NFL Draft Articles

Jordan Katz 2020 Prediction Style NFL Mock Draft: 1.0

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Welcome to the first installment of my prediction style Mock Draft. For those that might be reading for the first time, I do two kinds of Mock Drafts. The ones I post more regularly are what I would do if I were in charge of all 32 teams. In those mocks you see more of what I think of individual players, as well as what I think each team should prioritize.

In my prediction mocks, they are exactly what they sound like; predictions. I’m going based off of what I have seen rumored, As we get closer to the draft, I will use Combine meetings, who went to what pro day, and the rumor mill to make my predictions.

As far as trades go, any trade you see in this Mock Draft is a prediction on which teams could be in the trade market come draft time. Obviously there are more teams that will look to trade than the select ones I chose, and that’s where the breakdown of the board can have influence on the predictions I choose to make. As always, trades that were made in this mock are indicated via an asterisk.

Let’s cook.

ROUND ONE

1) Cincinnati Bengals: Joe Burrow, QB LSU- I still think Cincinnati is in a great position to build a roster before selecting their QB of the future, but let’s call a spade a spade; this will be Joe Burrow in three months.

2) Washington Redskins: Chase Young, EDGE Ohio State- Don’t sleep on Washington trading down here. Chase Young is a phenomenal player, but Washington has a lot of needs. They could leverage this pick to a QB needy team if the buzz around the Quarterbacks were to get high enough. For now, Washington just stays here and picks Young.

3) *Miami Dolphins via Detroit Lions: Tua Tagovailoa, QB Alabama- During the early stages of the college football season, there was a lot of buzz that Dolphins Owner Stephen Ross was going to force the front office to take Tua at the presumed first overall selection. Now they have a chance to trade up and land the guy that Ross supposedly coveted. Something tells me because of all the teams that need QBs near the top, Miami will be tempted to use their assets in this draft to go get their franchise QB. 

4) New York Giants: Isaiah Simmons, OLB/ILB/Slot Corner/FS/NFL Version of the Hulk, Clemson- Okay, so the position thing is clearly a joke, but Simmons is the definition of a chess piece for any NFL defense. The Giants rarely take a linebacker in round one, but Simmons is no ordinary linebacker. He changes games, and the Giants need game changers on defense.

5) *Detroit Lions via Miami Dolphins: Jeffrey Okudah, CB Ohio State- Detroit trading down feels like the layup trade of this draft. Trading down to still select Okudah, who they probably would take at three anyway, is the dream scenario. Darius Slay has one more year left on his contract, and because of where the Lions are at, he would likely walk in free agency. Assuming they trade Slay to expedite their rebuild, cornerback tops their wish list in the 2020 draft.

6) Los Angeles Chargers: Justin Herbert, QB Oregon- Herbert put on a clinic throughout the week of the Senior Bowl. He looked like the best player on the field at all times, which is exactly how he should have looked if in fact he was a top 10 lock. While Jordan Love is an option here, Herbert being further along mentally and physically is what pushes the Chargers in his direction.

7) *Indianapolis Colts via Carolina Panthers: Jordan Love, QB Utah State- Four QBs in the top 10 is a lot, but that appears to be where we are headed. Love has NFL size, NFL arm strength, and he can stretch the play with his legs. While I don’t view him that highly, many think he can resemble Patrick Mahomes. Indianapolis trades up for Love, but they won’t rush him if he’s not ready because of Jacoby Brissett, which also makes this a quality fit for the former Utah State star.

8) Arizona Cardinals: Andrew Thomas, OT Georgia- I know there is a ton of buzz around Mekhi Becton right now, however something tells me Thomas regains his momentum at the combine in a month. I think he’s been out of the spotlight for so long, people forgot just how dominant he was on tape. When he reminds them that he’s got the athleticism to match his game tape next month, Thomas should ascend back to the top offensive linemen on many people’s draft board.

9) *Atlanta Falcons via Jacksonville Jaguars: Derrick Brown, IDL Auburn- General Manager Thomas Demitrioff recently said he is looking for “game wreckers,” during this offseason. Let me tell you someone that embodies the words “game wrecker.” A Six foot five, 318 pound behemoth, who has quickness of a linebacker, the strength to beat double teams like they’re paper mache, and the ability to help others make plays because he draws so much attention. That is a guy TD would love to have on his roster.

10) Cleveland Browns: Jedrick Wills, OT Alabama- This was a real coin flip between Wills and Becton. I went with Wills because he’s built more like a prototypical offensive tackle. Becton is a mauler, built like a brick house, but his size could leave him susceptible to elite athletes on the edge. Wills is better served to deal with those kind of players.

11) New York Jets: Mekhi Becton, OT Louisville- Despite what’s written above, it’s not like Becton is a bad athlete. For someone of his size, he’s quite nimble. He gets to the second level with ease. He strikes with such force, he bodies other human beings in a way I have never seen on a football field. Becton would be a huge jolt to the Jets up front.

12) Las Vegas Raiders: Jerry Jeudy, WR Alabama- I think the wide receivers will fall throughout the 2020 NFL Draft, just because there are so many talented players at the position. This is the first example of that, as WR1 goes off the board outside the top ten. The Raiders feel like a lock to take a receiver with one of their two first round selections. Which selection they opt to do that at will depend on the way the board falls.

13) *Carolina Panthers via Indianapolis Colts: Tristan Wirfs, OL Iowa- Many seem to think Wirfs has all pro ability at guard, and that he will wind up along the interior of an offensive line at the next level. If that’s true, he probably falls outside the top 10 as well. The value placed on tackles is just greater than the value placed on guards or centers.

Fortunately for the Panthers, this can help them. They can generate enough buzz around themselves selecting the heir to Cam Newton, and trade down for a stud along the offensive line in Wirfs.

14) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Grant Delpit, FS/SS LSU- I know Delpit is very up and down on draft boards, but the one thing no one can deny is Delpit’s ability around the line of scrimmage. The Bucs secondary needs players that change games, and Delpit does just that. This feels like a natural fit that many might be sleeping on.

15) Denver Broncos: CeeDee Lamb, WR Oklahoma- Courtland Sutton was a breakout star in 2019, but in the modern day NFL, you need more than one playmaker offensively. This idea is why Denver is a prime candidate to grab another big time player to help Drew Lock turn into the franchise Quarterback that Denver needs him to be. 

16) *Jacksonville Jaguars via Atlanta Falcons: Kristian Fulton, CB LSU- The Jaguars are turning over their defense and trying to retool it to resemble the defense they had a few years ago. Having traded Jalen Ramsey, and with AJ Bouye presumably on his way out the door soon, a logical scenario for them is trading back in this draft, acquiring assets, and selecting Fulton, who is expected to be CB2 in April behind Jeffrey Okudah.

17) Dallas Cowboys: Javon Kinlaw, IDL South Carolina- Dallas has multiple needs defensively to get themselves back to where they expect to be. Interior defensive line, corner or safety are all on the table with their first round selection. Based on the way this board fell, Javon Kinlaw makes the most sense here.

18) Miami Dolphins via Pittsburgh Steelers: AJ Epenesa, EDGE Iowa- Epenesa is a weird prospect for me to attempt to predict right now. I think the NFL scouts like the player he is, the way he wins up front with technique instead of just sheer athleticism, and the way he controls his gaps up front.

Having said that, I think they are afraid that he lacks the quickness and athleticism to truly dominate at the next level. I don’t think anyone doubts that he will be a productive pro, I think the question is about his ceiling.

These are the reasons he could go anywhere from 10-30 come April.

19) Las Vegas Raiders via Chicago Bears: Patrick Queen, ILB LSU- The Raiders will probably go defense with the other first round selection they have, and a candidate for said selection is Patrick Queen. Oakland’s linebacking core is less than impressive, and Queen’s stock is through the roof after an incredible college football playoff.

20) Jacksonville Jaguars via Los Angeles Rams: K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE LSU- Chaisson will not be on the board long because of his elite ability off the edge. Jacksonville continues to revamp their defense by selecting Chaisson to replace pending free agent Yannick Ngakoue.

21) Philadelphia Eagles: Henry Ruggs III, WR Alabama- This is a realistic scenario that the rest of the NFL needs to make sure does not happen, for their own sake. Giving Doug Pederson a weapon like Ruggs would push the Eagles offense to the elite level they were at a few years ago. If the Eagles find a way to land the stud playmaker they are missing in a few months, lookout.

22) Buffalo Bills: Tee Higgins, WR Clemson- The Bills could go a number of different directions with their first round selection, and pass catcher is certainly one of them. While Josh Allen had a nice season with John Brown and Cole Beasley as his top targets, there is no question he could benefit from a big body receiver that can score in the red zone. If that’s what they are looking for, then Tee Higgins is their answer.

23) *Tampa Bay Buccaneers via New England Patriots: Jacob Eason, QB Washington- If the rumors of Philip Rivers to Tampa Bay are true, then the Bucs are the easy pick to trade back into round one for Eason. Eason has a big arm, and he can make all the throws when the pocket is clean. When the pocket collapses, that’s when his mechanics go awry. Give him to Bruce Arians, and you might just see Eason blossom into a superstar after sitting for a year.

24) New Orleans Saints: Raekwon Davis, IDL Alabama- One of the teams in the back end of round one is going to reach for Raekwon Davis. His athleticism will warrant it. I chose the Saints because recent reports are that they believe Taysom Hill is their guy for the future if Drew Brees does retire. That means the Saints turn to the defensive side of the ball, and give a boost to their pass rush along the interior.

25) Minnesota Vikings: Jeff Gladney, CB TCU- Minnesota’s secondary played subpar all year long. Not only that, but most of their secondary is up for contract. If there is a lock in the back half of round one, it’s Minnesota taking a secondary piece.

26) *Detroit Lions from Miami Dolphins via Houston Texans: Laviska Shenault Jr., WR Colorado- Detroit needs a weapon opposite Kenny Golladay long term. Marvin Jones could be a cap cut considering he’s been hurt each of the last two years, opening up a spot for one of the young, talented receivers in this draft.

27) Seattle Seahawks: Lloyd Cushenberry III, IOL LSU- Seattle is a really good trade down candidate to a team that needs a quarterback and did not select one in the top half of round one. If that team jumped up higher than Seattle, like they did in this draft, look for them to address their needs in the trenches during round one.

28) Baltimore Ravens: Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE Penn State- While the Ravens defense did have a strong year despite losing a multitude of high profile players to free agency from the year before, they still could use some help in their front seven. Matthew Judon turned into a quality rusher, but he’s set to become a free agent and most likely will not be back. This puts EDGE rusher atop their needs.

29) Tennessee Titans: Austin Jackson, OT USC- If Jack Conklin does in fact depart via free agency, the Titans top priority becomes offensive tackle. Austin Jackson is widely regarded as the best of the tier below the elite guys in this draft, making him the obvious selection.

30) *Los Angeles Chargers via Green Bay Packers: D’Andre Swift, RB Georgia- Predicting the top running back from this draft class is a debate that no one will solve until many years from now. If I were to guess which way the majority of teams are leaning, it would be Swift because of his vision and explosiveness. The Chargers jump the Chiefs to land their Melvin Gordon replacement.

31) San Francisco 49ers: Xavier McKinney, FS Alabama- Every year a player falls farther than many expect them to, and it’s all based on how the board shakes out in front of them. McKinney was the victim of that in this particular mock draft, but it allowed the 49ers to reap the benefits.

32) Kansas City Chiefs: JK Dobbins, RB Ohio State- Even if Swift does go before the Chiefs pick in round one, Dobbins is a very nice consolation prize. His ability in the open field combined with his vision between the tackles will make him a nightmare for opposing defense. In the Chiefs offense, it will be a never ending bad dream for those defenses.

TRADES IN ROUND ONE

1) Miami Dolphins trade the #5, #26 and a 2021 3rd Round Pick to the Detroit Lions for the #3 overall pick.

2) Indianapolis Colts trade the #13, #34, #75 and a 2021 2nd Round Pick to the Carolina Panthers for the #7 and #198.

3) Atlanta Falcons trade the #16, #47 and #109 to the Jacksonville Jaguars for the #9 and the #186.

4) Tampa Bay Buccaneers trade the #45, #76, a 2021 2nd Round Pick and a 2021 4th Round Pick to the New England Patriots for the #23 and #185.

5) Los Angeles Chargers trade the #37, #102 and the #133 to the Green Bay Packers for the #30 and #220.

ROUND TWO

33) Cincinnati Bengals: CJ Henderson, CB Florida
34) *Carolina Panthers from Indianapolis Colts via Washington Redskins: AJ Terrell, CB Clemson
35) Detroit Lions: Terrell Lewis, EDGE Alabama
36) New York Giants: Josh Jones, OT Houston
37) *Green Bay Packers via Los Angeles Chargers: Justin Jefferson, WR LSU
38) Carolina Panthers: Neville Gallimore, IDL Oklahoma
39) Miami Dolphins: Jonathan Taylor, RB Wisconsin
40) Arizona Cardinals: Cesar Ruiz, IOL Michigan
41) Cleveland Browns: Ashtyn Davis, SS California
42) Jacksonville Jaguars: Kenneth Murray, ILB Oklahoma
43) Chicago Bears via Las Vegas Raiders: Cole Kmet, TE Notre Dame
44) Indianapolis Colts: Ross Blacklock, IDL TCU
45) *New England Patriots via Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Isaiah Wilson, OT Georgia
46) Denver Broncos: Prince Tega Wanogho, OT Auburn
47) *Jacksonville Jaguars via Atlanta Falcons: Brandon Aiyuk, WR Arizona State
48) New York Jets: Jalen Reagor, WR TCU
49) Pittsburgh Steelers: Josh Uche, EDGE Michigan
50) Chicago Bears: Bradlee Anae, EDGE Utah
51) Dallas Cowboys: Trevon Diggs, CB Alabama
52) Los Angeles Rams: Jonathan Greenard, EDGE Florida
53) Philadelphia Eagles: Clyde Edwards-Helaire, RB LSU
54) Buffalo Bills: Zack Baun, EDGE Wisconsin
55) Atlanta Falcons via New England Patriots: Thad Moss, TE LSU
56) Miami Dolphins via New Orleans Saints: Lucas Niang, OT TCU
57) Houston Texans: Cam Akers, RB Florida State
58) Minnesota Vikings: Leki Fotu, IDL Utah
59) *New York Jets via Seattle Seahawks: Damon Arnette, CB Ohio State
60) *Las Vegas Raiders via Baltimore Ravens: Cameron Dantzler, CB Mississippi State
61) Tennessee Titans: Jason Strowbridge, DL North Carolina
62) *Philadelphia Eagles via Green Bay Packers: Noah Igbinoghene, CB Auburn
64) Kansas City Chiefs via San Francisco 49ers: Bryce Hall, CB Virginia
64) Seattle Seahawks via San Francisco 49ers: Ben Bredeson, IOL Michigan

TRADES IN ROUND TWO

1) New York Jets trade the #68 #79 and #140 to the Seattle Seahawks for the #59 and #123.

2) Las Vegas Raiders trade the #80, #91 and #203 to the Baltimore Ravens for the #60 and #187.

3) Philadelphia Eagles trade the #85, #117 and a 2021 2nd Round Pick to the Green Bay Packers for #62 and a 2021 3rd Round Pick.

Jordan Katz 2020 NFL Mock Draft 2.0

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Happy New Year everyone! I hope every one had a terrific New Year’s Eve, and to paraphrase Chris Berman, let me be the first to wish you all a safe, happy, and healthy new year.

Today is more than just the beginning of the new year. With the NFL regular season wrapped up, it’s officially…. drum roll please….

MOCK DRAFT SEASON!

We have got a very interesting set of prospects this year. By now you probably know how good the running backs and receivers are, but this year also has a bevy of talent at the cornerback position as well. The first round projected players are also as good of a group as we have seen in a long time. If you need talent to expedite a rebuild, this group has got it.

For those who are just reading for the first time, this is my own personal mock draft where I take control of all 32 teams and play out the draft process. I try to make what I feel is the best possible move for the team at that point in the draft. For example, if a player is available for the Kansas City Chiefs, but he’s a slightly better fit for the New England Patriots, I do not take that into account. If the Los Angeles Chargers want to trade up but the right scenario is not there, no trade is made. In short, this is what I think each team should do if the draft were taking place tomorrow.

We do have trades in this mock draft, and all trades that took place in said mock are denoted by an asterisk next to the team. If there is no asterisk, then the trade was made prior to the making of the mock draft by the actual teams. Mock Draft SZN is off and running, let’s roll.

ROUND ONE

1) Cincinnati Bengals: Chase Young, EDGE Ohio State- NFL teams are often forced into selecting a Quarterback before they are ready to compete because QBs dominate the current NFL. You have to have one to succeed in any sort of fashion, and there is a lot of pressure on teams to find that guy. The problem with that is, you can wind up ruining your Quarterback before you ever learn what he can be by playing him behind a bad offensive line and with a poor supporting cast. This is why I believe teams should build a roster and then insert their QB of the future.

The Cincinnati Bengals have the easiest excuse in the world to do this. Not only is Chase Young the runaway best player in the country and a Heisman Trophy candidate, but he’s a hometown guy that will sell tickets. The problem NFL teams in a rebuild face when it comes to the QB vs Build the Roster debate is that football is a business, and you have to sell tickets. Nothing sells tickets in the NFL like a young Quarterback with promise.

Having said that, Young went to THE Ohio State. People will show up to see Chase Young ball out. Therefore, not only is Chase Young the right move from a team building standpoint, he’s also the right move from an owner’s perspective.

Editor’s Note: By no means would Joe Burrow be a “wrong selection.” I love Burrow, I think he’s the real deal. I just also think filling out a roster before inserting the QB is the better way to build a team.

2) *Miami Dolphins via Washington Redskins: Joe Burrow, QB LSU- In a weird turn of events, Miami wins too much, but still finds their way into selecting the Franchise QB they need. Burrow is incredibly accurate, and he does a terrific job of letting his playmakers go get 50/50 balls. That’s a skill set to be desired in the modern day NFL. Showing the knowledge of when to take the one-on-one opportunity and having the touch to make the throw is what many passing attacks are all about.

Now for the fans that are wondering why the Dolphins would not also follow the Bengals team building blueprint, Miami still has two other first round selections during the 2020 Draft. They have the capability to move all around the draft board and fill out their roster to the point where Burrow will not be thrown to the wolves. Cincinnati takes Young and waits for Trevor Lawrence next year, Miami takes Burrow to get better right now.

3) *Carolina Panthers via Detroit Lions: Andrew Thomas, OT Georgia- Andrew Thomas is legitimately the best offensive line prospect I have ever scouted. He’s an elite athlete with textbook footwork (I should mention he’s 6’5 320). Thomas has a powerful first punch, as well as an elite counter-punch when working against opposing rushers. To top it all off, the dude is a straight mauler in the run game. Carolina trades up for a franchise changing left tackle.

4) New York Giants: Tristian Wirfs, OT Iowa- There are some rumors around Wirfs going back to school, and this scenario here is why he should not. Too many teams at the top of the draft need offensive line. Even if Joe Burrow went first, Wirfs most likely goes in the top 10. If Young went first, and some panic set in, Wirfs can climb towards the very top of this board because he’s one of only two complete offensive tackles in this class. He’s got NFL size, he’s quick to get his hands on defenders, and much like Thomas, he can drive players backward in the run game with a powerful base and strong hands. 

Editor’s Note- We have now hit the “what will David Gettleman do,” portion of the show, so buckle up Giants fan. Remember last year how I told you well in advance that Daniel Jones was going at six, even though everyone knew no one had him at a round one grade besides the Giants? Well here comes round two. Dave Gettleman has never… EEEEEVVVVEEEERRRR (Wrestling reference), selected an OL in round one during his tenure as a GM of the Panthers and the Giants. This pick will most likely be WR1 in the 2020 Draft. Consider this your warning.

5) *Washington Redskins via Miami Dolphins: CeeDee Lamb, WR Oklahoma- As good as Terry McLaurin has looked, most teams need more than one quality receiver to succeed in the modern day NFL. Lamb is explosive with the ball in his hands and he stretches the field as good as anyone in the draft.

6) Los Angeles Chargers: Tua Tagovailoa, QB Alabama- This may be an out of the box idea, but I think it’s the one that has the best long term advantage for the Chargers. Philip Rivers is on the decline, and even if he does have some football left in him, it’s one year at most. That works perfectly for Tagovailoa, who will be recovering from hip surgery this offseason. If he beats out Rivers, that’s great. If not, he can sit a year and learn how to read coverage along with making secondary throws (which is definitely his weak spot); all of which will help him come into the starting role in 2021. I think this is an ideal scenario for both the team and the player.

7) *Detroit Lions via Carolina Panthers: Jeffrey Okudah, CB Ohio State- If Detroit does move on from Darius Slay this offseason, then corner becomes the primary, secondary and tertiary need for them at the top of the draft board. Okudah headlines what has become a very quality cornerback class at the top. He has NFL size and length, and he looks extremely comfortable in multiple looks (although he does excel in man-to-man). This is a natural fit, assuming Matt Patricia returns as head coach.

8) Arizona Cardinals: Derrick Brown, IDL Auburn- You simply cannot teach Derrick Brown’s elite athleticism. He’s lightning quick off the snap of the ball, and can win against opposing offensive linemen with quickness or with power. Putting him up front with Chandler Jones would make an elite combo in Arizona.

9) Jacksonville Jaguars: Isaiah Simmons, LB Clemson- Simmons is the most underrated and underappreciated player in this draft. He is the modern day linebacker; an elite athlete with freakish range from sideline to sideline and the ability to cover tight ends with no help. Oh, and he runs a 4.35 and can do anything you ask of him in the box. This is a player you can build a defense around in the modern game.

10) Cleveland Browns: Jedrick Wills, OT Alabama- Offensive line has to be the primary focus for the Browns during the offseason, particularly on the right side. Fortunately for Cleveland, Jedrick Wills is a natural fit at RT. He’s not an elite athlete, but he’s able to get his hands on opponents quickly and use his power to alter the course of opposing rushers. 

