Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Holy Moly: Penn State Went into Madison...and Won?!?!?!

Well that sure was something!

I won't necessarily watch all of every Penn State game this year (looking at you, Villanova), but I watched every second of the opener agaisnt Wisconsin, then really dug into every play thanks to the full game being posted on YouTube. So, here are some extremely detailed grades and thoughts having pored over the thrilling victory.

Quarterback: 7
Sean Clifford's first half was true nightmare fuel. He had decent looks on a couple of possessions where he simply missed the throw, notably a missed hitch to TE Theo Johnson that would've moved the chains on an early drive. Thankfully, the second half was also played. Clifford looked cool as a cucumber, spreading the ball all over the field, especially toward the sidelines and down the field. He spent almost the entire second half delivering confident balls that were largely on target, one missed mid-third quarter out to WR Jahan Dotson notwithstanding that was followed immediately by an exceptional play where he hit WR KeAndre Lambert-Smith after going through his progressions for a 52-yard go on a third-and-10. He did miss another deep ball to WR Jahan Dotson, but he also hit on two.

The stats bear out the shift in Clifford's day. In the first half, he was 7-of-14 for 41 yards. In the second half? 11-of-19 for 206 yards and one touchdown. That's about as productive as a Wisconsin defense will permit. He looked a little skittish in the first half. In the second? His first touchdown pass looked professional as Clifford began with a play fake, scanned the defense, shifted backward to avoid a blitzing linebacker (more on this below), and hurled a beauty to an uncovered Jahan Dotson for six.

Perhaps most notably, Clifford was extremely careful with the ball. As a result, Wisconsin's best field position was a drive that began on their own 34 (a kick catch interference penalty notwithstanding) and all seven second-half Badger possessions began at their own 25 or closer to their own endzone. If Clifford gives his defense that much field to work with all season, opposing offenses are going to have a very difficult time putting up big numbers.

Offensive Line: 5
Kudos to LG Anthony Whigan for earning a timeshare after arriving on campus two years ago without enough strength to get on the field. Unfortunately for Whigan, the offensive line proved much more efficient when Harvard transfer Eric Wilson rotated in. Wilson took a couple of snaps to get his feet wet, but then he stabilized what had been a shaky interior; I did not see Whigan get a snap in the second half. Fellow new starter RG Juice Scruggs took a while to find his footing -- his return to football in general is incredible, so him making a start is miraculous -- but he looked like a genuine starter by the second half.

RT Caedan Wallace had a debut to forget. Late in the second quarter, OC Mike Yurcich dialed up a perfect post route for WR Jahan Dotson following Wisconsin QB Graham Mertz's fumbled exchange that gave Penn State possession deep in their own territory. Dotson got a step (maybe a bit more) on Wisconsin CB Faion Hicks and would've taken a clean throw to paydirt. Unfortunately, Wallace was manhandled, Clifford couldn't step into the throw, and the ball sailed as a result. LT Rasheed Walker also got off to a terrible start, exemplified by a third and long in the second quarter where Wisconsin OLB Nick Herbig threw Walker aside to blow up the play. Walker has 100 pounds on Herbig and aspirations of being a high NFL draft pick. That simply can't happen. For good measure, Herbig also ended a third quarter drive ripping through Wallace for an easy sack. Nevertheless, on the whole, both Walker and Wallace played much better in the second half.

C Mike Miranda's game largely mirrored everyone else above him. He struggled with a few missed protections in the first half. In the second, he commanded the offense well and kept things smooth up front, springing Noah Cain on Penn State's one big run of the game with a nice block to seal off a rushing linebacker.

Wide Receivers: 9
Jahan Dotson is a force. He was positively uncoverable on Saturday. He is widely known to be the focal point of the Penn State offense, yet Dotson got himself wide open deep four times against Wisconsin. If Clifford enjoyed average accuracy on Saturday, Dotson likely goes for between 150 and 200 yards. Dotson even did a great job blocking whenever he was asked to do so on short passes to Parker Washington. Washington himself did exactly what he did last year. Got open, caught everything thrown his way, and made at least one man miss every time. Lambert-Smith made a few nice plays, none bigger than his long catch in the third quarter that set up Jordan Stout's missed chip shot. Unfortunately, he dropped a gimme hitch to blow what should've been a first down in the fourth quarter. He'll need to eliminate such plays. Cam Sullivan-Brown and Winston Eubanks got a few snaps with no targets. I did not see Daniel George on the field.

Tight Ends: 2
It was a day to forget for the group and especially for Brenton Strange. Strange narrowly missed making a big catch late, and a few missed blocking assignments earlier in the game turned potential first downs into punts. His second half blocking was much better. Theo Johnson blocked well all day, but he never really had a chance to make any grabs in what should be a breakout season for the Canadian. Tyler Warren got some action as a blocker. It went OK, though he failed to create a running lane on a fourth quarter run where Cain was stuffed inside the 10, leading to a field goal.

Running Backs: 8
Noah Cain. What a guy. The Nittany offense is exponentially better with him around. And it's not just because of the three huge plays he made with the ball in his hands in the fourth quarter, those being a 30-yard sweep, an excellent slipped tackle to convert a third-and-4 late as a pass catcher in the flat, and another 15-yard catch-and-run just prior to his touchdown plunge. On Clifford's first touchdown bomb to Dotson, ILB Mike Mascalunas came through untouched, but Cain shifted over and blocked him out of the play, giving Clifford time to hit the open Dotson. Keyvone Lee's tackle-breaking skills proved to be a liability in the game as he kept moving backward to escape going down. Devyn Ford got a few forgettable snaps, though he did contribute on coverage units.

Defensive Line: 7
The front four was my biggest area of concern entering the game. DT PJ Mustipher was the expected star of the group, and he didn't disappoint. Mustipher was a menace in the middle of the line, routinely winning his one-on-ones and spending a good chunk of time in the Wisconsin backfield until the Badgers finally decided to double-team him. Unfortunately, DT Derrick Tangelo was quiet in my first watch, and the rewatch was bad news. Tangelo was pushed back on almost every snap. On one third quarter run, Wisconsin's RG pushed Tangelo from just inside the left hash all the way to the right hash in a one-on-one. For a 22-year-old with NFL aspirations, I think he should be more concerned about losing snaps and quickly. DT Coziah Izzard got some action in the second quarter, and after being blown off the ball on his first snap, did a great job pushing into the Wisconsin backfield a few snaps later. Chez Mellusi ended up with a big run as the linebackers misdiagnosed the play, but it was good to see Izzard on the field and making some noise. DT Fred Hansard also had some snaps but was very quiet in his action. He looked a lot like Tangelo. Rather surprisingly, DT D'Von Ellies got on the field and ate up space reasonably well, leading to an extended run for most of the fourth quarter. Ellies looks like he needs to get a bit stronger before he can ascend toward Mustipher's level, but that's the projection at this point.

