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Appreciate the comments guys, but relatively unnecessary. It's evident people read and respect what I do post. It really has nothing to do with content, the work put in, etc. I'm going to do a lot of this stuff whether or not I post it or anyone reads about it, because I personally enjoy it.
I'm not an expert either. I played football for a very long time and I won't dive into the specifics. One of my undergraduate degrees is in physical education where I focused my studies on kinesiology, biomechanics, sport and exercise physiology and the like. That's my background. I'm not an NFL scout and never have been. I'm not a former NFL executive. I have no basis to claim to be an expert. I don't try to pretend to be an expert, I just merely state things as I see them. I come here to have some form of intelligent discussion, although I've come not to expect an overabundance of intelligence on the Internet. Basically, I come here to interact with people who have similar interests. I don't, however, come here for a bunch of people to act like complete assholes to one another. If that's the case, I will just leave and find other avenues of entertainment. Anyhow, this is a small drop in the bucket of life. I really hope and pray that Sac is okay, that's much more important than this trivial shit. |
I took a break from the board, too, in part because people started suggesting I be banned for earnestly arguing unpopular opinions.
Let me ask this, though: I've had a couple slap fights with Laz -- why does he bother so many people. He's just a douche. |
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The bullshit threads like the dating thread, the drinking threads, the what are you eating or cooking threads, and others are the ones that should be sub-forumed, while the draft discussion should be part of the main forum. I mean, seriously, how does everyone not find it to be ****ing stupid that football discussion is separated as a sub form on a football forum? |
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That place is such a cluster**** from **** that I will never ever bitch about the layout or format of this outfit. If it was posted in the last week here, I have no trouble finding it whatsoever. I have to email myself a link from that place if there is a thread I want to follow. It should also be pointed out that they are a bunch of whiney bitches over there since the grain prices have come down. Worse than here probably. By comparison, this place owns. And is where I spend most of my time. |
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'Volcanic periods' has been used to describe him several times in the past and it seems to be apt. Mostly I think it's because he's an idiot but he's a loudly opinionated one. So he tends to draw fire from people that are far better informed than him and he frustrates the shit out of them because it's really like debating Nietzsche with a dalmatian. |
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But of course, from one condescending asshole to the next, it works out |
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I know a lot of people here don't like Chiefs Coalition, but a page from their playbook wouldn't be a bad idea. They have "The Locker Room" for all the other bullshit topics. It keeps the main Chiefs area clear for all things Chiefs, including the draft. It worked reasonably well when there was actually traffic there. Kind of a ghost town now with a few stragglers. |
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Round 1 (1-16)
01. Tennessee Titans Laremy Tunsil, OT, Mississippi The Titans reportedly like Jalen Ramsey a bunch, but taking a safety 1st overall would be a real head scratcher. I say safety because Ramsey struggled more than pundits are willing to admit when he moved out to the boundary in 2015. The long-term health of the franchise involves protecting its greatest asset, franchise quarterback Marcus Mariota, and general manager Jon Robinson has indicated as much. Drafting Tunsil will allow the Titans to slide Taylor Lewan to the right side and Jeremiah Poutasi inside to guard, which should give them one of the better offensive lines in the league with Chance Warmack (OG) and free agent acquisition Ben Jones (OC) filling out the interior. 02. Cleveland Browns Carson Wentz, QB, North Dakota State I disagree about Wentz being a better pro prospect than Jared Goff, who I compare favorably to a young Aaron Rodgers. However, you never really know what the brass in Cleveland is thinking, and apparently they like Carson Wentz quite a bit more. There is no doubt in my mind that Wentz is worthy of top-10 consideration and the Browns desperately need to get a quarterback with a stable mindset that can propel their franchise to winning football games going forward. 