11) New York Jets: Henry Ruggs III, WR Alabama- I know what you’re thinking Jets fans, “how are you picking Ruggs over Jerry Jeudy? Isn’t Jeudy the consensus top receiver?” 

Look, Jerry Jeudy is a stud, no arguments here. However, even though Jeudy is a phenomenal route runner, he does have his fair share of drops. The difference to me between Lamb and Ruggs versus Jeudy is the two others are the definition of playmakers. They make something on a play with the ball in their hands. And because both are quality route runners in their own right (Ruggs is a better route runner and a more complete receiver than he is given credit for), they both get the nod over Jerry Jeudy on my personal board right now.

12) Oakland Raiders: Jerry Jeudy, WR Alabama- Oakland put together a nice season considering their lack of weapons offensively. To make the jump they want to in 2020, they need to grab a WR1 in round one.

13) Indianapolis Colts: Jacob Eason, QB Washington- 2019 will be highlighted as a season that could have been for the Colts. What could the season have looked like if their offensive weapons stayed healthy? Most importantly, what could the season have looked like if Andrew Luck, not Jacoby Brissett, was the captain of the ship?

Jacob Eason is an ideal fit for how the Colts want to play. They want to run the ball, play action off of the run, and take their chances down the field to TY Hilton when it’s there. Eason is a good play action QB, he has a cannon for an arm, and when the pocket is clean, he can make just about any throw in the book. Much like Tua earlier, this feels like a natural fit for the team and the player.

14) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Grant Delpit, SS LSU- Delpit had a “Derwin James esque,” final season at LSU. His play was inconsistent and his effort was up and down. Having said that, he is still a big time playmaker in the back end. Delpit is best when he’s closer to the line of scrimmage, although he is quick to process the play that’s happening when deeper in the secondary. Hopefully teams learn from the Derwin James fiasco and still take Delpit towards the top of the draft.

15) Denver Broncos: AJ Epenesa, DL Iowa- I think the most natural fit for Epenesa at the next level is playing 3-4 DE. At 6’6 280, Epenesa already shows the ability to beat interior linemen with a bevy of moves and a quick first step. He’s a disciplined player against the run as well. Therefore, seeing as how he’s not a natural “dip and bend,” edge rusher, it might make the most sense to kick him inside at the next level. Denver selects the Iowa standout here as their replacement for Derek Wolfe.

16) Atlanta Falcons: Kristian Fulton, CB LSU- Fulton is a really interesting study. He has the ability to shine in man-to-man as well as off coverage because of elite footwork, impressive athleticism, and really good ball skills. The negative is, he lacks physicality. Fulton is not strong in press coverage and he’s not a great tackler either. I think the positives in his game outweigh the negatives, but it will be interesting to see if the NFL agrees come April.

17) Dallas Cowboys: Paulson Adebo, CB Stanford- Adebo could be my favorite player in this draft, because his upside is so high. As a former wide receiver, Adebo shows aggressiveness in jump ball situations, and already has a great feel for when to break on the football. His footwork does need to improve, particularly his technique with his lower body when mirroring receivers in man coverage. Having said that, what makes him so interesting is that he already shows a terrific understanding of defensive alignments despite only a few years of experience at the cornerback position. Give Adebo some time and he could become a star.

 

18) Miami Dolphins via Pittsburgh Steelers: Tyler Biadasz, IOL, Wisconsin- If the Dolphins are going to take a Quarterback at the top of the draft, then it makes sense to bolster his offensive line with one of their other first round selections. Biadasz may lack the ideal NFL length, but his technique is flawless. He shows the smarts to pick up blitzes and stunts, and the power to wall off said pass rushers.

19) Oakland Raiders via Chicago Bears: Javon Kinlaw, IDL South Carolina- The Raiders were dead last in sacks during the 2019 campaign. One of the reasons for that is they lack a three technique with the athleticism to change the game. Kinlaw is that dude.

20) Jacksonville Jaguars via Los Angeles Rams: Bryce Hall, CB Virginia- This is a little high for the “tier 2,” of corners, aka the ones after Paulson Adebo, but Jacksonville desperately needs CB help. Hall is a smart corner with good ball skills and shows quality technique in off coverage, but durability and quickness are a concern.

21) Philadelphia Eagles: Laviska Shenault Jr., WR Colorado- Carson Wentz balled out down the stretch of the regular season. You know how I know that? I was called and asked to suit up at receiver because of all their injuries (okay, bad joke, but you get the point).

This offense desperately needs a legitimate playmaker on the outside to compliment Zach Ertz and Dallas Goedert. Enter the YAC legend himself, Laviska Shenault.

22) Tennessee Titans: Xavier McKinney, FS/SS Alabama- McKinney may not wow with athleticism the way Grant Delpit does, but he shows NFL level instincts in the back end. He is also very comfortable in cover one, which is a big plus for the Titans defense should he wind up in Nashville.

23) Buffalo Bills: Jalen Reagor, WR TCU- Even with Buffalo’s improved receiver core, the Bills could still benefit from a legitimate threat along the outside. Reagor is a perfect fit in a Josh Allen led offense. He’s a quality route runner, a home run threat, and he can make plays with the ball in space. Drops are a bit of an issue, but Reagor’s future is bright at the next level.

24) Minnesota Vikings: Jeff Gladney, CB TCU- Gladney is one of my favorite cornerbacks in this draft class. He has the ability to mirror receivers from the slot or the boundary position. His hips flip effortlessly and he stays attached really well. If he learns to be more physical and reroute runners with his hands, he could easily earn this spot. Minnesota has a lot of expiring contracts in the secondary, so the fit makes sense.

25) *Washington Redskins from Miami Dolphins via Houston Texans: Creed Humphrey, IOL Oklahoma- Humphrey is a very similar prospect to Tyler Biadasz. He’s not as technically sound, but he does have the ideal NFL size and length that Biadasz. Much like Miami with their second first round selections, Washington selects offensive line to help the development of their young QB.

26) Seattle Seahawks: K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE LSU- Chaisson returned from injury and dominated off the edge in 2019. He showed more than just the dip and bend ability, getting to the passer with power and multiple moves as well. His versatility to do just about anything as a rusher will make him a hot commodity come April.

27) *Atlanta Falcons via New England Patriots: JK Dobbins, RB Ohio State- The first of what is a world class running back group comes off the board here. Dobbins can do it all, much like just about all the running backs near the top. His vision along with his ability in open space make him an elite level playmaker from day one. Atlanta uses their assets they got from New England to come up and jump the Chiefs for RB1.

28) New Orleans Saints: CJ Henderson, CB Florida- Very high for Henderson here, but New Orleans needs a cornerback opposite Marshon Lattimore. Henderson has elite athleticism and shows solid mirror skills. His physicality is lacking, which means he will have to show improved technique at the combine in Indianapolis to warrant a top 50 selection.

Editor’s Note: Really aggressive move by me here putting Henderson in round one, but in my defense, this was a trade up by Alex Leatherwood until he went back to school.

29) Kansas City Chiefs: Travis Etienne, RB Clemson- I speak for every member of Draft Twitter when I say that this is the selection we need in April. Etienne’s 4.3 speed in the Chiefs offense would be unstoppable. He’s a perfect scheme fit behind their zone blocking scheme up front as well. This would be the greatest show on turf reincarnated.

30) Green Bay Packers: Justin Jefferson, WR LSU- The once vaunted Packers receiving core has become Davante Adams and nothing else. Priority one, two and three this offseason is getting Aaron Rodgers more weapons.

Jefferson wins one-on-ones from the boundary and slot position, but it’s his ability to separate at the top of the stem that makes him a really quality receiver.

31) *Tampa Bay Buccaneers via San Francisco 49ers: Justin Herbert, QB Oregon- The most ideal scenario for the Bucs this offseason is to franchise tag Jameis Winston and look to trade back into round one for a QB, similar to what Baltimore did a few years ago with Lamar Jackson. If they can execute that plan, the best target for them is Justin Herbert.

Justin Herbert is another really interesting study. His 2019 tape was so vanilla that it’s hard for anyone to change their opinion on him from what he was in 2018. Oregon asked him to play conservative, so he did. His receivers really struggled to separate as well. The one thing you could say with certainty is that he has the ability to make all the throws, but he has a tendency to force a few. I think Herbert would excel with Bruce Arians because Arians would help his decision making from day one.

32) Baltimore Ravens: Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE Penn State- With Matthew Judon most likely departing in free agency, EDGE rusher becomes the top need for the Ravens. I’m a big fan of Gross-Matos. He plays with a high motor, he has multiple moves and can line up at multiple spots along the defensive front, but still be effective as a rusher. This is a really good fit for him.

TRADES IN ROUND ONE

1) Miami Dolphins trade the #5, #25, #70 and a 2021 2nd Round Pick to the Washington Redskins for the #2 and the #130.

2) Carolina Panthers trade the #7, #38 and a 2021 2nd Round Pick to the Detroit Lions for the #3 and a 2021 6th Round Pick.

3) Atlanta Falcons trade the #47 and the #59 to the New England Patriots for the #27 and #115.

4) Tampa Bay Buccaneers trade the #45, a 2021 2nd Round Pick and a 2021 4th Round Pick to the San Francisco 49ers for the #31 and #190.

ROUND TWO

33) *Jacksonville Jaguars via Cincinnati Bengals: Curtis Weaver, EDGE Boise State

34) Indianapolis Colts via Washington Redskins: Raekwon Davis, IDL Alabama

35) Detroit Lions: Julian Okwara, EDGE Notre Dame

36) New York Giants: Kenneth Murray, ILB Oklahoma

37) Los Angeles Chargers: Mekhi Becton, OT Louisville

38) *Detroit Lions via Carolina Panthers: Hamsah Nasirildeen, FS/SS Florida State

39) Miami Dolphins: D’Andre Swift, RB Georgia

40) Arizona Cardinals: Lucas Niang, OT TCU

41) Cleveland Browns: Alton Robinson, EDGE Syracuse

42) *Cincinnati Bengals via Jacksonville Jaguars: Tee Higgins, WR Clemson

43) Chicago Bears via Oakland Raiders: Brycen Hopkins, TE Purdue

44) Indianapolis Colts: Tyler Johnson, WR Minnesota

45) *San Francisco 49ers via Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Prince Tega Wanogho, OT Auburn

46) Denver Broncos: KJ Hamler, WR Penn State

47) *New England Patriots via Atlanta Falcons: Jared Pinkey, TE Vanderbilt

48) New York Jets: AJ Terrell, CB Clemson

49) Pittsburgh Steelers: Jordan Love, QB Utah State

50) Chicago Bears: Austin Jackson, OT USC

51) Dallas Cowboys: Jabari Zuniga, EDGE Florida

52) Los Angeles Rams: Leki Fotu, IDL Utah

53) Tennessee Titans: Trey Adams, OT Washington

54) Philadelphia Eagles: Cameron Dantzler, CB Mississippi State

55) Minnesota Vikings: Neville Gallimore, IDL Oklahoma

56) Buffalo Bills: Terrell Lewis, EDGE Alabama

57) Houston Texans: Cam Akers, RB Florida State

58) Seattle Seahawks: Nick Harris, IOL Washington

59) *New England Patriots from Atlanta Falcons via New England Patriots: Brandon Jones, FS/SS Texas

60) Miami Dolphins via New Orleans Saints: Devin Duvernay, WR Texas

61) *New York Jets from Seattle Seahawks via San Francisco 49ers: Trey Smith, IOL Tennessee

Editor’s Note: This is pending his medical evaluations coming back clean.

62) *Los Angeles Chargers via Green Bay Packers: Jonathan Taylor, RB Wisconsin

63) Kansas City Chiefs: Jaylon Johnson, CB Utah

64) Baltimore Ravens: Darryl Williams, IOL Mississippi State

TRADES IN ROUND TWO

1) Jacksonville Jaguars trade the #41, #106 and a 2020 4th Round Pick to the Cincinnati Bengals for the #33.

2) New York Jets trade the #68, #110 and a 2021 5th Round Pick to the Seattle Seahawks for #61 and a 2021 6th Round Pick

3) Los Angeles Chargers trade the #71 and the #102 to the Green Bay Packers for the #62 and #223.

Jordan Katz Preliminary 2020 Big Board

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This is an early look at how I rank the top 50 players in this draft as of right now. It goes without saying that much of this will change as my grades and player reports become finalized. This is just based on the tape I have watched thus far. The rankings may not be in line with my most recent mock draft. This is strictly who I think the best players are in the draft, regardless of position or team need.

1) Chase Young, EDGE Ohio State
2)
 Andrew Thomas, OT Georgia
3)
 Joe Burrow, QB LSU
4)
 Isaiah Simmons, ILB Clemson
5)
 Jeffrey Okudah, CB Ohio State
6)
 CeeDee Lamb, WR Oklahoma
7)
 Derrick Brown, IDL Auburn
8)
 Tristan Wirfs, OT Iowa
9)
 Henry Ruggs III, WR Alabama
10)
 JK Dobbins, RB Ohio State
11)
 Grant Delpit, SS LSU
12)
 Tyler Biadasz, IOL Wisconsin
13)
 Travis Etienne, RB Clemson
14)
 D’Andre Swift, RB Georgia
15)
Jerry Jeudy, WR Alabama
16)
 Creed Humphrey, IOL Oklahoma
17)
 Jedrick Wills, OT Alabama
18)
 AJ Epenesa, DL Iowa
19)
 Kristian Fulton, CB LSU
20)
 K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE LSU
21)
 Shaun Wade, CB Ohio State
22)
 Justin Jefferson, WR LSU
23)
 Laviska Shenault Jr., WR Colorado
24)
 Cam Akers, RB Florida State
25)
 Jonathan Taylor, RB Wisconsin
26) Javon Kinlaw, IDL South Carolina
27) Jalen Reagor, WR TCU
28) Paulson Adebo, CB Stanford
29) Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE Penn State
30) Xavier McKinney, FS/SS Alabama
31) Curtis Weaver, EDGE Boise State
32) Jacob Eason, QB Washington
33) Bryce Hall, CB Virginia
34) Jeff Gladney, CB TCU
35) Hamsah Nasirildeen, FS/SS Florida State
36) Tee Higgins, WR Clemson
37) Tua Tagovailoa, QB Alabama
38) Alex Leatherwood, OL Alabama
39) Julian Okwara, EDGE Notre Dame
40) Justin Herbert, QB Oregon
41) 
Raekwon Davis, IDL Alabama
42) Najee Harris, RB Alabama
43) Tylan Wallace, WR Oklahoma State
44) KJ Hamler, WR Penn State
45) Zack Moss, RB Utah
46) Kenneth Murray, ILB Oklahoma
47) Brycen Hopkins, TE Purdue
48) Mekhi Becton, OT Louisville
49) Alton Robinson, EDGE Syracuse
50) Chuba Hubbard, RB Oklahoma State

Best NFL Fits: 2020 Quarterbacks

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We’ve reached the halfway point in both the NFL and College Football seasons, and right about now is when fans of teams start looking forward to the NFL Draft. By now, you are well aware of whether or not your favorite team is in the hunt, or onto 2020. You might even know who your favorite team is going to look to target come April.

For the teams near the top of the projected draft board, most of them are in need of the same thing; a franchise quarterback. This draft class has a ton of quarterbacks with high upside. The question then becomes, which one should you take? Which player is going to give your team the best chance of success? 

Plenty can change from now until the NFL Draft (and you best believe that it will), but these are my thoughts on where the big name college quarterbacks would fit the best in the NFL.

Tua Tagovailoa: Miami Dolphins- It is hard to say that a quarterback’s best fit is a team without any long term pieces on it’s roster. Having said that, this is the exact reason why Tagovailoa’s best true fit is Miami. They can tailor an offense to him with all of their draft capital and cap space. In terms of the player’s fit to the NFL, Tagovailoa has a modern day skill set. He throws well on the move, he extends plays with his legs, and has the arm strength to put pressure on opposing defenses. Even though I am not sure he warrants the first overall selection, I think it is safe to say he will be that guy come April. 

Justin Herbert: Tampa Bay Buccaneers- Herbert has had a very strange 2019 campaign. He has not progressed at all, but he also has not regressed either. He has made some good throws, but in no game has he made a throw that makes you think he is “the guy.” Herbert has kind of just existed in limbo as a draft prospect. His lack of ability to make players better has led me to believe that he may be a system guy in the NFL. Therefore, I decided the ideal fit for Herbert is the team with the most weapons and best overall offense among QB needy teams; the Buccaneers. Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, and Head Coach Bruce Arians will really help him blossom early.

Joe Burrow: Tennessee Titans- Burrow has come from out of nowhere like he is Randy Orton delivering an RKO during the 2019 collegiate season. He has shown the ability to deliver the ball on time and on target in the short and intermediate windows. The one concern is how much of his great year is due to his talented WRs Ja’Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson, as well as the terrific offensive game plans Steve Ensminger and Ed Orgeron are dialing up each week? In short, if you ask me right now if Burrow is a franchise quarterback, or a modern day game manager (meaning he can throw for 300+ and win a game or two, but he’s not a 4,500 yards kind of player), I would lean towards a game manager. The kid is smart, and he is accurate. I’ll stick him in Tennessee with a good defense and running game. 

Editor’s Note: This opinion on Burrow could drastically change once they play Alabama.

Jacob Eason: Minnesota Vikings- This is a weird one, because the recent play of Kirk Cousins may lead you to believe he can be the guy once again. However, that is the trap. Cousins is not the guy, and he has proved that in every big moment he’s been in. 

Having said that, Jacob Eason could probably benefit from sitting a year and working on his footwork, along with his timing. So Cousins gets one more year, Eason sits and learns how to read NFL defenses, and then you insert the gunslinger into an offense that is actually loaded with weapons.

Jalen Hurts: Cincinnati Bengals- The Bengals have one of the worst rosters in football. They have no direction, and a super young Head Coach. There is a very real possibility that the Bengals are going for the two year tank and trying to get Trevor Lawrence in 2021. 

That is why Jalen Hurts is the perfect QB for them in 2020. Hurts will not be a first round selection despite the monster year he is having statistically. He still does not have the biggest arm, and even though his anticipation has improved, he still has a ways to go in terms of seeing NFL open. 

Now Hurts does make plays with his legs and he can improvise on the move, so if they hit on the pick, it could be a home run. I especially like the idea of pairing him with Head Coach Zac Taylor. I think they could create a very interesting, up-tempo offense that could be difficult to slow down.

Ultimately, this would be a low risk, high reward day two selection that is not only a good fit for Hurts, but a good fit for the Bengals.

Jake Fromm: STAY IN SCHOOL- If Jake Fromm opts to come out after this atrocious season, I would be stunned. He has regressed in every facet of the game. Fromm has neglected to put throws into NFL open windows and he has made some poor decisions with the ball because it is his first read. I already questioned his arm strength, and so far he has done nothing to answer those questions either. He will not be a first rounder if he comes out, which means he should just stay and try to improve his game next year.

Jordan Love: Los Angeles Chargers- You could insert a number of different teams that have an aging QB and need to find the heir to the throne. I chose the Chargers because Philip Rivers has shown some age this season, and they most likely will not be bad enough in either of the next two seasons to grab a “top tier,” guy in the draft. Love is a playmaker; he makes a ton of A+ throws outside the pocket. The area of his game that needs development is his ability to stay in the pocket and make throws from the pocket. A few years on the bench learning the finer points of Quarterback play could help Love become a starter in the NFL down the road.

Jordan Katz Way Too Early 2020 NFL Mock Draft

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WE ARE BAAAAAACCCCCKKKKKKKKK! Even though we are only a quarter of the way into the NFL season, it’s never too early to start looking towards the 2020 draft (and believe me, some teams are already doing that).

The rules for this mock were simple; no trades (because it’s way too early), and the draft order was projected by yours truly. So if you have a complaint on your favorite teams overall record, just know that my prediction will probably go haywire in every possible way.

Keep in mind, this is a very early look into the 2020 draft class. Right now, the quarterback class looks loaded, the skill position group is the most dominant I’ve seen in quite some time, and Chase Young looks better than Nick Bosa. It’s important to remember, there’s still a ton of time left in the collegiate season, and plenty of tape to digest. Plus, there’s the chaos that is Draft SZN. In short, a lot will change from now until April.

With all that being said, Mock Draft Lyfe never sleeps. So let’s get to it.

ROUND ONE

1) Miami Dolphins (Projected Record: 1-15): Tua Tagovailoa, QB Alabama- Miami is in the most obvious tank mode that has ever existed in the NFL. That’s why this pick is based on what they’re likely to do rather than my plans for this rebuild.

Tagovailoa has a big time arm and NFL level athleticism. He still struggles a bit with timing NFL open windows, but we’ve got a long way to go with this season. Right now, he’s the top QB for 2020. 

2) Cincinnati Bengals (Projected Record: 2-14): Jacob Eason, QB Washington- Here’s where we shake things up. Many people would have the Bengals take Justin Herbert assuming they go quarterback. 

However, Eason has had a much better start to his 2020 campaign. I’ve been impressed with the touch he’s developed on his throws, and he still has a cannon for an arm. Eason still needs to improve his footwork and force fewer throws, but the strides he’s taken so far make me think he has potential to be a big time NFL talent.

3) Washington Redskins (Projected Record: 2-14): Chase Young, EDGE Ohio State- Even though Washington took Montez Sweat last year, you need more than one pass rusher in the modern day NFL. Young is an elite talent and the best overall player in the draft right now. His get off is ridiculous, he has insane athleticism around the edge, and he can beat an opposing tackle with just about any move you could teach. Easy pick here for Washington.

4) Denver Broncos (Projected Record: 4-12): Grant Delpit, S LSU- The Broncos secondary is in shambles, and it will only be worse once they inevitably move Chris Harris. Delpit is easily the best secondary play in the draft. He can play close to the line of scrimmage, his coverage abilities are better than the traditional in-the-box safety, and his ball skills are NFL caliber. Delpit and Justin Simmons would make a lethal combination moving forward.

