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Top 5 Total DVOA

2007 FINAL

  1. NE (52.0%)
  2. IND (33.1%)
  3. DAL (24.3%)
  4. JAC (23.7%)
  5. GB (21.2%)

Top 5 Offense

2007 FINAL

  1. NE (42.6%)
  2. IND (28.3%)
  3. JAC (20.7%)
  4. DAL (19.0%)
  5. GB (17.3%)

Top 5 Defense

2007 FINAL

  1. TEN (-13.4%)
  2. PIT (-12.3%)
  3. IND (-10.7%)
  4. TB (-10.2%)
  5. SD (-9.8%)

Top 5 Special Teams

2007 FINAL

  1. CHI (9.3%)
  2. CLE (6.9%)
  3. HOU (5.7%)
  4. SF (4.5%)
  5. SD (4.5%)
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2007 CFBA Nominee: Best Audio

» Printable version

Audibles at the NFL Draft

4/27/2008

compiled by Vince Verhei

Each weekend of the regular season, the FO staff sends around e-mails to each other, both during and after the games. It lets us share ideas for columns and comments, and get an idea of how teams that we can’t watch are playing. This weekend, we’re doing the same during the draft. Be aware that the material in this roundtable might seem a bit disjointed and un-edited. It also might still show up later in the week in other columns, or in comments in PFP 2008.

Before the Draft

The night before the draft, Dallas trades linebacker Akin Ayodele and tight end Anthony Fasano to the Miami Dolphins for a fourth-round draft pick.

Aaron Schatz: Can someone explain the point of this from Dallas’s point of view? Particularly the Fasano part?

Sean McCormick: That’s a great move by Miami. My only explanation would be that the Cowboys already have Jason Witten as their starter at tight end and that they are looking to add receivers and go to more of a spread look for Tony Romo, in which case they don’t need an additional pass-catching tight end. It’s still a fleecing.

Bill Barnwell: Like I said in my Xtra Point, it’s gotta be to open up a spot at linebacker for Zach Thomas or Bobby Carpenter. Ayodele was very much just a guy on a great defense. Fasano’s no great shakes, but he’s worth more than this.

Michael Tanier: With Ireland and Sporano in Miami, the only guy in Dallas who understands Fasano’s value is Garrett, who may either want to go 3-WR more often or just got overruled. Ayodele is nothing special. I guess “Fasano for fourth-rounder” isn’t crazy, but he’s better than any TE/H-back you are going to get in the fourth round.

Bill Barnwell: I just watched the Giants-Cowboys game and Fasano had a miserable game. Absolutely awful. It might be bad feelings related to that.

Before the draft begins, the Miami Dolphins announce that Jake Long will be the first overall choice.

Sean McCormick: We might as well start with the pick we know, and that’s Miami taking Jake Long. I was expecting Parcells to go defense, but I think he made the proper pick. The two top defensive options were Chris Long and Vernon Gholston, and both have to be projected into their positions in an NFL 3-4. Gholston is perhaps the easier projection of the two, but he’s also the lesser prospect and I wouldn’t touch him with the first overall selection. The most important thing, particularly in a draft that is rather flat at the top, is not to blow the pick, and Jake Long is probably the safest pick in the draft. He has the measurables that suggest he can play left tackle, but even if he struggles there, he should be a terrific right tackle, and you can always fall back and put him at guard if he proves to be another Robert Gallery, so there’s a built-in safety net. But in addition to being a safe pick, Long also represents a rarer commodity than the other players at the top of the draft. It’s easier to find pass-rushing prospects than it is to find elite left tackles. The Giants have four top pass rushers on their roster and they didn’t take any of them before the end of the first round.

Michael Tanier: The Dolphins O-line could get good quickly with Long and Samson Satele. Really, it was one of the team’s better units last year. Turn your decent unit into a strength first, then you know that your skill position guys won’t be wasting their time.

Ben Riley: I’ve got a question about Brandon Albert, who has rocketed up the draft board on the assumption he can play left tackle. I understand the argument that he moved to guard because of D’Brickshaw Ferguson, but why didn’t he play right tackle? Is there some reason Virginia needed him to stay on the left side of the line?

Sean McCormick: Maybe they simply wanted to take advantage of his ability to pull and block on the move. He’s fantastic when he gets out in space.

Michael Tanier: Who was at left tackle for the Cavs last year? If they groomed a guy, and Albert was all-conference at guard, maybe they just resisted change.

Stuart Fraser: About the only thing you can really seriously question about Miami’s pick is why the five-year contract; though if taking a year off was the only way to get the guy signed before the draft, fair enough.

Round 1

The Rams select Chris Long.

Ben Riley: I’m looking forward to watching Walter Jones pancake Chris Long for eight quarters in 2008. SEAHAWKS!

(Sorry, I was channeling my inner Jets-fan-at-the-draft persona.)

(And I may have started drinking.)

Sean McCormick: I thought Chris Long would actually be a better player in a 3-4 or in a 4-3 across from an edge rusher. Supposedly the Rams are looking to give different looks and Long should be an excellent at moving around. He’s my favorite player in the draft, but I think the Carriker/Dorsey combination would have been more effective than a Long/Carriker combination, especially if the Rams had found an edge rusher later in the draft. Safe pick, but I’m not sure it’s the best match of team and talent.

The Falcons select Matt Ryan.

Sean McCormick: In a draft where there are three quality second-round quarterback prospects and Atlanta has three second-round picks to work with, this is a really dubious selection.

Ben Riley: I go the other way on that. They have a boatload of picks, and they need a quarterback, so take the best quarterback and build the line up in the second round.

Suzy Kolber to Matt Ryan: “When I say Atlanta, what’s the first thing that comes to mind?”

I find it troubling that my internal response was “dog rape.”

Sean McCormick: If Matt Ryan had Chad Henne’s statistical profile, I might agree with you. But he doesn’t. His starts are low, his completion percentage is a little low, and his skill-set is marginal. That doesn’t mean he won’t work out, but I think his ceiling is fairly low. I’d have taken the best player in Dorsey and looked at Henne or Joe Flacco at the back of the first round.

Ben Riley: Anyone watching NFL Network covering the Raiders draft table? Apparently Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens works for Al Davis.

Stuart Fraser: Aaaand Matt Ryan goes to Atlanta. Well, I wouldn’t have picked him there. The identity of the best quarterback in this draft is far from clear cut, and it may be that none of them are really good starters. Certainly far too much of a risk with the No. 3 pick.

Michael Tanier: Sounds like I like Ryan better than some of you guys.

Ned Macey: I agree with Tanier if only because I hate the strategy of the early second-round quarterback. They work out rarely, while early second-rounders are your best value pick. If you get a mediocre linebacker, you can still play him and he’s cost-effective at that spot. If you have a mediocre QB, your team is sunk.

Sean McCormick: I can understand that, but normally there is a difference between the physical ability of the guys at the top of the first and the guys at the top of the second. But Joe Flacco has No. 1 overall skills, while Matt Ryan has marginal physical skills. It’s not a normal situation where you’re passing up the 6-foot-5 rocket-armed guy for a 6-1 project.

Sean McCormick: I go back and forth on Matt Ryan, but there’s no question that his Lewin Forecast suggests he’s a major risk as a top-three pick. He looks like a Peyton Manning or a Philip Rivers, but his starts/completion percentage numbers are those of a late first/early second guy like Rex Grossman or Patrick Ramsey or Kellen Clemens. He has a high floor due to his work ethic, but Ryan isn’t close to the third best player in the draft.

The Raiders select Darren McFadden.

Sean McCormick: The Jets are really close to getting squeezed. If Kansas City takes Glenn Dorsey (which they should), then the Jets will take Vernon Gholston and go on about their business. But if the Chiefs take Gholston or trade out, the Jets are stuck with the best player in the draft, only they can’t take him. Ugh.

Ben Riley: Well, so much for my plans to order a Justin Fargas Fathead.

Al Davis is that one random guy in your fantasy football league who refuses to abide by conventional wisdom and takes, like, three quarterbacks in the first three rounds. Only, instead of being a fantasy team, Davis runs one of the NFL’s most storied franchises.

Stuart Fraser: Oh, Oakland. We all knew you’d do that, but it doesn’t make watching you do it any easier.

Lane Kiffin said publically (also correctly), pretty much, that he thought Oakland was set at running back and McFadden would be surplus to requirements. Al Davis drafts him anyway. I am left wondering if he did it just to wind Kiffin up.

What is it about the AFC West that makes coaches and GMs/owners not get on. Is Kansas City next?

On a wider issue, I’m wondering how often a running back is worth a first-round pick, especially a high one. Adrian Peterson was, or at least, if he keeps up current production, clearly will be. After him, who? None of the highly-touted first-rounders from 2005 looks that special now; the best of them is Joseph Addai, and the Colts offense barely missed a beat when Kenton Keith replaced him due to injury. It seems the only running backs who are really worth it in round one are the truly rare talents who only come along maybe once a decade (so the one before Peterson was probably Barry Sanders).