03. San Diego Chargers Ronnie Stanley, OT, Notre Dame There is no doubt about it, the Chargers desperately need help on the defensive side of the football. That being said, if this team wants to win football games they need to keep the face of their franchise, quarterback Phillip Rivers, off the grass. San Diegos offensive line last season was atrocious and, due to injuries and horrible play, trotted out some 24 different offensive line combinations last season. They have to stop the bleeding up front if they want Rivers and running back Melvin Gordon, their 2015 first round pick, to have any hope. 04. Dallas Cowboys Joey Bosa, DE, Ohio State The Cowboys have a ton of issues at defensive end at the moment. They let Greg Hardy walk away because he cant keep his head on straight, then they drafted Randy Gregory last season in the second round and hes proven to be everything everyone was worried hed be: unavailable. The good news for Dallas is that DeMarcus Lawrence stepped up with 8 sacks last season and looks like he can hold down one side of line. While Jalen Ramsey would be incredibly enticing here, the game is won and lost in the trenches and Jerry Jones subscribes to that theory. Bosa will bring a lunch-pail type work ethic to their defensive front and is extremely reliable. Bosa can defend the run and rush the passer well. The Boys could actually end up with a formidable edge duo in 2016. 05. Jacksonville Jaguars Myles Jack, OLB, UCLA While the defensive front could get consideration here, the Jags already have a pretty stout front line after the addition of Malik Jackson at DT and Dante Fowler coming back at DE. Jalen Ramsey would also be enticing here, but the signing of Prince Amukamara at CB and Tashaun Gibson at FS one of the better safeties in the NFL in my opinion, make it seem unlikely. Jack will give the Jags an insanely athletic combination of linebackers with Telvin Smith on the opposite side. Paul Posluzny is already one of the best ILBs in the business, so Jacksonvilles defense could significantly improve. Jack is a sideline-to-sideline player that can cover anyone with a lunch-pail work ethic to boot. 06. Baltimore Ravens Jalen Ramsey, DB, Florida State There are teams that might jump on Ramsey earlier than I have him slotted here, but the truth is that Ramsey struggled out on the boundary much more than most pundits are willing to admit. I see Ramsey as a much better player with everything in front of him, where he can take advantage of his outstanding closing burst. That said, Baltimore really needs help on the outside and there is no doubt theyll give Ramsey a look at cornerback first. If Ramsey doesnt work out on the outside, Baltimore has a chance to get a potential Ed Reed type of player at safety here and there is no doubt that Ozzie will jump at that chance. 07. San Francisco 49ers Jared Goff, QB, California Nearly everyone on the planet knows that the 49ers need to move on from Colin Kaepernick and find a franchise signal caller for the future. The only problem is that their head coach might not be in that everyone. Im going to reserve my opinions and thoughts on Chip Kelly and assume that the front office is smart enough to snag Goff here. That being said, Trent Balke loves him some Blaine Gabbert, so the jury is still out. Goff reminds me of a young Aaron Rodgers, and any other pick here would be foolish. 08. Philadelphia Eagles Ezekiel Elliott, RB, Ohio State There may not be a bigger hole on the roster in Philadelphia right now than there is at running back. While a quarterback of the future is definitely in line here, the Eagles have the chance to win right now in a mediocre division and already have a relatively solid QB on the roster in Sam Bradford. Elliott brings an elite running back resume with him to Philly with his advanced abilities as a blocker and receiver in addition to his prowess running the football. Elliott could be a 1,500 yard back in his first season. 09. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Vernon Hargreaves III, CB, Florida The Bucs could use a more talented and explosive edge rusher, but they also need someone that can cover a receiver. A washed-up Brent Grimes, who just signed with the Bucs, is probably their best cover-man and that speaks volumes. Hargreaves is a guy that would fit well in a zone defense with his closing burst and tenacity on the edge, plus hes a good tackler from the corner spot. With the depth of talent on the defensive front, the Bucs can afford to wait on a pass rusher. 