5) Arizona Cardinals (Projected Record: 4-11-1): Andrew Thomas, OT Georgia- Personally, I don’t understand how Thomas does not have more hype at this point. His tape is incredibly complete. He’s a mauler in the run game, with the athleticism to get to the second level. Thomas has incredible power in the pass game as well. The minute he gets his hands on an edge player, it’s game-set-match. He gains leverage with ease, and when he kicks out in pass protection, his first punch is powerful. This is the type of player the Cardinals need on their offensive line.

6) Atlanta Falcons (Projected Record: 5-11): AJ Epenesa, EDGE Iowa- Atlanta has struggled getting to the passer this year, and it’s been the downfall of their defense. Vic Beasley is not worthy of a contract extension, and Takk McKinley has just half a sack in four games. Epenesa is a complete defensive end. He can set the edge against the run, and then come off the blocks to make plays in the backfield. Epenesa has a quality set of moves, which allows him to be a presence in the passing game. If he becomes a more fluid dip and bend guy, Epenesa could go top five in April.

7) Oakland Raiders (Projected Record: 5-11): Jerry Jeudy, WR Alabama- I don’t know if you’ve heard, but Oakland made a move for a receiver this offseason and it didn’t quite work out. That’s right…. I’m talking about JJ Nelson. 

JJ Nelson’s elite route running has been sorely missed in this passing attack. Fortunately, this draft is loaded at receiver, and at the top of the class is the best route runner I’ve seen at the collegiate level in a long time. Jeudy cuts on a dime and his explosiveness adds to his abilities as a route runner. So to replace…. JJ Nelson…. Oakland adds Jeudy.

8) New York Giants (Projected Record: 6-10): Tristan Wirfs, OT Iowa- The Giants offense looks a lot better through two weeks with Danny Dimes at the helm, but there’s still work to be done. Nate Solder looks a step slow against athletic edge rushers, and Mike Remmers is, well, Mike Remmers. 

Wirfs has really quick feet, plus NFL level length. He’s consistent with his footwork in pass protection, and he has a strong counter-punch against an opposing pass rusher. He’s 1A to Andrew Thomas in this draft.

9) New York Jets (Projected Record: 6-10): Henry Ruggs III, WR Alabama- With the top two tackles off the board, the Jets move to their next big need on offense. Ruggs is ridiculously fast and a big time playmaker with the ball in his hands. What has surprised many so far this year is the development in his precision as a route runner. He still has room for improvement in that area, but if he can combine separating at the line of scrimmage with his 4.2 speed, this kid could dominate NFL corners for years to come.

10) Indianapolis Colts (Projected Record: 6-10): Justin Herbert, QB Oregon- Indianapolis is trying to navigate this season with Jacoby Brissett at the helm, and while they did opt to extend him, a short term extension does not show a great deal of faith. The golden situation for a quarterback heading into the NFL is being selected by a team with a really strong offensive line. The Colts have that now, but not having one for a long time might have costed them Andrew Luck’s career. It will not cost them the career of Justin Herbert.

11) Carolina Panthers (Projected Record: 6-10): Isaiah Simmons, LB Clemson- Simmons has elite level athleticism. Don’t believe me? He outran Travis Etienne in a 40 yard dash this summer. 

Let me say that again. A linebacker, outran a running back with 4.4 speed, in a 40 yard dash. He’s that kind of athlete.

Having said that, athleticism is not the only facet of his game. Simmons has experience at safety, which helps his ability in coverage as a linebacker. He’s a sure tackler with elite sideline to sideline speed. Most importantly, he’s the new age linebacker defenses are looking for. Putting him next to Luke Keuchly is most certainly what you want if you’re a Panthers fan.

12) Miami Dolphins via Pittsburgh Steelers (Projected Record: 7-9): Tyler Biadasz, OG/C Wisconsin- “Offensive Line University,” is back with the nation’s top interior offensive linemen for 2020. Biadasz could’ve been a first round pick if he came out last year, but going back to school is going to catapult him into the top 15. His game is clean with very little weaknesses. Biadasz can win one-on-one reps in the pass game, and he moves with athleticism and power in both the pass and run game. Miami gets a future Pro Bowl Center with this pick.

13) Jacksonville Jaguars (Projected Record: 7-9): Jeffrey Okudah, CB Ohio State- My belief is that the Jaguars will trade Jalen Ramsey instead of paying him, which puts cornerback atop their wish list in 2020. The top corners in 2020 can all play big time man coverage, but the best of the bunch is Okudah. I’m a sucker for corners that can excel in cover one and cover three, and that is Okudah in a nutshell.

14) Detroit Lions (Projected Record: 7-8-1): Bryce Hall, CB Virginia- Speaking of man cover corners, Hall has big time skills in cover one and cover three along with quality ball skills. I think the one thing that still needs to improve for Hall is his footwork in off coverage. Having said that, putting him opposite Darius Slay would create an elite secondary in Detroit.

15) Minnesota Vikings (Projected Record: 8-8): Derrick Brown, DL Auburn- Brown is a menace along the interior. He wins with power in both the run and pass game, showing a strong lower base and the ability to stack and shed. He’s got powerful strikes and really quality rip move as a rusher. Brown should be a quality pro.

16) Tennessee Titans (Projected Record: 8-8): Joe Burrow, QB LSU- I think Marcus Mariota still has the ability to be a modern day game manager in the NFL. The problem is, I don’t know if you can pay that person 11-13 percent of the cap in the modern day NFL. Even if the Titans choose to franchise tag Mariota, that could put the Titans in the market for a quarterback in 2020. 

Burrow has took the 2019 collegiate season by storm, dominating as the signal caller for LSU’s new look, high octane offense. He does not have the biggest arm, but he can read the defense well and he gets rid of the ball quickly. Right now, Burrow is easily the biggest riser during the early portion of the 2019 campaign (he’s also what people think Jake Fromm can be in the NFL, but that’s a different story for a later mock draft).

17) Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Projected Record: 8-8): Creed Humphrey, OG Oklahoma- This might be a little high for Humphrey when we look back on this mock a few months from now, but OL is also the biggest need for Tampa Bay. Humphrey is terrific at gaining leverage at the point of attack. He mauls opponents in the run game. Now his pass protection needs some polishing, he can get off balance at points in time. Still, Humphrey is a quality prospect.

18) San Francisco 49ers (Projected Record: 9-7): Kristian Fulton, CB LSU- Fulton is another elite level man cover corner in the 2020 NFL Draft. Unlike Okudah and Hall, Fulton has a ton of reps as a press cover corner. He’s physical at the line of scrimmage, and he has the athleticism to trail receivers in man coverage. The Niners really need a number one corner, Richard Sherman is not that guy anymore. Fulton can be that guy.

19) Baltimore Ravens (Projected Record: 9-7): CeeDee Lamb, WR Oklahoma- Baltimore’s new look offense is scoring in bunches right now, but they still need a playmaker to complete this offense. Having just picked Hollywood Brown, why not go back to the well and pick his counterpart from Oklahoma?

Lamb is explosive, he’s dynamic with the ball, and he can make just about any play you can ask with the ball in the air. Deep ball ability? Check. High point ability? Check. 

Hollywood-CeeDee-Mark Andrews would make for an elite level offensive unit in Baltimore.

20) Philadelphia Eagles (Projected Record: 10-6): Paulson Adebo, CB Stanford- Adebo rounds out the big four corners in this draft. He shows a higher IQ than the other three, particularly with his ability in off coverage. His technique out of his backpedal is much better than the other three. After the rest of the season, Adebo could jump the other corners in this draft.

21) Buffalo Bills (Projected Record: 10-6): Laviska Shenault Jr., WR Colorado- Buffalo’s offense still needs a number one wide receiver. Shenault has big play ability, he’s the best deep threat in this draft class. And for a team with Josh Allen at the helm, the deep play ability is crucial.

22) Oakland Raiders via Chicago Bears (Bears Projected Record: 10-6): Dylan Moses, ILB Alabama- Okay, here’s the deal. Yes, Dylan Moses blew out his knee. Yes, there are other defensive options here for the Oakland Raiders. 

However, the Raiders need a captain of the defense, and a healthy Dylan Moses is a top ten player in this class. He will have plenty of time to heal from the injury, and could make a day one impact for any NFL team.

23) Miami Dolphins via Houston Texans (Texans Projected Record: 10-6): K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE LSU- In the spirit of “Miami needs just about everything,” they simply take the best player on the board, who also happens to have the most upside of anyone left.

Chaisson has elite dip and bend ability, and he’s shown the ability to long arm opposing tackles. Had Chaisson not been hurt last year, his buzz would be much higher right now.

24) Los Angeles Rams (Projected Record: 11-5): Raekwon Davis, DL Alabama- The Rams defensive line has not looked the same in 2019. Davis is quick off the snap and he has elite size and length for an interior defensive linemen. 

My big concern with him moving forward is consistency. He flashes a quality club move, he stacks and sheds, and he can long arm opposing offensive linemen. The problem is, he’s just not consistent. He does not have elite pass rushing moves and he doesn’t dissect plays as well as his counterpart from 2018, Quinnen Williams. If he becomes more consistent during the rest of this season, Davis can move up the draft board. 

25) Cleveland Browns (Projected Record: 10-6): Prince Tega Wanogho, OT Auburn- Here’s the problem with every offensive tackle in this class not named Thomas or Wirfs; the rest of the tackles have NFL size and length, but they lack the technique to excel in the NFL. Prince Tega Wanogho (ELIte level name) has big time length and quickness, but that technique is what will determine if he’s a first round talent, or a day two selection.

26) Los Angeles Chargers (Projected Record: 11-5): Travis Etienne, RB Clemson- The Chargers will be in the market for a running back after they opt to not pay Melvin Gordon this offseason. Etienne is my top running back among what is a loaded running back class. He’s an elite one cut runner with top end speed as good as anyone in the NFL right now. D’Andre Swift may be shiftier, but I’ll take Etienne’s home run ability and quality vision.

27) Green Bay Packers (Projected Record: 11-5): Tee Higgins, WR Clemson- Davante Adams is an elite wide receiver, no question about it. Opposite Davante Adams, however, is… well… nothing. Higgins is a big, physical receiver that high points the ball well and dominates in the red zone. He’s a perfect match for Aaron Rodgers.

28) Dallas Cowboys (Projected Record: 12-4): Xavier McKinney, S Alabama- Dallas does not have many weaknesses, but one of them is Xavier Woods constantly being injured. McKinney is a quality cover safety in the back end, and he’s also able to come up into the slot and play man coverage. I think his versatility is perfect for Dallas.

29) New Orleans Saints (Projected Record: 12-4): Trevon Diggs, CB Alabama- Diggs is physical in press coverage, using his length and strength to throw opposing receivers off their routes. Technically he still needs refinement, and he can get over aggressive in man-to-man situations. Despite this, his skill set matches the Saints aggressive defense, which could make this a perfect match in the back end of round one.

30) Kansas City Chiefs (Projected Record: 13-3): D’Andre Swift, RB Georgia- Imagine this; the “O Show,” which is what the Chiefs offense calls themselves (it’s also the best nickname I’ve heard this year), adds a game changing running back with elite quickness and sharp cuts. Some say the best defense is a good offense. This offense would be unreal.

31) Seattle Seahawks (Projected Record: 12-4): Lucas Niang, OT TCU- Much like Prince Tega Wanogho, Niang has elite size, length and quick feet. He also needs to clean up his technique. At times he plays high, and I think he can also play down to his competition in terms of his physicality. When he wants to, he’s got the raw power to dominate on the right side of an NFL offensive line.

32) New England Patriots (Projected Record: 14-2): Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE Penn State- I just give up on the Patriots. At this point, their dynasty will never die. After going a, projected, 14-2, and winning another, projected, Super Bowl, they luck themselves into an elite edge athlete in Gross-Matos. The rich get richer, yada yada yada. 

2019 NFL Draft Recap: 32 Bold Calls for 32 Teams (Plus Draft Grades)

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For those that follow my draft coverage, you know I do things differently here at Draftstock.net. I do not subscribe to the notion that mock drafts can only be predictive measures of how the actual draft will play out, which is why I give you all a prediction mock draft as well as one where I take control of all 32 teams.

Another thing Draft Experts do that I wildly disagree with is traditional Draft Grade recaps. Draft Grades are based off of the writer’s individual analysis of players. The person giving the grade is using their own analysis to determine who was a reach and who was a steal. In short, Draft Grades are just a reflection of your personal big board pre-draft.

That’s why my draft recap is always a little different. In this article, you will not only get a draft grade for the team based on the selections they made, but you will also get a bold prediction. This shows a better representation of how I think certain players will do in the schemes they were selected to. I think this is a much better way to do a Draft Recap because it takes into account the future for the prospects and if they stand a good chance to succeed or fail. This also gives more of an unbiased look into each team’s draft.

Having said that, Draft Grades are a necessary evil for Mock Draft Analysts, and that is why you will also see draft grades and a summary of each team’s draft during the analysis of each bold prediction. Occasionally you will see draft recaps in the form of “Editor’s Notes,” if I could not fit the draft recap into the prediction smoothly. Essentially, this is the best of both worlds, and I hope you all agree.

Arizona Cardinals: Kyler Murray, Byron Murphy, Andy Isabella, Zach Allen, Hakeem Butler, Deionte Thompson, Keesean Johnson, Lamont Gaillard, Joshua Miles, Michael Dogbe, Caleb Wilson (Draft Grade: B+)

Bold Prediction: The Kyler Murray-Kliff Kingsbury Experiment Works Because of This Draft- Whether you agree with the decision to draft Kyler Murray or not, Arizona had a terrific draft after that point. They grabbed my top cover corner by far in Byron Murphy, two quality pass catchers in Andy Isabella and Hakeem Butler, and two other solid defensive pieces with starter potential in Zach Allen and Deionte Thompson.

The biggest steals were Butler and Thompson on day three. Butler’s athleticism and ability to high point the ball will be a terrific weapon for Kyler Murray both down the field and in the red zone. If Thompson’s knee is okay (this was the reason he fell), the Cardinals took one of the top cover safeties in the fifth round. Bottom line, this draft was stellar. If the Kyler-Kliff experiment works, it’s because Steve Keim had a terrific offseason and set up both to succeed.

Atlanta Falcons: Chris Lindstrom, Kaleb McGary, Kendall Sheffield, John Cominsky, Qadree Ollison, Jordan Miller, Marcus Green (Draft Grade: C)

Bold Prediction: Chris Lindstrom is a Consistent All-Pro- I’ve alluded to this during all my mock drafts and my big board write ups. Chris Lindstrom lacked top ten buzz strictly because he was a guard, and that positions holds inherently less value. He shows athleticism when pulling, quality footwork and a strong lower base. This hasn’t been much of a secret if you’ve followed my pre-draft coverage, but I love Lindstrom as a player. I also love the team he went to.

Editor’s Note: This draft besides Lindstrom is garbage. Trading up for McGary, and selecting him over Jawaan Taylor, was a massive mistake. Kendall Sheffield can contribute if healthy but that’s about it for the rest of the selections. It’s not what you want.

Baltimore Ravens: Marquise “Hollywood” Brown, Jaylon Ferguson, Miles Boykin, Justice Hill, Ben Powers, Iman Marshall, Daylon Mack, Trace McSorley (Draft Grade: B-)

Bold Prediction: Justice Hill Makes the Biggest Year One Impact- It was tough to create a bold call for the Ravens because their draft is very straightforward. This was the ideal scheme fits for Hollywood Brown and Miles Boykin, particularly Brown. He should be Lamar Jackson’s top target in the west coast scheme, and the two will make a deadly connection down the field.

Jaylon Ferguson is someone who I have no faith in, regardless of scheme. His athletic testing was just too poor, and I never saw any dip and bend ability on film that would translate.

Out of the day three selections, the most interesting is Justice Hill. His breakaway speed is second to none in this draft class. The game changer is the one thing the Ravens backfield currently lacks, making Hill a natural fit in this offense. If he can contribute on third downs (Hill was not the best pass catcher and he was a poor blocker), Justice Hill could be the lightning to Mark Ingram’s thunder in the Ravens backfield.

Buffalo Bills: Ed Oliver, Cody Ford, Devin Singletary, Dawson Knox, Vosean Joseph, Jaquan Johnson, Darryl Johnson, Tommy Sweeney (Draft Grade: B-)

Bold Prediction: Cody Ford is a Bust*- Even though this bold prediction is negative, I do like the Bills draft as a whole. Ed Oliver is going to be a beast in Sean McDermott’s defense. His athleticism and quickness will be matchup nightmares for opposing offensive lines. I also love the scheme fit for Dawson Knox. He will be a three down tight end for the Bills, someone who can help them as a blocker in the run game and a pass catcher against linebackers that cover him. Day three is a bit of a minefield, but Vosean Joseph is someone who could contribute on running downs because he takes aggressive angles and shows unique athleticism.

Cody Ford is also in a very good scheme fit… if he is played at guard. As I’ve mentioned during this draft process, Ford as a tackle is a bit of a scare. His kickslide is weak in the vertical set and I question is ability to get his hands on more athletic pass rushers. I have a feeling the Bills will opt to play him at Right Tackle, which has me concerned about his effectiveness.

Now if they play him at guard, they have a quality starter, which is why this bold call comes with an asterisk. Ford is quick to get his hands on defenders and he gains leverage with inside hands plus sheer power. He’s a natural fit at right guard. 

The question for Ford’s career will be where he lines up, and the answer could determine his NFL success.

Carolina Panthers: Brian Burns, Greg Little, Will Grier, Christian Miller, Jordan Scarlett, Dennis Daley, Terry Godwin (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Dennis Daley is More Productive than Greg Little- I thought the Panthers had a very solid draft. Brian Burns is going to be an elite pass rusher, and possibly one of the best players to come out of this draft class. Christian Miller can be an effective rotational pass rusher as well, especially if the Panthers stay true to the rumors and transition to a 3-4. Don’t sleep on Jordan Scarlett and Terry Godwin on day three either. Scarlett could take short yardage carries for the Panthers, and Godwin can develop into a quality slot receiver.

Every draft comes with a question mark, and that question mark, for me, is Greg Little. Many think Little is going to be one of the Panthers starting tackles, and I will admit that the scheme fit is ideal. Having said that, Little’s footwork is just so poor, I cannot imagine him reverting to the five star recruit he once was. I think Dennis Daley has much more upside because he progressed during his collegiate career, as opposed to Little who regressed. Daley is equally as good of a run blocker as Little. What separates the two for me is their ability in pass protection. I like the way Daley is able to adjust and counterpunch. Once Daley is able to become more consistent with his ability off the snap and his kickslide improves, he could prove to be a better right tackle than Greg Little long term.

Chicago Bears: David Montgomery, Riley Ridley, Duke Shelley, Kerrith Whyte, Stephen Denmark (Draft Grade: C)

Bold Prediction: David Montgomery Scores More Touchdowns Than Tarik Cohen This Year- It’s tough to make a bold prediction for the Bears draft because they lacked assets due to the Khalil Mack trade. David Montgomery is the easiest person to predict because he will step into Jordan Howard’s role from previous years. Montgomery is a really good runner between the tackles, but like all the running backs in this draft class, he had flaws. He lacks the breakaway speed necessary for the next level, and I think he has a tendency to look for the home run play instead of taking what the play gives him.

Fortunately for him, the Bears will ask him to be their heavy hitter between the tackles. He will be the compliment to Tarik Cohen’s playmaking ability. This means Montgomery will see more goal line touches, and consistently be the guy on designed running downs. Assuming the Bears get a lot of goal line opportunities, it’s not unrealistic to think Montgomery could be a six to eight touchdown guy, even if he doesn’t pile up yards.

Cincinnati Bengals: Jonah Williams, Drew Sample, Germaine Pratt, Ryan Finley, Renell Wren, Michael Jordan, Trayveon Williams, Deshaun Davis, Rodney Anderson, Jordan Brown (Draft Grade: B-)

Bold Prediction: Germaine Pratt, Renell Wren and Jordan Brown are Starters Next Year- The three defensive players I’ve chosen to highlight in this prediction are all stepping into situations where the incumbent starters are less than stellar. Germaine Pratt is the obvious one because the Bengals linebacking core is so weak. His cover skills and should have him as a likely candidate to start out of training camp in year one.

Renell Wren and Jordan Brown project as role players early, but I think both can start in year two. Wren can easily take the nose tackle job from Andrew Billings because he’s more athletic and he’s quicker off the snap. Technique wise, he plays with his pads too high at times, but so does Billings. Ultimately, I think Wren is the better player than Billings right now, so there’s no reason he can’t start for the Bengals soon.

Brown has the tougher challenge based on the way the NFL valued him. Personally, I think his man cover skills were really impressive on tape. I also liked his ability to make plays on the ball in multiple different defensive packages. This may be a stretch, but I think Brown can be a nickel corner by year two, and eventually transition to an outside spot, should he be asked.

Editor’s Note: I chose to exclude Jonah Williams from this prediction because my infatuation for him has been well documented throughout the draft process. He’s going to be a superstar.

Cleveland Browns: Greedy Williams, Sione Takitaki, Sheldrick Redwine, Mack Wilson, Austin Seibert, Drew Forbes, Donnie Lewis (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Greedy Williams Becomes an All-Pro Corner- What a phenomenal job John Dorsey did with limited assets in this draft. To come away with multiple depth pieces, and potential year one starters in Williams and Redwine, is impressive.

The prize, however, was Greedy Williams. Cornerback was the obvious need for the Browns heading into this draft, and Cleveland landed the corner with the most upside in this draft. Williams is at his best in man coverage where he can mirror and trail receivers. His ability to turn out of his backpedal needs work, it was the big reason he fell to where he did. Having said that, Williams has the length and athleticism to be a quality player. In Cleveland, he will play in lots of cover one and cover three, which puts his strengths on full display. This is an ideal fit and could set up Williams to be the player many thought he was two months ago.

Dallas Cowboys: Trysten Hill, Connor McGovern, Tony Pollard, Michael Jackson, Joe Jackson, Donovan Wilson, Mike Weber, Jalen Jelks (Draft Grade C+)

Bold Prediction: Trysten Hill Wins A Starting Job in Training Camp- Dallas drafted mostly depth pieces, a few of which have some upside like Joe Jackson and Connor McGovern. The one pick I liked was Trysten Hill. Hill can stack and shed blockers against the run, and he’s disruptive as a pass rusher. The one big question with him is his work ethic, and unfortunately that’s not something I can speak about with the information I am privy to. What I can tell you is that Hill has the athleticism and the game to beat out the other defensive tackles on the Cowboys roster. A three down defensive tackle was the goal at 58, and they got him. Don’t be surprised if Hill is a starter before the Cowboys suit up week one.