But they come along once a decade, and if there was one last year, it makes me skeptical that McFadden is really everything he’s advertised to be. Especially since the year before Peterson we were told how special Reggie Bush was, and I’m sure the year before that there was a running back who was a one-in-a-generation talent as well.

Sean McCormick: I would have taken Dorsey, but you can make an argument that McFadden was the best player on the board. I think as a rule you would prefer to avoid the position in the top five, but you don’t necessarily pass over a guy for a lower rated prospect. The positive is that a running back is likely to contribute immediately and to play out all of his rookie deal, so as long as you’re willing to take that production and then be careful about a second contract, you can make an argument for taking someone like McFadden.

Ned Macey:I think LdT worked out alright between Sanders and Peterson. And Marshall Faulk, Edgerrin James, and Fred Taylor aren’t exactly chopped liver. Still, I agree, a stupid pick for the Raiders based on what they have.

Michael Tanier: I think Davis’ brother, who really belongs at that table in Godfather 1 where Don Vito and the five families discuss the drug trade, is undead.

Sean McCormick: The Raiders are going to seriously regret passing on both Glenn Dorsey and Sedrick Ellis when their run defense is caving in every week. They had a chance to match BPA with their biggest weakness with Dorsey, but they optedfor McFadden, who is worthy of the pick, but not nearly as good a fit with their needs.

The Chiefs select Glenn Dorsey.

Will Carroll: My issue with Dorsey isn’t his play or the injury, but that everyone I spoke to said “Booger McFarland” in reference to him. OK, big DT, speedy, from LSU … I get it, but if that’s what you think he is, THAT’S worth a top-five pick? Would any sane human being, knowing what his career looks like, draft Booger McFarland in the first round? Is there anything like a similarity score for football players?

Bill Barnwell: SEC defensive tackles are pretty much sure things, guys-addicted-to-cheeseburgers aside.

Sean McCormick: Kansas City got a great player, but I’m not sure I could have passed up the package that New Orleans was supposedly dangling. I’d rather have two ones and an extra two than any player in this draft.

Ned Macey: I’m pretty sure Booger McFarland would still be a first-round pick. Guy was great for a number of years once Warren Sapp started declining.

The Jets select Vernon Gholston.

Sean McCormick: Gholston is a concern. I just watched the OSU-Illinois game with my eye on Gholston every snap and was stunned by just how little effort he gave. He provides no backside pursuit, he jogs after the ball carrier on his own side of the field, and for the most part he stepped into the blocker and just stayed there. Off that performance, I couldn’t believe that he was a first-round pick, much less a top-six guy. That said, he looked much more dangerous when standing up, he dropped fluidly, and I can buy the argument that OSU’s read-and-react scheme was significantly hindering his play. There really was nowhere else for the Jets to go with the pick, but I would be very, very concerned about Gholston’s ability to consistently impact a game.

The Jaguars trade up for the Ravens’ spot at No. 8.

Sean McCormick: Well, the Ravens will be taking Chad Henne, but who are the Jaguars coming up for?

William Carroll: I’ve been trying to figure out the “catch” with Flacco. Is it just that he’s a QB? A guy with all the physical skills, no off-field issues, and the intangibles would normally be someone flying up the board. But he’s not. He’s a second-rounder and he’s not budging off that while Chad Henne is going in the top ten. Is it just the small college?

Bill Barnwell: Does he really have the intangibles? Is he really that accurate? I mean, the book from what I’ve seen is that he’s a guy with a big arm.

William Carroll: I heard one guy say he’s got great makeup, so I’d assume they’d have mentioned the intangibles otherwise. NFL scouts are much quicker to tell you why they don’t like the guy than why they like them, I’ve found. The why they like them seems very “me too.” That and the disturbing physical references…

Ben Riley: Yeah, Bill is right. Beware the small school, big armed quarterback.

Sean McCormick: I think the idea is that Flacco is a project due to the combination of the small school and the fact that his footwork isn’t NFL-ready. You can’t take Flacco and play him this year, which basically nixes him for most teams in the first round. I think he’ll go to either Miami or maybe to the Jets and have a chance to develop behind John Beck or the Pennington/Clemens monster. Flacco’s upside is ridiculous. If you put on tape of him and Ryan side-by-side and didn’t know anything about either player, it would never occur to you that Matt Ryan would be the top-three pick.

William Carroll: I always worry about transfers. I mean, why didn’t he beat out some college guy? (Yes, I understand, Tom Brady…)

The Jaguars select Derrick Harvey.

Bill Barnwell: Well, this is the first real reach of the draft. They couldn’t have grabbed Harvey at 12 or 14?

William Carroll: Does Harvey have local ties? Someone told me that with the JAX to LA rumors that they’d have a bias towards local players to try to stave that off.

Stuart Fraser: Well, it’s possible that the Bengals might have taken Harvey, but I was going to call that a reach if they did. I am generally expecting the Bengals to reach as the guy they obviously wanted (Sedrick Ellis) is gone.

Cincinnati is really in their nightmare scenario where all the best players available are cornerbacks and offensive tackles, and the team that wanted to trade up just did.

Ben Riley: In my ESPN Magazine piece I wrote that, after Green Bay, Jacksonville was one of the teams most likely to trade down to stockpile midround picks, and praised them for the wisdom of this approach. So much for that. That move makes absolutely no sense to me.

The Bengals select Keith Rivers.

Stuart Fraser: I think Rivers is a bit of a reach, but there are some people who had him graded that high. I’d also like to note I called that one.

The Patriots select Jerod Mayo.

Stuart Fraser: OK, that wasn’t who I expected New England to pick (I was expecting Leodis McKelvin). I get the impression they wanted Rivers, except that if I can figure Cincinnati will pick Rivers in that situation, I’m sure Pioli can…

Ben Riley: Right now, Doug Farrar is starting to salivate in a Seattle bar at the prospect of one of the elite tackles falling to the Hawks.

Doug Farrar: Heh. I’m in my home office, juggling a few things. Did a Washington Post webcast spot in which I talked about how the Redskins perhaps wouldn’t have to trade up as much as they thought for a Clady or Albert. I knew about Long, Long and Ryan at the time, assumed McFadden and guessed Gholston. As I write this, the Pats just took Jerod Mayo at 10, and I’m starting to wonder if Walter Jones’ successor might not actually be there at 25.

The Broncos select Ryan Clady.

Doug Farrar: I love Ryan Clady to Denver. He might be the most versatile of all the linemen this year — the best able to run- and pass-block.

The Panthers select Jonathan Stewart.

Ben Riley: Great pick by Carolina. Get ready for the next fantasy football stud in Stewart.

Doug Farrar: Jonathan Stewart goes to the Panthers, leaving the Pacific Northwest
in a state of mourning. Weird pick. I thought they’d be better taking a lineman here and getting Kevin Smith or Matt Forte later on. Think he’ll be a wonderful player, but I don’t see this as need OR BPA.

Stuart Fraser: OK, Carolina, you draft DeAngelo Williams in the first round, let him have 265 carries over two seasons, see him average 4.6 yards per carry … and then draft his replacement in the first round two years later.

Um, why?

Still, not complaining. Every pick that goes by without an offensive lineman being selected makes it more likely that Branden Albert makes it to 23…

Branden Albert does not make it to 23; he is picked by the Chiefs.

Stuart Fraser: Booooooooooo. Hissssssssss.

Yeah, this is a smart pick by the Chiefs. The line seriously needs rebuilding, and starting with a mobile guard might not be a bad idea given this is Herm “forward pass, what’s that?” Edwards’ team.

Boooooo.

Bill Barnwell: Chris Long said Albert was the best player in the draft. Granted, he played against the guy, but he said Albert was better than any offensive lineman he went up against and it wasn’t even close.

Albert and Dorsey? That’s a hell of a start to your rebuilding plan.

Aaron Schatz: Build from the lines out, baby. Build from the lines out. I like Kansas City’s draft.

Ben Riley: Wow, Bill Belichick is rocking the Regis Philbin electric pink monotone tie-and-shirt suit look. Truly amazing.

Brian Billick: “Bill, people talk about the emotional letdown coming off a Super Bowl loss…”

Belichick: “You didn’t hear me bringing it up Brian.”

The Lions trade up for the Chiefs’ spot at 17, originally acquired by Kansas City in the Jared Allen trade.

Sean McCormick: Assuming Detroit takes Rashard Mendenhall here, this is going to be yet another draft where Matt Millen superficially seems to be doing a good job of maneuvering and getting the best player on the board.

And we all know that this spells doom for Rashard Mendenhall.