DE Arnold Ebiketie proved to be the unexpected co-star, knifing into the Wisconsin backfield on the first defensive snap of the game and giving the Badgers fits all game. Especially with DE Adisa Isaac out, Ebiketie needed to play like a starter; instead, he played like a plus starter making a slew of big-time plays throughout the game as both a pass rusher and run stopper. DE Nick Tarburton got off to a terrible start, but he acquitted himself better as the game went along. He seriously underwhelmed live and he'll need to play a big role, so the rewatch proved helfpul despite some snaps where he was ridden out of the play in one-on-ones. Tarburton should get plenty of snaps this year if he can finally stay healthy, and he showed off his motor, especially on a third quarter snap where he pressured Mertz, then found TE Jake Ferguson on a dump-off and ran him down for no gain. The surprise of this group was definitely Jesse Luketa, the partially-converted linebacker. Luketa the linebacker was up and down. Luketa the defensive end was a force, even displaying strong play recognition skills in his new spot. He even held up in run support one-on-ones against offensive tackles. Wisconsin offensive tackles! DE Smith Vilbert got some run in the second half; he looked long but also had a hard time playing low. Vilbert was apprehensive on what became a 25-yard pass to Danny Davis in the third quarter, but he followed with a great play to rip through Wisconsin's left tackle to stuff a Mellusi run in the red zone. DE Zuriah Fisher got one snap...but he wasn't ready for it. Yikes. Still, on the whole, there was a lot more to like from the defensive ends that I expected.

Linebacker: 6
Luketa is covered above. New Will Brandon Smith was a positive on the whole. He did a nice job whenever he had a chance to pursue and his coverage looked strong. However, in tight quarters, Smith struggled and he was non-existent as a pass rusher. Never fear, because Ellis Brooks was there (for most of the game anyway) to make play after play in the middle of the defense. Brooks went from a borderline starter to a core performer in one game. His positioning was spectacular and he was surpsingly explosive. Curtis Jacobs didn't do much on the stat sheet, but there were a few plays where he forced a ball carrier to redirect his path, especially on a key third-and-1 stop early in the third quarter that sprung Brooks and Smith to make the tackle. Obviously the hope is that Jacobs pushes toward his lofty ceiling and quickly. Charlie Katshir made the most of a couple of snaps, planting Mertz on a fourth quarter dropback that should've led to a Ji'Ayir Brown interception.

Secondary: 8
Only one place to start here: S Jaquan Brisker looked every bit like an All-American. He was everywhere for the Penn State defense, making plays in the backfield and downfield. His diving play in the first quarter stopped Mellusi for a one-yard gain on a fourth-and-one instead of a 30-yard touchdown. He broke up a deep out to Davis in the fourth quarter with a singular effort. His interception of Mertz with just over two minutes to go was the perfect combination of athleticism and headiness, and it came two plays after a TFL on an interior run where Brisker absolutely exploded into the backfield. Brisker did it all in spite of considerable physical impediments. Brown made a hugely important and seriously impressive tackle to wrestle Jake Ferguson to the ground and keep the clock running with under a minute left. Brown's tackle cost Wisconsin 15 crucial seconds. Also: never underestimate the importance of a player going down after making a game-ending interception instead of continuing to run around with the ball. Jonathan Sutherland got extensive reps despite not making a ton of noise; Kendric Pryor dropped Sutherland's jock on a third quarter end around, but otherwise Sutherland was in the right spot.

Tariq Castro-Fields played like a veteran, multi-year starter. He was an extremely sure as a tackler, and provided strong coverage in the limited moments where Mertz made a catchable throw. Joey Porter Jr. didn't have a lot of chances to make plays, but the big play he did make sure stood out. It looked like Badger WR Jack Dunn had the game-winning touchdown floating into his hands late before Porter leaped across his face to knock the ball away. Kalen King had an extremely limited run during which he was called for pass interference. Not good but it's early for the true freshman. Slot corner Daequan Hardy proved a liability once again; a missed throw by Mertz to Dike was the only reason Hardy wasn't the game's goat. Hardy also committed an uncalled pass interference penalty in the first half and was beaten by Dike in the endzone early in the fourth on a throw where Mertz underthrew the ball. Hardy was a huge liability. I did not see Marquis Wilson, Johnny Dixon, Zakee Wheatley, or AJ Lytton (on defense).

Specialists: 6
Jordan Stout the placekicker was an abject failure (and don't give me noise about the laces being back -- that doesn't matter on a PAT). Jordan Stout the punter and kickoff specialist won Big Ten Special Teams Player of the Week. That probably says enough. Drew Hartlaub stepped in as a gunner and made a big play in the second quarter, then got blocked all the way into Dotson on a third quarter punt return that could've been disastrous.

Coaching: 9
James Franklin had his team focused and competitive in a brutally difficult Week One road game. That says a lot about the shape of the program. Offensive Coordinator Mike Yurcich spent halftime figuring out that he needed to attack Wisconsin on the perimeter. Once he did so, the offense exploded. The play design on Clifford's 40-yard fourth quarter bomb to Dotson was a thing of beauty. Wisconsin bit hard on the bubble screen action to Washington with Dotson and Strange apparently blocking. This left Dotson running free with five yards of separation to set up the game-winning touchdown. Brilliant! That play only worked because Clifford sold two fakes beautifully and Wallace and Scruggs held up on iso blocks, but the result was huge and the design was beautiful.

Brent Pry's defense was stupendous...except for the baffling late-game strategy that gave Wisconsin easy access to the sideline for passes covering 10+ yards. Inexplicable. But that only mattered because Pry went on the road and refused to let Wisconsin into the endzone.

Officiating: 9
The zebras had an interesting game, as is to be expected at this time of the year. On the whole, I thought that they did wonderfully. Of course, there are individual plays that offend the conscience. For example, when Kalen King was flagged for pass interference in the second quarter -- on a play where Kendric Pryor really oversold things -- DE Jesse Luketa ripped inside of TE Jake Ferguson and won a free shot at Mertz...only to have Ferguson commit a blatant hold to prevent the free shot on the QB. No flag. Some amount of holding occurs on every play. Normally the "oh crap, my QB is about to get popped" emergency hold gets called. But not there. Ebiketie was also tackled to the ground on the game's final snap, but a holding call in that situation was exceedingly unlikely.