Denver Broncos: Noah Fant, Dalton Risner, Drew Lock, Dre’Mont Jones, Justin Hollins, Juwann Winfree (Draft Grade: B-)

Bold Prediction: Drew Lock Actually Works Out- The Broncos hit a home run with their first two picks. They traded down in round one and still selected a top ten talent in this draft. In round two, they took a physical offensive lineman that will help them run the ball better in 2019 (Risner is also a leader, and he will help change their attitude up front).

Drew Lock is the man of conversation though, because he’s a quarterback. After all, who needs a game changing, All-Pro caliber tight end and a guard who can start for many years in this league? The conversation is all about Lock because the only position that matters is Quarterbacks…. apparently.

Now based on my outrage in the previous paragraph, you might think I’m not a fan of Lock. Guess what? You’d be right. However, this is “Bold Predictions,” and the setup here might be perfect for Drew Lock. He should benefit from sitting a year and learning how to read defenses. He should also come in to a better situation in 2020 than if he started in 2019. The Broncos young offensive pieces will all have an extra year under their belts. If his mechanics improve, and his anticipation gets better, maybe Lock is finally the quarterback John Elway has been searching for.

Detroit Lions: TJ Hockenson, Jahlani Tavai, Will Harris, Austin Bryant, Amani Oruwariye, Travis Fulgham, Ty Johnson, Isaac Nauta, P.J. Johnson (Draft Grade: C+)

Bold Prediction: Only TJ Hockenson Finishes His Rookie Contract as a Member of the Lions- Hockenson is obviously the crowned jewel of this draft group for Detroit, and he will excel in the Lions offense. Outside of the Iowa tight end, however, this wasn’t a stellar draft.

Jahlani Tavai and Will Harris were productive college players, but both were overdrafted. Tavai isn’t a good enough athlete at the next level and Harris does not cover a lot of ground in the back end of the defense. Austin Bryant is more of the same. He’s a good run stopper, but he’s not a great athlete and he wasn’t very impressive on film as a pass rusher considering all the one-on-one opportunities he got at Clemson.

Amani Oruwariye is where this prediction could go sideways. I absolutely love this fit for Oruwariye. The Lions play a lot of multiple coverages, which plays to Oruwariye’s biggest strength; his footwork in off coverage. Truth be told, I think Oruwariye will fit very nicely in Detroit.

Here’s what scares me about the potential fit; Oruwariye is not the best in press coverage and his ability in cover one still needs work. Head Coach Matt Patricia not only runs multiple coverages like I mentioned earlier, but he also likes to play aggressive. While I personally think Oruwariye will be just fine in this scheme, if he’s asked to play a lot of aggressive man-to-man early on, there’s a chance he flops at the next level. 

Green Bay Packers: Rashan Gary, Darnell Savage, Elgton Jenkins, Jace Sternberger, Kingsley Keke, Ka’dar Hollman, Dexter Williams, Ty Summers (Draft Grade: B+)

Bold Prediction: Jace Sternberger Has the Best Statistical Rookie Season of the Tight Ends in This Draft Class- Green Bay addressed a lot of needs during this draft. Rashan Gary’s athleticism and versatility are exactly what the Packers need up front. The same can be said about Darnell Savage in the backend. He can come into the box and make plays against the run, and he has the cover skills to hunt the ball from sideline to sideline. The two underrated and undervalued selections will be Elgton Jenkins and Jace Sternberger. Green Bay has lacked offensive line depth for many years now, and Jenkins’ ability to play guard or center should help fix that (don’t be shocked if Jenkins beats out Corey Lindsay for the starting Center position sooner rather than later). The Packers have also lacked a true playmaker at the tight end position. Sure, Aaron Rodgers has made a solid report with guys like Richard Rodgers and what’s left of Jimmy Graham.

Sternberger is a different cat though. He separates well in and out of breaks and he’s able to run a fair amount of route combinations from multiple positions on the field. I think Sternberger will quickly become a favorite of Aaron Rodgers, and I would not be surprised if the “sleeper,” fantasy football players are talking about in 2019 is Sternberger.

Houston Texans: Tytus Howard, Lonnie Johnson, Max Scharping, Kahale Warring, Charles Omenihu, Xavier Crawford, Cullen Gillaspia (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Tytus Howard and Max Scharping Start for the Texans in 2019, And Both Become Successful Pros- This is one of the more aggressive takes I’ve had in this article, but it’s also one I’m oddly confident in. Howard and Scharping are incredibly similar. Both players can improve on their footwork and technique in pass protection, but both players have NFL size and length, plus experience at both left and right tackle. They both show the smarts necessary to succeed at the position. It’s very likely they will be called upon to start early in 2019 because the Texans offensive line is so bad. Even though both could have benefited from being brought along slowly, I think both will continue to improve in their technique and prove to be valuable starters early in their careers.

Editor’s Note: I chose the positive spin here, but there is a really good chance this draft goes awry for the Texans. Howard and Scharping are both susceptible to being thrown off balance during their kickslide in pass protection, and starting early could hurt them, as I mentioned. I was never impressed by Lonnie Johnson’s tape, and I think he will be exposed by the route runners he will see in the NFL. I do like Charles Omenihu and Kahale Warring; both should be solid contributors at the next level. Nevertheless, missing on your first three picks would be detrimental to a team that is competing for a championship in a crowded AFC.

Indianapolis Colts: Rock Ya-Sin, Ben Banogu, Parris Campbell, Bobby Okereke, Khari Willis, Marvin Tell, E.J. Speed, Gerri Green, Jackson Barton, Javon Patterson (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: The Most Important Move the Colts Made in This Draft Was Acquiring a Second Rounder in 2020- This was not Chris Ballard’s best draft, but his weaker draft is still better than most. Rock Ya-Sin was a player I was much higher on than others. I had a first round grade on him because of his toughness, ball skills and technique in man coverage. Parris Campbell should be a quality fit in the Colts offensive scheme. He is dynamic with the ball in his hands, and he showed elite level quickness during the agility drills at the combine, which makes you think he will be able to win consistently out of the slot. Ben Banogu was a bit of a reach, but he has the athleticism to be a quality sub-package player at the next level.

Interestingly enough, the best move they made was acquiring a high pick in next year’s draft. Indianapolis traded back from 26 and acquired a 2020 second round pick from Washington. That asset could allow them to move up the board next year for one of the many offensive playmakers that will headline next year’s draft. Or they could use it to move up for a defensive line player like Derrick Brown or Nick Coe (yes I named both Auburn standouts, they should dominate this upcoming season). Next year’s draft class appears to be much better than this one, and that asset could yield a better player than they could have selected at 26 in this draft.

Jacksonville Jaguars: Josh Allen, Jawaan Taylor, Josh Oliver, Quincy Williams, Ryquell Armstead, Gardner Minshew, Dontavius Russell (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Josh Allen Becomes the Best EDGE Rusher in This Draft- Jacksonville could have went home after their first two selections and still had one of the better drafts in 2019. Allen and Taylor are day one starters, and both are in perfect schemes. Let’s start with Taylor (because the bold call is about Allen). The Jaguars run the ball a lot and play a physical style of offense. That fits Jawaan Taylor perfectly. He’s a mauler in the run game, playing with poise and inside hands on a consistent basis to gain leverage. I love this fit for Taylor; he should be a quality right tackle in this scheme.

Allen was not as high on my personal board as he was on the big boards of media members, but that does not mean I didn’t like the player. He’s a strong edge rusher with terrific dip and bend ability. He also moves around the front seven a lot, and even shows the ability to drop in coverage. I thought a LEO linebacker role in the NFL would have been a really interesting use of his skill set. Jacksonville has the capability of playing him all over their defensive front, including a 4-3 LEO linebacker. He will see lots of one-on-one pass rushing opportunities with all of the Jags defensive talent. Allen has one of the brightest futures among this draft because of where he wound up. He should thrive because of it.

Kansas City Chiefs: Mecole Hardman, Juan Thornhill, Khalen Saunders, Rashad Fenton, Darwin Thompson, Nick Allegretti (Draft Grade: C+)

Bold Prediction: Despite Being in the Perfect Scheme Fit, Mecole Hardman Is a Bust- Before attempting this bold call, because I’m not even sure I can sell it, let’s dive into the Chiefs draft as a whole. Their defensive selections range from average, to terrific, to awful. Juan Thornhill should be a solid fit next to Tyrann Mathieu in the back, unless he’s asked to cover a lot, in which case disaster could happen. Khalen Saunders, on the other hand, is a much more straightforward selection. He can play multiple spots along the defensive front and help Chris Jones see less double teams. The Chiefs should have selected a cornerback earlier than round four (and better than Rashad Fenton), which is why I do not love this draft as a whole.

Now onto the bold prediction. Hardman was selected a bit early and ahead of some more versatile receivers, but the fit is ideal. He’s a speedster that explodes in and out of cuts. Putting him in the Chiefs offense is essentially cheating, and could prove to be the most undervalued pick of 2019.

What if it doesn’t work? What if Hardman is not far enough along in his development to read zone coverages? What if his lack of a true catch radius hurts him? Hardman is explosive as an athlete, but he does not always run the cleanest routes. Does this hurt him considering he will be thrown into the fire right out of the gate?

Don’t get me wrong, I think Hardman will flourish in this system. However, there is a chance that the Assuming Tyreek Hill does not return to the Chiefs, Hardman will have to grow up quickly, and that’s a tall order.

Los Angeles Chargers: Jerry Tillery, Nasir Adderley, Trey Pipkins, Drue Tranquill, Easton Stick, Emeke Egbule, Cortez Broughton (Draft Grade: C+)

Bold Prediction: Nasir Adderley Starts Week One- This draft is very black and white, so creating a prediction based on this draft was tough. Tillery and Adderley should be productive pros, and the rest of the draft has zero upside, in my opinion. Tillery will line up next to either Melvin Ingram or Joey Bosa, and help this pass rush generate even more pressure. I had been mocking the idea of the Chargers taking a defensive lineman since February, so I’m a huge fan of them selecting one with their first round selection.

Adderley should be a starter sooner rather than later in the Chargers defense, especially with all the sub-packages they run. Adderley can also play nickel corner, so he will be used early and often during his rookie year. Whether he starts, or is used only in sub-packages, Adderley will be tested early in his NFL career.

Los Angeles Rams: Taylor Rapp, Darrell Henderson, David Long, Bobby Evans, Greg Gaines, Davis Edwards, Nicholas Scott, Dakota Allen (Draft Grade: C-)

Bold Prediction: None of These Players Finish Their Rookie Contracts with the LA Rams- I thought the Rams traded down one too many times on during the early portion of the NFL Draft, and then capped off their mistake with Taylor Rapp, who was one of my least favorite players in the draft. I never saw an athletic in-the-box strong safety on tape. I just saw a guy who often over pursued plays and could not cover. The rest of the draft was not much better. Darrell Henderson is a backup running back that the Rams selected in the third round despite having other needs, and the remaining selections are all depth pieces. There are two picks here that give me pause for concern; David Long and David Edwards.

Long is athletic, but his coverage skills are up and down. He can trail receivers in man coverage, but he struggles in off coverage and his hips are stiff at times. I think he will be eased into the Rams defense because Aqib Talib and Marcus Peters still have a year left on their respective contracts. This could help him develop, but he has a ways to go towards becoming a starter in the NFL.

Edwards is a smart player but he needs to improve in his technique. As I’ve mentioned in my mocks and other draft related pieces, I still think he can succeed if given time. He will get the opportunity to see what he has learned next year once Andrew Whitworth retires, but if the Rams pursue a tackle early in next year’s draft or via free agency, that opportunity may not exist.

Even though I like the fit for both Long and Edwards because they will be eased into the NFL, it’s not improbable to assume that this draft class becomes a big whiff by the Rams.

Miami Dolphins: Christian Wilkins, Michael Dieter, (Acquired Josh Rosen), Andrew Van Ginkel, Isaiah Prince, Chandler Cox, Myles Gaskin (Draft Grade: C+)

Bold Prediction: Josh Rosen Flops… Again- I think Josh Rosen has to be included in the Dolphins draft of 2019 because they swapped a second round selection for the former UCLA stand out. In turn, they got their QB of the present, and hopefully the future. This is why the bold call is centered around Rosen.

Miami entered the 2019 NFL Draft in a clear rebuild. They selected the best player available at 13 in Christian Wilkins (and he should have a stellar career in the middle of the Dolphins defense), they opted for a guard that many held in high regard pre-draft (I had a fifth round grade on Michael Dieter, which is one of the reasons the Dolphins draft grade is not as high from me as it may be from other media personalities), and they continued to rebuild their team inside the trenches on day three.

The clear direction of a rebuild made the aggressive pursuit of Josh Rosen perplexing. This team is not built to win in 2019. They did not re-sign any of their offensive line, nor did they look to replacing the EDGE rushers that departed during this offseason. Miami’s entire offense is weak, including the weapons Rosen will be throwing to. He will spend his first year in Miami attempting to get the most out of a team that is not built to win, and that is a tough ask for a young QB in a new system. 

Now for the Dolphins, this is a calculated gamble. Josh Rosen will have two years to make the players around him better. If he can do that, the Dolphins will be able to expedite their rebuild. If Rosen struggles with a subpar receiving core and a less than stellar offensive line, the Dolphins are in prime positions for Trevor Lawrence in two years.

In short, sometimes quarterbacks “bust,” because of talent, and sometimes they do not work out because of the situation they have been placed into. Josh Rosen feels like he is going to be the latter.

Minnesota Vikings: Garrett Bradbury, Irv Smith, Alexander Mattison, Dru Samia, Cameron Smith, Armon Watts, Marcus Epps, Oli Udoh, Kris Boyd, Dillon Mitchell, Olabisi Johnson, Austin Cutting (Draft Grade: B+)

Bold Prediction: Bisi Johnson Beats Out Laquon Treadwell for the #3 WR Spot- Well Vikings fans, your front office listened to your offensive line complaints. Garrett Bradbury will start at either Center or Guard from day one and excel. Dru Samia and Oli Udoh should be solid backup lineman, with Samia being able to start along the interior in a pinch later on in his rookie deal (he needs to work on his pad level and counterpunch when facing a strong rusher from the interior).

The Vikings also took Irv Smith to replace Kyle Rudolph. Rudolph and Kirk Cousins never had the report many expected them to. Smith will win matchups against linebackers and safeties all day long. This should give the Vikings passing offense the dimension it was missing last year.

As for the bold prediction, Olabisi Johnson was a really interesting late round selection by the Vikings. I think he fits what the Vikings are looking for in a third wideout much better than former first round selection Laquon Treadwell. Johnson does the little things well; he’s smart as a route runner, he blocks well, and he contributes on special teams. Don’t be shocked if Bisi Johnson finds himself in a competition battle early on in Vikings training camp.

New England Patriots: N’Keal Harry, Joejuan Williams, Chase Winovich, Damien Harris, Yodny Cajuste, Hjalte Froholdt, Jarrett Stidham, Byron Cowart, Jacob Bailey, Ken Webster (Draft Grade: A-)

Bold Prediction: Each One of the Patriots First Three Selections Makes a Pro Bowl- I’m going to try to do this as impartially as I can, because that is my job. Having said that… HOW DO WE CONTINUE TO ALLOW THE PATRIOTS TO RELOAD EVEN SINGLE YEAR?! There are 31 other teams that could have done their jobs in selecting actual talent, but no. Somehow New England winds up with one of the best drafts of 2019. To make matters worse, they didn’t just reload this time, they stacked the deck.

N’Keal Harry is going to be a stud in this offense. I appreciate those wanting to wait and see on a New England WR that they draft highly because of guys like Aaron Dobson and Chad Jackson, but this is not one of those times. Harry is dynamic with the ball in his hands, he wins down the field with size and high point ability, and he’s versatile in terms of where he lines up. Oh, and he’s catching passes from Tom Brady.

Then Bill Belichick decided to flex on everyone. He took a 6’3 press cover corner with really good ball skills. Many questioned his ability to make up ground if beat, but Williams silenced those critics at his pro day. Williams can also sit in off coverage and make plays on the ball, driving off his back foot and closing ground quickly.

In the third round, Belichick selected Chase Winovich, an edge rusher who plays like his hair is on fire. He’s disciplined as a run defender and productive as a pass rusher, despite not having elite athleticism. His move-set and intelligence allowed him to be successful at Michigan, and it will help him be successful in New England.

To top it all off, Belichick snagged a running back with starter potential (Damien Harris), and two offensive lineman (Yodny Cajuste and Hjalte Froholdt) that can start in the future after their footwork improves under the tutelage of Dante Scarnecchia.

This was a phenomenal draft from the Patriots, and they will see the fruits of their labor both in the immediate future as well as the long term one.

New Orleans Saints: Erik McCoy, Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, Saquan Hampton, Alize Mack, Kaden Ellis (Draft Grade: B-)

Bold Prediction: Chauncey Gardner-Johnson is Cut by Year Three- Let me preface this bold call with this; I think the Saints did a terrific job with limited resources. To come away with Erik McCoy and CGJ with not a lot of draft capital, is very impressive. Both can potentially start in year one, and McCoy in particular should be a stud in the middle of the Saints offensive line. I should also point out that this is a prediction I do not entirely agree with. Having said that, in every draft recap you will read what a steal Gardner-Johnson was on day three. Therefore, I’m going to take the opposite point of view, not only because I enjoy playing devil’s advocate, but also because this is a bold prediction article and well…. you know….

While CGJ was viewed by many as the best cover safety in the draft, I saw someone who often guessed where to go based on the quarterback’s eyes. The famous interception of Shea Patterson against Michigan in the bowl game is actually a misread on his part. The ball being underthrown allows him to make up ground and make the interception. Plays like this happened far too much on tape. He’s also not a great tackler either. Why would the Saints replace Marcus Williams in the secondary with lesser Marcus Williams?

Editor’s Note: Here’s where this prediction goes sideways. Even if I’m right about his ability as a single high safety, Gardner-Johnson provides value as a nickel corner. He played it a lot at Florida and played the position successfully. It’s highly unlikely that CGJ is a complete bust, but I do think NFL teams correctly judged his draft value, a statement many would disagree with.

New York Giants: Daniel Jones, Dexter Lawrence, DeAndre Baker, Oshane Ximines, Julian Love, Ryan Connelly, Darius Slayton, Corey Ballentine, George Asafo-adjei, Chris Slayton (Draft Grade: D)

Bold Prediction: Dexter Lawrence Puts Together a Hall of Fame Career- I’m going to delve into the bold prediction portion of this draft analysis first because it’s the only positive thing coming in the next few paragraphs. It has been a long time since we have seen an athlete like Dexter Lawrence. At 340 pounds, this dude essentially ran a five flat during his 40 at the combine. He is lightning quick off the ball on tape, he collapses the pocket when pass rushing as a one tech, and good luck attempting to move this guy off the spot in the run game. Lawrence was a really quality pass rusher from a three tech as well. As long as he stays healthy, the sky’s the limit for him.

With that being said…. DANIEL JONES?! I’ll be honest, even though I’ve called this for two months, part of me still didn’t believe it. There was no way David Gettleman was dumb enough to be baited into selecting him at six. Jones was an average pocket passer at Duke who showed inconsistency with his footwork and release, and the Giants took him at six… because he’s connected to David Cutcliffe? By the way, this is coming from someone who actually likes Daniel Jones and thinks he could be a capable backup in this league. I cannot see this working out, especially because Jones will suit up this year once Eli Manning shows he has very little left.

To make matters worse, the Giants traded back into round one to select a cover corner with below average athleticism and the inability to press. In case you’re unfamiliar with James Bettcher’s defense, it’s aggressive in its schemes. You know who is not suited for an aggressive style defense? DeAndre Baker. I think Baker could have been solid in a zone heavy defense, but this is just not the fit for him. Same goes for Julian Love later on.

Fret not Giants Fans, because I can wrap this up with good news! In two years, after this draft is a debacle and David Gettleman is fired, Trevor Lawrence is available. So you have that going for you, which is nice.

New York Jets: Quinnen Williams, Jachai Polite, Chuma Edoga, Treveon Wesco, Blake Cashman, Blessuan Austin (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Despite Selecting Two Starters and Setting Up the Jets for a Playoff Appearance, Mike Maccagnan Loses His Job Because of This Draft- The Jets acquired two game changers on their defensive front with their first two selections. Many thought Quinnen Williams was the top player in this draft, and almost everyone thought Jachai Polite had first round tape. The Jets were willing to take a chance on Polite’s off the field issues in round three, and I think it will pay off. There’s no room for laziness on a Gregg Williams defense; you either play hard or you play your way onto another team. Polite will be tested, but if he answers the call, he can dominate.

Regardless of the success of this draft, I do not think the Jets did enough to establish themselves as a 9+ win team this offseason. Had they traded down, they might have had the ammo to complete this roster. Even if they had accepted lesser value, it still gave them a better chance to make the playoffs in 2019. The Jets still need a number two corner, a starting center, and one more receiving option. Trading down could have provided them the assets to address those.

Even though this draft was strong, and the Jets are a better team because of it, I do not think they will be a playoff team in 2019. Therefore, the one person who needs the team to make the playoffs to keep his job, winds up losing his job.

Oakland Raiders: Clelin Ferrell, Josh Jacobs, Johnathan Abram, Trayvon Mullen, Maxx Crosby, Isaiah Johnson, Foster Moreau, Hunter Renfrow, Quinton Bell (Draft Grade: B-)

Bold Prediction: Clelin Ferrell Proves Worthy of a Top Ten Selection- Mike Mayock’s first draft as General Manager was not spectacular, but he took a lot of players who should be productive pros. Jon Gruden is going to love Josh Jacobs and Johnathan Abram. Both players are physical and they play with aggression and passion (sometimes to a fault in the case of Abram). I also really like this fit for Trayvon Mullen and Isaiah Johnson. Both corners have puzzling tape, but their game seems best served as man-to-man corners.

