest in some protection. Tristan Wirfs is a high-ceiling player who will step right in at RT and will quickly become the best offensive lineman on the team. Wirfs is a monster and the team just got a lot better up front and that will not only help Brady passing but will also help the running game tremendously. Winfield is going to have to fight for a starting spot with Justin Evans returning from injury and Mike Edwards not being too bad last year but Winfield will find playing time. He’s a deep cover safety who can help in so many ways and the defense needs his skill set.

Best Value: WR Tyler Johnson
At Minnesota Rashod Bateman became a star WR this last season but it has been Tyler Johnson who was the reliable playmaker and producer for several years. He isn’t the biggest or the tallest guy but he runs routes well and he doesn’t lose contested catches to anyone. There is a lot of talk about how great Mike Evans and Chris Godwin are for Tom Brady but at WR there isn’t much else. The team lost Adam Humphries to free agency last year and never replaced him. Johnson is fantastic in the slot and he will become a Tom Brady favorite because of his route running proficiency. Brady has made the career of many slot WRs and many of them were guys like Johnson, they don’t win with their overall athletic traits, they win with knowing how to play the position.

Sleeper: RB Ke’Shawn Vaughn
The Bucs have Ronald Jones II at RB and not much else. Dare Ogunbowale is decent depth but he’s a niche player, not a full-time guy. Vaughn doesn’t stand out at anything he does but he gets yards. He rarely falls backwards and he doesn’t dance around looking for yards, he takes what the defense gives him. This offense needs a guy who will get four yards and just take it to keep the offense moving. It’s not that Vaughn is a power back he’s just a guy that sees the hole and hits the hole and doesn’t need a lot of room to move through it. I like Vaughn and I haven’t been very impressed with the rest of Bucs RBs so Vaughn could make some noise pretty quickly.

Overall Analysis
Tristan Wirfs has the ability to become one of the best RTs in the NFL pretty quickly in his career. He just turned 21 and yet he has two and half years of starting experience in the Big Ten and he’s just scratching the surface. He also has the athleticism and versatility to eventually move to LT if the Bucs need him there. Antoine Winfield is such a versatile defender in the secondary it’s scary to think of what a great defensive mind like defensive coordinator Todd Bowles can do with him. Bowles is a wizard with defensive backs and Winfield should be fantastic under his tutelage. Vaughn and Johnson add to an already talented group of skill position players and they really complement WRs Evans and Godwin and RB Jones. Throw in TEs Rob Gronkowski, Cameron Brate and for now OJ Howard and Tom Brady has the embarrassment of riches he was begging the Patriots for over the last several years. The Bucs aren’t stacked at d-line so Khalil Davis gives them a little depth. Chapelle Russell is a fluid LB who sort of fits the Bucs mold as they like athletic LBs who can run. RB Raymond Calais is unlike the other backs on the team as he is small, shifty and has great speed. He might have to make the team as a return man but he has a skill set that is a bit like James White or Dion Lewis so if he can show something on offense Tom Brady may find a way to use him.

AFC East Draft Review

AFC East Draft Review

When a team trades their first-round pick for a #1 WR and still ends up with a first-round talent in the second round of the draft, that’s a pretty good draft day. The Bills did just that with Stefon Diggs and AJ Epenesa, throw in a good RB a solid backup QB and some other potential contributors and that’s an excellent draft weekend. Miami had a lot of picks and they did very well with them. A QB, a new LT, offensive line depth all over and some nice additions to a defense that did quite well in free agency and the Dolphins rebuild is in good shape. The Jets fills some huge needs with a new LT Mekhi Becton and WR Denzel Mims. They even covered themselves at safety with Ashtyn Davis in case the Jamal Adams situation goes bad. Solid additions to a team that needed it. The Patriots did what the Patriots do, they traded out of the first round and then picked guys they wanted with little regard for where they were valued by others. It doesn’t always work, especially in the early rounds but Bill Belichick hasn’t made any trades for other team’s draft mistakes and then revived them so give him time. He’s much better at taking someone else’s bust and turning them into a player, Kyle Van Noy was the latest one. I’m waiting for him to steal Josh Rosen at the trade deadline if Stidham looks like he’s in over his head.

Buffalo Bills

(54) AJ Epenesa    DE    Iowa
(86) Zack Moss    RB    Utah
(128) Gabriel Davis    WR    UCF
(167) Jake Fromm    QB    Georgia
(188) Tyler Bass    K     Georgia Southern
(207) Isaiah Hodgins    WR    Oregon St.
(239) Dane Jackson    CB    Pittsburgh

Immediate Impact: DE AJ Epenesa, RB Zack Moss
Epenesa isn’t going to start with Mario Addison and Jerry Hughes set at DE but both of them are aging DEs that will need to rotate out and Epenesa can play either side of the line and play DT on passing downs. He brings a lot of versatility to a defensive line that needs more depth, he’ll get plenty of snaps. The Bills let Frank Gore go after watching Devin Singletary be more effective in his rookie year. However, Singletary is a smaller back who has a myriad of skills and while he’s a physical runner he would be better off not taking so many hard hits. Moss is a bigger back with the physical skills to excel between the tackles and allow Singletary to save his touches for the outside runs where he is highly effective.

Best Value: DE AJ Epenesa
I don’t care what the stop watch at the combine says AJ Epenesa should have been a first round pick. Every team that passed on him is going to regret it. On a team like the Bills who have multiple defensive linemen over the age of thirty Epenesa is going to be a great rotational piece at multiple positions and eventually he’ll be a starter. The Bills didn’t have a first-round pick but they got one anyway.

Sleeper: CB Dane Jackson
The Bills have star CB Tre’Davious White but they are counting on the recently signed Josh Norman to come in and resurrect his career opposite White. That’s a big gamble for a team that is poised to move to the top of the AFC East with the Patriots looking vulnerable. They don’t have a lot of depth either which means Jackson has a chance to stick around an contribute. He can play inside and out and while he isn’t the biggest or the fastest CB, he’s a fighter and that might be enough to get on the field.

Overall Analysis
Epenesa can be the steal of the draft and I love the Moss pick, he’s a great fit for this roster. The Bills are trying to make a move in the AFC at just the right time as the East is wide open with the Patriots in transition. You can’t evaluate this draft without acknowledging the fact the team traded their first-round pick for Stefon Diggs. Diggs is the best overall WR they have had in a while and bringing him in makes John Brown that much better because it takes the focus off of him, Brown is a hell of a #2 WR. It also makes Cole Beasley that much more effective in the slot. Great move at the right time for the team and especially for their QB. WR Gabriel Davis has some talent and he should either push for playing time or push guys like Duke Williams and Isaiah McKenzie to step it up to keep their spots. QB Jake Fromm was a great get in the fifth round. At worst he’s an upgrade as a backup over Matt Barkley and at best he might be a great insurance policy if Josh Allen never takes the next step in his development. They took a kicker which is weird because they already have a couple. WR Isaiah Hodgins is going to need an out-of-this-world performance to make the roster. CB Dane Jackson was solid seventh-round choice.