The Lions select Gosder Cherilus.

Sean McCormick: !!!!!

Ben Riley: The ESPN “Fan Grade” for the Cherilus pick: F. Every single other fan grade I’ve seen has been an A. Riots in the Motor City.

Stuart Fraser: OK, so what does the NFL have against Jeff Otah? I don’t think anybody had Cherilus ahead of him. Of course, this is Matt Millen we’re talking about.

Doug Farrar: The Lions just drafted a right tackle halfway through the first round. This, of course, makes complete sense.

Michael Tanier: Haven’t been reading these. Just wanna interject: Lions … duhhhhhhh.

The Ravens select Joe Flacco.

Sean McCormick: Baltimore just made out like bandits. As someone noted, if you reprogrammed the Terminator to play football, he’d throw the ball like Joe Flacco. And the Ravens got to pick up a bunch of picks in the process.

Bill Barnwell: How far can Joe Flacco throw the ball on his knees?

… and, literally as I type that, they show the shot of Flacco throwing the ball for distance. God.

Here’s the list of Division I-AA quarterbacks drafted in the early rounds:

  • Phil Simms
  • Neil Lomax
  • Bubby Brister
  • Steve McNair
  • Jonathan Quinn
  • Giovanni Carmazzi
  • Josh McCown
  • Tavaris Jackson

Not as bad as I might have though. Of course, I still think Flacco is more Brister and less McNair, but we’ll see.

Sean McCormick: Flacco’s tools are better than any of those guys. It’s not even close.

Ben Riley: I’m sure that playing against colleges called “Towson” and “Monmouth” is a good way to show off one’s “tools.”

Sean McCormick: Tell it to Jerry Rice.

Anyway, the interesting thing is where Baltimore had to go to make the pick. My guess is that they thought Tampa Bay would take Flacco at 20.

Stuart Fraser: Quarterbacks are more than an arm. Flacco is not tremendously mobile — yeah,
I know, Ben Roethlisberger ran a horribly slow 50 too, but Roethlisberger is such an exceptional (in the literal sense) talent that he’s probably best not used as a comparator for anyone. Flacco’s pocket presence will be severely examined whilst he’s trying to wait for one of Baltimore’s recievers to come open.

Sean McCormick: Flacco’s footwork isn’t ideal, but he has quick feet. I would normally be concerned about a guy who was 6-6 because they have trouble getting back and setting up before the rush gets to them, but Flacco has the foot speed to get back quickly. If you watch him on tape, he’s actually pretty mobile. I mean, Delaware ran the option with him from time to time.

Mike Tanier: I had a little pucker session over at Deadspin when Flacco got drafted. But I stand by every word about how thrilled I am for him. I’m not going to pretend to offer unbiased scouting on him, but I think he can grow into a heck of a QB.

Doug Farrar: The Seahawks took time with Henne, Flacco and Brohm. Not a real big surprise. If the Seahawks trade down in the first to go up in the second (as has been rumored), I thought it might be to get a quarterback in the second round.

Ben Riley: The Seahawks might draft a quarterback, just not Flacco. Ruskell doesn’t do small-school guys in the early rounds. Like, ever.

The Panthers trade up to acquire the Eagles’ pick, then select Jeff Otah.

Ben Riley: That scream you just hear was Doug Farrar watching the best left tackle still on the board going to Carolina. Panthers are singlehandedly ruining Seattle’s draft.

Doug Farrar: Nah. I don’t like Otah for Seattle at all. They already have too many hybrid tackle/guard guys. Better not to try and make him into the agile tackle he most certainly isn’t.

Bill Barnwell: Oh yeah. A 1, a 2, and a 4 for the Eagles’ 1 is nice.

Ben Riley: Mayock on the NFL Network said that they were worried about St. Louis or Seattle. Which is absurd, of course.

Doug Farrar: The Otah pick is interesting. The Panthers now have a great right tackle who can’t really play on the left side (Jordan Gross), a left tackle that the team wants to move inside to left guard (Travelle Wharton) and a rookie left tackle with serious issues against speed rushers. That’s one big, powerful
logjam. How effective it will be, well, we’ll see.

The Buccaneers select Aqib Talib.

Sean McCormick: It’s a good thing you can’t get any weed in Tampa. Wait a minute…

Russell Levine: Well, Gruden has never been a big character guy, so I’m not shocked by the pick of Talib. I don’t like it, but truth be told this is about the spot — 20 — where the risk factor of taking a dubious character starts to make it reasonable. I do know that Talib is hugely talented and fits a need.

The Cowboys select Felix Jones.

Stuart Fraser: Ooh, all the “Jerry Jones hasn’t picked a Razorback since 1970″ people will have to find a new tag now.

I have a horrible premonition that the Steelers are going to pick Rashard Mendenhall. Please, Mike Tomlin, Kevin Colbert, don’t. Yes, there are no sensible offensive linemen left to pick. Still, you are thin at outside linebacker. You are thin at cornerback and one of your starters is 32. You could do with another wide receiver because Nate Washington really isn’t the right guy to replace Hines Ward. You have five running backs on the roster currently and between them they must be capable of doing as well as might plausibly be expected given how bad your offensive line is.

The Steelers select Rashard Mendenhall.

Sean McCormick: Mendenhall was the best player on the board. It’s tough to argue with the pick considering the value of the player, even if it doesn’t help them right away.

Ben Riley: Unbelievable value pick for the Steelers.

Seahawks nation warily turns its eyes toward Kentwan Balmer…

The Titans select Chris Johnson.

Sean McCormick: Dangerous player, and there was rumbling that several teams gave Johnson a first-round grade. He’s arguably more of an impact player than any of the receivers who were options at this point. Interesting pick. Looks like receivers a-plenty in the second round.

The Cowboys select Mike Jenkins. The Texans follow by selecting Duane Brown.

Sean McCormick: Well, it’s safe to say that this draft didn’t work out for Houston at all.

Stuart Fraser: Um, that may be just a teensy bit premature.

I am still moping about Pittsburgh taking a running back. Still, I guess Houston’s first-round experience was probably worse.

It seems that nobody at all wants a wide reciever in the first round. Is it really that horrible a draft for them?

Sean McCormick: Pretty much.

Actually, I would expect about five guys to go in the next ten picks.

Ben Riley: Actually, Rick Gosselin of the Dallas Morning News thinks this is one of the deepest WR classes in recent years. It’s just that no one is a Calvin Johnson/Larry Fitzgerald-like standout.

Background music for Seahawks picks: Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” and Pearl Jam’s “Evenflow.” In Seattle, it’s always 1992.

Stuart Fraser: My favorite ever bit of background music was when the NFL Fieldpass radio feed faded back from a commercial just prior to the Jets’ pick in 2006 with the Kaiser Chiefs’ “I Predict A Riot.” I always wondered who they thought the J-E-T-S JETS JETS JETS were going to pick.

The Seahawks select Lawrence Jackson.

Ben Riley: Ruskell is nothing if not consistent. In the first round, he’s taking a defensive player from a major program. It’s just that simple.

The 49ers select Kentwan Balmer.

Bill Barnwell: Hey! Another guy with a somewhat questionable work ethic. Fortunately, the 49ers locker room is so strong as to pull Balmer in line … oh. Oh well.

The Jets trade up for the Packers’ pick and select Kentwan Balmer.

Sean McCormick: Aside from being a harsh condemnation of the wide receivers, it’s a pick that makes a lot of sense for teams with the Jets quarterbacks. With a smaller quarterback like Clemens, or a weak-armed guy like Pennington, you absolutely need a quality target at tight end who can open up the middle of the field. The Jets have been absolutely hamstrung by their lack of a third target in the passing game after Laveranues Coles and Jerricho Cotchery. There were a number of ways to go about addressing the issue, but this one works best with their quarterbacks.

Mike Tanier: Chris Baker and Bubba Franks and now Keller? I guess there’s a role for all three. I guess drafting Keller makes more sense than signing Franks, but it’s still a reach in my book.

Sean McCormick: Franks is there to block, and he’s hardly at a point in his career where he’s a reason to avoid drafting someone. Baker is a good player but is threatening to hold out if he doesn’t get a new deal. Now he’s not getting a new deal. Expect to see him shipped out — maybe even Sunday.

Mike Tanier: Overall, I give the new 10-minute format five trillion thumbs up, though those of us who try to do pick-by-pick stuff on the Internet may have to rethink how it is done.

Round 2

The Rams select Donnie Avery.

Bill Barnwell: Donnie Avery?

Sean McCormick: Donnie Avery.

Stuart Fraser: Given that most of the people who were evaluating wide receivers thought one or more of them would be picked in the first round, I’m not terribly worried by the fact that the first one who went isn’t one of the ones that was supposed to be the best.