The success of this draft class will hinge upon Clelin Ferrell’s ability to warrant a Top 10 selection. Anyone who watched the draft can picture the exact reaction they had to seeing Ferrell come off the board at 4. Nobody saw that coming.

However, Ferrell does bring NFL traits to the table. He’s a physical rusher, winning with power and multiple moves, including a very effective bull rush and nice swim move. He also shows solid discipline against the run. He’s rarely bullied off the edge, and he often makes plays in the backfield. I’m not sure Ferrell is ever a guy that will push 12+ sacks in the NFL, but he will have plenty of tackles for loss and prove to be a very effective Defensive End.

Philadelphia Eagles: Andre Dillard, Miles Sanders, JJ Arcega-Whiteside, Shareef Miller, Clayton Thorson (Draft Grade: B+)

Bold Prediction: Miles Sanders Becomes RB1 in This Draft Class- The Eagles had a really good draft. They used a few day three assets to move up in round one and select Dillard, a premier pass blocking left tackle. Dillard will sit for a year behind veteran Jason Peters as Peters plays what will presumably be his final year in the NFL. After that, he will step in and protect Carson Wentz’s blindside for the foreseeable future. The two offensive weapons selected on day two are perfect scheme fits. Sanders has the potential to be a three down back. He’s a terrific pass catcher, and he’s explosive in the open field. Arcega-Whiteside is one of the best 50/50 players in this draft. He uses his size to win down the field as well as in the red zone. He also rarely drops anything in his area code.

The guy I really love is Sanders. Behind a quality offensive line, Sanders should be able to find obvious holes to run through (he tends to overthink cuts in the backfield) and use his quickness to beat defenders at the second level. He can also balance out newly acquired running back Jordan Howard because Sanders can be the Eagles change of pace back, similar to what Tarik Cohen was for Howard in Chicago. Sanders should be very productive for the Eagles right from the get-go.

Pittsburgh Steelers: Devin Bush, Diontae Johnson, Justin Layne, Bennie Snell, Zach Gentry, Sutton Smith, Isaiah Buggs, Ulysees Gilbert, Derwin Gray (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Justin Layne Earns a Bigger Second Contract Than Devin Bush- The Steelers had a very strong draft. After moving up for Devin Bush as many predicted, the Steelers made some intriguing selections. Sutton Smith and Isaiah Buggs should be quality backs, with Smith also contributing on special teams. Bennie Snell can also contribute in short yardage situations.

Justin Layne has the biggest upside of the group. His footwork in off coverage and his ability to mirror in man coverage show that he can succeed in multiple defensive looks. Pittsburgh is known for running multiple different zone schemes in the back end of their defense, so Layne’s footwork and technique should help him fit in nicely. I expect Layne to start sooner rather than later, and if he performs well, it’s not unreasonable to think that a cornerback could haul a bigger second contract than a middle linebacker.

Editor’s Note- By no means am I calling Devin Bush a potential bust. He will be a stud in Pittsburgh.

San Francisco 49ers: Nick Bosa, Deebo Samuel, Jalen Hurd, Mitch Wishnowsky, Dre Greenlaw, Kaden Smith, Justin Skule, Tim Harris (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Jalen Hurd Carves Out a Successful NFL Career- I’m not sure how bold of a prediction this is because many accurately pegged how great this fit was for Hurd. Kyle Shanahan is able to get the most out of his offensive weapons, and Hurd is likely to be the rule, not the exception. When you consider where Hurd started his collegiate career, the transformation into a quality NFL receiver would be nothing short of impressive. That alone warrants the prediction.

Hurd was originally a running back at the University of Tennessee, and quite a good one at that. He was physical between the tackles and he could catch out of the backfield. Eventually the hits took a toll on him and he transferred to Baylor to become a receiver. His size makes him a difficult cover in the red zone. Hurd high points the ball very well, which you would expect for someone who’s 6’5. I think both Hurd and Deebo Samuel will be immediate contributors for the Niners offense, and for Hurd, that’s a terrific transformation.

Editor’s Note: I chose to focus on Jalen Hurd because of his story, but watch out for Deebo Samuel. Shanahan runs a west coast style offense, one that suits Samuel perfectly. Samuel can win out of the slot with precise route running. He should become one of Jimmy Garoppolo’s favorite targets. For those who are reading this and play fantasy football (which I’m assuming is mostly all of you), look for Samuel later on in your respective drafts this fall.

Seattle Seahawks: LJ Collier, Marquise Blair, DK Metcalf, Cody Barton, Gary Jennings, Phil Haynes, Ugo Amadi, Ben Burr-Kirven, Travis Homer, Demarcus Christmas, John Ursua (Draft Grade: C+)

Bold Prediction: 31 Teams Will Regret Passing on Future All Pro DK Metcalf- Seattle’s draft is disgustingly bad, but the one bright spot is “Superman 2.0.” Metcalf fell in this draft strictly because of his three cone and short shuttle at the combine. This is the most egregious instance of overvaluing combine results that I can remember. When you turn on the tape, you see more than a “one trick pony” (the buzz phrase when describing Metcalf during the coverage of the NFL Draft). You see a player who can sink his hips into his routes and separate at the top of the stem in multiple ways.

Now Metcalf is never going to be a precise route runner, that’s not his game. However, that does not mean he can only one run route. Many think this because of the aforementioned poor agility drills in Indianapolis. Scouts saw the drills and then went back to the tape to confirm what they saw, which is exactly what you should do.

What I cannot figure out is how they came to the conclusion that Metcalf can only run a go route. He runs comebacks and square ins, and he separates from defenders. Not to mention, he’s unguardable at the line of scrimmage. I cannot wait for the day myself and other Metcalf supporters (shout out to The Draft Network and its contributors here) get to say “we told you so.”

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Devin White, Sean Bunting, Jamel Dean, Mike Edwards, Anthony Nelson, Matt Gay, Scott Miller, Terry Becker (Draft Grade: C+)

Bold Prediction: Anthony Nelson Thrives and Proves Me Right- Nelson was one of my favorite players throughout the draft process. I never saw much of a difference between him and Clelin Ferrell. Both players win with technique rather than sheer dip and bend ability. Both players control their gaps and set the edge against the run. What I felt made Nelson different was that he possessed the ability to get low and run the arch, despite his size. Nelson should get the chance to prove himself during training camp because of the Buccaneers weak pass rush, and I expect him to make good of his opportunities.

Editor’s Note: The Bucs draft as a whole was subpar because they passed on some obvious talent for risky selections. Having said that, Sean Bunting, Jamel Dean and Mike Edwards will all get their chance to prove their worth right from the jump. Tampa Bay’s secondary is weak, allowing Bunting and Dean to compete for starting gigs right away. Mike Edwards joins a safety group that, to put it bluntly, stinks. Todd Bowles uses a safety close to the box, which Mike Edwards can definitely be. Each one of these players will have the opportunity to prove my draft grade wrong, but I doubt they will. Bunting struggles in press coverage (which Bowles uses a lot), Dean has injury problems and Edwards does not cover well enough to be a multifaceted safety in the NFL.

Tennessee Titans: Jeffery Simmons, AJ Brown, Nate Davis, Amani Hooker, D’Andre Walker, David Long (Draft Grade: A-)

Bold Prediction: Tennessee Drafted Four Starters in 2019- Nothing like saving one of the most aggressive predictions for last (or second to last). Tennessee had a phenomenal start to their draft, taking two impact players at positions of need. Jeffery Simmons is an elite talent and would have definitely gone in the top 10 had he not injured himself during a February workout. Simmons has a lethal first step and quick but powerful hand strikes. He’s able to chop away the arms of pass protectors, and he has a pretty lethal rip move to boot. Once he is healthy, he will start. 

AJ Brown is a piece that Marcus Mariota has needed for a few years now. Brown is someone that can move the chains on third down, winning out of the slot with technique and quickness. Mariota needs a safety valve and a reliable third down target, and that is AJ Brown.

The two remaining players to complete this prediction are Nate Davis and Amani Hooker. Davis will immediately enter a position battle with veteran guard Kevin Pamphile, who the Titans signed to a one year deal. I was a big fan of Davis pre-draft because of his quickness and ability to pull. His athleticism is impressive, and it helps him against more athletic pass rushers along the interior. Davis winning this job out of camp would not be a shock at all.

Hooker finding his way into the starting lineup in 2019 is probably a long shot, but his versatility gives him a chance. He shows the ability to mirror receivers and tight ends from the nickel spot, he can play cover one or cover two from the safety position, and he has NFL level instincts. With Kevin Byard occupying the free safety position, Hooker will either have to slide over to strong safety (which is not an in-the-box safety position in the Titans defense), or have an injury occur that allows him to step into one of the two positions he’s comfortable in. This is probably where this prediction will fall short, but the moral of the story is that the Titans had a tremendous draft.

Washington Redskins: Dwayne Haskins, Montez Sweat, Terry McLaurin, Bryce Love, Wes Martin, Ross Pierschbacher, Cole Holcomb, Kelvin Harmon, Jimmy Moreland, Jordan Brailford (Draft Grade: B)

Bold Prediction: Kelvin Harmon and Jimmy Moreland Start in Year Two- Washington had a really strong draft. They managed to select Dwayne Haskins without having to mortgage future assets, then traded back into round one for a game changing edge player in Montez Sweat. I like the selection of Terry McLaurin as well. Not only does he have speed to burn, but he already has a report with Dwayne Haskins from their days at Ohio State.

The two late day selections that made this a strong draft were Harmon and Moreland. Kelvin Harmon is a precise route runner for a bigger receiver. He may not win route combinations with athleticism, but he sinks his hips into his cuts and wins with technique. I think Harmon could be the receiver to watch in training camp and not McLaurin.

Moreland was also a quality selection. I really liked his ability to jam receivers at the line when I watched him. That, compiled with his athleticism, should help him compete for a nickel corner spot. At worst, Moreland should find his way into special teams (he has the potential to excel there). With Washington’s weak receiving core as well as the lesser talent they have at corner, both Harmon and Moreland will have the chance to succeed early in their careers.

Jordan Katz 2019 NFL Mock Draft 6.0: Final

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The culmination of the Draft Process is finally upon us.. THE NFL DRAFT IS HERE! With this being my final personal mock draft for 2019, I want to take this opportunity to thank you all for reading my draft coverage and interacting with me throughout the draft season. It means a lot to me that you all enjoy my draft coverage and continue to read it each and every year.

At this point, y’all know how this works by now. This mock draft is strictly what I would do if I was in charge of all 32 teams. If you’re looking for my prediction mock draft, aka how I think the draft will actually, play out, you can find that here (https://draftstock.net/2019/04/18/jordan-katz-2019-nfl-prediction-mock-draft-3-0-final/). All trades made in this mock are denoted with an asterisk next to the team name. The only difference from my other personal mocks is that there is a little less analysis in this one. By now, you all know the players I like and do not like. You all know who I think possesses NFL traits and who does not. So while this mock definitely has in depth analysis, it’s not as in depth as my other personal mock draft.

Thank you all once again for your support throughout the year. #MockLyfe rolls into town one final time. Let’s get to it.

ROUND ONE

1) Arizona Cardinals: Nick Bosa, EDGE Ohio State- Bosa is still my number one overall player, and he’s still a position of need for the Cardinals. Terrell Suggs is a one year fix at best. Truth be told, he’s a rotational rusher at this stage in his career. Bosa can make an impact and take this defense to the next level.

….and no, this still should not be Kyler Murray.

2) San Francisco 49ers: Brian Burns, EDGE Florida State- Yet another change from my most recent personal mock draft. Truth be told, this is where I should have been all along. Burns is an elite pass rusher off the edge. His dip and bend ability is second to none in this draft, and that includes Mr. Bosa. The Niners move Arik Armstead inside to play Burns off the edge.

3) *Oakland Raiders via New York Jets: Quinnen Williams, DT Alabama- The obvious question here is why would the Jets not just select Quinnen Williams? The answer is simple. The Jets desperately need more assets in this draft. One player alone does not make this a 10-6 roster, but assets and depth might.

Oakland has four picks in the first 35 selections, which means they can get creative and move up a spot to land a game changer, even if they pay a little extra.

4) *New York Jets via Oakland Raiders: Jonah Williams, OT/OG/Ten Year All Pro Wherever You Want To Play Him, Alabama- Williams should still be a tackle in the NFL because his footwork and technique are elite. Despite sometimes being thrown by a first punch, Williams, is agile enough to handle it, stay on balance and redirect an oncoming rusher. He does this time and time again on tape. That is the making of an elite left tackle in the NFL.

5) *Washington Redskins via Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Kyler Murray, QB Oklahoma- If there’s a team that should trade into the top ten for Murray in this draft, it’s Washington. Assuming it works and Murray is the dynamic playmaker we saw at Oklahoma, Washington will get exponentially better over the next two years and solve their need for a franchise QB.

On the other hand, should it flop and not work out, Washington will be in a very good position in two years to take Trevor Lawrence. Their competition is the Giants, who seem committed to a quarterback this year, the Dolphins, who seem like they will be bad enough for the top pick next year, and the Raiders, who will either stick with Derek Carr or take a QB in this draft.

6) New York Giants: Montez Sweat, EDGE Mississippi State- Since I am running all 32 teams in this mock, guess what I refuse to do Giants fans? SELECT A QUARTERBACK WHEN THE ROSTER HAS SO MANY HOLES! Sweat is a dynamic pass rusher, possessing the ability to win with power and technique. He showed the ability to dip and bend at the combine as well. If a team teaches him how to become a multifaceted pass rusher (Sweat doesn’t run the arch a lot on tape), Sweat could be an All-Pro in the future.

7) Jacksonville Jaguars: DK Metcalf, WR Ole Miss- I know the Jaguars need to fix the right side of their offensive line, but I’m higher on DK Metcalf than I am the remaining offensive linemen. And because the Jaguars also need playmakers in order for Nick Foles to truly open up the offense and make it multidimensional, “Superman,” lands in Jacksonville.  

8) Detroit Lions: Rashan Gary, DL Michigan- If you remember from the “Fans Only Mock Draft,” I gave the Lions Gary because of his versatility. Gary can rush from a five tech, using his power to collapse the pocket. I think he can also slide inside and use his quickness to beat interior offensive lineman. Head Coach Matt Patricia comes from New England, where versatility is king. That’s why this pick is the perfect fit.

9) Buffalo Bills: Jawaan Taylor, OT Florida- The Bills signed an entire new offense this offseason. The only problem is, they really didn’t make a move that should lead to significant contribution besides Mitch Morse. Taylor can start at right tackle from day one, and he will bring toughness and intensity to the Bills front line. Even though this is a reach on my personal board, the fit, coupled with no one wanting to trade up, makes too much sense.

10) Denver Broncos: Chris Lindstrom, OG Boston College- Hey Broncos fans, guess what position I’m also not going to give you in round one? A QUARTERBACK! Just be smart, take the best player on your board at a position of need, and move on. For me, that’s Lindstrom, who is as complete a prospect along the interior since Zack Martin (and Martin is technically cheating cause he was a tackle at Notre Dame).

11) Cincinnati Bengals: Devin White, ILB LSU- The Bengals linebacking core is a mess right now. White would not only provide stability to the group, but he would also be the only true three down linebacker they would have. Easy selection here.

12) Green Bay Packers: Ed Oliver, DL Houston- Oliver falls right into the Packers lap, which is exactly the scenario the Packers could wind up with on draft day. Oliver is an ideal three technique at the next level, but a 3-4 scheme would allow him to use his quickness and power at multiple spots along the defensive line like JJ Watt or Aaron Donald do. I’m not saying Oliver is as good as those players, but his game is molded after Donald, which makes his ideal fit the exact same as those players.

13) Miami Dolphins: Jeffery Simmons, DT Mississippi State- Full disclosure, Miami tried to trade out here but was unsuccessful. Simmons is unlikely to play a lot this year, but that’s not a huge concern to the Dolphins because they aren’t looking to win in 2019. This makes them the perfect team to select the dynamic interior pass rusher who to tore his ACL back in February.

14) Atlanta Falcons: Christian Wilkins, DT Clemson- Atlanta has a decision to make this upcoming offseason. Do they pay Vic Beasley or do they pay Grady Jarrett? Jarrett looks like the much better player at the moment, but Beasley still has the upside to return to the dominant pass rusher he once was.

Regardless of their decision, the smart play would be selecting Wilkins and figuring it out later. If Jarrett stays, the Falcons have a terrific interior pass rush. If Jarrett walks, the Falcons have his replacement.

15) *Tampa Bay Buccaneers via Washington Redskins: Anthony Nelson, EDGE Iowa- Call me crazy, but Carl Nassib and an aging Jason Pierre-Paul do not seem like the answer to generating a dominant pass rush.

Nelson is a technically sound player, showing good discipline in his gap assignments, and the power to collapse the pocket on passing downs. Nelson shows solid ability to run the arch as well. At 6’7, Nelson has the game and athleticism to be a quality edge player at the next level.

16) *New England Patriots via Carolina Panthers: Noah Fant, TE Iowa- The Patriots have the ammo to move all around this draft for players they covet. After the retirement of Rob Gronkowski, you best believe that Bill Belichick is looking to come up this draft board for one of the Iowa tight ends.

Carolina is unlikely to trade out of 16, but based on the way the board fell and the needs they have in this draft, it makes a lot of sense for them to do so in this particular mock. Plus, I’m running the show here, so if you ain’t down with that, I’ve got two words for ya.

17) New York Giants via Cleveland Browns: Byron Murphy, CB Washington- The Giants continue to rebuild their defense with this selection. Murphy is elite in off coverage, his footwork is outstanding and his ability to mirror receivers is very impressive. There’s not many defensive backs in this draft class with big time upside, but Murphy is one of them.

18) Minnesota Vikings: Erik McCoy, C/OG Texas A&M- The difference between other mocks and my board for this selection is that McCoy, not Garrett Bradbury, is my top center this year. Both players are very close on my board, and both players are very similar. McCoy, like Bradbury, does an excellent job of finishing blocks in the run game, and both possess quality footwork. I like McCoy’s ability in pass protection slightly better than Bradbury, which is why he’s my top Center.

Despite having Pat Elflein, the Vikings take McCoy because he can slide over to guard and succeed. Just like Bradbury, both players are athletic enough to become pulling guards at the next level.

19) Tennessee Titans: N’Keal Harry, WR Arizona State- N’Keal Harry is a perfect fit for Tennessee. He’s explosive with the ball in his hands, he runs clean routes from the slot, and he wins one-on-ones along the sideline with his size and the ability to high point the football. Whether it’s Harry, a tight end like TJ Hockenson, or a different pass catcher all together, Tennessee needs a weapon early in this draft.

20) Pittsburgh Steelers: Devin Bush, ILB Michigan- Pittsburgh needs a signal caller in the middle of their defense, as well as a three down linebacker. Bush is a big time athlete, he shoots gaps, and he flips his hips effortlessly. If the Steelers can find a way to land him, it’s a massive win.

21) Seattle Seahawks: TJ Hockenson, TE Iowa- Hockenson is an elite player in this draft. He’s a phenomenal blocker, a red zone threat, and he wins down the field with size. Russell Wilson operates better when he has a tight end as an option, and there is no better option for the Seattle Seahawks offense in this draft than TJ Hockenson.

22) Baltimore Ravens: Marquise “Hollywood” Brown, WR Oklahoma- I still love this fit for the Ravens. Hollywood Brown is a playmaker down the field, and he’s a playmaker with the ball in his hands. What makes him an ideal pick for the Ravens is that Brown is a sneaky good route runner. “Desean Jackson 2.0,” becomes Lamar Jackson’s newest offensive weapon.

23) Houston Texans: Andre Dillard, OT Washington State- Insert offensive lineman here remains the selection for the Texans. Dillard steps in from day one and protects Deshaun Watson’s blindside.

24) Oakland Raiders via Chicago Bears: Rock Ya-Sin, CB Temple- The Raiders secondary was very inconsistent in 2018. One of these two backend first round selections should be used on addressing that issue. Ya-Sin mirrors receivers well and has the ability to excel in multiple coverage schemes at the next level. While he may not go round one during the actual draft, I think he is well deserving of a first round selection.

25) Philadelphia Eagles: Deionte Thompson, FS Alabama- This is a bit of a reach, but as I mentioned in my prediction mock draft, safety appears to be the Eagles biggest need. Malcolm Jenkins and Rodney McLeod are taking up a fair amount of cap room for a team that will need to pay Carson Wentz soon.

Thompson is my top safety this year because of his ball skills and range from the single high position. He does need to improve on his angles to the football, but every one of the safeties in this class has flaws.

Editor’s Note: I know many have Johnathan Abram or Chauncey Gardner-Johnson as their top safety. While I don’t agree, I can’t really argue if you have one of about six different safeties as your top guy. 

26) Indianapolis Colts: AJ Brown, WR Ole Miss- The Colts primary need has shifted with the acquisition of Justin Houston. I think defensive line is still in play in round two, but a receiver will be one of the first two selections.

Brown is a perfect scheme fit for the Colts, as I have said on a number of occasions. I think Andrew Luck would look his way a lot on third downs.

27) Oakland Raiders via Dallas Cowboys: Josh Jacobs, RB Alabama-Jacobs isa smart runner between the tackles, he contributes in the pass game and he makes defenders miss in open space. The late retirement of Marshawn Lynch has the Raiders in desperate need of a running back, so they take Jacobs a little higher than he should go.

28) Los Angeles Chargers: Greedy Williams, CB LSU- Just like the prediction mock draft, Greedy Williams goes to the Chargers at 28. I still like the idea of them selecting a player along the defensive front at some point, but a boundary corner is definitely the more pressing need.

Now it is true that Williams remains the most polarizing player in the draft. However, I’m trusting my analysis of his tape on this one. He showed terrific ability to mirror and trail in cover one and cover three, and strong ball skills. If he cleans up his backpedal (pretty much his footwork in general), Williams can be one of the better players in this draft.