They did a nice job getting together to make some big calls, especially a couple of intentional grounding calls on Mertz and a couple of kick catch interference calls on Nittany gunner AJ Lytton. They did need some help from Paul Chryst to spot the targeting penalty on Brooks, but they eventually applied a crappy rule correctly and DQ'd the linebacker.

Stars of the Game
Just for fun, here are my stars of the game:

  1. S Jaquan Brisker
  2. DE Arnold Ebiketie
  3. WR Jahan Dotson
  4. RB Noah Cain
  5. QB Sean Clifford
  6. DT PJ Mustipher
  7. DE/LB Jesse Luketa

Friday, September 3, 2021

2021 Nittany Football: A Rebound or Nah? (Plus Big Ten Picks)

Thank God for football.

Simply put, the 2020 Penn State football season wasn't very fun. For most of 2020, it appeared as though the season wouldn't even happen. When it finally did, Penn State lost star running back Journey Brown to a hear condition before the season began, watched #2 running back Noah Cain go down for the season on the opening drive, suffered a devastating road loss to Indiana -- complete with a brain fart for the ages as preseason fourth-string running back Devyn Ford ran for a touchdown instead of running out the clock at the end of regulation -- was blasted by Ohio State at home, then was blasted by Maryland at home before dropping road tilts at Nebraska and Iowa. Along the way, two-year starting quarterback Sean Clifford lost his job although his replacement, Will Levis, didn't play any better.

Nittany finally won a game just after Thanksgiving -- let that sentence sink in -- and ripped off four straight victories by double digits to close out the season. Coach James Franklin somehow parlayed that into an elite recruiting haul in the Class of 2022, a class that is currently ranked first in the nation although it will realistically fall in the 8-12 range assuming that all of the verbal recruits sign. Thankfully, one bad year didn't crush the program.

Which brings us to the 2021 season. Penn State needs a good year to keep the recruits on board and, more importantly, to prove that the 2020 season was an anomaly. Will the team be able to do that? To an extent, yes. To an extent, no. And goodness gracious, there's a lot of risk here. Here's a look at the team, position-by-position, on the eve of the 2021 season. Meaningful names for casual fans to know are in bold.

Quarterback
This room was on track to have four or even five scholarship arms this year. Then, backup Will Levis bolted to Kentucky to start for the Wildcats and Micah Bowens surprisingly bolted for Oklahoma to backup Spencer Rattler. Penn State struck out in the entry into the Transfer Portal, leaving the roster with Sean Clifford, third-year redshirt freshman Ta'Quan Roberson, and true freshman Christian Veilleux, whose senior season was canceled. If Clifford gets hurt, woo boy, it could get seriously ugly in a hurry. If Clifford stays healthy, he could have a big year in new offensive coordinator Mike Yurcich's offense. I'm a Clifford fan, perhaps because I saw his last excellent performance in the 2019 Whiteout against Michigan. He has surprisingly good speed and plenty of arm. In Clifford, Penn State has enough at quarterback to have a strong season, but without a backup who is experienced or has a high ceiling, the risk here is immense. Clifford absolutely cannot miss significant time, whether with an injury or a positive COVID test.

Offensive Line
Newish offensive line coach Phil Trautwein has recruited like a big-time position coach. He also got stud LT Rasheed Walker to return for another year. That's a huge win. The tackles should both be a strength with Walker on the left side and the mammoth Caedan Wallace on the right side. Fifth-year returning starter Mike Miranda moves to center and should provide stability on the interior. The guard spots aren't as solid, but there are bodies. Projected RG Juice Scruggs is a nice story, having recovered from a car accident that cost him a season and ripped 30+ pounds from his body. The LG spot remains an ongoing competition between Lackawana transfer Anthony Whigan and Harvard grad transfer Eric Wilson; surprisingly, longtime swingman Des Holmes is on the outside looking in. The practical impact of the previous few sentences is that there are plenty of starting caliber options on the line. There's only one Walker, so Penn State will be in a tough spot if he misses time. On the whole, however, this group should be good and could be very good.

Running Back
This room is unfair. Ja'Juan Seider's recruiting prowess has reached the ludicrous zone. The top five options in this room are four four-star backs in Noah Cain, Keyvone Lee, Devyn Ford, and Caziah Holmes with former Baylor starter John Lovett thrown in because...well, I have no idea why Lovett transferred to Penn State of all spots. Cain has looked like a worthy successor to the mantle established by Saquon Barkley, Miles Sanders, and Journey Brown, but he hasn't been healthy since October 2019. The depth is there to absorb another injury to Cain, but it sure would be more fun to actually watch Cain play. Regardless, running back won't be the problem for the 2021 Nittany Lions.

Tight End
Tight end won't be a problem either. The riches aren't quite the same level of embarrassing here, but Brenton Strange and Theo Johnson come into 2021 with pedigree, production, and projection. Despite suffering a shoulder injury at the end of his prep career, Johnson looks every bit like the top-100 prospect he was, yet Strange looked just as good. The depth here isn't ideal with converted quarterback Tyler Warren next on the depth chart, but with two plus starters at the top, complaining about Warren is whining.

It's incredible that Penn State could lose a second-round draftee from this room in Pat Freiermuth, yet still be so loaded here. This must be what it feels like to be an Alabama/Clemson/Ohio State fan at every spot.

Wide Receivers
Here's an interesting group! Jahan Dotson returns for a final season, and after entering college running his 40 in the 4.5s, Dotson reportedly clocked a 4.33 this spring. Dotson also led the Big Ten in yards and touchdowns in 2020, so he figures to be a steady WR1 for this team. The clear WR2 is Parker Washington, a tank of a slot receiver with great hands, great routes, and fantastic YAC ability.

But after Dotson and Washington? There's a big pile of question marks. Keandre Lambert-Smith has the body and pedigree to win the job, but he largely disappointed in 2020. If he takes a modest step ahead, he's a strong option in the WR3 spot. Unfortunately, Lambert-Smith likely needs to step into that role because the veterans in the room, Daniel George and Cam Suillivan-Brown, have both proved incapable of making meaningful contributions and Lackawana transfer Norval Black looks like a whiff. That means that the only other options for filling out the depth chart are from a batch of projectable redshirt freshmen or a pair of polished true freshman. My guess is that Clifford's younger brother, Liam, carves out a halfway meaningful role for himself. Unfortunately, the far-and-away top receiver recruit, Lonnie White, opted to join the Pittsburgh Pirates when the ballclub dangled seven figures in front of him (understandably so). This room has a bright future and a strong present, but the depth pieces at receiver likely aren't ready to play big roles should such a need arise.