Or, “if in doubt, assume the NFL teams know more than we do,”

Sean McCormick: Atlanta’s decision to take Ryan looks even worse based on how the board shook out. Brohm and Henne are both still on the board, and the board doesn’t match up especially well with their needs. Don’t like it at all.

The Saints select Tracy Porter.

Doug Farrar: Tracy Porter is an absolutely perfect pick for the Saints. He’s ridiculously quick in man coverage, and that will have New Orleans ignoring the fact that he’s not a great tackler. Good news is that he can out-cover Hole in Zone, who has been told that he’ll be playing nickel from now on. Disgruntled, HiZ has demanded a trade to the Bengals.

The Bills select James Hardy.

Will Carroll: I talked yesterday in Buffalo about Hardy vs. Devin Thomas in the first. Now they get Hardy in the second? I realize I’m the least expert guy here, but this seems like such a steal.

Sean McCormick: Well, the Bills certainly got a big receiver. I’m not sure he’s a huge steal, though. Clearly the receivers were badly overvalued. Hardy is a nice red-zone threat, but he doesn’t run very crisp routes and he doesn’t really pull away when he gets the ball on short passes. I also worry about these really big receivers in the NFL, as they usually take a while to learn how to beat press coverage. Often they’re better once they’ve moved on to their second teams.

Ned Macey: As an Indy native living in Ann Arbor, awfully strange to see two IU guys go before the second Michigan guy. Baltimore definitely smoke-screened Peter King on Henne, but if they did like him (just not as much as Flacco), I wonder if they’re upset they didn’t just sit and take him with their second-rounder.

When are the Eagles going to pick? Next week sometime?

The Minnesota Vikings are on the clock.

Sean McCormick: Is our long national nightmare of Tavaris Jackson coming to an end?

The Vikings select Tyrell Johnson.

Sean McCormick: I guess the answer would be no. We’ll have to settle for our long national nightmare of Rex Grossman coming to an end.

The Bears select Matt Forte.

Sean McCormick: No! The NFC North quarterback blight rages unabated.

Ned Macey: I agree with Steve Young on this one. Do the Bears really think Grossman is better than Benson? When the O-line played well in 2006, Benson was fine. I guess with two sort-of-equal players (Brohm and Henne), it is sort of hard to pull the trigger on the first one. Nobody I guess is likely to take one before Tampa Bay, so maybe one of these teams can trade back in after the first one goes.

The Bengals select Jerome Simpson.

Stuart Fraser: Good to see Cincinnati drafting a receiver. The Bengals obviously still have problems along the defensive line, but in many ways I think WR was the biggest problem. Something I’m going to talk about a bit in PFP 2008 is how the Bengals ought to be asking themselves “What Would Polian Do?” given that they seem to be trying to build a team somewhat similar to his sort of roster.

One of his hallmarks is to address any problem with your area of strength (i.e., offense in general and passing offense in particular) before trying to improve your weakness. So the crucial thing for Cincy to do was pick a wide receiver as soon as reasonably practicable — and not even Matt Millen wanted any part of this lot in the first round, so R2 it is.

Looking at the list of teams remaining to pick, is it possible that neither Henne nor Brohm will even go on the first day? Is this a new record for the player named in the 0-4 wins category in PFP?

The Redskins select Malcolm Kelly, then the Jaguars select Quentin Groves.

Sean McCormick: Interesting to see teams loading up at certain positions. Washington is flooding their receiving corp and now the Jaguars have taken two consecutive edge rushers, and in both cases the teams got terrific value with their second selections.

The Packers select Brian Brohm.

Sean McCormick: And the NFC North quarterback blight is over! (And to think it was the team with arguably the best quarterback in the division that had to take Brohm.)

The Steelers select Limas Sweed.

Stuart Fraser: I hope 6-foot-4 is tall enough for you, Ben. So, Pittsburgh upgraded a position where the starter was below average (also a Pro Bowler, but um, no, he’s really not that good) and a position where the starter was above average but into an age-related decline. I should probably be happier with this than I actually am.

It does seem rather unfair to Najeh Davenport, who outclassed Parker in terms of production last year and is now probably going to get cut, given that there are probably only three roster spots for running backs and the franchise more or less has to give two of them to Mendenhall and Moore (or else look *really* stupid). I can’t see Parker being cut, even though… well, I think we need a table here:

Player DPAR Rank DVOA Rank Runs Yards TD Suc% Rank
Najeh Davenport 17.5 18 20.4% 8 107 500 5 52% 9
Willie Parker 4.1 38 -11.3% 44 321 1317 2 42% 42

Maybe they will keep all four backs, which doesn’t say anything encouraging for the Steelers run/pass ratio in ‘08.

Maybe the offensive line is better than we all think and it’s just Willie Parker is a terrible back. Najeh Davenport’s statistics kind of suggest that. On the other hand…

The EIC Returns

Aaron Schatz: Hmm. I guess I should not have expected to come home from a barbecue at 8 p.m. and hop right into Audibles… but hey, Jason the cartoonist was in town from Denver and I don’t get to see him often. We watched some of the draft and got to make fun of Leodis McKelvin’s name together. We also noted that Tampa Bay now leads the league in players whose first and last names both end in “ib.”

Ned doesn’t like the “early second-round quarterback” strategy? I wasn’t aware that was a specific strategy. Drew Brees worked out, but what other early second-round quarterbacks can people remember prior to last year? None, for a good reason. From 1998-2006, the only quarterbacks chosen between picks 30 and 50 were Brees and Patrick Ramsey (technically the last pick of the first round).

Ned Macey: Aaron raises a good point about the strategy I don’t like, so I’ll rename it the second-tier quarterback strategy. Between picks 18-60 (to cover Flacco-Henne) in the same 98-06 time period, we get (in rough order of quality) Brees, Pennington, Campbell, Grossman, Shaun King, Boller, Batch, Losman, Quincy Carter, Ramsey, Tuiasosopo, with an incomplete for Clemens and Rodgers.

My theory is that quarterbacks necessarily get pushed too high, so the second-tier guys are players with very real flaws. They seem like either marginal starters or good back-ups.

Now, obviously, some disastrous busts are in the top 17, but there have also been about eight or nine very good to great quarterbacks taken in this same period. I believe top-17 picks in this period make six of this year’s top 14 in DPAR, compared with one of the other group (two with Favre if we expand the time period). I realize that a bust hurts more with a high pick and understand why you would stay away from Ryan, but I don’t think the strategy for finding a guy is to take from the second tier.

Will Carroll: How much of this was that they fell and fell, but when they went, it was in a grouping of about four or five teams that might have taken them if they passed? Might the teams have perceived this as “we have to take him now” rather than as the actual value of the pick?

Sean McCormick: But I think that ignores recent history, as teams are increasingly wary of investing high first-round picks in quarterbacks and are looking to go the other way. It’s not a coincidence that in the last three drafts you’ve gotten Tavaris Jackson, Kellen Clemens, John Beck, Kevin Kolb, Drew Stanton, Brian Brohm and Chad Henne after years of there being very few second-round selections (and I would count Trent Edwards and Brodie Croyle, who both went high-third, as part of the trend). You’re also seeing the second first-round quarterback drop past where he was expected to go — huge drops in the case of Rodgers and Quinn, a smaller but still significant drop for Leinart. Whatever the drafting trends were in 1999 that created that
bloated quarterback class, they’re very much going the other way now.

Aaron Schatz: I’m sure Jonathan Stewart is a good running back, but is John Fox allergic to DeAngelo Williams or something? That team had a number of other holes. They needed a running back in the first round, instead of letting Williams start? Now we get into one of the huge problems with doing the projections in PFP, trying to read Fox’s mind as to how he’ll split the carries between two backs.

Both Baltimore and New England made out like bandits. There’s nothing like trading down and getting extra picks so you can take the player you wanted anyway and pay him a lower salary.

I think we’re stuck with Cincinnati not solving the Chad Johnson issue before we have to write the Bengals chapter and send the book to press. We’re going to be stuck with a chapter that talks about “what if Johnson isn’t back,” the way the BP guys had to go to press waiting for Minnesota to finally pull the trigger on a Johan Santana trade.

Tennessee: The Detroit of running backs.

Brohm to Green Bay and Henne to Miami is pretty funny. Talk about your quarterback controversies. It’s one thing to argue about the young prospect versus the veteran, but now you have two fanbases who get to debate the virtues of one young prospect versus another slightly older prospect.

Stuart Fraser: Aaron Rodgers has, I think, a better chance than John Beck, who to me clearly looks like “some guy the old coach/GM drafted and is clearly just a placeholder until the new management’s passer gets up to speed.”

Rodgers probably has the more formidable competitor; that said, Holmgren has been quoted as saying it takes quarterbacks three years to understand his version of the WCO, meaning that Rodgers has a substantial head start. In Miami, the offense is new to everyone. Heck, in Miami having an offense will be new to everyone.