29) Seattle Seahawks via Kansas City Chiefs: Clelin Ferrell, EDGE Clemson- I’m standing by Ferrell despite his rough showing this past month. He’s a power rusher with a good sense of gap assignments and he’s able to gain leverage against opposing tackles on a consistent basis.. Ferrell may never be a double digit sack player, but I think he can be a quality pro for a long time.

30) Green Bay Packers via New Orleans Saints: Irv Smith Jr., TE Alabama- While one could argue this is a reach because the tight end class is incredibly strong top to bottom, the big three of Smith, Noah Fant and TJ Hockenson are all worthy of round one selections. All three are very good blockers, each one of them runs terrific routes for the tight end position, and they all have good hands. That’s why even though the class is talented, Irv Smith is the pick here for Green Bay.

31) *Denver Broncos via Los Angeles Rams: Dwayne Haskins, QB Ohio State- Even though I’m not as high on Haskins as many seem to be, I still think he’s one of two quarterbacks worthy of a first round selection. He has a great knowledge of the game and explosive arm talent. Assuming he refines his technique, and sits for a year (I cannot overstate how important that is for Haskins), I think he possesses enough value for a QB needy team to trade back into round one and get the fifth year option on him.

32) *Carolina Panthers via New England Patriots: Josh Allen, EDGE Kentucky- Assuming the Panthers are true to their word and wish to give more 3-4 looks in 2019, Allen would be a great selection. His dip and bend ability has been well documented, but he can also drop into coverage and react out of a zone defense. The versatility he provides would mesh nicely with Ron Rivera’s schemes.

Editor’s Note: Obviously Allen is not falling to this spot. I have him lower on my personal board than most, which is why he is picked later in this mock.

TRADES IN ROUND ONE

1- Oakland Raiders trade the #4 #35,  #140 and to the New York Jets for #4 and #105.

2- Washington Redskins trade the #15, #46, a 2020 1st Round Pick and a 2020 4th Round Pick to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for the #3 Overall Selection.

3- New England Patriots trade the #32, #56, and #134 to the Carolina Panthers for the #16 Overall Selection.

4- Denver Broncos trade #41, #125 and #148 to the Los Angeles Rams for the #31 and #251.

ROUND TWO

33) *Houston Texans via Arizona Cardinals: Garrett Bradbury, C NC State- The Texans offensive line needs a massive makeover during this draft. Bradbury is one of two very talented, all around centers in this draft. He has the athleticism and power to be a quality starter for years to come. Houston trades up to land a second day one starter on the offensive line.

34) Indianapolis Colts via New York Jets: Khalen Saunders, DT/NT Western Illinois- Saunders is an elite athlete with the ability to play anywhere from a zero tech to a three tech. Something the Colts lack along their defensive front is explosive athleticism, hence why they signed Justin Houston. Saunders is a perfect fit along the Colts defensive line.

35) *New York Jets via Oakland Raiders: Jachai Polite, EDGE Florida- Unfortunately, I am not privy to the information that scouts have on Polite’s horrific interviews. Obviously he struggled during the draft process, that is well documented. What is unknown is if his interviews were so bad that his quality tape should be thrown out the window.

Assuming it was not, I think a team could look to snag him in round two. He’s still a quality rusher on tape and an impact player if his off the field issues checked out.

36) San Francisco 49ers: Deebo Samuel, WR South Carolina- The lock of round two seems to be the Niners selecting the best available pass catcher. Samuel’s route running ability will match up nicely with the Niners west coast offense.

37) New York Giants: Dalton Risner, OT/OG Kansas State- Risner has the versatility to play guard or tackle at the next level. His toughness, leadership and physicality in the run game are three qualities the Giants will love to have in their locker room and on their offensive line.

38) Jacksonville Jaguars: Cody Ford, OG Oklahoma- Ford is a much better prospect at guard than at tackle. Despite not being the most agile guy, Ford is a physical player. He keeps his shoulder pads square at the second level, and he’s also able to get his hands on defenders quickly. Jacksonville’s offensive line needs work so this is an easy fit.

39) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Nasir Adderley, FS Delaware- The Buccaneers secondary was beyond subpar in 2018. Adderley’s ability to play single high, as well as his willingness to come into the box and make tackles, should help the Bucs defense immediately.

40) Buffalo Bills: Kelvin Harmon, WR NC State- Harmon would be a nice compliment to the rest of the Bills receiving core. He’s an excellent route runner and he high points the ball well. Harmon may not have tested as well as some of the other receivers during the draft process, but his tape is very strong. He is still worthy of a high selection in this draft.

41) *Los Angeles Rams via Denver Broncos: Dexter Lawrence, DT/NT Clemson- Lawrence is a beast in the middle of a 3-4. One could argue that, pound for pound, he is a top five athlete in the class. He eats space, stacks and sheds blockers when put in one-on-one situations, and he can collapse the pocket as a pass rusher. The Rams need a nose tackle in the middle of their 3-4, making Lawrence a perfect fit.

42) Cincinnati Bengals: Yodny Cajuste, OT West Virginia- Hey Cincinnati, DO NOT START BOBBY HART! Back to you, Jim.

43) Detroit Lions: Amani Oruwariye, CB Penn State- I like Oruwariye’s ability to mirror receivers and make plays on the football. Detroit uses a lot of different coverages and defensive sets, something I think Oruwariye can do from the boundary position. I like this fit.

44) Green Bay Packers: Mack Wilson, ILB Alabama- The Packers have a glaring hole in the middle of their linebacking core. Wilson may come with some athletic concerns, but his tape is very good and he’s arguably the best cover linebacker in the draft. I still think he’s a day one starter in the right scheme.

45) Atlanta Falcons: Tytus Howard, OT Alabama State- Howard has the potential to be one of the top offensive lineman in this draft class. He’s smart, he has ideal size and length, and his technique continues to improve. A perfect fit for him would be going to a team that would not have to start him right away unless he earned it.

46) *Tampa Bay Buccaneers via Washington Redskins: Justin Layne, CB Michigan State- Layne’s man cover skills get the bulk of the conversation, but I like his footwork in off coverage equally as much. I think Layne is one of the more underrated players in this draft because his upside is significantly higher than the middle of round two.

47) Carolina Panthers: Amani Hooker, FS Iowa- Hooker has an interesting skill set for a free safety, mainly because his best attribute might be his ability to play nickel corner. Having said that, he still shows good range and reaction time in cover two and cover three. His versatility should fit nicely in the Panthers secondary.

48) Miami Dolphins: Hakeem Butler, WR Iowa State- It’s been quite some time since the Dolphins had a legitimate deep threat. Butler is 6’5 and runs a sub 4.5. If that’s not a mismatch down the field, I’m not quite sure what is. Whoever the QB of the future is for the Dolphins, they do not stand much of a chance with the receiving core as it is currently constructed. Butler gives them a legitimate target.

49) Cleveland Browns: Joejuan Williams, CB Vanderbilt- Joejuan Williams corrected the athletic questions surrounding him after the combine with a very strong pro day. That went a long way towards reassuring me my tape evaluation of his make up speed was correct. His press skills are very good, but as a press corner you need to be able to make up ground if you are beat. Since he showed he can, he’s a top 50 target in this draft.

50) Minnesota Vikings: Charles Omenihu, DL Texas- Omenihu is a very good pass rusher and he’s quick off the ball. The athletic three tech was a perfect fit last year next to Linval Joseph. I’m not saying Omenihu is the next Sheldon Richardson, but my guess is that the Vikings defensive formula should remain the same up front.

51) Tennessee Titans: Renell Wren, DT/NT Arizona State- The Titans need depth along their defensive front; I’ve said that for the past few mock drafts. Just like the past few mock drafts, I once again have given them the athletic run stuffer that is Renell Wren.

52) Pittsburgh Steelers: Jordan Brown, CB South Dakota State- Brown is another underrated corner in this draft class. He flips his hips effortlessly, and he’s able to drive off his back foot well in zone coverage to make up ground. I like his ball skills as well, he locates the ball well when put in one-on-one situations. This is an ideal pick for the Steelers in round two, should they land Devin Bush in round one.

53) Philadelphia Eagles via Baltimore Ravens: Parris Campbell, WR Ohio State- Campbell’s ability at the next level will be dependent on his route running. He’s so explosive with the ball in his hands that if he can separate at all and sink his hips into his route combinations, he could be a matchup nightmare in the slot. He did show the quickness at the combine to be a good route runner, but his route tree was simple at Ohio State. Only time will tell just how good he can truly be.

54) *Arizona Cardinals from Houston Texans via Seattle Seahawks: David Edwards, OT Wisconsin- Much like Campbell, Edwards has an obvious key to his NFL success as well. Despite being very intelligent, his footwork needs to improve to be effective on the right side at the next level. Arizona is desperate for offensive line talent, so they select Edwards in hopes that his technique will continue to improve.

Editor’s Note: This could be one player that falls flat on my “intelligence over sheer athleticism,” theory for offensive line. Edwards really struggled with his pad level and his technique in pass protection last year. I’ll roll the dice though and say Edwards can contribute at the next level.

55) *Arizona Cardinals via Houston Texans: Emanuel Hall, WR Missouri- Hall is a big time deep threat. He wins with speed at the top of his route, and he can beat DB’s on 50/50 balls with size and athleticism. Hall would be a terrific compliment to Christian Kirk in the present and the future.

56) *Carolina Panthers from New England Patriots via Chicago Bears: Nate Davis, OG Charlotte- Nate Davis is one of my favorite players in this draft because he finishes blocks with power and intensity. He’s consistently competing and it shows in the run game. I like his athleticism as well, I think his footwork is good and he pops out of his stance with his pad level on plane. This may be a little high for him, but Carolina needs a starting guard and that can definitely be Davis.

57) Philadelphia Eagles: Damien Harris, RB Alabama- Another player who may be a little too high, but the Eagles need of a running back demands it. Howard is a two down running back at best, and I honestly question if he’s even that anymore. I have not seen a player take this much of a nose dive in a long time.

Harris is essentially insurance for everyone currently on the Eagles roster. He has good vision between the tackles, he can block, and despite Josh Jacobs being the primary pass catcher at ‘Bama, Harris can catch the ball out of the backfield as well.

58) Dallas Cowboys: Trysten Hill, DT UCF- Dallas is a tough team to gauge because they have two glaring needs on day two; defensive tackle and safety. The order in which you give them those players depends on who is on the board. With most of the safeties still available and defensive line flying off the board, the Cowboys jump on Trysten Hill.

59) Indianapolis Colts: Johnathan Abram, SS Mississippi State- Abram is a quality in-the-box safety. He shoots gaps and makes tackles around the line of scrimmage. Putting him in the same secondary with Malik Hooker is a perfect match.

60) Los Angeles Chargers: Jerry Tillery, DL Notre Dame- Much like Tennessee a few spots ago, the idea of giving the Chargers more talent along their defensive front remains the same as my previous mocks. Tillery would wreak havoc with all the one-on-ones he would see playing opposite Joey Bosa and next to Melvin Ingram.

61) Kansas City Chiefs: Trayvon Mullen, CB Clemson- Mullen is a tough guy to grade because he excels in mirroring receivers in man-to-man coverage, but he’s not great in press, nor is he stellar in off coverage. Having said that, he is my best available corner at this point, and the Chiefs need secondary.

62) New Orleans Saints: Blake Cashman, ILB Minnesota- With only one pick in the first three rounds, the Saints will have to decide on trading backwards or selecting their best player available at this spot.

Cashman is clearly the next best off ball linebacker, and it’s by a sizable amount. Therefore, the Saints just select him and worry about the rest of their needs on day three.

63) Kansas City Chiefs via Los Angeles Rams: Elgton Jenkins, C Mississippi State- Jenkins is a really good option for the Chiefs as a starting center on day two. Should they pass and go elsewhere, look for the Chiefs to try and convince a veteran like John Sullivan to sign a one year deal in hopes of winning a championship after the draft.

64) New England Patriots: Andy Isabella, WR UMASS- The ideal Patriots wideout once again finds his way to New England at the end of round two. The buzz on Isabella has grown, but his athleticism and ability to run routes out of the slot still make his ideal fit the New England Patriots.

TRADES IN ROUND TWO

1- Houston Texans trade the #54 and #55 to the Arizona Cardinals for #33 and #103.

ROUND THREE

65) Arizona Cardinals: Dennis Daley, OT South Carolina

66) *Green Bay Packers from Pittsburgh Steelers via Oakland Raiders: Chase Winovich, EDGE Michigan

67) San Francisco 49ers: Darnell Savage, FS Maryland

68) New York Jets: Corey Ballentine, CB Washburn

69) Jacksonville Jaguars: Christian Miller, EDGE Alabama

70) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, CB/FS Florida

X) New York Giants- Forfeit Due to the Selection of Sam Beal in the Supplemental Draft

71) Denver Broncos: Jace Sternberger, TE Texas A&M

72) Cincinnati Bengals: Daniel Jones, QB Duke

73) New England Patriots via Detroit Lions: Zach Allen, DL Boston College

74) Buffalo Bills: Rodney Anderson, RB Oklahoma

75) *Pittsburgh Steelers via Green Bay Packers: Max Scharping, OT Northern Illinois

76) Washington Redskins: Riley Ridley, WR Georgia

77) Carolina Panthers: Tyree Jackson, QB Buffalo

78) Miami Dolphins: Connor McGovern, OG/C Penn State

79) Atlanta Falcons: Oshane Ximines, EDGE Old Dominion

80) Cleveland Browns: Juan Thornhill, SS Virginia

81) Minnesota Vikings: Kaleb McGary, OT Washington

82) Tennessee Titans: Dru Samia, OG Oklahoma

83) Pittsburgh Steelers: Damarkus Lodge, WR Ole Miss

84) Kansas City Chiefs via Seattle Seahawks: Miles Sanders, RB Penn State

85) Baltimore Ravens: Maxx Crosby, EDGE Eastern Michigan

86) Houston Texans: David Long, CB Michigan

87) Chicago Bears: Sean Bunting, CB Central Michigan

88) Detroit Lions via Philadelphia Eagles: Dawson Knox, TE Ole Miss

89) Indianapolis Colts: DeAndre Baker, CB Georgia

90) Dallas Cowboys: Sheldrick Redwine, FS/SS Miami

91) Los Angeles Chargers: Bobby Evans, OL Oklahoma

92) Seattle Seahawks via Kansas City Chiefs: BJ Autry, OG Jacksonville State

93) New York Jets via New Orleans Saints: JJ Arcega-Whiteside, WR Stanford

94) Los Angeles Rams: Kahale Warring, TE San Diego State

95) Cleveland Browns via New England Patriots: Ben Banogu, EDGE TCU

96) Washington Redskins: Shareef Miller, EDGE Penn State

97) New England Patriots: Isaiah Buggs, DT Alabama

98) Jacksonville Jaguars via Los Angeles Rams: Karan Higdon, RB Michigan

99) Los Angeles Rams: Julian Love, CB Notre Dame

100) *Baltimore Ravens via Carolina Panthers: Mecole Hardman, WR Georgia

101) New England Patriots: Vosean Joseph, ILB Florida

102) Baltimore Ravens: Germaine Pratt, ILB NC State

TRADES IN ROUND THREE

1- Green Bay Packers trade the #75 and #114 to the Pittsburgh Steelers for the #66 and #192.

2- Baltimore Ravens trade the #113 and a 2020 4th Round Pick to the Carolina Panthers for the #100 and a 2020 6th Round Pick.

Jordan Katz 2019 NFL Draft Big Board 3.0: Top 100 and Final

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Here’s my top 100 players and final big board for the 2019 Draft Season. This is strictly my ranking of players based on my grades. The order I have them may not reflect where I slotted them in either my personal mock draft or my prediction mock draft.

1) Nick Bosa, EDGE Ohio State
2) Brian Burns, EDGE Florida State
3) DK Metcalf, WR Ole Miss
4) Jonah Williams, OT Alabama
5) Quinnen Williams, DT Alabama
6) Ed Oliver, DT Houston
7) Chris Lindstrom, OG Boston College
8) Noah Fant, TE Iowa
9) Montez Sweat, EDGE Mississippi State
10) TJ Hockenson, TE Iowa
11) Byron Murphy, CB Washington
12) Marquise “Hollywood” Brown, WR Oklahoma
13) Rashan Gary, DL Michigan
14) Jeffery Simmons, DT Mississippi State
15) Anthony Nelson, EDGE Iowa
16) Christian Wilkins, DT Clemson
17) Devin White, ILB LSU
18) N’Keal Harry, WR Arizona State
19) Clelin Ferrell, EDGE Clemson
20) Dexter Lawrence, DT/NT Clemson
21) Rock Ya-Sin, CB Temple
22) Josh Allen, EDGE Kentucky
23) AJ Brown, WR Ole Miss
24) Jawaan Taylor, OT Florida
25) Kelvin Harmon, WR NC State
26) Erik McCoy, OG/C Texas A&M
27) Garrett Bradbury, OG/C NC State
28) Khalen Saunders, DT Western Illinois
29) Irv Smith Jr., TE Alabama
30) Greedy Williams, CB LSU
31) Devin Bush, ILB Michigan
32) Deionte Thompson, FS Alabama
33) Amani Oruwariye, CB Penn State
34) Nasir Adderley, FS Delaware
35) Andre Dillard, OT Washington State
36) Deebo Samuel, WR South Carolina
37) Josh Jacobs, RB Alabama
38) Mack Wilson, ILB Alabama
39) Justin Layne, CB Michigan State
40) Cody Ford, OG/OT Oklahoma
41) Jachai Polite, EDGE Florida*
42) Kyler Murray, QB Oklahoma
43) Hakeem Butler, WR Iowa State
44) Charles Omenihu, DL Texas
45) Andy Isabella, WR UMASS
46) Joejuan Williams, CB Vanderbilt
47) Yodny Cajuste, OT West Virginia
48) Jerry Tillery, DT Notre Dame
49) Parris Campbell, WR Ohio State
50) Elgton Jenkins, OG/C Mississippi State
51) Trayvon Mullen, CB Clemson
52) Johnathan Abram, SS Mississippi State
53) Tytus Howard, OT Alabama State
54) Renell Wren, DT/NT Arizona State
55) Jace Sternberger, TE Texas A&M
56) Trysten Hill, DT UCF
57) Chase Winovich, EDGE Michigan
58) Christian Miller, EDGE Alabama
59) Riley Ridley, WR Georgia
60) David Edwards, OT Wisconsin
61) Nate Davis, OG Charlotte
62) Amani Hooker, FS Iowa
63) Emanuel Hall, WR Missouri
64) Damarkus Lodge, WR Ole Miss
65) JJ Arcega-Whiteside, WR Stanford
66) Damien Harris, RB Alabama
67) Blake Cashman, ILB Minnesota
68) Dawson Knox, TE Ole Miss
69) Oshane Ximines, EDGE Old Dominion
70) Kahale Warring, TE San Diego State
71) Darnell Savage, FS Maryland
72) Dwayne Haskins, QB Ohio State
73) Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, CB/FS Florida
74) Maxx Crosby, EDGE Eastern Michigan
75) Corey Ballentine, CB Washburn
76) Kendall Sheffield, CB Ohio State
77) Dennis Daley, OT South Carolina
78) David Long, CB Michigan
79) Rodney Anderson, RB Oklahoma*
80) Sean Bunting, CB Central Michigan
81) DeAndre Baker, CB Georgia
82) Mecole Hardman, WR Georgia
83) Shareef Miller, EDGE Penn State
84) Zach Allen, DL Boston College
85) Juan Thornhill, SS Virginia
86) Terry McLaurin, WR Ohio State
87) Dru Samia, OG Oklahoma
88) Connor McGovern, OG/C Penn State
89) Miles Boykin, WR Notre Dame
90) Sheldrick Redwine, FS/SS Miami
91) Foster Moreau, TE LSU
92) Miles Sanders, RB Penn State
93) Julian Love, CB Notre Dame
94) Max Scharping, OT Northern Illinois
95) Vosean Joseph, ILB Florida
96) Isaiah Buggs, DL Alabama
97) Ben Banogu, EDGE TCU
98) Porter Gustin, EDGE USC*
99) Germaine Pratt, ILB NC State
100) Karan Higdon, RB Michigan

Editor’s Notes

  • The asterisk next to Jachai Polite is due to his horrific interviews with teams and the uncertainty of if he truly does have character issues.
  • The asterisk next to Rodney Anderson is due to his injuries in college. If he’s healthy enough, he’s a capable starter in the NFL.
  • The asterisk next to Porter Gustin is because of his failed drug test at the combine. Hard to tell how much that would matter to his ability on the field, or if it was a one time thing.

Jordan Katz 2019 NFL Prediction Mock Draft 3.0: Final

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Ladies and Gentleman, the spectacle that is the NFL Draft has arrived. Even though this draft class is not one of the stronger ones, this has still proven to be an incredibly interesting draft season. We still have no idea who the first overall pick will be, we still have no idea which teams are actually going to take quarterbacks, and we still have no idea how the New England Patriots will find enough talent in this draft to make it back to another Super Bowl next year.

Based on things I have read as well as pre-draft visits and workouts, this is my prediction for how I expect the NFL Draft will shake down next week. There’s some predictions in this mock draft that are to be expected, there are some curveballs, and as I alluded to earlier, the rest of the league just lets the Patriots clean up once again.

This is not one of my personal mock drafts where I assume the GM role for all 32 teams. This is strictly me trying to get every selection right, which is an exercise in futility, but it should help give you an idea of who your favorite team likes and what positions they are looking to target on draft day. As always, there are trades, and trades made in this mock draft are denoted with an asterisk next to the team.

Final Prediction Edition of #MockLyfeNeverSleeps. We are in the Endgame now.

ROUND ONE

1) *Oakland Raiders via Arizona Cardinals: Kyler Murray, QB Oklahoma– There’s too much smoke here, right? Arizona has not only talked Murray up for weeks, they now appear to openly be fielding offers for Josh Rosen.

However, what if this truly is a smokescreen? The Cardinals still need multiple pieces in order to compete in 2019, and one way to accomplish that is to trade down and acquire some assets.