Miami Dolphins

(5) Tua Tagovailoa    QB    Alabama
(18) Austin Jackson    OT    USC
(30) Noah Igbinoghene    CB    Auburn
(39) Robert Hunt    OL    Louisiana-Lafayette
(56) Raekwon Davis    DT    Alabama
(70) Brandon Jones    S    Texas
(111) Solomon Kindley    OG    Georgia
(154) Jason Strowbridge    DL    North Carolina
(164) Curtis Weaver    OLB    Boise St.
(185) Blake Ferguson    LS    LSU
(246) Malcolm Perry    WR    Navy

Immediate Impact: QB Tua Tagovailoa, OT Austin Jackson, OL Robert Hunt
I’m not sure how immediate Tua’s impact will be but knowing Ryan Fitzpatrick’s usual M.O. he will play well early and then fall apart and Tua will step in. If Tua is healthy, he’s fantastic, that’s a big if. Austin Jackson isn’t a ready-made player but he’s by far the best option at LT and when your QB of the future has past injury issues, you go with the best man for the job. He will start at LT and push Julie’n Davenport over to compete at RT. OL Robert Hunt is an intriguing prospect, he played OT in college and most assume he will move inside to guard in the NFL. However, in Miami I think he might just compete with Davenport and Jesse Davis for the RT spot and then if he doesn’t win it, he could end up at RG. I think Hunt will prove to be one of the five best offensive linemen on the team, it’s more about what’s the best lineup overall.

Best Value: OLB Curtis Weaver
I do not know how this guy got all the way to the fifth round of the draft. I’m a little upset the Patriots passed on him several times. He is definitely a Patriots type player, evidenced by the fact that Brian Flores’ team took him. Weaver isn’t a flashy speed rusher off the edge but he’s an effective one. He had first-round potential and I’m not completely certain why he fell this far. The Dolphins signed Kyle Van Noy for one OLB spot but Weaver will give Vince Biegel a run for the other side. If not, he’s a fantastic third OLB for this team. Great pick, phenomenal value.

Sleeper: OG Solomon Kindley
The Dolphins signed Ereck Flowers to big free agent deal to come in and play LG, a position he admittedly played well at last year for the Redskins. Flowers resurrected his career with a solid half of a season stepping in for the Redskins after some injuries. Flowers was a colossal bust for the previous 4.5 years of his career flaming out with the Giants and Jaguars. Let’s just say I’m skeptical of his career turnaround. Kindley is a mammoth human being who moves surprising well for a guy who is 6’3 337 lbs. He is built like an ox and his strength is beyond NFL caliber. Both Flowers and incumbent RG Michael Dieter could be beaten out for their job and while Robert Hunt could be an OG or OT, Solomon Kindley is a guard for sure and I really like his odds of becoming a starter.

Overall Analysis
Obviously, when a team takes a QB with a top five pick that draft is going to be judged by the success of that QB. In this case it’s going to be judged by Tua’s health initially. However, this draft might end up having enough good players to overcome any issues Tua has moving forward. They did draft two of the most important positions in the NFL with their first two picks so this is a very important draft for the future of the team. They took a risk on Tua and OT Austin Jackson isn’t a sure thing either. I really like Jackson and I think he has elite skills that just need a little more time to develop but if both Tua and Jackson fail, everyone in Miami will be looking for jobs in a couple of years. Their third first-round pick Igbinoghene has loads of potential but with Xavien Howard and Byron Jones at CB he’ll have to make his mark as the nickel corner and that’s no sure thing. Veteran Bobby McCain isn’t going to hand over that job without a fight. I do love the fact that in addition to a new LT they also drafted Hunt and Kindley. Hunt has lots of versatility and potential and while Kindley may never be a Pro Bowl regular he could end up a 10-year starter in the NFL. All three of those guys make Tua feel safer. DT Raekwon Davis isn’t flashy but he plays nose tackle and those guys rarely are flashy. He may have gone too soon in the second round but keep in mind he was actually the Dolphins fifth pick overall and they had no backing up Davon Godchaux at NT. If you don’t believe me take a look at who they signed as undrafted free agents, two NTs (Benito Jones and Ray Lima). They know they need some options there. S Brandon Jones is another guy that simply isn’t flashy. He’s not a great athlete but he’s smart and he knows where to be. The team isn’t stacked at safety and Jones’ intelligence will be a welcome addition. Brian Flores learned from Belichick and Belichick loves smart safeties. DL Jason Strowbridge is a solid investment in a developmental player, even if he ends up on the practice squad. Usually drafting a long snapper is a little crazy but when you have 11 picks you might as well take one when you need one because Blake Ferguson is going to end up being your long snapper and that means you drafted a starter. WR Malcolm Perry is a nice story of a great QB out of Navy who is going to try to make an NFL team at a different position. Taking a hard-working, intelligent, respectful guy that Perry is only good news for your team, even if he doesn’t make the roster, he sets a tone in training camp. He’s a longshot but who doesn’t want to cheer for a longshot out of the Naval Academy.

New England Patriots

(37) Kyle Dugger    S    Lenoir-Rhyne
(60) Josh Uche    OLB    Michigan
(87) Anfernee Jennings    LB    Alabama
(91) Devin Asiasi    TE    UCLA
(101) Dalton Keene    TE    Virginia Tech
(159) Justin Rohrwasser    K    Marshall
(182) Michael Onwenu    OG    Michigan
(195) Justin Herron    OL    Wake Forest
(204) Cassh Maluia    LB    Wyoming
(230) Dustin Woodard    OL    Memphis

Immediate Impact: OLB Josh Uche
This kid is a tailor-made Bill Belichick LB. He can run sideline-to-sideline as a LB and also rush the passer from the edge when need be. He’s basically the replacement for Kyle Van Noy which is a good thing because right now the Patriots have Brandon Copeland and Shilique Calhoun penciled in to start at OLB. Those two aren’t scaring anyone. I see Uche stepping in rather quickly, he won’t be Van Noy but he’s better than the rest of the group.

Best Value: ?????
Yeah, I got nothing here. Belichick likes his kind of players which doesn’t usually match up with what others like and where they are valued. Uche is the best player they got and he came about where he was expected to go, mid to late second round.

Sleeper: S Kyle Dugger
It’s weird to call a player who was over-drafted a sleeper, especially a second rounder but Duggar is a Belichick special. Most teams had him late second or in the third round, not top five of the second round. However, in Belichick’s hands Duggar could be very good. He isn’t a traditional safety and most teams are looking for more coverage-oriented safeties but Belichick likes the guys who can hit. Patrick Chung has made a very long career being a Belichick guy, a big, smart safety that tackles and knows where to line up and where to go. Duggar is basically a far more athletic version of Chung. Patrick Chung is 32, Belichick just drafted his replacement and if Duggar works out, he could be an All-Pro by the time his career is over.