10. New York Giants Darron Lee, OLB, Ohio State The Giants got a whole lot better on the defensive front with the signings of Olivier Vernon at DE and Damon Harrison at DT as well as in the backfield with the signing of Janoris Jenkins at CB. This leads me to believe that the G-men will look to add speed and talent up the middle of their defense early and often. No player represents speed-to-size better than Ohio States Darron Lee. Lee can play the weak side in New York, using his insane speed to play sideline-to-sideline and cover backs, tight ends, and even receivers underneath to hopefully help the leagues worst ranked passing defense in 2015. 11. Chicago Bears DeForest Buckner, DE, Oregon The Bears move to a 3-4 last season was a borderline disaster. After a fire sale of ho-hum talent this offseason, the Monsters of the Midway are beginning to look even more like the Care Bears on defense. Up first and foremost for Chicago will be not relying on Ego Ferguson and Cornelius Washington to be their starting defensive ends going into the season. Bucker provides the Bears with a solid run stopper and budding pass rusher on the outside, and if he at least lives up to his Calais Campbell comparisons hell be a huge addition to their defense. 12. New Orleans Saints Sheldon Rankins, DT, Louisville The Saints werent very good in 2015 on their front line, boasting the 2nd worst defense against the rush and the 2nd worst against the pass with only the Giants saving them from being the leagues worst overall unit. A couple big reasons are that Kevin Williams is closing in on 40 years old (hell be 36 when the season starts) and John Jenkins moves like a sloth. They need a guy that can penetrate up front next to their star pass-rusher, Cameron Jordan. Rankins provides one of the best blends of athletic ability to push the pocket while still being able to hold the fort against the run and compares favorably to Carolinas Kawaan Short. 13. Miami Dolphins Eli Apple, CB, Ohio State The Dolphins werent great against the pass last season and a big reason for that was terrible play from the corner position. The Dolphins already acquired Byron Maxwell in part of the trade that slid them from 8 to 13, but I dont think they are going to be happy starting Jamar Taylor opposite him after their release of Brent Grimes. Apple provides a unique blend of size and athleticism that have NFL decision makers drooling over. Apple gives the Dolphins that longer CB on the outside that they normally covet. Apple defends the run very well and is aggressive with his press. The jury is out on Vance Joseph as a defensive coordinator, but his lineage suggest Apple will be a perfect fit. 14. Oakland Raiders Reggie Ragland, ILB, Alabama The Raiders signing of Curtis Lofton last offseason was an absolutely disaster and play from the inside has to improve. Malcolm Smith proved to be a good signing if he can stay on the weak side and recently signed Bruce Irvin should help on the strong side. Enter Reggie Ragland, who is an old-school, smash-mouth linebacker that should help the Raiders have a more reliable presence on the inside that will improve their overall run defense and leadership. 15. Los Angeles Rams Paxton Lynch, QB, Memphis Its a quarterback driven league and the Rams are staring dead on at starting Case Keenum or Nick Foles at the position in 2016, neither of which present very satisfying potential, unless they can find a solution in the draft. While gaining a number one receiver here in Laquon Treadwell would be very enticing, they need someone to throw that number one the ball. Paxton Lynch has some flaws and will need a bit of work in his jump to the pros, but he offers first round traits and legitimate franchise potential. Lynch also possesses the type of athletic abilities that Jeff Fisher has went after in the past at the position. 16. Detroit Lions Laquon Treadwell, WR, Mississippi The Lions lost Megatron to retirement this offseason, so they are going to need to find a replacement. Signing Marvin Jones away from Cincinnati provides the team with a nice second target, but he isnt a primary receiver. Golden Tate was insanely productive a year ago, but does his best damage from the slot. If hes there when Detroit selects, Treadwell will give them that true number one and a very complete passing attack for Matthew Stafford. Granted, the Lions need help in the trenches on both sides of the ball, but I cant see them passing on Treadwell. |
Round 1 (17-31)