Defensive End
Penn State has enjoyed an incredible run of success at defensive end. The starters over the past few years all heard their names called on draft day: Shareef Miller (4th round in 2019), Yetur Gross-Matos (2nd round in 2020), Jayson Oweh (1st round in 2021), and Shaka Toney (7th round in 2021). Last year's two-deep featured Oweh, Toney, senior Shane Simmons, and lanky sophomore Adisa Isaac.

Well, it's now 2021. Oweh and Toney are in the NFL, Simmons retired before transferring to Marshall, and Isaac suffered a season-ending injury this summer. So who is the new two-deep? There's senior Arnold Ebiketie, a Temple transfer, and a collection of damaged goods. Former four-star Nick Tarburton has suffered a gaggle of injuries during his career, but he's now expected to start. Gulp. Oversized redshirt freshmen Amin Vanover and Smith Vilbert will have to play genuine snaps. The depth is so lacking that senior linebacker Jesse Luketa spent most of fall camp practicing with the DEs. That's far from ideal. If the depth is tested, here's hoping that Zuriah Fisher ends up forcing his way onto the field given his incredible athleticism.

If the Penn State defense underwhelms in 2021, it will almost certainly be because the defensive ends can't get the job done. Wisconsin will obviously present a beefy test to kick off the season.

Defensive Tackle
Now that's more like it. Duke grad transfer Derrick Tangelo will join with returning stud PJ Mustipher to form a great starting tandem. Veterans Fred Hansard and Aeneas Hawkins provide useful, experienced depth. Then, there are seven DTs with freshman eligibility; four are four-stars while the remaining three are three-stars. There are obviously plenty of bodies here!

Cornerbacks
You may have expected to see the linebackers next, but in order to fully understand the goings on in the back seven, it's essential to address the corners first. Simply put, There's way too much talent in this room given the amount of playing time. First, Tariq Castro-Fields took advantage of his extra year of eligibility and returns for another year of starting. Then, Joey Porter Jr. emerged as a stud in year two. This after Keaton Ellis and Marquis Wilson both earned starter-level reps as freshmen in 2019. Then, South Carolina starter Johnny Dixon transferred to Penn State this offseason. And finally, true freshman Kalen King arrived from Detroit and blew the coaches away, earning his way into expected meaningful reps this year.

Add it all up and Ellis moved to safety permanently while Wilson has flirted with a two-way role. In any event, the cornerback group should be in great shape.

Safeties
Penn State's safeties has regularly underwhelmed since Marcus Allen headed off to the Steelers. 2021 could provide a one-year reprieve. A pair of Lackawanna transfers, Jaquan Brisker and Ji'Ayir Brown, are expected to start. Brown is a nice story. Brisker, on the other hand, is a top prospect and an AP preseason second-team All American. The impact of Brisker's star turn and Brown's is that longtime reserve Jonathan Sutherland has spent most of camp at the Sam linebacker spot. There are four four-stars with freshman eligibility, but the hope and expectation is that they'll provide unneeded depth.

Linebackers
This group doesn't have great depth, but the starting unit is idyllic. Beginning the season with Brandon Smith at the Will and Curtis Jacobs at the Sam, redshirt junior Ellis Brooks will look unathletic at the Mike despite having a solid career to date. Smith and Jacobs both come with elite, top-50 pedigrees and look ready to make plays. The pipeline is alarmingly dry in terms of athletes after Smith and Jacobs. But for 2021, there's plenty to like.

Specialists
As always, Penn State's kicking game should be a strength. Jordan Stout is back to put kickoffs through the endzone, attempt the occasional long field goal, and be an average punter. Jake Pinegar has routinely underwhelmed me, but he gets the job done as a placekicker. The return game is a mystery.

Coaches
James Franklin is an incredible program CEO, a seemingly great human being, and a plus recruiter. Unfortunately, JFF's time to shine is coming to an end. Now, he has to coach on Saturdays again which means the return of baffling timeouts, surprising disorganization, and generally coaching like a favorite in all situations, regardless of opponent, score, and clock. Thank God Mark Dantonio isn't around anymore to take advantage of JFF. Franklin will keep the team focused and playing hard; there's a lot to be said for that. Come January, Franklin can return to his CEO role to keep the program humming along.

Beyond Franklin, the position coaches merit intrigue, especially new offensive coordinator Mike Yurcich who arrived following an extended run as OC at Oklahoma State then one year apiece as Ohio State's QB coach and Texas' OC. Yurcich's offense probably can't be worse than former OC Kirk Ciarrocca's mess. Receivers coach Taylor Stubblefield will need to develop third and fourth receivers, and defensive line coach John Scott Jr. will need to prove his chops immediately given the hole at defensive end.

Schedule
Does any team have a tougher trio of road games than Ohio State, Wisconsin, and Iowa? (FWIW: possibly Florida State, who has roadies against North Carolina, Florida, and Clemson...but you get the point. Alabama would be there with trips to Gainesville and College Station, but neutral site games are horse pucky, so the Miami contest doesn't count). The home schedule is no slouch either with visits from Auburn, Michigan, and Indiana. The September slate is brutal with Wisconsin, reigning MAC champion Ball State (who returns 18 starters), and Auburn right out of the gate. If the team gets off to a rocky start, things could implode.

Recruiting
You have to enjoy recruiting when it's going well. And my goodness, it is going really well right now. Not Ohio State/Clemson/Alabama/Georgia really well, but right behind those teams. Penn State has verbals from 14 four-star prospects: four top-100 prospects, four more in the 101-200 range, five more in the 201-300 range, and one more ranked outside of the top 300. The next five recruits are ranked inside the top-500. It's an absolutely wonderful class. Basically the only nugget of bad news to afflict the class thus far was the defection of EDGE Tyrese Fearbry, but Penn State remains in the mix for Fearbry along with Missouri-based EDGE DJ Wesolak. 

Post-season
Following the season, the following players will head off to the NFL:

2nd Round
LT Rasheed Walker
WR Jahan Dotson
CB Joey Porter Jr.

3rd Round
S Jaquan Brisker

4th Round
RB Noah Cain

5th Round
DT PJ Mustipher

6th Round
CB Tariq Castro-Fields
DT Derrick Tangelo

7th Round
DE Arnold Ebiketie

Porter Jr. is the only mildly surprising pick above, but if he peaks this year, he has the physique, style of play, and pedigree to hear his name called early. Not featured: Brandon Smith. If Smith goes pro, Penn State will need to hit the portal hard to fill out the linebacker room.