Overall Analysis
Once again Bill Belichick is a mystery at the draft. The visual during the draft whenever they cut to Belichick’s house was usually his laptop sitting at the table with his dog sitting in the seat. If you told me his dog was pushing buttons on the keyboard with his paw to pick players, I wouldn’t doubt you for a second. It’s hard to disagree with a guy that has put together six Super Bowl winners but let’s just say he has proven to be great coach considering he’s won six Super Bowls with the players Belichick the GM has given him to work with. Duggar has immense potential. Uche fits the defensive system like a glove. LB Anfernee Jennings was severely over-drafted especially considering he’s a whole lot like Juwan Bentley who is an athletically limited MLB who struggles in coverage. TE Devin Asiasi is a solid prospect but he was the second TE off the board, he wasn’t the second best TE in the draft. Then they drafted another TE ten picks later, the fourth off the board but not the fourth best TE. They took a kicker, they needed a kicker, but by all accounts, Rohrwasser wasn’t the best kicker. Onwenu and Herron were solid depth picks for a team that doesn’t have a lot of depth on the offensive line and both could develop into future starters. Cassh Maluia isn’t making the team unless he’s a special team’s demon. Dustin Woodard is a seriously undersized offensive lineman who only has a chance to make the team because David Andrews is the only other center on the roster.

New York Jets

(11) Mekhi Becton    OT    Louisville
(59) Denzel Mims    WR    Baylor
(68) Ashtyn Davis    S    California
(79) Jabari Zuniga    OLB    Florida
(120) Lamical Perine    RB    Florida
(125) James Morgan    QB    FIU
(129) Cameron Clark    OL    UNC-Charlotte
(158) Bryce Hall    CB    Virginia
(191) Braden Mann    P    Texas A&M

Immediate Impact: OT Mekhi Becton, WR Denzel Mims
Becton is a freak athlete for a man his size and he has great length, great feet and good power, he looks like an all-world type of LT. The biggest concern is keeping his weight under control so he can continue to dominate. He has some technique work to do but that is not a huge worry. He has All-Pro potential and probably has the highest ceiling of any of the top four OTs from this draft. He might also have the biggest bust potential. Mims is another fantastic athlete (there was a theme to many of the Jets’ picks). He comes in to replace Robbie Anderson’s production, although the team did sign Breshad Perriman to help do that too. Mims is a big, fast WR who was highly productive in Baylor’s high-powered offense. He’s going to have to work on using his own skills to get open and not relying as heavily on the scheme, that’s the big difference between college and the NFL.

Best Value: CB Bryce Hall
I might be wrong about this is Hall’s ankle injury from last year has any lasting effects but this kid is a player. If he doesn’t get injured, he competes with CJ Henderson to be the second CB off the board, he’s that good. The Jets somehow lucked into him in the fifth round. They signed Pierre Desir after he was cut by the Colts and they have Brian Poole as their nickel corner but they don’t have much else at CB. As long as Hall is healthy, I think he wins a starting job, and he was a fifth-round pick (I still can’t believe it). Hall isn’t the fastest player but he sticks to guys like glue. There was once a CB named Derrell Revis who wasn’t really a speed guy either but somehow, he made it work. That’s a pretty lofty expectation for Hall but I’m just pointing out you don’t have to be a great CB.

Sleeper: One of the Florida guys (Zuniga or Perine)
Zuniga has all the tools you look for in a pass rusher but he was highly inconsistent. He looks the part of an outside pass rusher but somehow, he just disappears during games. Perine isn’t great at anything but he’s not bad at anything either. The Jets are spending too much money on LeVeon Bell so they are going to use him and they just signed Frank Gore, even though he’s 147 years old. Perine is a great backup option and I think he can be a bit more. Think of guys like Raheem Mostert or Chris Carson who aren’t great at any one thing but are pretty effective.

Overall Analysis
The Jets started off with some guys with some really high upside. Becton could be a star at LT and Mims certainly checks plenty of boxes when it comes to impressive looking WRs. Ashtyn Davis was a star track sprinter at Cal before walking on to the football team. He didn’t work out at the combine but if he had he would have been one of the most impressive athletes to ever compete there. The team has Jamal Adams and Marcus Maye but Adams is going to get really expensive here pretty soon and the team has to decide where to spend its money. Davis could be a fantastic replacement for one of them. Zuniga and Perine are good players that will have to find their place to make a difference. The Jets are far from stacked at either position so both players should make the roster it’s just a matter of how much they contribute. James Morgan is a curious choice considering Sam Darnold is so young but the Jets only have David Fales behind him so a developmental QB might make the team. However, I think they may want to find a better veteran backup than Fales. Cameron Clark might be able to give them some depth on the interior offensive line, this team can’t be too particular when looking for quality depth there, they don’t have much else. Hall was a gigantic steal, as a Patriots fan I hate that they got him. They took a punter with a sixth-round pick. They needed a punter but they probably should have used that pick elsewhere. Perhaps Braden Mann will be their punter for the next 20 years but it’s a better bet they could have found someone else as an undrafted free agent.

NFC West Draft Review

NFC West Draft Review

No one from the NFC West is building a contender from this draft but most of them don’t have to because they were well on their way. Arizona got some nice players to put around Kyler Murray and DeAndre Hopkins, on both offense and defense. The 49ers were in the Super Bowl last year and replaced their two biggest free agent losses with younger, cheaper versions of those guys. The Seahawks had another unorthodox draft but it seems to work for them. The Rams are in transition and it’s going to be a bumpy ride. This draft class isn’t going to turn around their fortunes but there are some solid players in this group.

Arizona Cardinals

(8) Isaiah Simmons    LB    Clemson
(72) Josh Jones    OT    Houston
(114) Leki Fotu    DL    Utah
(131) Rashard Lawrence   DL    LSU
(202) Evan Weaver   LB    California
(222) Eno Benjamin    RB    Arizona St.

Immediate Impact: LB Isaiah Simmons
Simmons could change the trajectory of the entire Cardinals defense. He can play all over the field and while he will line up at LB, he’s chess piece the team can move all over. He can drop into coverage, blitz off the edge and chase down any RB in the league. Within his own division he’ll be covering George Kittle one week and trying to chase down Russell Wilson the next. He’s a perfect defender for today’s NFL.

Best Value: OT Josh Jones
Seriously? The guy had first-round ability and the Cardinals got him in round three. The team has Marcus Gilbert set to play RT but he’s 32 and he missed last season with an injury. Jones can take that job pretty quickly and he is so much more talented than a third-round pick. He isn’t flashy but he’s good. The team needs to protect Kyler Murray and they lucked into a starting caliber RT with the 72nd overall pick.

Sleeper: RB Eno Benjamin
They are bringing back Kenyan Drake after trading for him last season and they have Chase Edmunds but Benjamin is good enough to push Edmunds down the depth chart. He’s not the biggest RB in the world but he’s actually the same size as Edmunds. Benjamin carried the load at Arizona St. the last two years and proved that his size isn’t a detriment to him being a full-time player. He has a multitude of skills and he’ll find a place in what should be a high-powered Arizona offense.