17. Atlanta Falcons Shaq Lawson, DE, Clemson The Falcons cant go into the future with Tysyn Jackson starting at defensive end. Atlanta must find a complimentary end piece to Vic Beasley and push Jackson inside to compete with Jonathan Babineaux. Lawson is an excellent run defender and solid pass rusher that should help shore up the Falcons middle-of-the-pack defense. Atlanta can address needs up the middle of their defensive later on in the draft. 18. Indianapolis Colts Emmanuel Ogbah, DE/OLB, Oklahoma State The Colts defense is an absolute mess and they could, theoretically, take a player at any position and see a huge improvement. They were 8th and 9th worst respectively against the run and pass last season and lost some of their best talent in free agency. All of that said, you have to start somewhere when building a defense from the ground up and the best place to start is with an edge rusher. Ogbah presents a unique blend of size, length, speed, and power and is beginning to put it all together with at 22.5 sacks in his last 26 games. The Colts will at least have a bookend for the ageless wonder, Robert Mathis. 19. Buffalo Bills AShawn Robinson, DE/DT, Alabama The Bills have to improve their defensive front over Jarius Wynn and Kyle Williams. Marcell Darius is great, but he cant do it all by himself. If Rex Ryan has proved anything, hes going to stack the trenches before he worries about improving the pass rush from the outside linebacker position. Robinson is one of the best all-around defensive lineman in this years draft and should provide the Bills with a steady 2-gap space eater and run stopper that can provide the occasional pass rush. Hopefully Robinson, along with Darius, can help fix the leagues 8th worst run defense in yards per carry (4.4), while helping to keep their outside pass rushers a little cleaner. 20. New York Jets Noah Spence, DE/OLB, Western Kentucky The Jets were solid both defensively and offensively in 2015, and if they can resign Ryan Fitzpatrick they have very few major holes to fill on the offensive side of the ball. On defense, however, the Jets have some major holes. The top priority for the Jets needs to be finding a dominate pass rusher to compliment a very solid Lorenzo Mauldin on the other side. Spence comes with some obvious baggage after getting booted from Ohio State, so teams will exercise major caution, but he also may be the best overall pass rusher in the draft. It will be difficult for teams to overlook Spence if hes cleaned up as much as he said he has while at Western Kentucky. It might just be high time for the Jets to take a major chance on what could be a major player. 21. Washington Redskins Andrew Billings, NT, Baylor The Redskins are fortunate in that they dont have too many major holes on the team, but what they do need are quite a few improvements. The one area they do have a need in is at nose tackle, since the team hasnt re-signed Terrance Knighton to date. Billings has the makings of an All-Pro caliber nose tackle with a stout frame, good size and length for his height, outstanding power and drive, and tremendous closing speed. Billings is a high motor player that will keep offensive lineman busy the entire game. 22. Houston Texans Corey Coleman, WR, Baylor The Texans have a few holes along the offensive front, but those needs are on the interior where they can address them later on. The primary need for the Texans at this point is finding another explosive receiver outside of DeAndre Hopkins to keep teams honest. Coleman may be the most complete package when it comes to explosive receivers in this draft, and he can play on the outside or in the slot. If Jaelen Strong can develop into a nice outside threat, then having Coleman play the slot is all that much more of a bonus. Coleman would make newly acquired quarterback Brock Osweiler much more comfortable after leaving a quality stable of wide receivers behind in Denver. 23. Minnesota Vikings Josh Doctson, WR, Texas Christian The Vikings probably found a future star in Stefan Diggs last season, but hes about all Teddy Bridgewater has to throw to right now. Dont get me wrong, the Vikings have some decent complimentary pieces in tight end Kyle Rudolph and receiver Jairus Wright. However, Wright would be best served staying in the slot where he can maximize his skill set and Rudolph would be better as a complimentary tight end rather than an every down player trying to bust open the seams. All that said, Docston is probably the best receiver in the draft this year, but teams are scared of the offense he played in at TCU. Doctson runs well, hes insanely quick, hes got good size, but best of all he catches everything thrown his way. Doctson is, at worst, a prototypical possession receiver in this league and could end up being much more. 24. Cincinnati Bengals Vonn Bell, SS, Ohio State The Bengals are in an envious position of not having many glaring needs on the roster, but they havent re-signed Reggie Nelson yet so safety could be a big need for them. Bell is an outstanding athlete at safety and has shown outstanding ability as a single-high, man-cover safety that you can bring down one-on-one in the nickel. Bell has shown a knack for being a playmaker from the safety position with 8 interceptions over his last two years as a starter. 