And QB Sean Clifford returns for his sixth year of eligibility and fourth year as the starting quarterback in 2022 with James Franklin hoping against all hope that Drew Allar or perhaps even Beau Pribula is ready to start as a redshirt freshman in 2023 unless the Transfer Portal offers up a one-year bridge starter. Hey, Kyle McCord, if you get squeezed out by CJ Stroud and Quinn Ewers, PA would love to have you back.

--------------------------

(I wrote this section on Tuesday August 31. It would've looked pretty funny had Ohio State failed to complete their comeback in Minneapolis last night!)

Now, briefly, my picks for the Big Ten as a whole. In prior years, I've picked every game. This year, I'm looking at schedules for teams and making a general pick without ensuring that the records all tie out with each other. Oh well.

East

  1. Ohio State (12-0, 9-0). The Buckeyes are losing a ton of talent...but replacing that talent with a ton of talent. Nowhere is that truer than at quarterback where new Bears starter draftee Justin Fields is being replaced by 5* C.J. Stroud, who beat out fellow 5* January enrollee Kyle McCord and August enrollee and new millionaire 5* Quinn Ewers. Good grief. A visit from Oregon in Week 2 and a mid-October trip to Bloomington are the only remotely challenging contests. There's just too much talent here. It's a huge bummer that Ohio State doesn't have to play Wisconsin or Iowa during the regular season.

  2. Michigan (9-3, 6-3). The schedule sets up well for Michigan this year. The Week 2 game against Washington will provide a good barometer. If the Wolverines pull out a win there, they'll be 4-0 heading to Madison in October. Even if they lose to the Badgers, Michigan should run through Nebraska, Northwestern, and Michigan State, entering November at 7-1 before facing Indiana, Penn State, and Ohio State down the stretch. Will there be a bunch of helium entering the season's final month? Or will Michigan actually reenter the national picture? The bet here is that it's mostly helium for a good but not great team.

  3. Indiana (8-4, 6-3). Indiana is going to be seriously beat up at the midpoint of their season. Road games at Iowa and Penn State with a home date against Cincinnati will test the Hoosiers by the first week of October. Will Penix stay healthy through that slog? If so, it could be a special year. If not, it could be a long one.

  4. Penn State (8-4, 5-4). I think that Penn State is going to be quite good this season. Unfortunately, the opening two-thirds of the schedule is a bloodbath. September features an opener in Madison and a Whiteout visit from Auburn before a slog in October: Indiana at home and trips to Iowa City and Columbus. However, November offers the chance to go on a real run and end the season on a high note.

  5. Michigan State (4-8, 2-7). I'm on the record as being wildly anti-Mel Tucker. He was the worst defensive coordinator in Chicago Bears history, something for which I'll never forgive him. I expect that Sparty will suffer a pair of losses in their September road games against Northwestern and Miami. If so, this season could tumble into the darkness with Ohio State and Penn State waiting at the end.

  6. Rutgers (4-8, 2-7). Greg Schiano should have Rutgers playing scrappy ball again. The roster isn't good. But there are enough mediocre opponents that he'll find some wins.

  7. Maryland (3-9, 1-8). Speaking of brutal schedules. Maryland opens the year as a home underdog against West Virginia and their Big Ten opener is the dreaded Friday night road game in the Central Time Zone. I think that Maryland will beat Howard and Kent State...then win one game between October and November. Ouch. There's a stunning amount of young talent on this roster, but the staff has a tough task getting it to play up in games.

West

  1. Wisconsin (10-2, 8-1). Playing Penn State, Notre Dame (in Chicago), and Michigan in their first four games, the Badgers should know plenty by the time the leaves change colors. I think that Notre Dame will get the better of Wisconsin, but they'll acquit themselves well throughout the rest of their schedule. Here's hoping they lose their opener!

  2. Iowa (9-3, 7-2). Iowa looks good. The schedule gets off to a terribly difficult start with Indiana and Iowa State in Weeks 1 and 2. After that, they'll get hot and roll for a while, especially against their poo-poo platter of a schedule in November.

  3. Northwestern (7-5, 4-5). I don't think that Northwestern looks all that good this year, and against a schedule with a tough non-conference opponent and a reasonable crossover slate, they'd be a four- or five-win team. But they play Indiana State, Duke, and Ohio in the non-Big Ten schedule and Michigan, Michigan State, and Rutgers from the East. Pat Fitzgerald should find a way to scratch out a few extra wins. If they're a little better than I expect, this could be a nine-win season thanks for the schedule makers.

  4. Minnesota (6-6, 3-6). Minnesota will get whooped in Week 1, then rip off a great stretch through their early November home date against Illinois. Then, they get @ Iowa, @ Indiana, and Wisconsin to stumble to 6-6 at the finish line.

  5. Illinois (4-8, 2-7). Is Bret Bielema good again? Nah. You only get to play Nebraska once.

  6. Nebraska (3-9, 1-8). I figured that Nebraska would enjoy a nice growth year in 2021. After seeing their opener against Illinois, I'm convinced that this is very, very wrong. It's hard to see Scott Frost surviving another debacle.

  7. Purdue (2-10, 1-8). David Bell is a lonely, lonely man. This roster is a mess. Hard to believe that Jeff Brohm was one of the hottest names in coaching just a few short years ago.
Ohio State handles Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship Game, propelling the Buckeyes to Playoff. That leaves the following bowl games for Big Ten teams:

CFP: Ohio State
Rose: Wisconsin
Fiesta: Michigan
Citrus: Iowa
Outback: Penn State
Las Vegas: Indiana
Music City: Northwestern
Pinstripe: Minnesota

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Chicago Bears 2021 Draft Thoughts

Last year, I wrote that Ryan Pace was desperate. This year? It seems abundantly clear that Pace and Matt Nagy should be fired if the Bears don't have an impactful season with 10+ wins.

Once again, I expect that the thought above will dictate what the Bears do this weekend. Unsurprisingly, I am of the opinion that this will lead Pace to make yet another in a continuing series of draft-day mistakes. Despite that, I remain hopeful that this year will be different because, well, that's what I do.

In no particular order, here are my thoughts on the Bears and the draft.