Mike Tanier: I am not listening to any Eagles talk radio this weekend. But I do agree with the angry fans: it’s not like there was no place on this team for, say, Kenny Philips.

Sean McCormick: Several teams had what look to be very strong drafts. As I indicated, I thought Miami made the proper choice at the top of the draft, and they did a good job by eschewing Henne at the top of the second for Merling, as they correctly determined that there was no one else really in the market and that they could afford to wait. I also liked their predraft trade with Dallas, so you’re talking about a very productive 48 hours.

Kansas City had a tremendous first three picks. Everyone had the Chiefs pegged as a team likely to reach badly for an offensive lineman, but instead they turned the fifth pick into the top player in the draft, added arguably the second-best line prospect in Branden Albert, and then took a corner in Brandon Flowers who most people agreed was the best-looking secondary player in the draft when you turn on the film. Flowers didn’t run well and that hurt his stock, but in Herm Edwards’ defense, he won’t be asked to play a lot of man coverage, and his ability to support the run and to deliver punishment will be maximized. Really nice drafting.

Washington and Jacksonville took different routes but had the same rough idea; the Redskins traded down and flooded their receiving corp with fresh blood, while the Jaguars traded up twice to flood their defense with edge rushers.

I very much liked the two players the Ravens took in Joe Flacco and Ray Rice, and I liked the spots in the draft where they took them even better. I’m sure some people will question the decision to trade back up to 18 to land Flacco, but supposedly the Jets were trying to package picks with Flacco as the target, so the Ravens didn’t want to miss out. If you consider Flacco and Henne to be equivalent prospects, then it doesn’t look so good. But if you consider Flacco and Matt Ryan to be equivalent prospects — and I do — then Baltimore’s maneuvering looks great.

Bill Barnwell: I’m not upset with the Eagles. They didn’t have a position of obvious need and got blown away with an offer (basically, trade this year’s 1 for a likely similar 1 and pick up a 2 and a 4 in the process). That’s almost always a good trade to take.

Mike Tanier: The Eagles need some developmental offensive linemen. They need a safety. Could use a linebacker with some real blitz ability. Depth at CB assuming Lito moves. They need receivers, though they did get one, and really there was no great option in this draft.

I just wanted them to follow up the Samuel signing with some other bold move. “Hey. we got Philips, check out our secondary!” “Hey, we got Mendenhall or Felix, watch us run teams over.” Nope. Meh.

Bill Barnwell: I’m very interested in why the Patriots think Mayo works as opposed to any other linebackers who have come out the past few years.

The most interesting thing for me about this draft is how the wide receivers went. There was a perception as to how that whole group of players would break down and it went almost entirely differently than how anyone predicted, with teams reaching for players lower on most mock draft boards than the well-known group of players at the top of the list (Kelly, Thomas, Jackson, etc.). Any ideas as to why that is? Has there been a shift in how receivers are perceived, or is it just that there can be significant amounts of variance in a relatively middling crop of players?

Some thoughts on second-round picks:

  • Terrence Wheatley is pretty much your ideal Patriots defensive back — talented, able to play on special teams, and oft-injured. He basically plays and feels like Randall Gay redux, which is something that’s useful.
  • Martellus Bennett (DAL) seems like a poor replacement for Anthony Fasano. The Cowboys don’t need a tight end who can get downfield, they need one who can block well on the interior and take over Fasano’s role. Essentially, they went for best athlete available, and I just don’t see Bennett having the right kind of impact on this team.
  • Mike Pollak (IND) is one of those players where, after you look at his selection and the team that chose him, simply makes perfect sense. Pollak’s undersized, but he’s smart and swift. There’s also something I’ve been looking at in offensive line selections where the first center chosen is almost always a starter two or three years into his career for a good chunk of time. Pollak would be that guy in this year’s draft.
  • I don’t get Miami picking Henne. In the first round, you’re passing on Ryan with the idea that not having players around him will prevent him from being a star. In the second round, drafting Henne means that you’re putting him into a marginally better situation — as good as I think Jake Long is, he’s not going to change things overnight. You’re also basically locking yourself into having Henne or Beck as your starter for the next four years; otherwise, you’re going to have to make a significant free agent outlay on a quarterback or spend a first-round pick on one, which is just repeating the same mistakes you’ve made before, spending pick after pick to try and improve a position but never going out and really comitting to bringing in an elite player.
  • I’m very conflicted. I’ve said such nice things about the Ravens’ drafting abilities before, but I hated their draft today. I apologize to Mike, but Flacco seems like Kyle Boller redux to me, and Rice is the one running back amongst the top guys that the adjusted 40 time score hated. Essentially, to succeed on the pro level, he’s going to need to be an elite-level receiver out of the backfield and superb blocker, because he’s simply not going to have the running ability to make it worth anyone’s while.
  • It’s interesting to see the Jaguars basically employ the Broncos drafting plan from last year in 2008, considering how relatively ineffective it was.
  • In the FO Mock Draft, I picked Malcolm Kelly for the Redskins in the first round. Kelly ended up going to them in the second round. I can’t emphasize how highly I think of this move. Kelly’s the perfect fit for what that offense needed, a possession receiver who runs smart routes and has reliable hands. He’s a great foil for Moss and allows Randle El to return to the slot. This will probably come back to haunt me, but I think Kelly ends up being a Rookie of the Year candidate. It’s just such a good fit. I don’t know if I can say the same about Devin Thomas, since Thomas’ route-running isn’t up to Kelly’s caliber. Either way, Jason Campbell should have plenty of options this year.
  • On the other hand, Eddie Royal has a 5-catch, 27-yard season to look forward to as the Broncos’ fifth wideout.

One more first-round comment: Felix Jones was the other running back who the adjusted 40-time score saw as below-average (103.98). With all the talk that he’s such an explosive big-play back, that simply didn’t come out in the combine numbers.

Sean McCormick: I think the receivers came off the way they did for a pretty simple reason: The guys who were thought of as the top group weren’t fast enough. The two guys who came off the board first — Keller (who was drafted for his receiving chops) and Avery — placed 1-2 in the short shuttle at the combine. I think the fear is that the bigger receivers didn’t have the necessary quickness to get in and out of their breaks or to get cleanly off the line.

Mike Tanier: Without one or two guaranteed guys, it makes sense that the wide receivers would be hard to predict. Take the top 2 or 3 prospects away from any position and there’s a lot of guesswork. It all came down to system and specific need when each team picked. The Bills needed size. The Eagles needed quickness/return ability. The Redskins needed bodies. While I usually hate their draft strategy (let’s take Saturday off), I like the idea of getting two pretty good prospects from this class and letting them compete.

Russell Levine: As a Michigan/Bucs fan I’d just like to express my gratitude to Gruden for drafting Dexter Jackson of Appalachian State. The guy ruined my entire fall and now I get to watch him become Jacquez Green 2.0 in Tampa.

Stuart Fraser:It is interesting to compare how the Bengals look now and how they might look had they accepted Washington’s offer for Chad Johnson. The Bengals took Keith Rivers and Jerome Simpson, the latter of which I would regard as a reach if I had any confidence that draftnik groupthink had evaluated this year’s wide receiver class halfway competently. This leaves them with a big hole along the defensive line and a smaller one at safety (and still some questions in their multiple-receiver packages). If they’d accepted the Redskins’ approach for Chad Johnson, who I’m becoming more and more convinced will not return at anything like his previous form if he returns at all, they could have grabbed someone like Kentwan Balmer or Phillip Merling with that pick (they could have traded down again and still grabbed one of them, actually).

Those whom the gods would destroy, they first make proud. And embroil them in a ridiculous dispute with a praise-motivated wide receiver represented by Drew Rosenhaus.

Doug Farrar: I never understood why the Redskins were so hot on making the Johnson deal in the first place. But yeah, the Bengals get the booby prize. If you’re offered up to two first-round picks for a 30-year-old disgruntled wide receiver that is spending his entire off-season bemoaning his presence on your team, the only potential drawback is that you might injure yourself getting to the phone quickly enough to agree to the deal. So the Redskins kept their picks and had a very solid first day. Jim Zorn’s offense doesn’t require a Hall of Fame receiver; it needs three receivers who are consistently good. Zorn sees Randle El as his new Bobby Engram and Santana Moss as his Deion Branch. He needed a big receiver who would require a defense’s focus, and he got two of them in Devin Thomas and Malcolm Kelly. The Chiefs and Dolphins were Saturday’s big winners, but the Redskins were the ultimate beneficiaries of the fact that sometimes, the draft doesn’t go the way you want it to, and you wind up thanking random deities that it didn’t.