Overall Analysis
Sometimes it’s better to be lucky than good and the Cardinals got lucky plenty of times in the draft. Simmons falling to 8th overall makes him a steal. Then they didn’t have a second-round pick but they end up with a first-round talent in OT Josh Jones at a position of need in round three. The two d-lineman, Leki Fotu and Rashard Lawrence aren’t household names but they add some heft and some run-stopping prowess to defensive line that needed it badly. LB Evan Weaver is an underrated player because he’s not a superior athlete but when you can potentially play him with uber-athlete Simmons that drastically reduces the problem of his athletic limitations. RB Benjamin is legitimately the best seventh-round pick of the year. This draft was damn good overall. It wasn’t a big class but it is a good one.

Los Angeles Rams

(52) Cam Akers    RB    Florida St.
(57) Van Jefferson   WR    Florida
(84) Terrell Lewis    OLB    Alabama
(104) Terrell Burgess    S    Utah
(136) Brycen Hopkins    TE    Purdue
(199) Jordan Fuller    S    Ohio St.
(234) Clay Johnston   LB    Baylor
(248) Sam Sloman    K    Miami-OH
(250) Tremayne Anchrum    OL    Clemson

Immediate Impact: RB Cam Akers, OLB Terrell Lewis
The Rams can pretend they really like the combination of Malcolm Brown and Darrell Henderson at RB but Akers is the more talented back. I don’t think it will take him long to take the starting job. Brown is the bigger power back while Henderson is the smaller shiftier guy but Akers is good at both. He would allow Brown to be the short-yardage back and Henderson to be the third-down specialist. Lewis has to be more consistent and stay healthy but the Rams lost Dante Fowler Jr. and cut Clay Matthews so they need someone to bring the pressure from the OLB spot. DE Aaron Donald shouldn’t have to be the lone focus for offenses to stop. Lewis might not be the biggest impact player but they need him pretty badly.

Best Value: OLB Terrell Lewis
Lewis has first-round talent the only thing that held him back was his injury history. It’s certainly a concern but if he’s healthy, on this roster, he’s a starter. That’s pretty good value for a third-round pick.

Sleeper: TE Brycen Hopkins
He’s a sleeper here because the team already has Tyler Higbee and Gerald Everett at TE so no one is expecting a lot from Hopkins. He was only a fourth-round pick but he’s got plenty of skills. He runs good routes and he’s a very good athlete. He will be hard to handle in the passing game and while he’s not a great blocker he is willing and that’s half the battle. The biggest concern with him is that he’s the type of guy who will make a tough catch one play and then drop a routine one the next play. He needs to work on his consistency catching the ball. Higbee and Everett are young guys but their contracts will be coming up soon and the team has some salary cap issues. Hopkins would be a cheap alternative if they decide not to bring one of these guys back in the next couple of years.

Overall Analysis
I love the Cam Akers pick considering the team had to let Todd Gurley go. Malcolm Brown and Darrell Henderson are nice complementary backs but Akers is a better overall talent. The Van Jefferson pick was also a solid choice. Jefferson isn’t flashy and he was almost a forgotten man in a draft so stocked with WR talent. However, Jefferson is a technician at WR which probably comes from the fact his father, Shawn Jefferson, was a long-time NFL WR and is now a WR coach. The team traded Brandin Cooks and while Jefferson won’t outright replace him, he does offer nice depth and he could compete with Josh Reynolds to be the third WR behind Robert Woods and Cooper Kupp. Obviously, I like the Lewis and Hopkins picks and that is mostly because while they have their issues the team didn’t overdraft either one and they both have great upside. The team took S Terrell Burgess in round three and S Jordan Fuller in round six. Burgess is a CB sized safety with good coverage skills while Fuller is the bigger, more physical safety. Considering the team doesn’t have much beyond starters Taylor Rapp and John Johnson, these were very solid picks. Clayton Johnston is a coverage LB I’m not sure makes the roster. The took a kicker, they needed a kicker so I won’t argue with taking one in round seven. The one spot that stands out as a problem with this draft is that while the team clearly needed some help on the offensive line, they only drafted one and it was Tremayne Anchrum in the seventh round. LT Andrew Whitworth is 38 years old and LG Austin Corbett was a bust in Cleveland the Rams traded for last year. This team needed more than a developmental seventh-rounder.

San Francisco 49ers

(14) Javon Kinlaw    DT   South Carolina
(25) Brandon Aiyuk    WR    Arizona St.
(153) Colton McKivitz    OL   West Virginia
(190) Charlie Woerner    TE    Georgia
(217) Jauan Jennings    WR    Tennessee

Immediate Impact: DT Javon Kinlaw, WR Brandon Aiyuk
The 49ers traded for the 13th pick which they then flipped to Tampa Bay to move down one spot and still get the player they wanted. In that trade they gave up DeForest Buckner and Kinlaw is a younger and cheaper version of Buckner. He could become a starter rather quickly or just be one of the many talented d-linemen they like to rotate. The team moved up at the end of the first round to grab WR Brandon Aiyuk out of Arizona St. because the need a playmaker. They got Emmanuel Sanders last year and he really helped but he left for the Saints and that left Deebo Samuel to fend for himself. Aiyuk is a big play monster and he’s actually a pretty good blocker for a WR, that will help on a team that loves to run.

Best Value: None
When you only have five picks it’s hard to find great value. It was a pretty good move to pick up a pick for the 13th spot and still get Javon Kinlaw, the guy they would have taken at 13.

Sleeper: OT Colton McKivitz
There isn’t a lot to choose from with only five picks but I like McKivitz. He shouldn’t play this season since the team traded for Trent Williams to play LT and they have Mike McGlinchy entrenched at RT and that’s good because McKivitz is a bit of a project. Williams will be 32 this season so they should be looking at a long-term replacement there. McKivitz looks the part as he’s 6’6 and move quite well. He can be their swing tackle for now and develop over the next several years. He may not be the long-term solution but he’s worth a shot.

Overall Analysis
Kinlaw and Aiyuk fill a couple of key holes for a team that went to the Super Bowl last year but this draft probably doesn’t move the needle overall for the team. They are still good and they will still heavily rely on their run game. Kinlaw and Aiyuk are much cheaper replacements for veterans DeForest Buckner and Emmanuel Sanders so that helps the team moving forward. McKivitz is worth a shot but I feel like Woerner and Jennings are longshots for the roster. The team isn’t extremely deep at either WR or TE but it will be an uphill battle to make a Super Bowl roster.

Seattle Seahawks

(27) Jordyn Brooks    LB    Texas Tech
(48) Darrell Taylor    DE    Tennessee
(69) Damien Lewis    OG    LSU
(133) Colby Parkinson    TE    Stanford
(144) DeeJay Dallas    RB    Miami
(148) Alton Robinson    DE    Syracuse
(214) Freddie Swain    WR    Florida
(251) Stephen Sullivan    TE    LSU

Immediate Impact: OG Damien Lewis
This speaks volumes about the Seahawks draft overall but I’ll get to that. The team drafted Lewis to bring some power and nastiness to the interior offensive line. Lewis is a beast on the inside and he should start right away after the team cut DJ Fluker after drafting Lewis. He was a part of the best offensive line in college football last season at LSU and he should be a starter for the next decade in the NFL.

