NFL Draft Reaction Day 1

Patriots:

You know we have to start with the Pats draft reaction.

Round 1 (Pick 4): Will Campbell, OT, LSU

ABSOLUTELY LOVE IT. He has consistently been predicted to go to the Pats for weeks and I also had him going to the Pats in my mock draft. Sometimes the best pick is the most simple one. The Pats need to protect Drake Maye’s blindside and they take the best offensive lineman and OT in the draft in Will Campbell.

His arm length isn’t ideal, but the guy was a stud and a three year starter while playing in the SEC. He was going against top tier rushers and delivered week after week, giving up 2 sacks in 989 career pass blocking opportunities. Film is more important than measurables and I think he’ll thrive with the Pats.

People say worst case scenario he has to kick inside to LG where he would be a Pro Bowl caliber player. That would still be a huge get and building block for the Pats moving forward. He also seems like a great person and his family seems like they’re great too.

Jaguars – Browns Trade

This was a shocker of a trade that no one saw coming. The Jags gave up the No. 5 pick, the 36th pick (2nd round), the 126th pick (4th round) in this draft along with a 1st round pick next year in exchange for the No. 2 pick, the No. 104 pick (4th round), and the No. 200 (6th round).

They did all this to move up and draft WR/CB Travis Hunter. At WR, they already have a bonafide number 1 WR in Brian Thomas and while they could use a 2nd WR or use Hunter at CB, the difference between having him or having DL Mason Graham is not worth giving up this much capital for.

For the Browns, this is absolutely fantastic. They can now continue to build their team or trade up for a QB next year given their stockpile of draft picks. They also have a chance to draft Sheduer Sanders with the 33rd pick when some people were speculating it might take the 2nd pick in the draft to get him. They already have a WR1 and CB1, so Hunter was not a necessity. Mason Graham will help give the Browns a great front four along with Myles Garrett.

Raiders vs Chargers RB Strategy

The Raiders and Chargers each selected running backs in the draft, but I have very different feelings about both picks.

I think spending the 6th pick on Ashton Jeanty was just terrible. I am not saying Jeanty is not a good player. However, to spend the 6th pick in the draft on a guy who mainly played against Group of 5 competition is questionable. He only played 4 games against Power 4 competition in his career and had mixed results. There was not a big enough sample size to see how he does vs better competition.

Furthermore, a running back’s success is so reliant on the offensive line. Look at Saquon Barkely. He was always a talented player on the Giants who was limited by a bad offensive line and continually dealt with injuries. When he played, he was always asked to carry the team. Then he gets dealt to the Eagles and has one of the greatest seasons ever by a running back. When he was just relying on his talent with the Giants, he had up and down results. When you combined his talent with the best offensive line in football, magic happened.

The Raiders offensive line is not good. They could have drafted a high ranking player to play RT for them and build up the offensive line. Then they could have taken a guy who might 80-85% of Jeanty in the 3rd/4th round, who would benefit from a much improved offensive line. Geno Smith would also benefit from an improved offensive line. Instead, Jeanty will get force fed the ball behind a bad offensive line, and I am hesitant how that will work out.

On the other hand, their divisional rival Chargers, handled the situation much better. They have a better offensive line, led by two high end tackles. If they want to improve their interior offensive line, they can do that much easier in later rounds than the Raiders can improve their RT situation in later rounds. Hampton also has a much better QB in Justin Herbert and will have a guy in Najee Harris to share the load with. Everything will not be thrown on his plate and he can stay fresh.

Teams that Reached

Cam Ward/Titans:

Cam Ward has a lot of talent, but I don’t think he can overcome how bad the Titans are. He may have been the highest ranked QB this draft, but he is not a generational talent that can find success on any team. The Titans have one of the worst offensive lines in football, they have one pretty good RB and WR and then a bunch of average to below average skill position players, an unproven HC/OC, a bad defense, and a poor overall organization. That just seems like too much to overcome.

Panthers

I have been talking about how I think Tetairoa McMillan is overrated. For the Panthers to draft him with the 8th pick when there were so many other needs and two TEs available who are much better is bonkers.

As I have mentioned, big bodied Pac 12/Big 12 WRs who aren’t very fast are instantly red flags for me. I feel they benefit from playing against weaker defenses in offensive conferences and mainly rely on their size to be successful in college. When you combine that with him saying he doesn’t like to watch film, that is enough for me to not draft him. And worst of all, Bryce Young is in a make or break year. He needed them to get a stud offensively, not a guy with so many question marks.

Cowboys/Dolphins/Seahawks/Lions

I understand the Cowboys wanted to build up their offensive line, but this was a major reach. They over drafted when they had many other needs they could have filled for the right price, while taking IOL in later rounds.

Kenneth Grant is another guy the Dolphins took a little too high. The Seahawks over drafted Grey Zabel. Finally, Tyleik Williams is a reach for Lions. I am not saying these players won’t turn out, simply that the value given up for them was too high.