As far as the Seattle picks, I was doing these mock drafts for Seahawks.NET, and I kept circling around USC’s Lawrence Jackson thinking how obvious it would be if they went with him. Then I would think, “Well, you want the mocks to be interesting, so bring up a player like Tyrell Johnson who people maybe haven’t heard of.” But Tim Ruskell doesn’t like “interesting.” He doesn’t like projects, and he doesn’t like surprises. He wants his day one draft picks to be as NFL-ready as possible, and that’s what he got in Jackson and John Carlson. Jackson started 51 games for NFL U, and though he was kind of the forgotten man among first-round defensive ends, he may be the most versatile. He’s played all over the line, rushed the passer from inside and out (Justin Tuck?) and has even had some success in coverage. Carlson’s that same type of versatile but unspectacular player. He can do everything required of the more traditional tight end position, and he can do it now, at a level that will allow him to compete for serious starting time right away.

Aaron Schatz: And unlike last year’s tight end, he is not yet old enough to run for President.

Doug Farrar: My big “HUH???” of the day had to be Detroit. Gosder Cherilus strikes me as a guy who just stands there and mauls people — not a lot of technique or facility at the left tackle position. The Lions apparently see him as a right tackle out of the box, which is fine, but why do you go with him that early? I’ve read that they desperately wanted Derrick Harvey (good move, Jacksonville) or Jerod Mayo, but I don’t get Cherilus being third on the board of any team with a mid-first round pick. Oh, and by trading down two picks, they effectively passed on Branden Albert. Ouch.

Mike Tanier: I’m the kind of guy who says “Geez, we shouldn’t pile on the Lions cuz it gets old”. But my God, everything they do is just awful.

Finally, a Few Thoughts on Day Two

Stuart Fraser: I’d just like to point out that pick 71 is listed as Ravens (from Ravens through Bills and Jaguars). Is everybody managing to follow all these trades?

Bill Barnwell: I’d like to place a bet on “Bryan Smith appearing in the bottom half of the FO Top 25 Prospects in 2009″.

The Patriots chose a quarterback in the third round? That must mean he’s twice as good as Tom Brady!

Stuart Fraser: I wonder what odds you could get on Pittsburgh going the first three rounds without drafting a lineman on either side of the ball (Bruce Davis is an outside linebacker in Pittsburgh’s 3-4). I’m left wondering if they think that either Chris Keomeatu or Sean Mahan is a plausible starter at left guard, on the grounds that fourth-round picks aren’t normally considered likely opening day starters.

Doug Farrar: I’m really enjoying Charley Casserly’s analysis on the NFL Network, especially his takes on Demetrius Rodgers-Cromartie and Mario Manningway. Turns out the NFL Network won’t miss Bryant Gumbel after all.

Bill Barnwell: I love Baltimore grabbing Oniel Cousins at the end of the third round. He’s a project, but he’s in the right place to be developed into a starter.

Stuart Fraser: According to the NFL.com draft tracker, Tennessee fourth-round pick William Hayes is 0′0″ tall, which might make him a bit undersized to succeed at this level.

Doug Farrar: Undersized, yes, but many intangibles. He came in under everybody’s radar, for sure.



posted 4-27-2008 at 11:51 AM by Vince Verhei || Audibles ||


216 Comments »

  1. First!

    I don’t get the Broncos’ pick of Royal…sure they needed a return guy, but they just picked up Colbert, Parker, and Jackson…WR wasn’t a need, and the Broncos have so many–like ILB.

    :: Bronco Jeff — 4/27/2008 @ 12:24 pm




  2. A couple points:

    1. re: Albert, Virginia has Eugene Monroe at LT, who’ll be a first round pick next year.

    2. It’s a little ironic that all the talk recently was about Shockey moving, but Chris Baker is the TE who won’t be long for New York. Echoes of Kendall/Strahan last year.

    3. In defense of Rice, he really runs with a head full of steam, playing like a much larger player. Baltimore didn’t really have a good backup in place.

    :: Jon — 4/27/2008 @ 12:25 pm




  3. Does Bill Barnwell really think Bobby Carpenter is ahead of Kevin Burnett on the depth chart?

    :: FullMoonOverTulsa — 4/27/2008 @ 12:35 pm




  4. I would be mad at the Eagles if I found out they didn’t take that offer to trade out of the first. I like moving down as far as they did to get Jackson too.

    :: Adam H — 4/27/2008 @ 12:42 pm




  5. Does anyone really think that Matt Ryan is so much more likely to be a good NFL QB than Chad Henne that is justifies the very large gap in where these two were drafted?

    It is interesting to look at what the Jags gave up to get a de who has never played in the league, versus what the Vikings gave up for a 26 year old guy who has performed at an elite level in the league. I think the drinking issues are a worthwhile risk. Now, of course, we’ll see Allen pull a Koren Robinson.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 1:05 pm




  6. Matt Ryan is GOING to be an average starting QB at worst (Think Jake Delhomme) and a good WB(not great) at best (think Matt Hasselback)

    Chad Henne has the same ceiling as matt ryan, but he could also be a terrible pro

    :: Joe Skolnik — 4/27/2008 @ 1:11 pm




  7. I like the Vikings choice of Booty in the fith round, as much as one care about such things. He’s used to a pro style offense, and was held back by a broken finger last year. It seems to be a decent pick.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 1:15 pm




  8. I had no problem with the Ryan pick. OK, that’s not exactly true - I wanted Dorsey. I REAAAAALLY wanted Dorsey. But I think Ryan’s the best QB prospect in the draft by a *significant* margin, and they needed to make that step to commit to a young QB at some point anyway. Thomas Dimitroff, an incredibly bright football man, said his April 5th meeting with Ryan was the most impressive whiteboard display he’s ever seen. Ryan has Peyton and Brady-type study skills and football smarts, not to mention his excellent mechanics (best in this year’s class) and his ferocious work ethic. I’m ready to buy into him, to hell with the Lewin projection.

    :: langsty — 4/27/2008 @ 1:16 pm




  9. Does Albert remind anyone else of Jim Parker?

    :: Karl Cuba — 4/27/2008 @ 1:29 pm




  10. And Ryan had BY FAR the worst supporting cast arround him this year compared to Brohm or Henne so i dont think that the lewin projection system took that into account. Ok Joe Flacco had worse, but he was facing worse competition. I dont think Ryan was the #3 prospect, but the gap between him and Flacco and Hene and Brohm was certainly warranted

    :: Joe Skolnik — 4/27/2008 @ 1:36 pm




  11. The 49ers select Kentwan Balmer.

    Bill Barnwell: Hey! Another guy with a somewhat questionable work ethic. Fortunately, the 49ers locker room is so strong as to pull Balmer in line … oh. Oh well.

    The Jets trade up for the Packers’ pick and select Kentwan Balmer.

    There is something wrong there. Keller perhaps?

    :: Jimmy — 4/27/2008 @ 1:39 pm




  12. Jets didnt move up to sign kentwan balmer, otherwise a good read

    :: Chris UK — 4/27/2008 @ 1:39 pm




  13. No Bears commentary, but hardly suprising considering how bland their draft has been so far. If you look closely though you’ll notice they’re picking a lot of SEC guys, not that I know what that means however.

    As for the picks themselves, I don’t think anyone can really argue with taking Williams. As far as value and need goes, my unsolicited opinion is that it was the right pick, and altough he wasn’t a big riser, one report I read says he allowed two sacks in 1558 offensive snaps…IN THE SEC.

    As for forte, taking a RB who can put up yards like that will never get old, but unles I’m mistaken they probably could have traded down for him and received a late third or an early fourth for their troubles. Considering how many WRs and CBs there were sitting there I can only assume some team must have been willing to trade up, like Ten. for Sweed or something.

    As a final note, losing out on Brohm hurts more than any team save possibly Baltimore can imagine, and the sting of seeing him in “turf and mustard” for the forseeable future leaves a foul taste in my mouth.

    At least we didn’t take Boller’s clone, LOL Jesus with practically the same pick too.

    pps: if angelo doesn’t take a flyer on woodson with one of those 7’s I’m going to be one sad bears fan….err….panda.

    :: Sociojoe — 4/27/2008 @ 1:44 pm




  14. re: 6

    There was never much doubt among the wirters that ryan was “probably” a better prospect than brohm and henne. That’s what we have scouts for. The argument was he was going to get Brady/Peyton money without playing a snap and without being a “much’ better than Henne/Brohm, especially according to the Lewin forecast.

    I also have doubts his floor is Jake Delhomme. I think his floor is a guy Atlanta already has on it’s roster. Joey Harrington.

    :: Sociojoe — 4/27/2008 @ 1:51 pm




  15. The picks the Jags gave up were “worth” about the 12th or 14th pick (on either chart, I think) and they got to keep their 2nd-round pick. Points-wise, they absolutely did not give up too much to move to #8. And to get to 12 or 14 requires a team who wants to trade with Jacksonville at 12 or 14 — and like you said, if Cincy picks him, then the Jags’ pick of him is defensible (assuming he is the player they think he is, of course).