Best Value: Maybe TE Colby Parkinson
Parkinson is a tall, rangy athlete that could turn into a valuable asset in the passing game. He’s long and has a giant catch radius which Russell Wilson should find useful. The team got him in the fourth round and he has starter potential down the road. The one roadblock is the Seahawks have quite a few bodies at TE and while newly signed Greg Olsen should start easily Parkinson might find it difficult breaking through so many players to find snaps as a backup. He was well worth the fourth-round pick they used on him.

Sleeper: DE Alton Robinson
Robinson is a fifth round pick out of Syracuse that showed flashes of pass rushing ability that could be quite useful to the Seahawks who are counting on LJ Collier and Bruce Irvin to be their main source of pressure. The team took Darrell Taylor from Tennessee in round two but I actually think they got a better deal with Robinson in round five and he could break out. He needs to be more consistent but if the team coaches him up a bit, they may find a steal.

Overall Analysis
Evaluations of Jordan Brooks were all over the place and as they usually do, the Seahawks zig when everyone else zagged. Brooks could be a good player but the Seahawks have Bobby Wagner and KJ Wright set at two starting LB spots with Shaquem Griffin and Ben Burr-Kirven set to compete for the other spot so Brooks might not contribute much next season. For a team looking to compete for a Super Bowl title they may have spent their first-round pick on a guy that sits on the bench next season. Darrell Taylor fits a need as a DE but there were better DEs available. This team has a weird idea of what they want off the edge. Taylor was extremely inconsistent and disappears for long stretches. The Lewis pick was great, he is exactly what they need for their power running game and they finally invested in the offensive line. I like Parkinson’s potential; I just hope he can navigate his way to some playing time. DeeJay Dallas is proof the Seahawks like average RBs. Chris Carson, Rashaad Penny, Travis Homer and DeeJay Dallas, yeah, he fits right in. Robinson is a boom or bust pick but if you’re going to take an inconsistent edge player it’s better to do it in round five not round two. WR Freddie Swain and TE Stephen Sullivan are going to find it hard to make the roster considering the depth the Seahawks have at WR and TE.

AFC North Draft Review

AFC North Draft Review

Once again, the Ravens had a fantastic draft, they always do. It doesn’t seem to matter if it’s Ozzie Newsome or Eric DeCosta making the picks, they are just really good at it. They picked players at LB that will help immediately, they got a very valuable RB, and they got depth at d-line, o-line and WR. Well done Ravens. They Bengals are resetting their franchise with Joe Burrow leading the way. They got him some help at WR and some much-needed help at LB. I’m not the biggest fan of Jedrick Wills moving to LT but the rest of the Browns picks are quite good. They can really help the team moving forward. The Steelers took some solid players but they didn’t take anyone in the draft that is going to change the trajectory of the team. They did trade their first-round pick for Minkah Fitzpatrick and he certainly changed their defense last season when he showed up. He’s the best safety the team has had since Troy Polamalu.

Baltimore Ravens

(28) Patrick Queen    LB    LSU
(55) JK Dobbins    RB    Ohio St.
(71) Justin Madubuike    DL     Texas A&M
(92) Devin Duvernay    WR    Texas
(98) Malik Harrison    LB    Ohio St.
(106) Tyre Phillips     OL    Mississippi St.
(143) Ben Bredeson    OG    Michigan
(170) Broderick Washington Jr.    DL   Texas Tech
(201) James Proche    WR    SMU
(219) Geno Stone    S    Iowa

Immediate Impact: LB Patrick Queen, LB Malik Harrison
Baltimore has always had great defenses but the 2020 version was looking at a major liability at inside linebacker, until the draft. Patrick Queen is a no-doubt starter at ILB but they didn’t stop there, Malik Harrison should start too. Queen is the sideline-to-sideline player who will tackle everything in sight. Harrison is the block-shedding monster who will attack the line of scrimmage in the run game and come downhill. These two are going to complement each other extremely well and they will start together relegating LJ Fort and Chris Board to backup roles where they belong.

Best Value: LB Malik Harrison
The Ravens always have a great draft because they do better than everybody else in the middle rounds of the draft. Harrison was a third-round pick but he was actually the team’s fifth choice overall. Harrison is a starter for them at a position of need and they got him 98th overall, that’s awesome value.

Sleepers: OG Ben Bredeson, S Geno Stone
The Ravens drafted Tyre Phillips, an OT from Mississippi St., at the end of the third round based on his potential to move inside to guard. They backed that up by taking Bredeson, from Michigan, in round four. Phillips is all about potential, he’s a massive man with great power but he was only a one-year starter and now they want to move him inside. Bredeson was a four-year starter at OG for the Wolverines and he has great technique. I think Bredeson is more likely to push for Marshall Yanda’s old starting spot before Phillips. Stone is an instinctual player who lacks elite size or athleticism. He reads things well and understands where to be, that’s basically the definition of an Iowa safety. The Ravens have Chuck Clark and Earl Thomas at safety but the depth doesn’t exactly scream quality. Stone will make the team as a backup safety and as a special team’s demon initially and don’t bet against him getting some playing time on defense.

Overall Analysis
The Ravens are the best drafting team in the NFL. It started with Ozzie Newsome for many, many years and now it’s his former right-hand man Eric DeCosta continuing the great work. Patrick Queen has a legacy of great LBs to live up to and I believe he will. Some people thought the team reached for JK Dobbins because they have one of the best run games in the league. However, Mark Ingram will be 31 by the end of the season and Gus Edwards has never proven to be the work horse. Dobbins fits their style as a low to the ground power back. The Ravens also continued a tradition of drafting a position before a need becomes obvious. The defensive line looks really good but the truth is they are aging and drafting Justin Madubuike was a smart move for the future. WR Devin Duvernay is a speed demon who excels in the slot and slot receiver Willie Snead didn’t have a great connection with Lamar Jackson. Malik Harrison may never be the star Patrick Queen can be but every Batman needs a Robin. Phillips and Bredeson were solid mid-round investments the team needs to try to replace future Hall of Famer Marshall Yanda. Broderick Washington was another solid investment in trying to make the d-line younger, he has some versatility along that three-man front. James Proche isn’t winning any sprinting contests but he is a reliable receiver they got in the sixth round. Stone was a wise choice to take a shot on in round seven. Anybody who was hoping to make up ground on the Ravens is going to have to hope Lamar Jackson regresses because this draft is only going to make the rest of the team better around him.

Cincinnati Bengals

(1) Joe Burrow    QB    LSU
(33) Tee Higgins    WR   Clemson
(65) Logan Wilson    LB    Wyoming
(107) Akeem Davis-Gaither    LB    Appalachian St.
(147) Khalid Kareem    DE    Notre Dame
(180) Hakeem Adeniji    OL    Kansas
(215) Markus Bailey    LB   Purdue

Immediate Impact: QB Joe Burrow, WR Tee Higgins
The Bengals didn’t draft Joe Burrow to sit and learn, they drafted him to be the face of the franchise. He’s the best QB they have had since Carson Palmer, sorry Andy Dalton but it’s true. Dalton is off to Dallas now so that leaves the team with only Ryan Finley left with Burrow at QB. Burrow has a chance to be a star in the NFL. Higgins might be able to help Burrow achieve being a star and become one himself. He has loads of talent and all the physical traits of a dominant WR. He won’t have to step in right away as the team has AJ Green and Tyler Boyd to carry the load but he should pick up as much as he can from those two.