1. The Bears' salary cap management almost surely dictates their draft strategy. Whereas the best teams simply draft the best players, Pace's nightmarish management of the team's salary cap has left glaring lacks of depth in prior years. This year? This year there are numerous spots without starting-caliber players entirely. The most obvious spots:

  • Quarterback. Duh. Andy Dalton is the current "starter." In 2021. On purpose. Yikes.
  • Right Tackle. While the other four offensive line spots are set, recent seventh rounder Lachavious Simmons appears to be the current projected starter at RT. Again: yikes.
  • Wide Receiver. Allen Robinson is a number one. Darnell Mooney is a number three. Number two? Ideally that role would've been filled by recent draftees Anthony Miller (second round) and Riley Ridley (fourth round), but they were both whiffs. Javon Wims and Marquise Goodwin are replacement-level options.
  • Cornerback. Yowzers. Jaylon Johnson is locked in as a starter despite his voluminous injury history, and the other spot is a grab bag of minimum-salary veterans: Desmond Trufant, Artie Burns, and Jalen Tabor. To say that Kyle Fuller is desperately missed is a massive understatement.

Starting rookie offensive tackles is never ideal. Starting a rookie quarterback is even less ideal. But that's where the Bears find themselves. Pace needs to find a handful of day-one starters to give the 2021 team a shot.

2. Despite the foregoing, there are a few spots that don't need to be addressed. Cole Kmet showed out as a rookie at tight end and Jimmy Graham is still here. There's high-end talent and depth at defensive end between Akiem Hicks, Bilal Nichols, Mario Edwards, and Angelo Blackson. Outside linebacker has had so many assets allocated to it in recent years that the Bears need to simply roll with Khalil Mack, Robert Quinn, and Trevis Gipson (effectively the 2021 fourth round pick). Eddie Goldman locks down the nose. The interior offensive line trio of James Daniels, Cody Whitehair, and Germain Ifedi looks good. The running back spot is a strength between David Montgomery and the returning Tarik Cohen. Inside linebacker is a little wobbly behind Roquan Smith, but the Bears are wed to Danny Trevathan (thanks Pace!) and Joel Iyiegbuniwe can play in a pinch. Finally, the safety group desperately needs Eddie Jackson to get way better, but there are a trio of potential acceptable starters alongside him with Tashuan Gipson, Deon Bush, and Jordan Lucas in addition to core special teamer DeAndre Houston-Carson. There are enough bodies at these spots to make things work.

3. I've said for years that Pace's penchant for trading away picks in order to get "his guy" was going to come back to bite the team. That arose as an issue last year and it's happening now to a greater extent. In addition to the numerous needs above, the Bears would be well-served to draft a developmental tight end, a successor to Trevathan at ILB, and a DE prospect in the middle rounds of the draft this year. As was the case last year, there aren't nearly enough mid-round picks for the Bears this year given the holes that have been created by years of trading away picks. They have four top-200 selections: #20, #52, #83, and #164. They do have four sixth round picks, but the Bears likely need a couple of them to turn into starters, not projects. Gulp.