25. Pittsburgh Steelers William Jackson III, CB, Houston It is absolutely no secret that the Steelers are one of the NFLs neediest teams when it comes to acquiring talent in their secondary. While acquiring a nose tackle will be high on Pittsburghs to-do list, they play many more snaps out of their nickle package. The only reasonable option at this slot outside of Jackson seems to be Louisiana Tech defensive lineman Vernon Butler. That said, Jackson fits everything the Steelers look for in a corner with excellent athleticism, length, and ball skills. I find it hard to believe Pittsburgh will pass on a boundary player once again. 26. Seattle Seahawks Jack Conklin, OT, Michigan State It was borderline silliness that the Seahawks let Russel Okung go in free agency, further compounding their offensive line woes, so its absolutely imperative that Seattle gets a left tackle that can start from day one. The Seahawks did sign JMarcus Webb and Bradley Sowell, but neither fit on the left side. In the end, the Seahawks get a relative bargain in Jack Conklin. There are legitimate concerns that Conklin can stay on the left side for the long haul, which is why I have him dropping, but he plays with a good base, has outstanding technique, and is always on target. Conklin should be able to keep Russell Wilson relatively clean from the blind side and has shown hes extremely reliable, which will be a welcome addition over Okungs injury history. 27. Green Bay Packers Kevin Dodd, DE/OLB, Clemson The Packers biggest need likely is at inside linebacker, but Ted Thompson usually isnt the kind of guy that likes to reach just to fill a void. The defensive front is also a need, so guys like Vernon Butler and Kenny Clark will get consideration here. With Julius Peppers quickly declining, the Packers cant expect to get much more out of his tank. The Packers have little else on the outside, so getting a pass rusher in now that can learn from Peppers and take some snaps from him is extremely important. Dodd is stout against the run and can bring pressure off the edge. While Dodd needs refinement, including his hand usage, he could turn out to be one of this drafts more complete edge defenders. 28. Kansas City Chiefs Vernon Butler, DE/DT, Louisiana Tech The Chiefs likely hope one of the top cornerbacks fall to them, but it appears extremely unlikely given the number of teams with day one needs at the position. The Chiefs might end up having to wait until day two to address the boundary, and given they have Phillip Gaines returning from his ACL injury, they may just do so anyhow. The Chiefs did re-sign Jaye Howard on a two-year deal, but with Howard not signed for the long-term and Dontari Poe set to become a free agent in 2016, the Chiefs may just want to address their defensive front with an early pick. Butler is everything you look for in a defensive lineman for an odd front, with great mass throughout, great length, a big motor, lateral quickness, and a great closing burst. Many have compared Butler to the Jets Muhammad Wilkerson, and that type of player on an already formidable Chiefs front line would be a welcome addition. 29. Arizona Cardinals Jarran Reed, DE/NT, Alabama The Cardinals boasted one of the leagues best defenses a year ago, but they lack quality players next to Calais Cambell up front and age is a major concern with Frostee Rucker, Cory Redding, and Red Bryant. The Cards could definitely use a major upgrade over Cory Peters at nose tackle. Jarran Reed is an immovable object on the front line and is a prototypical run-stopping, space-eating, nose tackle. While Reed doesnt offer much value on passing downs, hes going to be one of those key cogs in a base front that will keep his linebackers clean and able to fill lanes. 