Best Value: WR Tee Higgins
This one comes with a caveat. If Higgins lives up to his enormous potential, he could be one of the top ten WRs in the NFL and getting that guy at #33 overall is incredible value. The problem is he isn’t a completed project yet. He has some issues with route running execution and he isn’t great after the catch. He’s a brilliant jump ball WR and he will make life easy on Burrow because you only have to get it within his area code and he can catch it. If he turns into Michael Thomas, he’s a steal, if he turns into Kelvin Benjamin, he’s a colossal bust.

Sleeper: LB Akeem Davis-Gaither
The Bengals needed LBs and they got LBs and I like Davis-Gaither better than the rest. He’s a freaky fast (sorry Jimmy Johns) LB who can come off the edge as a rusher and cover in the passing game. Guys like Germaine Pratt, Jordan Evans, and Josh Bynes are the vets on the team and I can see Davis-Gaither taking a job very quickly with this team. So could Logan Wilson but Davis-Gaither was a lower pick.

Overall Analysis
This draft will forever be judged by Joe Burrow’s career and that’s what happens when you’re the first pick in the draft. However, there are other picks here who can really help this team. Burrow is going to be good as long as the team invests in the offense around him and for now the only issue is, they didn’t get him any real help on the line.  However, last year’s first-round pick LT Jonah Williams should be healthy this season, that will help. They did take Higgins and while they have Green and Boyd, Green is on a one-year franchise tag for now and coming off an injury while Boyd is probably better as the #2 guy. Higgins could be a great combination with Burrow. At LB the team needed a reset because they haven’t been good there in a while. They spent three of their seven picks at the position so clearly, they realized the issue. Logan Wilson, Akeem Davis-Gaither and Markus Bailey are all good coverage LBs who fit into the new look of the NFL. All of them, including seventh-round pick Bailey, should make the roster and contribute. I wouldn’t be shocked to see one or both of Wilson and Davis-Gaither starting this year. DE Khalid Kareem is athletically limited but the Bengals aren’t stacked at DE either so he could make the team as a backup. He probably isn’t ever going to be a starting DE but he could be a solid backup. Adeniji is a project that needs to transition to OG from OT but with some coaching he could be a solid guard. He has some good athletic traits he just lacks any type of refinement.

Cleveland Browns

(10) Jedrick Wills Jr.    OT    Alabama
(44) Grant Delpit   S    LSU
(88) Jordan Elliott    DL   Missouri
(97) Jacob Phillips    LB    LSU
(115) Harrison Bryant   TE    Florida Atlantic
(160) Nick Harris    C/G    Washington
(187) Donovan Peoples-Jones    WR    Michigan

Immediate Impact: OT Jedrick Wills Jr, S Grant Delpit
I’m not really a big fan of Wills as a LT prospect but he is going to have to play there because the team signed Jack Conklin to a massive contract to be their RT and he isn’t moving to the left side. For better or for worse Wills will transition to the left side. Even if he struggles, he’s probably better than their other options; moving Conklin or playing Chris Hubbard there full-time. Grant Delpit is the one guy who didn’t have an incredible year at LSU last season, he was human compared to most of his teammates but he still won a National Title. He fell a bit but he’s going to push Andrew Sendejo to a backup role and start next to Karl Joseph.

Best Value: C/G Nick Harris
The Browns did a nice job of addressing their OTs, in the case of Conklin they did great, less so with Wills. On the interior JC Tretter is a solid center and Joel Bitonio is a good guard. Wyatt Teller is serviceable at LG but he could lose his job. Harris isn’t an overwhelming physical player but he’s a technician on the interior. He is probably better at center than guard but he can be better than Teller. He is best suited for the zone-blocking scheme which is exactly the type of offense Kevin Stefanski will install with the Browns. Harris could end up a starter and he was a fifth-rounder.

Sleeper: LB Jacob Phillips
The Browns LB corps has undergone quite the change as they lost Joe Schobert and Christian Kirksey. They need help to replace those two because BJ Goodson, a free agent signee, isn’t really starter material. Phillips wasn’t a big name at LSU but he was a productive player. He probably won’t ever be a star but he can start for the Browns given their depth chart.

Overall Analysis
For the Browns’ sake I’m worried about Wills transition to LT. He has plenty of physical ability to do it but it’s about a comfort level moving up to the NFL and transitioning to a position he didn’t play at Alabama. He’s also moving to a zone-based running scheme which will be a change up for him. If Grant Delpit gets healthy and plays like he did two years ago he has Pro Bowl caliber talent at safety. The Browns have been shuffling safeties for a while, it would be nice if he locks down a spot for the next decade. Jordan Elliot should be a good fit as a backup DT, he can push the pocket from the inside which is a trait the defense sorely needs. Jacob Phillips has starter potential on a team that needs another starting LB, good fit. Harrison Bryant might find it hard to find playing time with Austin Hooper coming in as a free agent to join David Njoku but Stefanski likes using TEs so he’s good depth. Phenomenal value in the Harris pick, he can be a guard for now and could eventually be JC Tretter’s replacement. Donovan Peoples-Jones is a dynamic athlete who simply never lived up to that talent at Michigan. It could be the fact he played with well below average QBs at Michigan so he should hope Baker Mayfield ups his game. The Browns do have Odell Beckham Jr and Jarvis Landry but those two are turning 30 and there isn’t much depth, Peoples-Jones might get some playing time this year.

Pittsburgh Steelers

(49) Chase Claypool    WR    Notre Dame
(102) Alex Highsmith    OLB    UNC-Charlotte
(124) Anthony McFarland Jr.    RB    Maryland
(135) Kevin Dotson    OG    Louisiana-Lafayette
(198) Antoine Brooks Jr.    S    Maryland
(232) Carlos Davis    DT    Nebraska

Immediate Impact: WR Chase Claypool
This is a stretch but because I really don’t expect any of these guys to make much of an impact. If anyone could Claypool is the best bet. The Steelers have JuJu Smith-Schuster but they rely far too much on him in their passing game. James Washington hasn’t broken out in his first two years and Diontae Johnson was just okay last year. A lot of that was probably due to an unstable QB position with Big Ben out. Claypool gives the team a different look as he’s a 6’4 player with good speed, they don’t have a big-bodied WR. If Washington and Johnson don’t stake their claim to being the #2 behind JuJu than Claypool may emerge.

Best Value: RB Anthony McFarland
McFarland is a heck of a RB and while the team has James Connor, Jaylen Samuels and Benny Snell Jr., McFarland gives them a different look. Connor and Snell are power big power backs with thick builds and really aren’t threats to take it to the house, they are grinders. Samuels is also a bigger back but he has more skills in the passing game. McFarland is small, shiftier and a threat to take it all the way at any time. He has the speed they need to add to the backfield and I think he may make Snell expendable or Connor if he keeps getting injured.