On the other hand, Oakland is definitely convinced they can win now. The one thing they do not seem to be convinced of is Derek Carr. The Raiders have met with both Murray and Dwayne Haskins a few times and appear to like both a lot. Now this would definitely be an out of the box move, but what if Jon Gruden and Mike Mayock use their assets in a weak draft to get a game changer at the QB position? Arizona and Oakland shock the world to start the Draft.

Editor’s Note: I have to give my brother Danny the credit for this prediction. For months he’s been telling me how bad the Raiders brass is at playing “the game,” that is the NFL Draft, and how Arizona and Oakland make sense as trade partners. He was first on this prediction and I’m now jumping on board.

2) San Francisco 49ers: Quinnen Williams, DT Alabama- Some may call this a curveball here, but I don’t think that’s apropos. Williams has dominated the athletic testing portion of the draft process, and many think he was equally as dominant as Nick Bosa was in college. I think more teams have Williams atop their board than the media realizes at this moment.

3) New York Jets: Nick Bosa, EDGE Ohio State- In just about every scenario, Mike Maccagnan will trade out of this pick. There should be enough buzz around Dwayne Haskins at this point for teams like Denver, Cincinnati or Washington to leapfrog the Raiders and Giants in order to land their QB of the future. If Kyler Murray is also available, the Jets could get a king’s ransom here.

However, this isn’t your normal scenario. If I’m right and the Niners take Quinnen Williams over Bosa, the Jets will have a massive dilemma on their hands. Is their roster good enough to compete if they do not trade down and pick Bosa? Do they still trade down even with Bosa on the board? It’s not a bad problem to have, but it will be very interesting to see how Maccagnan and company handle it.

4) *Arizona Cardinals via Oakland Raiders: Jawaan Taylor, OT Florida- Assuming Bosa and Quinnen Williams are both off of the board by this selection, which I’m not sure is a lock, Arizona would just move to their biggest need. Many think Taylor is the runaway best tackle in this draft and can slide over to the left slide while maintaining production. Arizona chooses to sure up their offensive line after narrowly missing the heist of the century in Bosa at the 4th overall pick.

5) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Devin White, ILB LSU- White to the Buccaneers has been rumored for a while now. They lost Kwon Alexander in free agency, and they need a three down linebacker that can do it all to replace him. 

6) New York Giants: Daniel Jones, QB Duke- Okay Giants fans, I am so sorry to continue to obliterate your front office in these prediction mocks, but here we go again. David Gettleman can praise Eli Manning all he wants, but he’s still looking for a QB of the future in this draft. By not taking one last year in the best QB draft we’ve seen since 2004, and thinking his team was in a win now position, Gettleman backed himself into a corner. He had to settle for a lesser offer in order to get Odell Beckham out of the locker room and start a rebuild, and now he will have to settle for one of the QBs in this draft.

I know what you’re thinking though. “Okay Jordan, that explains them going quarterback. But why on earth would they pass on Dwayne Haskins for Daniel Jones?” Ladies and Gettleman (pun intended), allow me to introduce you to how David Gettleman will mess this up even further.

Jones has the “ideal size and build,” just like Haskins, but it’s his connection to David Cutcliffe that will have NFL teams ready to pick him much higher than he should go. Cutcliffe is most well known for his work with both Peyton and Eli Manning, and his relationship with David Gettleman is very strong as a result of working with Eli Manning. I think the Giants QB target in this draft is Daniel Jones, and they will either take him at 6 or 17 depending on how the board falls.

7) *Cincinnati Bengals via Jacksonville Jaguars: Dwayne Haskins, QB Ohio State- I think Cincinnati is going to go all out for a QB in this draft. With Andy Dalton on the latter stages of his career, the Bengals need to find their quarterback of the future sooner rather than later. Having dodged a bullet with the Giants, the Bengals give the Jaguars a little extra to come up and get their guy.

8) Detroit Lions: Josh Allen, EDGE Kentucky- Allen has had multiple visits with the Lions during this draft process, including a private workout. Detroit needs a pass rusher opposite Trey Flowers to generate the havoc that Head Coach Matt Patricia would like. If Allen is on the board here, this is as far as he goes because Detroit is seemingly in love with him.
Editor’s Note: Assuming Allen is off the board before this spot, Detroit could be a candidate to trade down. I don’t think they are as enamored with Brian Burns and Montez Sweat as they are with Allen. Not to mention, a team looking to pick DK Metcalf will have to jump Buffalo to do so.

9) Buffalo Bills: DK Metcalf, WR Ole Miss- Speaking of Metcalf to Buffalo, allow me to introduce the layup of the Top 10. The Bills still need a game changer in their receiving core, and Metcalf is just that. He’s phenomenal off the line and he showed his deep ball ability with a freakish 40 time at the Combine. John Brown and Cole Beasley were nice additions in free agency, but Metcalf is the big playmaker they need.

10) Denver Broncos: Drew Lock, QB Missouri- Four QBs in the Top Ten of this draft class is absolutely abominable, but we’re trending that way. The Broncos have had multiple visits with Drew Lock, and it appears they are… Locked…. in to him should Dwayne Haskins land elsewhere on draft day.

Editor’s Note: If you’ve read my personal mock drafts, you know I’m not a fan of the QB class. Outside of Kyler Murray, I do not have a quarterback on my board with a round one or a round two grade. Having said that, this is a Quarterback driven league, and QBs will always be overdrafted because of the value they bring.

11) *Jacksonville Jaguars via Cincinnati Bengals: Rashan Gary, EDGE/DL Michigan- Jacksonville’s draft strategy is anyone’s guess at this point. They have a few obvious needs (OL, Pass Catchers, FS, DL), but the order in which they address them is a mystery.

Should the Jaguars trade down, a guy like Gary could be in play for them. He has the versatility to move all along the defensive front, and the athleticism to be productive at the next level.

12) Green Bay Packers: Ed Oliver, DL Houston- Green Bay has been very aggressive in attempting to improve their defense during the 2019 offseason. I expect that to continue during the first round of this draft.

Oliver would go right to 3-4 defensive end and solidify a new look front seven that should be much more productive than years past.

13) *Houston Texans via Miami Dolphins: Andre Dillard, OT Washington State- The Texans are desperate for offensive line talent early in this draft. They had a ton of money this offseason and chose not to spend it. With extra assets in a weak draft (and Miami’s willingness to trade down), the Texans come up for Dillard, who many people think is the top left tackle in the draft.

14) Atlanta Falcons: Christian Wilkins, DT Clemson- Ed Oliver would be the ideal pick for Atlanta at 14, but Wilkins is a nice consolation prize. He possesses a quick first step like Oliver, he’s very technically sound in the little things (pad level, gap assignments, exc), and he has a high motor. All three of these will be very appealing to Head Coach Dan Quinn.

15) *Pittsburgh Steelers via Washington Redskins: Devin Bush, ILB Michigan- Bush has put together a phenomenal pre-draft process. He was a combine warrior, posting terrific numbers in the 40, vertical jump and 3-Cone drill. Then he went to his pro day and showed the ability to flip his hips like a defensive back. Pittsburgh trades up to land a necessary three down linebacker in the middle of their defense.

16) Carolina Panthers: Brian Burns, EDGE Florida State- Carolina loves the bigger, more physical edge players like Rashan Gary, and Brian Burns isn’t necessarily that. While he possesses good strength for his skill set, his biggest “strength,” is his ability to dip and bend around the edge.

Having said that, I think Carolina could go a different route here and take a player like Burns. Carolina has hinted at wanting to run more 3-4 sets and show multiple looks this season. They signed Bruce Irvin as well, making me think that the idea to go 3-4 could become more of a reality.

Whatever the decision winds up being, the selection at 16 will tell you all you need to know about their defensive game plan for the upcoming season.

17) New York Giants via Cleveland Browns: Montez Sweat, EDGE Mississippi State- Here’s why I sense the Giants going with a Quarterback at 6 instead of 17. There are so little quarterbacks this year and so many edge rushers, there is a much better chance to grab a talented pass rusher at 17 than a talented quarterback. Sweat had a terrific pre-draft process and should be a top 20 lock in a week’s time.

18) Minnesota Vikings: Jonah Williams, OT/OG/C/OL/Please Play Him at Tackle, Alabama- The fact that Jonah Williams will not be the top offensive lineman taken this year is an absolute disgrace. This is Zack Martin all over again. At some point, NFL teams will learn that technique and intelligence are what matters along the offensive line, and not just length and athleticism. Williams will be an All-Pro talent.

19) Tennessee Titans: Noah Fant, TE Iowa- Fant hs been my TE1 all year because of his athleticism and quickness when running routes. He’s an excellent blocker and a weapon in the middle of the field. Fant is an ideal fit in Tennessee’s offense and the heir to Delanie Walker’s throne at the TE position.

20) *Washington Redskins via Pittsburgh Steelers: Parris Campbell, WR Ohio State- Campbell is flying up draft boards after a very impressive combine. He displayed quickness in and out of cuts as well, something that we didn’t always get to see during his time at Ohio State. I think NFL teams view Campbell as a better version of Curtis Samuel, who went top 40 in his own right. Washington needs weapons for whoever their quarterback is, making Campbell a solid selection.

Editor’s Note: Obviously Washington is a great candidate to trade up for a quarterback, but a second option is them pursuing a QB already in the NFL like Josh Rosen or Derek Carr (hint hint, wink wink). If they choose the latter, they can trade backward, get some assets to further their pursuit of Rosen or Carr.

21) Seattle Seahawks: Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, CB/FS Florida– CGJ is a definitive ball hawk, but it’s his versatility to man up in the slot and contribute from a single high position that will have him as the first safety off the board. Seattle is a tough team to predict, but a selection of Gardner-Johnson would help further advance the recreation of LOB 2.0.

22) Baltimore Ravens: N’Keal Harry, WR Arizona State- Baltimore has to find weapons for Lamar Jackson during this draft. Harry can move all around the field, winning route combinations from the boundary as well as the slot. His tape during the season combined with quality testing in Indianapolis should help him be a first round selection.

23) *Miami Dolphins via Houston Texans: Jeffery Simmons, DT Mississippi State- It’s not much of a secret that Miami is looking to rebuild over the next few seasons. This makes them a perfect team to draft a player like Jeffery Simmons.

Simmons is viewed by many as a top talent in this draft, but he tore his ACL during a workout in February. The Dolphins do not need him to contribute right away in year one, so why not trade backward and take an elite talent for the future?

24) *Arizona Cardinals from Oakland Raiders via Chicago Bears: Hakeem Butler, WR Iowa State- Regardless of whether the Cardinals stay with Josh Rosen or select Murray first overall, they will need to find weapons for whoever their QB is. Butler has freakish athleticism for someone of his size. His potential is off the charts if he can fix the drops that plagued him in college.

25) Philadelphia Eagles: Nasir Adderley, FS Delaware- Philly is a tough team to judge for prediction purposes because they have the ammo to move up high in this draft and land a big fish. However, I think it’s more likely that they stay put in round one, and look to trade up into the early portions of round two.

If they do stay here, a safety is a very likely selection. Malcolm Jenkins and Rodney McLeod are two sizable contracts for a team that will need to save money over the next two years in preparation to pay Carson Wentz.

26) Indianapolis Colts: AJ Brown, WR Ole Miss- In my personal mock drafts, I have been talking about this potential fit for months. Brown’s quickness in the short to intermediate windows out of the slot would be a huge boost to the Colts offense. It would allow T.Y. Hilton to see less double teams. I expect wide receiver to be the target for the Colts at 26, and Brown makes the most sense to me.

27) Oakland Raiders via Dallas Cowboys: Byron Murphy, CB Washington- Murphy’s size was a question heading into the combine. However, when scouts saw his footwork and technique during the on-field drills, the concerns went away. His versatility to do a number of different things and excel in multiple coverage schemes will have many teams jumping at the chance to take him in the backend of round one.

28) Los Angeles Chargers: Greedy Williams, CB LSU- Williams may be the most polarizing player in the draft, but I’m not sure that stops him from being selected in round one. He still has phenomenal collegiate production and very good ball skills. The Chargers secondary took a hit this offseason, particularly at corner. Assuming Desmond King goes back to being a full time nickel player/third safety, LAC needs a second boundary corner to play opposite Casey Hayward.

29) Seattle Seahawks via Kansas City Chiefs: Clelin Ferrell, EDGE Clemson- Ferrell has had a lackluster performance during the draft season, but I don’t think his draft stock will be too hampered by it. His tape is too good and his game is too complete for him to drop past the first 40 picks or so.

30) Green Bay Packers via New Orleans Saints: Chase Winovich, EDGE Michigan- Winovich has put together two terrific pre-draft workouts, both at the combine as well as the Michigan pro day. Throughout his tape he is constantly in the backfield, which shows in his tackles for loss totals during his final two years at Michigan. Now that he has answered some athletic questions, Winovich is most likely the surprise of the first round.

31) *New York Giants via Los Angeles Rams: Dexter Lawrence, DT/NT Clemson- The Giants appear to be in love with Lawrence’s skill set, but I don’t think he will make it to their selection at the top end of round two. To ensure they get their man, the Giants mortgage a few draft assets in a weaker draft class to come up and take a player they covet.

32) New England Patriots: TJ Hockenson, TE Iowa- Rob Gronkowski’s retirement puts offensive weapons at the top of the Patriots wish list for the 2019 draft. The Patriots will definitely attempt to move up for Noah Fant, but I think Bill Belichick is also very comfortable with staying put and seeing if he can land Hockenson or Irv Smith Jr. If he can somehow pull Hockenson, the rest of the NFL should be embarrassed and thoroughly terrified.

TRADES IN ROUND ONE

1- Oakland Raiders trade the #4, #24 and a 2020 1st Round Pick (from Chicago) to the Arizona Cardinals for the #1 and a 2020 3rd Round Pick.

2- Cincinnati Bengals trade the #11, #72 and a 2020 2nd Round Pick to the Jacksonville Jaguars for the #7 and a 2020 5th Round Pick.

3- Houston Texans trade the #23, #54 and #55 to the Miami Dolphins for the #13 and #78.

4- Pittsburgh Steelers trade the #20, #83 and #122 to the Washington Redskins for the #15 and #206.

5- New York Giants trade the #37, #108 and #180 to the Los Angeles Rams for the #31.

ROUND TWO

33) Arizona Cardinals: Rock Ya-Sin, CB Temple- Arizona needs cornerback depth in the worst way. Outside of Patrick Peterson, it’s a giant question mark. Ya-Sin is a competitor and a ball hawk, two things that should compliment Peterson nicely considering all the targets Ya-Sin will see.

34) Indianapolis Colts via New York Jets: Anthony Nelson, EDGE/DE Iowa- I know Nelson is much higher on my personal board than he is being mocked by draft experts. Normally in this spot you would see a player like Jaylon Ferguson instead of my man Nelson.

However, I think NFL teams will agree with my analysis of Nelson. He’s just as technically sound as Clelin Ferrell, and despite the fact his first step isn’t quite as good on tape, he’s more adept at bending around the edge and running the arch.

Therefore, Nelson is the pick here and not Jaylon Ferguson.

35) Oakland Raiders: Josh Jacobs, RB Alabama- Oakland is now the frontrunner to land Jacobs after Marshawn Lynch decided to step away from football again. Whether they make that selection in round one or at the top or round two, it would take a miracle for one of the few three down runningbacks in this draft class to wind up elsewhere on draft day.

36) San Francisco 49ers: Deebo Samuel, WR South Carolina- The Niners need to find more weapons for Jimmy Garoppolo during this draft. Samuel has had a terrific draft process, shining ever since the Senior Bowl week back in January. He’s one of many quality pass catchers that will be selected on day two.

37) *Los Angeles Rams via New York Giants: Jachai Polite, EDGE Florida- Polite’s only saving grace to go in the first two rounds right now is the Rams. While Polite has had one of the worst Combine and Pro Day performances that I can remember, the one team he interviewed well with was the Rams. I still believe Polite stands a chance to be a good pro because his ability to come off the edge and generate pressure is so prevalent throughout his collegiate tape. This is why the Rams trade backwards and take him in round two.

Editor’s Note: An alternative move for the Rams could be to trade up in round three and try to snag him at the top of that round. If they believe he is truly off of many teams draft boards, they could look to do the same strategy with Polite that the Raiders did with Arden Key.

38) Jacksonville Jaguars: Darnell Savage, FS Maryland- A sneaky need for the Jaguars that they will most likely address early in this draft is a single high safety to keep their defense at the elite level it should be. Savage is that kind of player.

39) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Marquise “Hollywood” Brown, WR Oklahoma- The Bucs used a pre-draft visit on Hollywood Brown, which makes sense seeing as they need a deep threat to replace Desean Jackson. I’m not sure I would spend a top 40 selection on a third wideout in their offense, but that appears to be the direction they are headed.

40) Buffalo Bills: Kaleb McGary, OT/OG Washington- McGary is nowhere near this evaluation on my personal board, but his athleticism and supposed versatility is what has a lot of teams chomping at the bit for him in round two.

41) Denver Broncos: Garrett Bradbury, C NC State- Matt Paradis was a big loss for the Broncos, but he’s replaceable in the front end of the draft. Even though Bradbury is likely to go higher than this, players fall to round two that should have gone in round one all the time. In this draft, that player is Bradbury.

42) Cincinnati Bengals: Cody Ford, OT/OG Oklahoma- Cincinnati signed Bobby Hart to… uhh… let up sacks? It surely wasn’t to protect the passer. One can only hope they’re wise enough to just draft offensive line anyway and act as if the Bobby Hart signing never happened.

43) *Kansas City Chiefs via Detroit Lions: Erik McCoy, C/OG Texas A&M-  McCoy is a very similar player to Garrett Bradbury, showing good athleticism in short areas, as well as the technique necessary to excel in pass protection. Much like the Broncos a few picks earlier with replacing Matt Paradis, Kansas City needs to replace Mitch Morse. They trade up a few spots to land McCoy.

44) Green Bay Packers: Irv Smith Jr., TE Alabama- Aaron Rodgers loves throwing to tight ends. The problem is, Rodgers has not had one that is truly a matchup problem in a long time. Irv Smith can block and he’s improved as a route runner. He’s a much better fit for the Packers current offense than Jimmy Graham.

45) *Philadelphia Eagles via Atlanta Falcons: Chris Lindstrom, OG Boston College- Atlanta has teased that they could trade down in this draft. If that truly is the draft strategy, it might make more sense to happen in round two rather than round one. Philadelphia could also trade in this draft, but their goal is to trade up not backward. Both teams could be perfect trade partners at some point in this draft.

Editor’s Note: Lindstrom is a good fit for either of these teams, but based on pre-draft workouts I think he’s more of a target for Philly than Atlanta. Hence the trade.

46) *Oakland Raiders via Washington Redskins: Jaylon Ferguson, EDGE Louisiana Tech- For some reason Ferguson’s three cone shuttle, which was north of eight seconds, has not scared NFL teams from talking about him on day two. Oakland acquires this selection by sending Derek Carr to Washington and takes Ferguson to double up on pass rushers in day two.

47) Carolina Panthers: Greg Little, OT Ole Miss- I really don’t like Little as a selection before day three, but Carolina has visited with him a lot throughout the draft process. He is most likely going to be picked on day two, and Carolina is a very likely destination for the former 5-Star recruit.

48) Miami Dolphins: Dalton Risner, OT/OG Kansas State- The Dolphins need to improve in the trenches on both sides of the ball. Risner can start on the right side of their offensive line from day one.

49) Cleveland Browns: Juan Thornhill, SS Virginia- Thornhill’s athleticism and ability to play downhill has teams very interested in him early in this draft. Many teams think he can be a chess piece in the backend of their defense. Thornhill makes sense as a target for the Browns because he can move around the field like Julius Peppers did.

50) Minnesota Vikings: Jerry Tillery, DT Notre Dame- Tillery is extremely athletic and a quality pass rusher along the interior. Minnesota needs an athletic starter next to Linval Joseph, making Saunders a perfect fit for them at 50.

51) Tennessee Titans: Khalen Saunders, DL Western Illinois- One of the best pound for pound athletes in this draft is Khalen Saunders. He’s a perfect fit in a 3-4 because he’s successful from multiple positions along the defensive front.

52) Pittsburgh Steelers: Justin Layne, CB Michigan State- Layne has emerged as a day two lock during the pre-draft process. He’s long, he’s athletic, and he shows big time potential in man-to-man situations. The Steelers still need a number two corner, making Layne a very likely selection in the second round if he is available.

53) *Atlanta Falcons from Philadelphia Eagles via Baltimore Ravens: Tytus Howard, OT Alabama State- Howard has ideal size and length for a right tackle, but he needs to continue to refine his technique in order to become a quality starter. This makes Atlanta an ideal destination because he would not have to start day one, unless he earned it.

54) *Miami Dolphins from Houston Texans via Seattle Seahawks: Emanuel Hall, WR Missouri- The Dolphins have lacked an explosive deep threat for a long time. Hall is a definitive burner that separates with speed and athleticism down the field. He’s a good target for Miami at some point during this draft.

55) *Miami Dolphins via Houston Texans: Jamel Dean, CB Auburn- Here’s a classic reach on day two because of a good combine. Dean showed enough on tape to make teams covet his sheer athleticism over some more technical corners.

56) New England Patriots via Chicago Bears: Andy Isabella, WR Massachusetts- I know Patriots fans would rather see Isabella later in the draft, but I think he tested too well at the Combine for the Pats to do that. Isabella’s route running, athleticism and solid hands make him a perfect fit for the Patriots offense.

57) Philadelphia Eagles: Mack Wilson, ILB Alabama- The buzz around Wilson has cooled during the latter portions of the draft process. Having said that, the off ball linebacker class is so weak that his tape and collegiate production should still have him as the third player off the board in this position group.

58) Dallas Cowboys: Deionte Thompson, FS Alabama- The Cowboys have visited with a ton of safeties during this offseason, making a selection of one at 58 very likely. Thompson is easily the best cover safety still on the board, so he is the pick here.

59) Indianapolis Colts: Iman Marshall, CB/FS/SS USC- Marshall is going to go much higher than he should on draft day, and I still have not figured out why. Many teams think he possesses the versatility to play nickel corner or a cover two safety position. When I figure out what they are basing this off of, I will let you all know.