30. Carolina Panthers Jason Spriggs, OT, Indiana For a Super Bowl team the Panthers have some glaring needs on offense, and that starts at the tackle position. Michael Oher belongs at right tackle and Mike Remmers belongs on the bench as a swing reserve. That Panthers need to find a left tackle prospect so that they can make this switch and help keep Cam Newton from facing some of the pressure he saw in the big game. Spriggs may be the most athletic tackle prospect available this year overall and has the look of a franchise blind-side protector once he gains more strength for the pro game. The plus side for the Panthers is that they dont need to rush Spriggs into action immediately, but I think theyd see a tremendous gain by doing so. 31. Denver Broncos Dak Prescott, QB, Mississippi State Its no secret that the Broncos need a starting quarterback. The Broncos cant conceivably come up with an excuse that there is any other position of greater need, or likely value, at the end of round one. Dak Prescott is the perfect type of quarterback for the Broncos because of his mobility and ability to throw on the run, staples of Kubiacs offense. Prescott is one of the only quarterbacks in this years draft that passes the Parcells Test and, assuming he got at least a 26 on the Wonderlic, the 26-27-60 Rule. Prescott could become a very good passer as he learns to read pro-style defenses and make more progressions in the NFL. |
Round 2
32. Cleveland Browns Taylor Decker, OT, Ohio State 33. Tennessee Titans Mackenzie Alexander, CB, Clemson 34. Dallas Cowboys Kendall Fuller, CB, Virginia Tech 35. San Diego Chargers Austin Johnson, DT, Penn State 36. Baltimore Ravens Kentrell Brothers, ILB, Missouri 37. San Francisco 49ers Ryan Kelly, OC, Alabama 38. Jacksonville Jaguars Keanu Neal, SS, Florida 39. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Kenny Clark, DT, UCLA 40. New York Giants Cody Whitehair, OG, Kansas State 41. Chicago Bears LaRaven Clark, OT, Texas Tech 42. Miami Dolphins Derrick Henry, RB, Alabama 43. Los Angeles Rams Hunter Henry, TE, Arkansas 44. Oakland Raiders Robert Nkemdiche, DT, Mississippi 45. Los Angeles Rams Michael Thomas, WR, Ohio State 46. Detroit Lions Nick Martin, OC, Notre Dame 47. New Orleans Saints Leonard Floyd, DE/OLB, Georgia 48. Indianapolis Colts Joshua Garnett, OG, Stanford 49. Buffalo Bills Will Fuller, WR, Notre Dame 50. Atlanta Falcons DeAndre Houston-Carson, FS, William & Mary 51. New York Jets Connor Cook, QB, Michigan State 52. Houston Texans Chris Jones, DE/DT, Mississippi State 53. Washington Redskins Sua Cravens, OLB/SS, USC 54. Minnesota Vikings Germain Ifedi, OT/OG, Texas A&M 55. Cincinnati Bengals Tyler Boyd, WR, Pittsburgh 56. Seattle Seahawks Kamalei Correa, OLB, Boise State 57. Green Bay Packers Adolphus Washington, DT/DE, Ohio State 58. Pittsburgh Steelers Darian Thompson, FS, Boise State 59. Kansas City Chiefs Braxton Miller, WR, Ohio State 60. New England Patriots Jonathan Bullard, DE, Florida 61. New England Patriots Joshua Perry, OLB, Ohio State 62. Carolina Panthers Harlan Miller, CB, Southeastern Louisiana 63. Denver Broncos Dominique Alexander, ILB, Oklahoma Round 3 64. Tennessee Titans Karl Joseph, SS, West Virginia 65. Cleveland Browns Charone Peake, WR, Clemson 66. San Diego Chargers Jeremy Cash, SS, Duke 67. Dallas Cowboys Sterling Shepard, WR, Oklahoma 68. San Francisco 49ers Pharoh Cooper, WR, South Carolina 69. Jacksonville Jaguars Shilique Calhoun, DE/OLB, Michigan State 70. Baltimore Ravens Vadal Alexander, OG, LSU 71. New York Giants Jerald Hawkins, OT, LSU 72. Chicago Bears Austin Hooper, TE, Stanford 73. Miami Dolphins Christian Westerman, OG, Arizona State 74. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Jalen Mills, FS, LSU 75. Oakland Raiders T.J. Green, FS, Clemson 76. Los Angeles Rams Artie Burns, CB, Miami 77. Philadelphia Eagles Connor McGovern, OG, Missouri 78. New Orleans Saints Landon Turner, OG, North Carolina 79. Philadelphia Eagles Blake Martinez, ILB, Stanford 80. Buffalo Bills Kyler Fackrell, OLB, Utah State 81. Atlanta Falcons Nick Vannett, TE, Ohio State 82. Indianapolis Colts Scooby Wright III, ILB, Arizona 83. New York Jets Joe Schobert, OLB, Wisconsin 84. Washington Redskins Xavien Howard, CB, Baylor 85. Houston Texans Sebastian Tretola, OG, Arkansas 86. Minnesota Vikings Tyler Higbee, TE, Western Kentucky 87. Cincinnati Bengals Sheldon Day, DT, Notre Dame 88. Green Bay Packers Jerrell Adams, TE, South Carolina 89. Pittsburgh Steelers Isaac Seumalo, OG, Oregon State 90. Seattle Seahawks Max Tuerk, OC/OG, USC 91. New England Patriots Kenneth Dixon, RB, Louisiana Tech 92. Arizona Cardinals D.J. White, CB, Georgia Tech 93. Carolina Panthers Paul Perkins, RB, UCLA 94. Denver Broncos Joe Dahl, OT/OG, Washington State 95. Detroit Lions Carl Nassib, DE, Penn State 96. New England Patriots Rashard Higgins, WR, Colorado State 97. Seattle Seahawks James Bradberry, CB, Samson 98. Denver Broncos Jihad Ward, DE/DT, Illinois Round 4 99. Cleveland Browns Alex Collins, RB, Arkansas 100. Philadelphia Eagles Maliek Collins, DT, Nebraska 101. Dallas Cowboys Devontae Booker, RB, Utah 102. San Diego Chargers Jack Allen, OC, Michigan State 103. Jacksonville Jaguars Graham Glasgow, OC/OG, Michigan 104. Baltimore Ravens Charles Tapper, DE/OLB, Oklahoma 105. San Francisco 49ers Tyler Matakevich, ILB, Temple 106. Chicago Bears Leonte Carroo, WR, Rutgers 107. Miami Dolphins Deion Jones, OLB, LSU 108. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Evan Boehm, OC, Missouri 109. New York Giants Jonathan Williams, RB, Arkansas 110. Los Angeles Rams Justin Simmons, CB/FS, Boston College 111. Detroit Lions Javon Hargrave, DT, South Carolina State 112. New Orleans Saints Keyarris Garrett, WR, Tulsa 113. Tennessee Titans Hassan Ridgeway, DT, Texas 114. Oakland Raiders Jordan Payton, WR, UCLA 115. Atlanta Falcons Kenny Lawler, WR, California 116. Indianapolis Colts Miles Killebrew, SS, Southern Utah 117. Buffalo Bills Shon Coleman, OT, Auburn 118. New York Jets LeShaun Sims, CB, Southern Utah 119. Houston Texans Bryce Williams, TE, East Carolina 120. Washington Redskins Nick Vigil, ILB, Utah State 121. Minnesota Vikings Jayron Kearse, SS, Clemson 122. Cincinnati Bengals Bronson Kaufusi, DE, Brigham Young 123. Pittsburgh Steelers Willie Beavers, OT, Western Michigan 124. Seattle Seahawks Jordan Howard, RB, Indiana 125. Green Bay Packers Malcolm Mitchell, WR, Georgia 126. Kansas City Chiefs Juston Burris, CB, NC State 127. Chicago Bears Jacoby Brissett, QB, NC State 128. Arizona Cardinals Kyle Murphy, OT, Stanford 129. Carolina Panthers Sean Davis, FS, Maryland 130. Baltimore Ravens Shawn Oakman, DE, Baylor 131. Green Bay Packers Eric Murray, CB, Minnesota 132. Baltimore Ravens Jordan Jenkins, OLB, Georgia 133. San Francisco 49ers Rashard Robinson, CB, LSU 134. Baltimore Ravens Kolby Listenbee, WR, TCU 135. Dallas Cowboys Kavon Frazier, FS/SS, Central Michigan 136. Denver Broncos Tajae Sharpe, WR, Massachusetts 137. Green Bay Packers B.J. Goodson, ILB, Clemson 138. Cleveland Browns Matt Judon, DE/OLB, Grand Valley State 139. Buffalo Bills Robert Aguayo, K, Florida State |
Round 5
140. Tennessee Titans Paul McRoberts, WR, Southeast Missouri State 141. Cleveland Browns Cody Core, WR, Mississippi 142. San Francisco 49ers Parker Ehinger, OG, Cincinnati 143. Oakland Raiders Zack Sanchez, CB, Oklahoma 144. Denver Broncos Maurice Canady, CB, Virginia 145. San Francisco 49ers John Theus, OT, Georgia 146. Jacksonville Jaguars Kenyan Drake, RB, Alabama 147. Miami Dolphins Matt Ioannidis, DT, Temple 148. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Joe Haeg, OT, North Dakota State 149. New York Giants K.J. Dillon, SS, West Virginia 150. Chicago Bears Willie Henry, DT, Michigan 151. Detroit Lions C.J. Prosise, RB, Notre Dame 152. New Orleans Saints Travis Feeney, OLB, Washington 153. Philadelphia Eagles Will Redmond, CB, Mississippi State 154. Oakland Raiders Keith Marshall, RB, Georgia 155. Indianapolis Colts Jhurell Pressley, RB, New Mexico 156. Buffalo Bills Rees Odhiambo, OT/OG, Boise State 157. New York Jets Darrell Greene, OG, San Diego State 158. Washington Redskins Mike Thomas, WR, Southern Mississippi 159. Houston Texans Christian Hackenberg, QB, Penn State 160. Minnesota Vikings Nick Kwiatkoski, ILB, West Virginia 161. Cincinnati Bengals Demarcus Robinson, WR, Florida 162. Kansas City Chiefs Tyvis Powell, FS, Ohio State 163. Green Bay Packers D.J. Reader, DT, Clemson 164. Philadelphia Eagles Daniel Braverman, WR, Western Michigan 165. Kansas City Chiefs Dominick Jackson, OT/OG, Alabama 166. Houston Texans Matt Skura, OC, Duke 167. Arizona Cardinals Cardale Jones, QB, Ohio State 168. Carolina Panthers Chris Moore, WR, Cincinnati 169. Detroit Lions Brandon Shell, OT, South Carolina 170. Arizona Cardinals Fahn Cooper, OT/OG, Mississippi 171. Seattle Seahawks Cyrus Jones, CB, Alabama 172. Cleveland Browns Jaylon Smith, OLB, Notre Dame 173. Cleveland Browns Joe Thuney, OG/OC, NC State 174. San Francisco 49ers James Cowser, DE/OLB, Southern Utah 175. San Diego Chargers Kevin Hogan, QB, Stanford Round 6 176. Cleveland Browns Ben Braunecker, TE, Harvard 177. Tennessee Titans Joe Walker, ILB, Oregon 178. San Francisco 49ers KeiVarae Russell, CB, Notre Dame 179. San Diego Chargers Deiondre Hall, CB/FS, Northern Iowa 180. Minnesota Vikings Kyle Peko, DT, Oregon State 181. Jacksonville Jaguars Quinton Jefferson, DT, Maryland 182. Baltimore Ravens Kelvin Taylor, RB, Florida 183. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Kevon Seymour, CB, USC 184. New York Giants Aaron Burbridge, WR, Michigan State 185. Chicago Bears Nick VanHoose, CB, Northwestern 186. Miami Dolphins Hunter Sharp, WR, Utah State 187. Washington Redskins Antwione Williams, ILB/OLB, Georgia Southern 188. Philadelphia Eagles Brandon Allen, QB, Arkansas 189. Dallas Cowboys Jason Fanaika, DE, Utah 190. Los Angeles Rams Jaydon Mickens, WR, Washington 191. Detroit Lions Brandon Chubb, ILB, Wake Forest 192. Buffalo Bills Kevin Byard, SS, Middle Tennessee 193. Tennessee Titans Spencer Drango, OG, Baylor 194. Oakland Raiders Doug Middleton, SS/FS, Appalachian State 195. Houston Texans Jordan Lucas, CB/FS, Penn State 196. New England Patriots Ryan Smith, CB, North Carolina Central 197. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Jared Norris, ILB, Utah 198. San Diego Chargers Yannick Ngakoue, DE/OLB, Maryland 199. Cincinnati Bengals Jonathan Jones, CB, Auburn 200. Green Bay Packers Cole Toner, OT, Harvard 201. Jacksonville Jaguars Ted Karras, OG, Illinois 202. Detroit Lions Ronald Blair, DE/DT, Appalachian State 203. Kansas City Chiefs Stephen Weatherly, DE/OLB, Vanderbilt 204. New England Patriots Ron Thompson, DE, Syracuse 205. Arizona Cardinals Austin Blythe, OC, Iowa 206. Chicago Bears Marshaun Coprich, RB, Illinois State 207. San Francisco 49ers Bralon Addison, WR, Oregon 208. New England Patriots Jalin Marshall, WR, Ohio State 209. Baltimore Ravens Josh Forrest, ILB, Kentucky 210. Detroit Lions Daryl Worley, CB/FS, West Virginia 211. San Francisco 49ers Dadi Lhomme Nicolas, DE/ILB, Virginia Tech 212. Dallas Cowboys Anthony Brown, CB, Purdue 213. San Francisco 49ers Mark Weiser, TE, Buffalo 214. New England Patriots Caleb Benenoch, OT, UCLA 215. Seattle Seahawks Vernon Adams Jr., QB, Oregon 216. Dallas Cowboys Jeff Driskel, QB, Louisiana Tech 217. Dallas Cowboys Ricardo Louis, WR, Auburn 218. Buffalo Bills Tyrone Holmes, DE/OLB, Montana 219. Denver Broncos Daniel Lasco, RB, California 220. Pittsburgh Steelers Vincent Valentine, DT, Nebraska 221. New England Patriots Tyler Ervin, RB, San Jose State Round 7 222. Tennessee Titans Victor Ochi, DE/OLB, Stony Brook 223. Cleveland Browns Lawrence Thomas, DE, Michigan State 224. San Diego Chargers Nile Lawrence-Stample, NT, Florida State 225. Seattle Seahawks Brett McMakin, OLB, Northern Iowa 226. Jacksonville Jaguars Steve Longa, OLB, Rutgers 227. Miami Dolphins Kaimi Fairbairn, K, UCLA 228. Denver Broncos Temarrick Hemingway, TE, South Carolina State 229. Pittsburgh Steelers Jay Lee, WR, Baylor 230. Chicago Bears Alex Lewis, OT, Nebraska 231. Miami Dolphins Denver Kirkland, OG, Arkansas 232. Washington Redskins Sterling Bailey, DE, Georgia 233. Philadelphia Eagles Mike Jordan, CB, Missouri Western State 234. Oakland Raiders Alex McCalister, DE, Florida 235. Denver Broncos Joseph Cheek, OG, Texas A&M 236. Detroit Lions Derrick Kindred, SS, TCU 237. New Orleans Saints Nila Kasitati, OG, Oklahoma 238. Atlanta Falcons Aaron Morris, OG, Mississippi 239. Indianapolis Colts Mike Matthews, OC, Texas A&M 240. Minnesota Vikings DeAndre Washington, RB, Texas Tech 241. New York Jets Beau Sandland, TE, Montana State 242. Washington Redskins Jordan Walsh, OG/OC, Iowa 243. New England Patriots Ronald Zamort, CB, Western Michigan 244. Minnesota Vikings Tom Hackett, P, Utah 245. Cincinnati Bengals Avery Young, OT/OG, Auburn 246. Pittsburgh Steelers Cody Kessler, QB, USC 247. Seattle Seahawks Connor Wujciak, DT, Boston College 248. Green Bay Packers Derek Watt, FB, Wisconsin 249. Kansas City Chiefs Luke Rhodes, ILB, William & Mary 250. New England Patriots Ufomba Kamalu, DT, Miami 251. Philadelphia Eagles Quenton Bundrage, WR, Iowa State 252. Carolina Panthers Darius Latham, DT, Indiana 253. Denver Broncos Eric Striker, OLB, Oklahoma |
Reposted for you guys.
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That would be a damn home run for Miami, wow. Apple, Henry, Westerman, & Jones. Nice haul.
I just finished up co-GMing on a draft for Miami on another board. This one allowed trades. This is what we did: 1) CB Hargreaves 2) Henry went #33 and I couldn't trade up for Whitehair, so i traded down to 56 + 90 from 42 and took OG Westerman 3) Traded up from 73 to 65 and took DE Nassib 3b) DT Sheldon Day 4) swapped late round picks to get a few spots up ahead of 3 RB-needy teams to grab RB Perkins Tried trading up into the 5th to get Cyrus Jones but didn't have sign-off from my Co-GM to drop a pick. Still bummed about this. 6a) OT/OG Benenoch (Miami switched to ZBS with Gase, hence the Westerman and Benenoch picks) 6b) LB that hasn't been picked in our mock yet 7a) RB that hasn't been picked in our mock yet 7b) WR that hasn't been picked in our mock yet |
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