Sleeper: OG Kevin Dotson
The team needed to get some help on the line and Dotson is a big boy who anchors well and can run block too. He needs a little time, especially pass blocking, but there is an opportunity to play. Ramon Foster retired this off season and while the team signed Stefen Wisniewski, he is a replacement level player. Dotson could move up the depth chart quickly if he proves he can hold his own in the passing game.

Overall Analysis
The team has a pretty solid roster which is good because this draft class is more about potential than production. They traded their first-round pick for Minkah Fitzpatrick and that was a wise move considering how he turned around their defense last season after the trade. Claypool is a solid prospect at WR but he’s going to have to develop to be effective which is exactly what you can say about James Washington and Diontae Johnson. Alex Highsmith could become a nice pass rusher at OLB but the team has its starters in Bud Dupree and TJ Watt. RB Anthony McFarland has long-term value but for now he’s just part of the committee hoping to find his place. I like Dotson moving forward but they have veterans at guard. Brooks and Davis are really deep depth if they make the roster. Brooks might help on special teams. This isn’t a draft that is going to push this team over the hump but getting Big Ben’s return should do most of that heavy lifting.

NFC East Draft Preview

NFC East Draft Review

The Cowboys are always an interesting team when it comes to the draft and this year, they had a very good draft. They drafted quite a few players who were fantastic value picks. Jerry Jones was drafting from his yacht but clearly, he was still being heavily influenced by the smarter and less impulsive members of the front office and probably by Mike McCarthy. The Giants had quite a few picks and did a hell of job mixing immediate help with some truly talented developmental players. While most of the focus of Philly’s draft was on them taking a QB in the second round they did pretty well overall if you look beyond that. The Redskins took their one true blue-chip guy in Chase Young and they hope he can have a huge impact on their defense, and I think he will. The rest of the guys are developmental players and that’s okay since they are clearly in rebuilding mode.

Dallas Cowboys

(17) CeeDee Lamb    WR    Oklahoma
(51) Trevon Diggs    CB    Alabama
(82) Neville Gallimore    DT    Oklahoma
(123) Reggie Robinson II    CB    Tulsa
(146) Tyler Biadasz    C/G    Wisconsin
(179) Bradlee Anae    DE    Utah
(231) Ben DiNucci    QB    James Madison

Immediate Impact: WR CeeDee Lamb, CB Trevon Diggs
The Cowboys re-signed Amani Cooper and they still have Michael Gallup who had a breakout season last year but they don’t have much beyond them after losing Randall Cobb in free agency. Lamb was arguably the best WR in the draft and while the Cowboys didn’t expect him to be available at 17th overall they didn’t hesitate when he fell to them. He makes their offense that much more explosive. Diggs was a potential 1st round pick and they got him 51st overall. They need a top CB and Diggs has that type of potential. He gives them a bigger CB who can match up with the better WRs in the league. He should quickly ascent to the top of their CB depth chart.

Best Value: WR CeeDee Lamb, CB Trevon Diggs, DT Neville Gallimore
Like I said, Lamb was arguably the top WR in the draft and yet he was the third one off the board and the 17th overall pick, that’s good value. Diggs had a first-round grade by many teams and he fell all the way to 51st overall, again a great value pick for the Cowboys. DT Neville Gallimore was widely considered a potential first-round pick and for sure a second-round pick and yet he fell all the way to the 82nd pick. The Cowboys got amazing value with all three of these guys. Gallimore may not have the biggest impact this year with Gerald McCoy and Dontari Poe set to start but he will make a fantastic rotational piece and he’s a future starter with both McCoy and Poe aging.

Sleeper: C Tyler Biadasz
The Cowboys unexpectedly lost Travis Frederick to retirement and for now they turn to Joe Looney at center. Looney filled in two years ago when Frederick missed the season but Looney is going to be 30 this season and he’s just a replacement level guy, he’s better suited to be a backup. Biadasz has some holes to his game and he needs some work but he’s been a multi-year starter at Wisconsin and that means something. It may not happen this year but sooner rather than later I expect Biadasz to replace Looney as the Cowboys starting center.

Overall Analysis
The Cowboys had one of the better drafts, perhaps Jerry Jones should draft from his yacht all the time. They lucked into CeeDee Lamb but they were smart enough to pass on filling a major need to take the best available player. Diggs was a potential choice for them in round one so getting him in the second was another lucky selection. Finally, having Gallimore still available in round three worked out for them too. Having a good draft usually takes a little luck and this year the Cowboys had lots of it. CB Reggie Robinson II was a bit of a reach but he’s a supreme athlete who brings great size to the CB spot and they can hope he develops over time. They hope Diggs develops as a #1 CB but the team has plenty of depth to give Robinson time to develop overall. Biadasz is a very solid prospect at center, a position they were not necessarily expecting to need to fill. DE Bradlee Anae was another guy many expected to go higher. He’s not a great athlete at DE but he’s a solid prospect who was very productive in college. Ben DiNucci is unlikely to make the roster and looks like a potential practice squad player.

New York Giants

(4) Andrew Thomas    OT    Georgia
(36) Xavier McKinney    S    Alabama
(99) Matt Peart    OT    UConn
(110) Darnay Holmes    CB    UCLA
(150) Shane Lemieux    OG    Oregon
(183) Cam Brown    LB    Penn St.
(218) Carter Coughlin    LB    Minnesota
(238) TJ Brunson    LB    South Carolina
(247) Chris Williamson    CB    Minnesota
(255) Tae Crowder    LB    Georgia

Immediate Impact: OT Andrew Thomas, S Xavier McKinney
Andrew Thomas is the best OT in this class right now. He may not have the ceiling of Mekhi Becton or Tristan Wirfs but on day one Thomas is a ready-made starter. He will likely step in at RT this season but eventually I see him replacing Nate Solder at LT, and by eventually, I mean in 2021. Thomas has Pro Bowl talent and he’ll be Daniel Jones’ favorite teammate. McKinney is a do-everything type of safety. In today’s NFL he’s exactly what you need because he can be a free safety and cover deep, he can come up and support in the run and he can actually excel in the nickel role. The team has Julian Love penciled in at FS but I think there’s a very good chance McKinney takes that job.

Best Value: S Xavier McKinney
He should have been a first-rounder and while he didn’t fall very far into the second round, he’s still a steal there. The fact is the Giants went secondary quite often in the draft taking three different prospects but only McKinney can fill a couple of roles.

Sleeper: CB Darnay Holmes
Like I said the Giants were looking to fill some holes in the secondary and as much as I like McKinney, he won’t be asked to do it alone. The team has Deandre Baker at one CB and signed big-money free agent James Bradberry to be the #1 outside guy. They still needed to upgrade the nickel spot and that happens to be Holmes best position. He’ll have to fight for the job but I think he can win it and excel at it.