60) Los Angeles Chargers: Yodny Cajuste, OT West Virginia- Offensive tackle is a sneaky need for the Chargers during this draft. Okung has been up and down during the last few years, and Sam Tevi is better served as a backup. Cajuste steps in and competes for a starting job from day one.

61) *Detroit Lions via Kansas City Chiefs: Lonnie Johnson Jr., CB Kentucky- Teez Tabor has not stepped up and grabbed the number two cornerback slot like the Lions had hoped. Johnson’s length and athleticism combined with his (presumed) ability in press coverage are the two aspects of his game that NFL teams find attractive.

62) New Orleans Saints: Joejuan Williams, CB Vanderbilt- Williams had a tough combine, but redeemed himself during the athletic testing portion of his pro day. He’s a long, physical corner with the ability to press and solid ball skills. His traits on tape combined with his improved athletic testing should have him as a day two selection.

63) *Detroit Lions from Kansas City Chiefs via Los Angeles Rams: Amani Hooker, FS Iowa- Detroit continues to revamp their secondary by selecting the best cover safety left on the board. While this could be a thumper like Taylor Rapp or Johnathan Abram, I’m going to take a chance on Hooker because of his versatility in coverage.

64) New England Patriots: Blake Cashman, ILB Minnesota- New England does have a few defensive needs in this draft, one of which is addressing their linebacking core. Outside of Kyle Van Noy, it’s a weak unit. Cashman is an athletic three down linebacker who shows a great understanding for gap assignments on tape.

TRADES IN ROUND TWO

1- Kansas City Chiefs trade the #61 and #63 to the Detroit Lions for the #43, #111 and #224.

2- Philadelphia Eagles trade the #53, #127 and #163 to the Atlanta Falcons for the #45 and #230.

3- Washington Redskins acquire Derek Carr and a 2020 3rd Round Pick from the Oakland Raiders in exchange for the #46 and 2020 Conditional 5th Round Pick.

ROUND THREE

65) Arizona Cardinals: Dawson Knox, TE Ole Miss

66) Pittsburgh Steelers via Oakland Raiders: Dennis Daley, OT South Carolina

67) San Francisco 49ers: Jimmy Moreland, CB James Madison

68) New York Jets: Elgton Jenkins, C Mississippi State

69) Jacksonville Jaguars: Terry McLaurin, WR Ohio State

70) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Johnathan Abram, SS Mississippi State

X) New York Giants- Forfeit Due to the Selection of Sam Beal in the Supplemental Draft

71) Denver Broncos: Isaiah Johnson, CB Houston

72) *Jacksonville Jaguars via Cincinnati Bengals: Jace Sternberger, TE Texas A&M

73) New England Patriots via Detroit Lions: Charles Omenihu, DL Texas

74) Buffalo Bills: Maxx Crosby, EDGE Eastern Michigan

75) Green Bay Packers: Michael Dieter, OL Wisconsin

76) Washington Redskins: Amani Oruwariye, CB Penn State

77) Carolina Panthers: Taylor Rapp, SS Washington

78) *Houston Texans via Miami Dolphins: Trysten Hill, DT/NT UCF

79) Atlanta Falcons: DeAndre Baker, CB Georgia

80) Cleveland Browns: Trayvon Mullen, CB Clemson

81) Minnesota Vikings: Michael Jordan, OG/C Ohio State

82) Tennessee Titans: JJ Arcega-Whiteside, WR Stanford

83) *Washington Redskins via Pittsburgh Steelers: Kelvin Harmon, WR NC State

84) Seattle Seahawks: LJ Collier, DL TCU

85) Baltimore Ravens: Ben Banogu, EDGE TCU

86) Houston Texans: Connor McGovern, OG/C Penn State

87) Chicago Bears: David Long, CB Michigan

88) Detroit Lions via Philadelphia Eagles: Dru Samia, OG Oklahoma

89) Indianapolis Colts: Renell Wren, DT Arizona State

90) Dallas Cowboys: Zach Allen, DL Boston College

91) Los Angeles Chargers: Kingsley Keke, DL Texas A&M

92) Kansas City Chiefs: Christian Miller, EDGE Alabama

93) New York Jets via New Orleans Saints: Sean Bunting, CB Central Michigan

94) Los Angeles Rams: Bobby Evans, OT/OG Oklahoma

95) New York Giants from Cleveland Browns via New England Patriots: David Edwards, OT Wisconsin

96) Washington Redskins: Nate Davis, OL Charlotte

97) New England Patriots: Tyree Jackson, QB Buffalo

98) Jacksonville Jaguars via Los Angeles Rams: David Montgomery, RB Iowa State

99) Los Angeles Rams: Sheldrick Redwine, FS/SS Miami

100) Carolina Panthers: Damien Harris, RB Alabama

101) New England Patriots: Riley Ridley, WR Georgia

102) Baltimore Ravens: Germaine Pratt, ILB NC State

2019 Fans Only Mock Draft

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Welcome to the second annual (except we missed last year, but who’s counting?) Fans Only Mock Draft! This mock draft is strictly what you the fans want to see your favorite teams do on draft day. I sent out a few social media statuses asking for fans of teams to sign up for this mock and make a selection (or fans of the draft in general, it did not have to be the team you rooted for), and I’m so happy we got enough people to put this together for this year. This is one of my favorite things to do during the draft season. I love seeing all of your opinions on what you think your team should look for, or what you think of certain prospects.

A few disclaimers before we get underway. Almost everyone made one selection, except for me who chose to own two teams that were unfilled, and Mike Reynolds, who some of you may remember used to be a part of DraftStock.net and will contribute again starting next year. Mike made a few selections based on his knowledge of the draft prospects and his own rankings of players and scheme fits, just like I did.

However, this was not the way everyone chose to approach it. Some of the selections are strictly what the individual fan (or journalist, as you will see later on) thought the team would do based on the way the board fell. On top of making the selection, I also offered each person the opportunity to provide analysis should they be so inclined. I also offered my own analysis on each selection, I hope I didn’t critique too harshly.

Next order of business, there were no trades during this mock draft, and it’s only one round. I would love to open it up to two rounds and trades in the future, but more participation will be required. So if you’re reading this and enjoy the premise, please sign up next year. The more the merrier.

Lastly, I want to thank all those that participated. I think this is a really cool idea and hopefully I am able to get more participation next year so that we can extend this particular mock and make it more in depth.

ROUND ONE

1) Arizona Cardinals: Nick Bosa, EDGE Ohio State (Selected by Frank Barbuti)

Fan’s Analysis: Kyler Murray is just not worthy of a top selection. Josh Rosen was selected last year, no reason to pivot off of one year for someone who isn’t as good. Take Bosa and don’t overthink it.

Katz’s Kritique: No arguments here. Bosa is the best player in this draft, EDGE is a need long term, and I had Rosen graded significantly higher last year than I have Murray this year. I wouldn’t pivot the franchise’s direction just because Head Coach Kliff Kingsbury likes Murray. If Kingsbury is truly an offensive guru, he should be able to turn Rosen into a good starter.

2) San Francisco 49ers: Quinnen Williams, DT Alabama (Selected by Nick DePinho)

Fan’s Analysis: Williams is the clear cut best player available. He also fills a need.

Katz’s Kritique: If Bosa is selected first, Quinnen Williams will be the obvious pick here. He would line up next to DeForest Buckner, creating one of the best young tandems along the defensive front in the NFL. If Murray goes first and not Bosa, it will be very interesting to see if Williams is the pick here or if the Niners go Bosa and move Arik Armstead inside.

3) New York Jets: Josh Allen, EDGE Kentucky (Selected by Anthony Zanfini)

Fan’s Analysis: Obviously the Jets would love to trade here, but with no trades in this mock draft the Jets will look for a pass rusher. For years the Jets have needed a QB and an Edge Rusher. Last year they finally got their quarterback in Sam Darnold and this year they will find their pass rusher in Allen.

Katz’s Kritique: In a mock draft with trades, the Jets would get a plethora of offers with Murray still on the board. In this one, Allen feels like the obvious selection to many fans, but it’s not where I would go. I like Allen as a player, he’s a good pass rusher and a fluid athlete. Having said that, his draft stock is just way too high for me (I have a second round grade on him). Assuming Bosa and Williams were both gone and the Jets could not trade, Brian Burns would be the EDGE guy I would prefer.

4) Oakland Raiders: Ed Oliver, DT Houston (Selected by Justin Katz)

Fan’s Analysis: Oliver is my number two player this year and he fits a need. This is a no-brainer.

Katz’s Kritique: I think Oliver is a fine pick here. He answers a need for the Raiders along the defensive line, and his quickness allows him to be an impactful pass rusher from the interior. However, do not be shocked if Oakland looks to draft a quarterback here instead of looking for the BPA at a position of need. 

5) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Kyler Murray, QB Oklahoma (Selected by Maxx McNall)

Fan’s Analysis: Time for the first curveball of the 2019 Fans Only Mock Draft. One quality player like Devin White or Jonah Williams will not be enough to make this team a playoff contender, so they might as well draft a potential QB of the future with a good head on his shoulders. Jameis Winston has not done anything over his career thus far to warrant a second contract as a starter, and I love the way Murray plays. I would trade Winston now and select Murray if he fell to this spot.

Katz’s Kritique: Well, this is certainly a curveball. This is essentially what the Raiders are considering doing with Derek Carr, however this one is probably more justified. Winston is on his fifth year option, which means one of two things will happen. Either he will light it up with Bruce Arians at the helm and get a massive contract based on one year, or flop, leaving the Bucs without a starter heading into 2020. I would not make this move, but if you are a fan of Murray, it’s not a bad move to consider.

6) New York Giants: Dwayne Haskins, QB Ohio State (Selected by Adam Figueiredo)

Fan’s Analysis: The Giants need a quarterback of the future, and they select one here. Although having minimal starts in college is a concern for Haskins, he played well against the top-ranked teams. He will also get to sit for a year, which should help him understand defenses better. The Giants could always wait until next year for their QB of the future, but selecting one here gives the Giants a clear direction. Haskins has prototypical size, good arm talent and conducts himself the the right way… for whatever that’s worth.

Katz’s Kritique: Adam and I are good friends and I know he agrees with me when I give this criticism. THIS IS THE PROBLEM WITH SELECTING SAQUON BARKLEY LAST YEAR! Barkley was a win now selection, and the Giants didn’t do that. They are now stuck in a rebuild/reload with zero direction like Adam alluded to. Even if the Giants are able to turn this around in two years, you’ve wasted close to half of Barkley’s prime being a mediocre team. If you select Sam Darnold last year, maybe the Giants could’ve signed a guy like Tevin Coleman or Mark Ingram, and they would be in a position to compete this year with Darnold at the helm. Instead, the Giants are going to pursue a QB in a weak QB class. That should go over well…

7) Jacksonville Jaguars: Jawaan Taylor, OT Florida (Selected by Jon Alba)

Katz’s Kritique: Jon covers the Jaguars down in Florida so there’s no fan analysis here since this is a prediction on what the Jaguars might do. Taylor would solidify a major need at right tackle, and he would bring some attitude to the Jaguars OL.

8) Detroit Lions: Rashan Gary, EDGE Michigan (Selected by Me)

Katz’s Kritique: I threw an idea here that could be an interesting change of pace from things you may be seeing predicted right now. Detroit needs an EDGE rusher opposite Trey Flowers, and I think Head Coach Matt Patricia will want flexibility along his defensive front in order to run multiple sets. Gary could easily be the pick the Lions make at eight because he can play a three or five tech, and his athleticism allows him to be a chess piece along the defensive front.

9) Buffalo Bills: Jonah Williams, OL Alabama (Selected by Danny Feighery)

Fan’s Analysis: N/A

Katz’s Kritique: I love this pick. I don’t think it’s going to happen because the Bills made a lot of free agent signings along the offensive line, but I don’t think any of them were particularly noteworthy besides Mitch Morse. On top of that, Dion Dawkins is not a starting left tackle. Jonah Williams, on the other hand, is.

10) Denver Broncos: Devin White, ILB LSU (Selected by Chris Emery)

Fan’s Analysis: Can’t go wrong here with either Devin, be that Devin White or Devin Bush. I’m a huge fan of Devin Bush, but White being available at 10 is too much value to pass on.

Katz’s Kritique: It makes me happy to see this pick not being a quarterback, even though a quarterback is probably what John Elway will select on draft day. The analysis here is spot on as well, Bush is a three down linebacker just like White, he’s just not as good.

11) Cincinnati Bengals: Andre Dillard, OT Washington State (Selected by Mike Reynolds)

Mike’s Analysis: Do Not Start Bobby Hart. That’s the reasoning behind this pick.

Katz’s Kritique: Cincinnati’s offensive line needs a major overhaul, and the signing of Bobby Hart only made the unit worse in terms of their projection for next season. Offensive line remains a major need heading into the draft.

12) Green Bay Packers: Noah Fant, TE Iowa (Selected by Steve Reynolds)

Fan’s Analysis: N/A

Katz’s Kritique: Jimmy Graham was not the player the Packers thought he would be, but Fant most definitely is. He is a complete player for the position, excelling as a blocker and showing quickness at the top of the stem. He separates in route combinations with athleticism as well as his size, which is a matchup nightmare when you’ve got a guy like Aaron Rodgers at the helm.

13) Miami Dolphins: DK Metcalf, WR Ole Miss (Selected by Tim Fletcher)

Fan’s Analysis: The Dolphins haven’t had anyone to blow the top off a defense and make the tough catches on the deep ball for years. Having a number one target in place for the Quarterback the Dolphins will most assuredly draft next year can ease the transition for that QB.

Katz’s Kritique: Superman lands in Miami in this mock draft. Metcalf is a great pick for anyone, especially a team that is in desperate need of a number one receiver.

14) Atlanta Falcons: Montez Sweat, EDGE Mississippi State (Selected by JP Lalumia)

Fan’s Analysis: Sweat answers the real need along the Falcons defensive front. They can afford one of Vic Beasley or Grady Jarrett, but not both. The answer should be letting Beasley walk and giving Jarrett a long term deal next offseason.

Katz’s Kritique: I’m not saying I would rule this scenario out, but I would say it’s unlikely the Falcons look for EDGE at 14 here. If Ed Oliver is off the board, I would expect a guy like Christian Wilkins to be the pick if they go along the defensive front. Having said that, Jarrett looks much more deserving of a long term contract right now than Beasley.

15) Washington Redskins: N’Keal Harry, WR Arizona State (Selected by Mike Reynolds)

Mike’s Analysis: The Redskins need a true number one receiver for whoever their QB winds up being in 2019. Harry is that guy.

Katz’s Kritique: Harry is one of a multitude of elite level pass catchers that will be selected during the first 100 picks of this draft. Washington should try to revamp their lackluster receiving core this year instead of selecting a quarterback to “make their receiving core better.”

16) Carolina Panthers: Brian Burns, EDGE Florida State (Selected by Mike Reynolds)

Fan’s Analysis: Burns is an elite level pass rusher. His ability to run the arch is second to very few in this draft.

Katz’s Kritique: Burns is a top five player on my board, so grabbing him at 16 is a home run in my book. It’s nice to see Mike finally make a pick for his favorite team during this mock.

17) New York Giants via Cleveland Browns: Cody Ford, OT/OG Oklahoma (Selected by Adam Figueiredo)

Fan’s Analysis: Although I’m tempted to get an EDGE rusher like Clelin Ferrell, I’ll take Cody Ford. Anyone who has watched the Giants extensively the past few years knows how frustrating it has been to have human turnstiles on the offensive line. Although Spencer Pulley and Jon Halapio are huge question marks at center (even though Halapio was decent up until he broke his leg), I think adding Ford to a line with Nate Solder, Will Hernandez, and Kevin Zeitler will make a solid unit.

Katz’s Kritique: My only criticism here is where Ford would play. I have Ford graded much higher as a guard than a tackle, and his athletic testing at the Combine confirmed my guard projection of him in the NFL. It would be interesting to see how he would fare at Right Tackle.

18) Minnesota Vikings: Chris Lindstrom, OG Boston College (Selected by Alex Ankier)

Fan’s Analysis: Right now, the Vikings have the most putrid interior line in the NFL. Any first round pick should go to address that need. With Cody Ford off the board, the Vikings should reach for Lindstrom.

Katz’s Kritique: If you have read my mock drafts, you know how high I am on Lindstrom. I do not think this is a reach at all, but I think the masses would agree with Alex. Despite this, I think the masses would also agree that offensive line is priority number one for the Vikings at 18.

19) Tennessee Titans: Clelin Ferrell, EDGE Clemson (Selected by Anonymous)

Katz’s Kritique: Boy is this a horrible fit. Ferrell showed very little ability to dip and bend on tape, and his combine performance in the drills that would translate to that skill was subpar. Now you’re going to ask him to stand up and rush in a 3-4? Hard pass.

20) Pittsburgh Steelers: Byron Murphy, CB Washington (Selected by Nick Prevete)

Fan’s Analysis: The Steelers need cornerbacks desperately and Murphy is the best guy in this class.

Katz’s Kritique: That analysis was basically all that needed to be said, but let’s dive even further into why this is a phenomenal selection. Murphy excels in off coverage, something the Steelers do a lot of. He can also mirror receivers from either the boundary or nickel position (the Steelers like their corners to be versatile). This is the ideal pick for Pittsburgh in round one, in my opinion.

21) Seattle Seahawks: Christian Wilkins, DT Clemson (Selected by Mama Katz)

Katz’s Kritique: Mama Katz couldn’t own the Jets, but she still wanted to make a pick in this draft. She did an excellent job, as you would have expected. Wilkins is quick off the ball, he plays with attitude and he competes on every down. He’s terrific on the backside of plays too. Wilkins is smart and athletic, a perfect fit for Seattle’s defense.

22) Baltimore Ravens: Marquise “Hollywood” Brown, WR Oklahoma (Selected by Ray Perlman)

Fan’s Analysis: Lamar Jackson needs weapons during this draft, particularly ones that can stretch the field. No one is a better deep ball receiver in this draft than Hollywood Brown.

Katz’s Kritique: Brown is also explosive with the ball in his hands, I think that’s a key to this pick that cannot be overstated. Jackson is still going to play like a collegiate quarterback in the sense of the offense being predicated on quick hitters and then the occasional deep shot. The pseudo west coast offense will be perfect for Brown.

23) Houston Texans: Garrett Bradbury, C NC State (Selected by Anonymous)

Katz’s Kritique: Can you really criticize the Texans taking an offensive lineman?

24) Oakland Raiders via Chicago Bears: Greedy Williams, CB LSU (Selected by Justin Katz)

Fan’s Analysis: The Raiders need a number two corner opposite Gareon Conley. Williams has the length, ball skills and straight line speed to be a quality player in the NFL.

Katz’s Kritique: I like this fit a lot. Jon Gruden likes defensive backs that excel in man coverage, and that is Greedy Williams in a nutshell. Allow him mirror and trail receivers, and watch him go to work.

25) Philadelphia Eagles: Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, FS Florida (Selected by Anonymous)

Katz’s Kritique: I’m not the biggest fan of CGJ, but Eagles fans across the NFL Draft forums like Reddit, Discord, and those I see on Twitter seem to love this fit. They all like CGJ’s ability to locate the ball from the single high spot and go chase it.

26) Indianapolis Colts: AJ Brown, WR Ole Miss (Selected by Mike Reynolds)

Mike’s Analysis: It’s weird to say that the Colts need receivers after all the years they spent taking receivers highly, but here we are. Brown should compliment T.Y Hilton very nicely.

Katz’s Kritique: Bump.

27) Oakland Raiders via Dallas Cowboys: TJ Hockenson, TE Iowa (Selected by Justin Katz)

Fan’s Analysis: I get a top ten player on everyone’s board at 27? At a position of need? This seems easy.

Katz’s Kritique: Easy selection indeed. Hockenson’s game is tailor-made for a Jon Gruden offense.

28) Los Angeles Chargers: Dexter Lawrence, DT/NT Clemson (Selected by Me)

Katz’s Kritique: This was the second team I chose to own, strictly because I love the scheme fit. Lawrence would be a huge boost to the Chargers run defense, he can collapse the pocket as a pass rusher, and he’s a space eater, which allows the athletes of the Chargers defense to step up and make plays.

29) Kansas City Chiefs: DeAndre Baker, CB Georgia (Selected by Mark Spillane)

Katz’s Kritique: Like Jon with Jacksonville, Mark covers the Chiefs, making this more of an educated guess than a “what the fans would want.” Just like Jon’s pick, the two happen to coincide. Baker fills the biggest need for the Chiefs during this draft; secondary.

30) Green Bay Packers via New Orleans Saints: Devin Bush, ILB Michigan (Selected by Steve Reynolds)

Katz’s Kritique: Bush most assuredly will not make it here on draft day, but this could definitely be a selection Green Bay makes at 12 instead. Bush is a three down linebacker, he’s a leader, and he’s very quality cover linebacker. The fit makes a ton of sense, but if Green Bay wants him, they will have to take him at 12.

31) Los Angeles Rams: Chase Winovich, EDGE Michigan (Selected by Anonymous)

Katz’s Kritique: The Rams are most likely going to trade down on draft day, but that’s not a play you can make in this particular mock draft. This is a little high for Winovich for me personally, but I think he has a real chance to go round one in a few weeks.

32) New England Patriots: Hakeem Butler, WR Iowa State (Selected by Daniel Katz)

Fan’s Analysis: On Draft day I want to see the Patriots trade up for Noah Fant or TJ Hockenson. In this mock, Butler is a solid consolation prize. Butler is a freak of nature, with the ability to make some unbelievable catches. If his drops can be corrected, he should be able to dominate with Tom Brady throwing him the ball.

Katz’s Kritique: As a Jets fan, this is something I would rather not see. Tom Brady throwing to a receiver that is 6’5, runs a sub 4.5 40, and has the quickness to separate at all three levels. Butler even lined up in the slot at Iowa State and was able to sink his hips into the route and create space from there as well. This is something the league would rather not see happen.