    They got an every-downs defensive end who is NOT a turd and who they are pretty sure is a future star. If he slips up, he’s not suspended for a year or longer. And they don’t have to pay him Dwight Freeney money.

    :: The Original Sam (formerly sam!) — 4/27/2008 @ 1:56 pm




  16. re:7

    I agree, his strengths match what the Vikings offense is trying to do, and it’s not like they invested a significant pick in him. I think I read somewhere Ron Wolf used to draft Qbs like that a lot and ended up with Hassleback, Warner, Brunell, etc.. Worked for a few teams as i recall….New England took that route if i remember correctly.

    :: Sociojoe — 4/27/2008 @ 1:56 pm




  17. Re: QBs

    Comment 9 is dead on about the quality of players around each QB. Boston College had a shit running game (3.2 and 3.4 ypc the past two seasons) and has no WRs of any quality. Matt Ryan is the BC offense. I agree with the FO writer who wrote that he doesn’t think Ryan is the 3rd best player in the draft, but I think he’s clearly the best QB prospect.

    I don’t get the Henne hype (unless you believe he was never coached at Michigan). Was he substantially better from his freshman to senior years? He still tends to miss wide open guys despite having great talent around him. He’s got the long stride and average release. Other than having a real NFL arm (he can throw that deep out extremely well), what else does he bring to the table?

    Does anybody watch FCS (I-AA) football? Flacco was actually on TV for the national title game versus Appalachian State. He looked pretty average to me, but then again Appalachian State might be one of the top 50 teams regardless of division in the nation.

    :: DoubleB — 4/27/2008 @ 1:59 pm




  18. Yeah, I’m not saying Henne is a better prospect, or even tied with Ryan. I’m just doubtful that there is a 54-pick difference between the two. When you have a bad footbal team, it doesn’t seem sensible to use such a high pick on a qb unless you have reason to think he is of Peyton Manning or Troy Aikman quality, or something along those lines. I just don’t think Ryan comes close to that standard as a qb prospect. Better for the Falcons to go with some muscle types who can knock people on their ass.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 1:59 pm




  19. Sam, until a guy does it, you just don’t know what a guy will be. I’ll take the guy who has done it, drinking and all.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 2:04 pm




  20. I wonder if the Packers took Brohm largely to keep the Vikes, Bears, and Lions from doing so when they remembered that they don’t actually have quarterbacks.

    :: Dave — 4/27/2008 @ 2:25 pm




  21. Fun read. I’m utterly ignorant of college football, so I don’t have too much to say about Miami’s picks thus far. What I will say is that the still have a void where most NFL teams have a secondary, (Will Allen excepted), and that Tom Brady and Randy Moss might put up a mile-and-a-half of passing yards against them next season.

    I’m also a little suprised that Jason Taylor is still a Dolphin.

    :: James, London — 4/27/2008 @ 2:34 pm




  22. “When you have a bad footbal team, it doesn’t seem sensible to use such a high pick on a qb unless you have reason to think he is of Peyton Manning or Troy Aikman quality, or something along those lines. I just don’t think Ryan comes close to that standard as a qb prospect.”

    Yeah, but I think Tom Dimitroff does believe he’s a prospect along those lines.

    The thing is, this is just kind of the price you pay when you have such a gaping hole at QB - you miss out on blue chippers like Dorsey, who I thought was the best player in the draft, because you’re spending your top pick on a QB who might not even be one of the ten best players in the draft. I’ll still take this over what Ned was calling the ’second-tier QB’ strategy, where you target almost-as-good second rounders with an eye on making value-appropriate picks. I feel like you’re kinda cheating yourself in that case, because you’re not committing to the best possible prospect at the most important position, you’re just hedging your bets. You HAVE to invest more resources in QBs than you do in other positions, and that includes ‘reaching’ for a top prospect, even if he is only marginally better than some of his peers (tho i think the gap between ryan and the rest of em is bigger than ppl are saying)

    :: langsty — 4/27/2008 @ 2:40 pm




  23. Harvey is far from a reach IMO. The guy is half the reason J.Moss was drafted that high last year(Other half is Jevon Kearse), and still got production while losing Thomas and Moss.

    Chris Johnson a great pick ? Chris Henry anyone ? Who is VY going to throw to..

    And I don’t want to be a homer, but EAgles Day 1 was just fantastic. The 2 guys they got could havebeen picked with their round 1 and 2 picks without anyone really complaining, not only they did that, but they also added a 1st next year(!) and a 4th. Amazing first day.

    :: bubqr — 4/27/2008 @ 2:43 pm




  24. The Bears said that Earl Bennett, who they drafted in the 3rd round was the #1 receiver on their board. So someone was terribly wrong on their evaluation of this years receivers.

    :: Tom D — 4/27/2008 @ 3:10 pm




  25. Not only did Booger Mcfarland have a good career in Tampa, he was just recently traded away for a 2nd round pick with his age/tread on his tires.

    Let me go down by saying that the Raiders made a HUGE mistake by taking Darren Mcfadden. The comparisons to AD are laughable, just like the Reggie Bush/ Gale Sayers comparisons were.

    I was very pleased with the Giants thus far parlaying that wonderful draft from last year.

    Phillips
    Thomas
    Manningham

    Phillips addresses an Obvious need, Thomas and Manningham improve CB and WR. The Giants are already set at the ever important QB, DE positions and just move on down to address the other super important positions even with Steve Smith, Sinorice Moss, Aaron Ross fresh off the draft press in the past years.

    How much do you guys love Mel Kiper and Mike Mayock ?

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 3:19 pm




  26. I think the difference between what the Vikings did and the Jaguars did is the Vikings paid about $13M for the proven performance of Jared Allen ($31M guaranteed minus $15 guaranteed for #8 pick last year - also a DE - plus some inflation). The cap space is a resource just like the picks; if the Jags were even interested in Allen they may not have been willing or able to devote the cap to him that they were to Harvey. The Vikings had the cap room and were willing to take on the risk of tying it up on a proven player with a history of drinking. The Jags went with less money on an unproven player with no trouble that I know of in his past.

    :: MRH — 4/27/2008 @ 3:20 pm




  27. Chad Hennes release is too damn slow. I see flashes of Drew Bledsoe - Parcells 2nd to last QB.

    I am glad Mike Hart fell way down the draft board and I am glad Mel Kiper was calling him a “backup” despite everybody else speaking of his “heart” and character. Kiper talked about Ray Rice and his 4.5 Running behind Michigans line averaging much more than Hart and his 4.7.

    Darren Mcfadden = Willie Parker. Decent player but not worth the 4th pick.

    Gled Dorsey is the best DT prospect to come out in years. It isn’t just about penetration or tackles, this guy has the initial punch and then can control his gap. He won’t get pushed around inside and is a key cog to develop a strong run defense ( ala Pat Williams).

    I think your Patriots had a good pick with Crable, I also like Avril to be a solid and underrated pro for Detroit.

    I am glad the Giants got Manningham at the end of rd 3. At one point in time he was projected as the best receiver in the draft before a slow combine and “drug” off field issues. The slow 40 doesn’t bother me because he plays fast, and the drug stuff doesn’t bother me either because 25% of the league smokes. ( Just don’t get caught).

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 3:27 pm




  28. Mel Kiper hates Todd McShay, it’s so funny/awkward to watch them go at it.

    :: Tom D — 4/27/2008 @ 3:28 pm




  29. I don’t understand how Andre Woodson gets drafted a round after Josh Johnson. Woodson beat LSU and was a preseason guy to watch while Josh Johnson was basically playing High School football. Sure his stats were great, but there are probably some college intramural teams at big colleges like Ohio State with more talent than some of the teams he played against. Woodson was throwing passes with the Glen Dorseys of the world in his face.

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 3:37 pm




  30. I’m surprised more people don’t compare Flacco to Jamarcus Russell. Both are super toosly, huge but not overly fast, and had a mid-sixties completion %. Each didn’t start many games either, giving scouts a limited opportunity to do judge them.

    Of course, the level of competition they faced was slightly different (only slightly).

    The Boller comps to me don’t make sense, Boller never proved he was an accurate passer in college (even though he’s become reasonably accurate), and completion % is an important stat when translating college performance into the pros (or so I’m told).

    :: jonnyblazin — 4/27/2008 @ 3:41 pm




  31. I look at what the Bengals did this offseasons and then the Saints. Both teams have elite QB’s and should have top 10 offenses at worst. The Saints are literally doing everything in their power to bring in a talented Vilma, Sedrick Ellis, draft other defense etc. Then I look at the Bengals. They spend 2 top picks on WRs because of their premadonna Receiver, their Pothead receiver, etc. The Bengals were picking guys up off the street to play LB last year, and that front 7 losses their best player etc. The Bengals did not address their front 7 like they needed to while the Saints did.