Overall Analysis
Clearly, GM Dave Gettleman had some specific needs he was looking to fill in this draft. Andrew Thomas is a no-doubt starter from day one but he didn’t stop there on the offensive line. He drafted a developmental OT with great upside in Matt Peart. Peart is long and agile and really just needs a little physical and technical development to be a very good OT. Gettleman also drafted OG Shane Lemieux and while he isn’t a flashy guy, he can be a starter at some point in the near future. The team has Will Hernandez at LG but RG Kevin Zeitler is over 30 and center Spencer Pulley isn’t the best. Lemieux can spend some time working at center while waiting to potentially replace Zeitler. He’s already a good run blocker so if he ends up playing on the right side with Thomas Saquon Barkley will love running behind those guys. Gettleman got some serious secondary help with McKinney and Holmes and there is nothing wrong with taking a shot on Williamson in the seventh round. The team didn’t invest high picks at LB but they invested heavily in terms of numbers. Cam Brown, Carter Coughlin, TJ Brunson and Tae Crowder were all brought in during the 6th or 7th rounds meaning they were looking for depth. It’s hard to blame them considering how weak the position has been in the past but most of these guys are special team’s players at best.

Philadelphia Eagles

(21) Jalen Reagor    WR    TCU
(53) Jalen Hurts    QB    Oklahoma
(103) Davion Taylor    LB    Colorado
(127) K’Von Wallace    S    Clemson
(145) Jack Driscoll    OL    Auburn
(168) John Hightower    WR    Boise St.
(196) Shaun Bradley    LB    Temple
(200) Quez Watkins    WR    Southern Miss
(210) Prince Tega Wanogho    OT    Auburn
(233) Casey Toohill    LB    Stanford

Immediate Impact: WR Jalen Reagor
The Eagles went into the draft with a major need at WR and they took Reagor in the first round. He is a talented WR with a skill set they will find quite useful. He has speed to go deep and the type of change of direction skills that make him hard to cover. Considering the team lost Nelson Agholor in free agency, Alshon Jeffrey’s health is unreliable and Desean Jackson is aging Reagor should step in immediately.

Best Value: OT Prince Tega Wanogho
Wanogho is a kid with a lot of upside as a developmental OT. He probably could have gone in the fourth round instead of the sixth and no one would have batted an eyelash. He probably isn’t going to step in immediately but there have been rumblings that the Eagles have reservations about last year’s first round pick LT Andre Dillard stepping in as the starter for Jason Peters. Wanogho is a bit of a hedge against betting on Dillard.

Sleeper: K’Von Wallace
Wallace is a safety prospect who can come up and cover the slot, that makes him a valuable player in NFL today. He isn’t the biggest guy and he doesn’t have great length or deep speed but he knows how to cover and he does it well. Philly isn’t exactly teeming with great safeties; they have Rodney McLeod and they re-signed Jalen Mills with the intent of moving him from CB to safety. Wallace has a chance to end up a starter with the next few years.

Overall Analysis
The Eagles needed WR help desperately and they spent their first-round pick on one just like everyone expected and Jalen Reagor was a solid choice. They didn’t stop there. John Hightower and Quez Watkins are two later round picks that bring a whole lot of speed to the WR corps even if they aren’t high level prospects. You can’t judge the Eagles only on their picks though, they also made a trade during the draft to pick up Marquise Goodwin from the 49ers. Goodwin is a solid pickup who can be a reliable player. One thing all these guys have in common is they all bring a lot of speed to the team that is looking for playmakers. The most talked about pick they made was their second-round choice of QB Jalen Hurts. Hurts isn’t your typical QB prospect considering he’s known more for his running ability. He doesn’t have the type of strong throwing arm you need in the NFL although he is a pretty accurate intermediate passer. He’s an interesting draft pick because the Eagles already have a franchise QB in Carson Wentz who is still quite young and signed to a massive contract. How they fit Hurts into the equation should be quite interesting. The team needed help at LB and they took Davion Taylor in round three and Shaun Bradley in round six. They both bring speed to the position but they use that speed in different ways. Taylor is more the run and chase LB against the run and the coverage guy against the pass while Bradley is better attacking the line of scrimmage. They do fit one major theme of the Eagles draft, speed. They also got Casey Toohill out of Stanford but he’s more of a pass rusher off the edge. The team also took both Auburn OTs in the draft in Jack Driscoll and the afore mentioned Prince Tega Wanogho. Both are solid investments moving forward.

Washington Redskins

(2) Chase Young    DE    Ohio St.
(66) Antonio Gibson    RB/WR    Memphis
(108) Saahdiq Charles    OT    LSU
(142) Antonio Gandy-Golden    WR    Liberty
(156) Keith Ismael    OG    San Diego St.
(162) Khaleke Hudson    LB    Michigan
(216) Kamren Curl    S    Arkansas
(229) James Smith-Williams    DE    North Carolina St.

Immediate Impact: DE Chase Young
Well this is a no-brainer. Young has Julius Peppers type athleticism and he will be a monster as a pass rusher. He doesn’t have to be rushed because the team has both Montez Sweat and Ryan Kerrigan on the edge but Young is better than both of them. They hope he makes a dynamic pass rushing duo with Sweat for the next decade. Ron Rivera will make this kid a star.

Best Value: WR Antonio Gandy-Golden
A WR out of Liberty seems like a strange choice here but Gandy-Golden could have gone in the late second round and that would have been acceptable. He’s actually a great complement to the young receiving corps the team is building. Terry McLaurin was fantastic last season as the deep threat. Kelvin Harmon is a big-bodied receiver with some skills and Trey Quinn works well in the slot. Gandy-Golden is the big, power WR who is 6’4 and knows how to use his size and may end up an upgraded version of Harmon. No matter what he’s a great addition to a team that is looking to help out their young QB.

Sleeper: OT Saahdiq Charles
Charles has some red flags from his time at LSU. He’s definitely not a choir boy but he started at LT for a team that had a pretty impressive offensive line. If Ron Rivera and company can keep him on the straight and narrow Charles has plenty of talent to like. The Redskins finally traded LT Trent Williams and they really need someone better to step up. Charles might be their best choice. If they can tap into his potential, he could end up taking the LT job as early as right now.

Overall Analysis
The team got the best prospect in the draft with the #2 overall pick so that’s always a good start. Chase Young has All-Pro potential and is working with the right coaching staff to get him to that level. Antonio Gibson was a strange pick given he doesn’t have a defined position, is he a RB or a WR? And his best assumed position, RB, is pretty stacked with Adrian Peterson, Derrius Guice, Peyton Barber, and a couple of young guys Bryce Love and Josh Ferguson. The team also has Trey Quinn and Kelvin Harmon who can play the slot, Gibson’s next best position. Charles was worth a shot on a fourth-round pick. If he works out, he could be the starting LT, if he doesn’t, they only burned a fourth-round pick. Gandy-Golden is a steal and I think he’s a perfect complement that will make Terry McLaurin that much more dangerous. Keith Ismael is a solid addition as depth on the interior offensive line. LB Khaleke Hudson is a small LB with nominal speed and not great athleticism. If he makes the roster it will be because he shows he can really help on special teams and they don’t have a ton of depth at LB. Kamren Curl comes in as a safety but he might actually transition to LB, Hudson better hope he doesn’t because he might be a better prospect at LB than he is. Smith-Williams is a developmental DE who will likely end up on the practice squad.