4. As I've done in prior years, here's a list of scenarios for Pace from most desirable to least desirable:

  1. Trade down. Always. Pace is one-for-two trading back in the second round, ending up with OG Cody Whitehair the first time and TE Adam Shaheen the second time. In both events, trading down yielded valuable picks that turned into important contributors: ILB Nick Kwiatkoski, S Deon Bush, and, following another minor deal, S Eddie Jackson. Pace desperately needs to do that again. Considering that Pace likely needs 2021 picks in return in any deal, I see three attractive possibilities:
    1. Bears Trade #20 to Jacksonville for #33 and #65. On the Jimmy Johnson chart, this trade yields 850 points for the Jags and 845 for the Bears, so it's basically a wash. But the Bears pick up an extremely valuable third rounder for the deal. This trade works if the Jags decide that either LT Cam Robinson (on the franchise tag) or 2019 second rounder RT Jawaan Taylor isn't sufficient to protect Trevor Lawrence and the team has other needs to address at #25 as well. Jacksonville is an unlikely fit.
    2. Bears Trade #20 to Las Vegas for #48, #79, and #80 as well as a 2022 third-round pick. This sends 850 of 2021 value to the Raiders and brings back 805 for the Bears, who extract only a slight premium for delaying the receipt of the additional pick one year. That may leave Pace less likely to play ball. But if Vegas thinks there's another player in the first round that puts them on the precipice, they could pull the trigger, especially since the cost of moving from #48 to #20 doesn't involve any first- or second-round picks.
    3. Bears Trade #20 to Washington for #51, #74, and #82 as well as a 2022 third-round pick. This sends 850 of 2021 value to Washington and brings back 790 for the Bears. Everything from the Vegas deal above also applies here. It's hard to see Washington making this kind of move without a franchise QB on the roster...but if they make another move for a quarterback, this kind of move could land them a LT to protect their new passer.
    4. Bears Trade #20 to Baltimore for #27, #94, #131, and #184. This sends 850 of 2021 value to Baltimore and brings back 861 for the Bears. Jumping from #27 to #20 should be enough for Baltimore to get a plug-and-play RT after dealing away Orlando Brown, and they have extra picks in the third, fourth, and fifth rounds from which to deal. This is probably my favorite single outcome for the Bears short of getting multiple, high-value 2022 picks back in a trade (selections that can be made by the next GM).
  2. Trade up...but only for Justin Fields. I am not an NFL scout. That has always been true. That said, I have absolutely no idea how Fields is sliding. He is an extremely accurate passer, he has a cannon for an arm, and he is a remarkable athlete. His footwork is strong. The primary criticism of him should be that Ohio State is too good which makes Fields difficult to evaluate in a vacuum, but this problem afflicts just about every Alabama player, too, and they tend to have excellent careers. If Fields slips to the #7/8/9 neighborhood and can be acquired for something like #20, #52, and the 2022 first-round pick, Pace should pounce. It's crazy to me that the Jets aren't taking Fields and are going after Zach Wilson instead. We'll see whether San Francisco actually passes on Fields are #3. More on this below. ***I never recommend that Pace trade up, but Fields sliding to the back of the top-10 - if it happens - presents such an otherworldly error by other clubs that Pace should take advantage. Crazy.***
  3. Get a few day-one starters by standing pat. Obviously if somebody undergoes an insane draft slide like one of the Alabama wide receivers (Jaylen Waddle or DeVonta Smith), Oregon LT Penei Sewell, or Penn State OLB Micah Parsons, the Bears should pounce. But since there's a 0.00000000001% chance of players like that reaching the 20s, they're not addressed here. Here are targets for #20:
    1. QB Trey Lance (North Dakota State). Hear me out. I don't think there's any real chance that Lance gets this far, but I do think there's a possibility that he slips a decent way as teams see him as a developmental QB. Admittedly, Lance has an extremely high ceiling, but he's going to need a couple of years to get there and I think it's far more likely that he is a bust. But if the Bears can get him without trading up, great!
    2. OLB Micah Parsons (Penn State). This is probably a pipe dream. Probably. But Parsons has seen his stock fall a bit in recent weeks and it's not entirely inconceivable that he could drop this far. If he did, I'm done. What a fit opposite Mack. Parsons isn't a classic 3-4 OLB yet, but he's such a good football player and athlete that he'd surely grow into the job.
    3. OT Rashawn Slater (Northwestern). Slater shut down Chase Young, largely taking him one-on-one. Holy smokes. Slater will be the long-term replacement for Charles Leno and a day-one starter. If he makes it to #20, it's a no-brainer.
    4. CB Patrick Surtain II (Alabama). I'm still made at Pace for wrecking the cap enough to need to cut Fuller. But Surtain is awesome, the complete package at corner with size, speed, instincts, and ball skills. He's exponentially more attractive than Jaycee Horn.
    5. WR Terrace Marshall Jr. (LSU). I don't understand why he's so far below Chase, Waddle, and Smith in rankings. Marshall is huge (6'4", 200 lbs.) with great hands, great routes, and a sub-4.4 40 time. There may be a medical issue, but he's worth that risk at 20.
    6. LB Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah (Notre Dame). If Owusu-Koramoah is "just" a linebacker, this doesn't work. He's 6'1", 216 lbs., so he has to play inside in a 3-4. The Bears already have Roquan Smith in the three-down role. Where would Owusu-Koramoah play? In a word: everywhere. He's probably more aptly described as a defensive weapon or a rover. He'd fit, he'd play on all three downs, and he'd be a weapon.
    7. DE Christian Barmore (Alabama). The value proposition isn't really there for the 2021 Bears, but the value of Barmore in the long run is clear to me. He'll absorb blockers and push back at the point of attack.
    8. OT Dillon Radunz (North Dakota State). He can really move and looks powerful enough to play a long time in the NFL. The learning curve may be steep, however.
    9. CB Greg Newsome II (Northwestern). Newsome looks like a plug-and-play plus starter. He runs well and is extremely agile. Plus, he really gave Wisconsin quarterbacks nightmares (that translates to Rodgers, and maybe Love, right?).
    10. OT Christian Darrisaw (Virginia Tech). Darrisaw is plenty impressive in his own right. He's extremely quick and plenty powerful. But to me, he's a clear step down from Slater.
  4. Stand pat and draft OK players. Players that are OK for the 2021 Bears but don't knock my socks off.
    1. OT Teven Jenkins (Oklahoma State). He's plenty big, quick enough, and quite powerful with experience at both tackle spots. He's not my favorite tackle, but he'd work.
    2. OLB Jaelan Phillips (Miami). Phillips would be a top-10 pick were it not for his history of concussions. His pass rushing moves are incredible and he's an ideal athlete. But again, the concussions. 
    3. OLB Jayson Oweh (Penn State). No sacks last year? No matter. Oweh is darn good at football and the sacks will come thanks to his continuous pressures.
    4. OLB Kwity Paye (Michigan). Paye always struck me as "just a guy" at Michigan. But then 2020 happened, he took a big step, and I can see an impact rusher. Good for him.
    5. G Alijah Vera-Tucker (USC). He's a good looking guard prospect. If Germain Ifedi is really a RT, this could work, though the value proposition isn't really there. Good player, less-than-ideal fit. He doesn't look quick enough to be a tackle.
    6. S Trevon Moehrig (TCU). It's so hard for me (and Ryan Pace) to evaluate safeties. Moehrig would be fine, I guess, but he doesn't seem special to me.
    7. OT Jackson Carman (Clemson). Carman has surprisingly sloppy technique, but I can overlook that for a mountain of a man with great quickness. He's going to have a high ceiling and a low floor.
  5. Stand pat but draft players I don't like, either because of their skill sets or their fits with the Bears. They'd all be fine later, however.
    1. Any running back.
    2. QB Mac Jones (Alabama). Allen Robinson. He's the only Bears offensive player at wide receiver or on the offensive line better than the guys that Jones played with last year at Alabama. He's not the guy.
    3. OT Alex Leatherwood (Alabama). He'd be a nice get in the second round, but I think he ends up at guard and that makes #20 a tough fit.
    4. CB Caleb Farley (Virginia Tech). I'm underwhelmed by Farley and he comes with back issues. He's going to get flagged a lot in the NFL because he's constantly got his hands all over receivers on his way down the field.
    5. WR Rashod Bateman (Minnesota). Bateman dusted Penn State's secondary in 2019, but I'm not terribly impressed by him. He plays a lot stiffer than I expected, and he didn't create enough separation unless there were complete coverage breakdowns.
    6. CB Jaycee Horn (South Carolina). I love Horn's effort, but that's about it. He's extremely handsy, reminding me of former Michigan CB Jourdan Lewis, and I expect that Horn will find the illegal contact penalty in the NFL to be a big problem. Horn is impressively strong, but I don't see top-20 value here.
    7. WR Elijah Moore (Ole Miss). Really just looks like a guy. Third- or fourth-round pick type of guy. I'll love it if the Bears draft him, however, because he had that incredible celebration at Mississippi State.
    8. OLB Azeez Ojulari (Georgia). An undersized OLB from Georgia? We've already done this one before. Come on. In all seriousness, I appreciate his springiness and like him more than Leonard Floyd. He'd be great in round two.
    9. OLB Gregory Rousseau (Miami). Rousseau has the frame, but he's much too stiff.
  6. SIDEBAR: Other players I like for later in the draft. This section isn't nearly as robust as in most years because I haven't spent nearly as much time on this year's draft. Basically, there are some second round tackles that I like.
    1. OT Jalen Mayfield (Michigan). I don't think that Mayfield will make it to the middle of the second round, but he could and he'd be a great get if he did.
    2. OT Sam Cosmi (Texas). Looks like a perfectly cromulent RT for the next 10 years. Not elite, but should have a good career.
    3. OT Walker Little (Stanford). Little is a great athlete who hasn't played meaningful football in a long time. He's a risk, but an OK one to take here.
  7. Trade up for anyone other than Justin Fields. Don't do it, Ryan. This includes trading up for Trey Lance. Any deal for Lance would feature a first-round pick that would likely be higher than the selection where Lance was taken. For example, if the Bears trade with the Lions and draft Lance at #7, it'll be something like #20 in 2021, #5 in 2022, and a mid-round pick to get it done. Barf.
  8. Trade up for Mac Jones. Barf. Barf. Barf. Mac Jones is Andy Dalton. (I also wrote that Patrick Mahomes was Jay Cutler 2.0 a few years ago, so take everything I say with an ocean's worth of salt.)
What do I think will happen? Pace will trade #20, the Bears' 2022 first-round pick, and the Bears' 2023 first-round pick to the Bengals for #5 overall and a 2023 third-round pick. There will be dancing in the streets of Cincinnati. Pace then drafts Mac Jones because everything is terrible. I can't bring myself to mock this, however, because I don't hate myself that much.