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 3:42 pm




  32. The Seahawks drafted a long snapper.
    You don’t have to be real quite to hear the seahawk fans cry. Again.

    :: Theo, Netherlands — 4/27/2008 @ 3:48 pm




  33. Re #7
    “[John David Booty is] used to a pro style offense, and was held back by a broken finger last year, a marked tendency to throw the ball to the other team, and questionable ability to throw the ball downfield. It seems to be a decent wasted pick.”

    Fixed.

    :: NewsToTom — 4/27/2008 @ 3:50 pm




  34. John David Booty won the rose bowl against Chad Henne two years ago because of his much quicker release. The talented Michigan defense couldn’t get there quite in time, where as Henne kept getting sacked over and over because of holding onto the ball longer and releaseing it slower. I don’t know much about Flacco besides he is tall, has a strong arm, and played at a smaller school, but Booty is not a wasted pick.

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 3:54 pm




  35. How about the D-III love late in the 6th round–Wheaton and Mount Union. Good to see.

    :: DoubleB — 4/27/2008 @ 3:56 pm




  36. Brohm I think reeks of Drew Brees. NFLN had the best criticism of him for negatives “Good, not great”. So his biggest fault was that he was good at everything.

    Yet Matt Ryan’s biggest fault was “Throws too many INTs”. That seems like a really awful fault for a QB to have. That’s like a WR whose fault is “struggles catching the ball”.

    Also, I think Philly really had to take that trade. They probably wanted Kenny Phillips, but that offer was just too good to pass up.

    Either way about the QBs, Brohm outperforms Ryan in every statistical category. Is being the best QB on a top college team really enough for people to think Ryan is better than Brohm?

    :: Crushinator — 4/27/2008 @ 4:03 pm




  37. A stray thought on Green Bay’s drafting of Brian Brohm, graded by some as the most pro-ready of the plethora of QBs available - protection for Aaron Rodgers or protection from Brett’s “maybe I will, if they need me.”

    I can just hear Mike McCarthy now - “We got it covered Brett, really…”

    :: roeselef — 4/27/2008 @ 4:14 pm




  38. MRH, the way the Vikings manage the cap, the extra 13 milion in guaranteed cash won’t have much impact in future years. It’s true, however, that the Jags may not have had the fexibility.

    Unless the Vikings pull the trigger on another big trade, requiring more guaranteed money, or Tavaris Jackson has a huge year (yes, I’ve been drinking) I suspect they’ll go into next year thirty or forty milion under the cap again.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 4:16 pm




  39. Uh, news to Tom, there is a reason that Booty is a fifth round pick. Show me a qb picked that late that couldn’t be described as “wasted” based upon a perceived major weakness. If they didn’t have such a major weakness, they would be picked sooner.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 4:21 pm




  40. Y’know, a really good long snapper who is also fast enough to run downfield and occasionally make a tackle on a punt just might be worth a 7th round pick. Mike Morris had a 14 year NFL career because of that skill combination.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 4:28 pm




  41. #32, maybe, but sometimes the reasons are illogical. I mean, Brohm was a 2nd-round pick mostly because Louisville couldn’t play defense last year.

    :: Dave — 4/27/2008 @ 4:36 pm




  42. World of difference between dropping to the 2nd round, and dropping to the 5th, dave. Nobody drops to the fifth, especially from a BCS conference, unless major weaknesses are seen on film.

    :: Will Allen — 4/27/2008 @ 4:42 pm




  43. Brian Brohm will be better than Chad Henne. I would rather have Brohm in round 2 than Henne, and I would rather have Booty in round 5 when at the same time you could have drafted say Dan Connor or Mike Pollack and rebuilt the line or D.

    #35, I love how people are still making fun of Brett Favre. Everybody loves to kick guys on their way out but wait until the Aaron Rodgers era opens and this team is 3-8 wins worse depending on Rodgers. Will you still be making fun of Bretty Favre? Most of the anti-Favre crowd dissapeared after last year but you still have to come out and bash the guy.

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 4:44 pm




  44. I am honestly not that hot on this QB crop in general. I am not that high on Ryan, I liked what I saw out of Brohm, Henne has huge bust potential, Josh Johnson??????? JDB in round 5 from a risk reward perspective doesn’t bother me at all. I would MUCH rather have JDB in round 5, than Tavaras Jackson in round 2. Booty actually played college FB too.

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 4:48 pm




  45. and how the heck do the Ravens draft Flacco. He has a big arm?????? So what, doesn’t Kyle Bollier? A big unproven guy with a big arm, they are a dime a dozen in the NFL. Bollier was the youngest starter in the league a couple of years ago, and you might as well see what he can do after benching it for a couple of years. Mcnair wasn’t great, and Bollier was similar last year, but they weren’t trying to score 42 pts. per game. Just see how KB works out and build the rest of that team up.

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 4:51 pm




  46. re: 29

    Ryan’s INTs are pretty deceptive, and I think in general you can’t use production stats as the base of your evaluation wrt college QBs. it’s a piece of the puzzle, but you still have to look at the film and look at the individual plays where the picks happened - were they bad throws, was he playing in a trailing situation, etc. Ryan’s understanding of the game appears to be more advanced than that of any other prospect, his mechanics are top-notch, he has good accuracy and strength, good size, an incredible work ethic and a passion for football. He’s just a more complete package than Brohm, and I really don’t think that scouts are punishing BB for being on a Louisville team that struggled.

    :: langsty — 4/27/2008 @ 4:55 pm




  47. Re 29

    Brett Favre threw too many ints, but he had a solid career

    :: David — 4/27/2008 @ 5:07 pm




  48. So…just how many teams have spent 1/3rd of their draft picks on centers?

    Maybe Polian is establishing himself as Millen’s evil twin.

    :: John — 4/27/2008 @ 5:12 pm




  49. I agree that Ryan has the release, mechanics, intelligence, and I don’t even hold that 19 picks against him with that conference. My point is that being a top notch QB is no joke. I don’t see him as a Carson or Peyton but I could certainly be wrong. I’d even agree that he is a better bet than BB, but BB has a better chance than Henne, Flacco etc. I am starting to think that a quarterbacks release is highly underrated, where as most people on this site would agree that Mobility is highly overrated.

    45- That is all you have to say for Favre, A solid career? He is still in the top 3rd of QBs in the league with a beard full of grey hair, he has started 10 straight years worth of games and has a freaking ring on his finger.

    :: Chris — 4/27/2008 @ 5:20 pm




  50. I think the major hangup on Jared Allen for Jacksonville was not, “he’s a risk to be suspended”, as much as, “he would be the highest paid defender and he’s gotten DUIs, which is bad for team unity”. The Jags have had alot of problems with player arrests, and I think keeping locker room harmony is really a big goal - Stroud reportedly was unhappy and got his wish to be traded. JAX isn’t Dallas - the Jags are low on stars, and play in a very conservative area of the country . Allen was not someone you go out on a limb for.

    :: Rollo — 4/27/2008 @ 5:23 pm




  51. Either way about the QBs, Brohm outperforms Ryan in every statistical category. Is being the best QB on a top college team really enough for people to think Ryan is better than Brohm?

    Well, let’s see:

    Ryan Leaf, Washington State (10-2), 2nd overall pick.

    Brian Griese, Michigan (12-0), 91st overall pick.

    Matt Hasselbeck, Boston College (4-7), 187th overall pick.

    No, I think it’s just that Ryan Leaf and Brian Griese are better than Matt Hasselbeck.

    :: Alex — 4/27/2008 @ 5:46 pm




  52. The Jaguars are in no way salary cap restricted, but they are a small market team. They have $13M in salary cap room but they may not have had $13M REAL dollars that they wanted to spend on a guy with major off the field issues. As a fan I would have preferred that the Jags stay put at 26, pick Merling, and still have two 3rds to add depth. I just can’t see the real difference between Merling and Groves vs Harvey and Groves.

    :: Stillio — 4/27/2008 @ 5:51 pm




  53. Regarding the Vikings vs the Jaguars moves to acquire a pass rush DE. The Vikings spent roughly 200 pts more in the current draft chart to land Allen. 200 pts is the value of a mid 3rd round pick I believe.

    Allen had 15.5 sacks and 55 tackles in the NFL.

    Derrick Harvey had 4.5 sacks and 32 tackles in the NCAA.

    I think the Vikings made a far better gamble. College DE’s drafted in the first round are a huge risk.

    :: jimm — 4/27/2008 @ 6:20 pm




  54. Barnwell’s penultimate comment above wins just about every Audibles thread. Ever. And beyond.

    :: Bobman — 4/27/2008 @ 6:26 pm




  55. 37

    Ye