Finally, my first-round mock:
  1. Jacksonville: QB Trevor Lawrence (Clemson). Duh.
  2. New York Jets: QB Zach Wilson (BYU). Crazy to me but seems set in stone.
  3. San Francisco: QB Justin Fields (Ohio State). The 49ers traded the kind of haul of picks that you only trade for a quarterback, and there's no way they did so for Mac Jones.
  4. Cincinnati (trade from #5 with Atlanta): LT Penei Sewell (Oregon). Sewell is a plug-and-play star.
    1. I hate trading up one spot, but I can see Atlanta leveraging access to Sewell here and Cincinnati ponying up to protect Burrow.
  5. Dallas (trade from #10 with Atlanta): TE Kyle Pitts (Florida). The Dallas defense is a mess...but Jerry Jones won't be able to help himself and the Falcons get a few extra picks for dropping down to #10.
  6. Miami: WR Ja'marr Chase (LSU). Speaking of dream scenarios. Miami gets their #1 receiver and a chance to find out if Tua is for real.
  7. Denver (trade from #9 with Detroit): QB Trey Lance (North Dakota State). The Lions can get out of the Jared Goff deal following the 2022 season for just $10M in dead money against the cap. They could auction off the pick to the highest bidder...but why not take your next franchise QB yourself? In the end, I think they chose to avoid a locker room mess by drafting Lance or Jones...but they regret passing on Lance within a year or two. Denver rejoices to have a QB with a crazy ceiling.
  8. Carolina: OT Rashawn Slater (Northwestern). Carolina is bummed not to sell this pick to the highest bidder, but having invested in Sam Darnold, they elect to keep him upright.
  9. Detroit: OLB Micah Parsons (Penn State). This makes no sense based on positional need, but the Lions desperately need an impact player on defense. A wide receiver also makes sense.
  10. Atlanta: WR DeVonta Smith (Alabama). Atlanta wins the draft. They trade down twice, picking up tons of extra value, and get a stud receiver anyway. Smith excels against press coverage despite his slender frame.
  11. New York Giants: WR Jaylen Waddle (Alabama). Lots of mocks have the Giants seeking linemen, but I think Daniel Jones needs another toy beyond Kenny Golladay's one-year deal.
  12. Philadelphia: G Alijah Vera-Tucker (USC). This is Philly's nightmare: they desperately need a receiver, but they're all gone.
  13. Los Angeles Chargers: CB Patrick Surtain II (Alabama). The Chargers are in a great spot to land a cornerback or left tackle. Here, it's a corner.
  14. Arizona (trade from #16 with Minnesota): CB Caleb Farley (Virginia Tech). The Vikings are without a second-round pick, so they trade down here. Arizona is without a third-round pick, but it's worth it for them to jump New England.
  15. New England: CB Jaycee Horn (South Carolina). The Pats shrug and say "we were going to take Horn anyway."
  16. Minnesota: OT Christian Darrisaw (Virginia Tech). A perfect fit for Minnesota as they rebuild a mess of an offensive line.
  17. CHICAGO (trade from #20 with Las Vegas): QB Mac Jones (Alabama). The Bears fear that Washington will jump here and keep them from Jones, so they make another deal involving the Raiders, this time sending #20 and #83 to Las Vegas to get their statue of a new quarterback. Barf.
  18. Miami: DE Jayson Oweh (Penn State). Oweh is going to come off the board earlier than expected, and I can see this being his landing spot. There are very few people on the planet that have his athleticism, and he's already a darn good football player despite limited experience.
  19. Washington: OT Teven Jenkins (Oklahoma State). Washington will need to run the ball and Jenkins is a mauler.
  20. Las Vegas: OT Alex Leatherwood (Alabama). Mayock and Gruden love Alabama players, and they need a tackle.
  21. Indianapolis: DE Kwity Paye (Michigan). Indianapolis almost certainly wants a left tackle here, but those options are gone and the Colts lack the extra picks needed to make a move. Accordingly, they sit tight and take the shot on an edge instead.
  22. Tennessee: CB Greg Newsome II (Northwestern). After releasing both starting cornerbacks, the Titans need an NFL-caliber player at this position. Newsome should start Week 1.
  23. New York Jets: S Trevon Moehrig (TCU). The Jets use the pick acquired in the Jamal Adams deal to draft a safety. How fitting.
  24. Pittsburgh: LB Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah (Notre Dame). Pittsburgh finds an athletic marvel to pair with Devin Bush in the middle of its defense.
  25. Jacksonville: DT Christian Barmore (Alabama). Even though Barmore doesn't help Trevor Lawrence, Jacksonville is ecstatic to find such an impactful lineman this late in the first.
  26. Cleveland: DE Gregory Rousseau (Miami). Despite signing Jadeveon Clowney to pair with Myles Garrett, the Browns nab Rousseau and terrorize opposing offensive lines with all three linemen on the field on passing downs.
  27. Baltimore: OT Dillon Radunz (North Dakota State). Radunz is an incredible athlete. He's going to be able to run with the runnin' Ravens.
  28. Tampa Bay (trade from #32 with New Orleans): WR Terrace Marshall Jr. (LSU). The Bucs trade up and break Green Bay hearts by grabbing this big receiver. Tampa Bay is heading for an inflection point with both Mike Evans and Chris Godwin making big bucks. One will likely head out soon.
  29. Green Bay: WR Rashod Bateman (Minnesota). Finally.
  30. Buffalo: DE Azeez Ojulari (Georgia). Buffalo strengthens their defensive front.
  31. Baltimore: OLB Jaelan Phillips (Miami). Despite Phillips' concussion history, Baltimore needs to roll the dice on him to keep their pass rush feisty after losing so much in free agency.
  32. New Orleans: WR Rondale Moore (Purdue). The Saints need help for Michael Thomas, and with Emmanuel Sanders out the door, it needs to come via the draft.
Enjoy!