Questionable Picks

I really like WR Emeka Egbuka as a player and think that he will be amazing with the Bucs. However, why are the Bucs taking a WR? Their offensive is amazing with Baker Mayfield at QB, a solid RB duo, two stud WRs, a 3rd WR who was drafted last year and showed potential, and a good TE. To add in another mouth to feed seems to be overkill that will cause problems. The Bucs also lost the opportunity to improve their defense, which was more problematic than their offense last year.

I feel similar about the Packers drafting WR Matthew Golden. I think he is great and will thrive on the Packers, but did they really need him? They have 4 other promising, young WRs and one TE who are on rookie contracts. This just feels like they are going to crowd the WR room and create animosity.

For the Steelers to have a chance to draft Shedeur Sanders at pick 21 and instead take a DT is the most Steelers move ever. They currently have no starting QB and had the chance to nab their franchise QB, but instead chose defense. They are too obsessed with defense and don’t value offense enough in an offensive league. I think Derrick Harmon will be a good player for the Steelers, but they needed a QB much more than a DT.

Good Picks

I think OT Kelvin Banks to the Saints was a great pick. They need to rebuild their team and stud from Texas is a great way to do it. Banks can protect Derek Carr right now and then ideally a future franchise QB.

TE Tyler Warren is an absolute weapon that will be a huge get for the Colts. He can line up all over the field and produce. Anthony Richardson needs to prove himself this year and Warren should help.

LB/EDGE Jalon Walker surprisingly fell to the Falcons and they capitalized by bringing him to Atlanta. He should immediately be able to help boost their defense and help the Falcons compete to win the NFC South.

The Eagles usually do well when drafting SEC defenders and LB Jihad Campbell shouldn’t be an exception. He fell in the draft and the Eagles end up benefitting.

OT Josh Simmons to the Chiefs should work too. Talent wise, he was much better than the 32nd pick, but is coming off an injury, so he fell. The Chiefs having a great team and organization should help him get settled in and fill a big need for the team.

Guys I Can’t Believe Weren’t Drafted:

QB Sheduer Sanders falling from the first round is the story of the draft so far. I honestly do not understand it. Yes, Sanders is not the most athletic guy, however, I very much think he can thrive on a team that has a good coach and some offensive talent around him. For teams like the Steelers at pick 21 or Giants at pick 25 to pass on him is shocking.

Sanders is an extremely accurate quarterback who had to deal with a rebuilding college team and a bad offensive line during his two years at Colorado. That is a lot of football adversity to overcome and similar to what some young QBs have to overcome in the NFL.

I think the most surprising thing with Sanders is that his stock is falling AFTER the CFB season is ending. All throughout the season, he seemed to be a lock top 5 pick. As the offseason has gone on, there seems to be more and more negative reports coming out about him and his stock slowly kept falling and falling.

Is there anything real and meaningful in these reports? Or is this just a psychological thing at this point. Similar to how traders will keep selling off a stock with no rhyme or reason other than other people are doing it too, are people passing on Sanders just because others are too? Whatever is going on, it is very odd.

Finally, I feel for CB Will Johnson. He was being mocked as a potential top 5 pick at the start of the CFB season. However, three different injuries from the season until now have caused him to fall out of the first round. I think he is a great value pick for anyone at this point who has the guts to take him.

15 Minute Blitz Episode 28

https://open.spotify.com/show/7FRSwrllknwemMVvghqlRQ

https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-15-minute-blitz-230527724/

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/15-minute-blitz/id1775746291

https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/23d6848d-e967-470e-b1f1-8996bd205feb/15-minute-blitz

Mock Draft

I want to emphasize that this mock draft is not what I think teams are actually going to do. You can find that information all over the internet done by people way smarter than me, with way more information and league sources than I have. This mock draft is what I think teams should do with their picks.

1 Tennessee Titans – Abdul Carter, Edge, Penn State

The Titans are absolutely awful, especially offensively. No QB in this draft is good enough to succeed with what they have going on right now. I think the best move is to build up the team and wait for a better QB in future years. Carter is the best player in this draft and reminds me of Micah Parsons and Von Miller in the way he rushes the QB. He can combine with Jeffrey Simmons to produce a great front four on an otherwise bad team

2 Cleveland Browns – Travis Hunter, WR/CB, Colorado

It seems like Hunter is seen as a primary WR who can help out at CB too. He could give the Browns a good 1-2 punch with him and Jerry Jeudy. Defensively he would be able to boost their secondary with limited snaps at CB.

3 New York Giants – Cam Ward, QB, Miami

I think Ward would fit in nice here. He has some swagger that would fit well in NYC. He also would be going to an offensive HC, has a star LT, and a star WR to throw the ball to

4 New England Patriots – Will Campbell, OT, LSU

I think the Pats bite the bullet on Campbell. His arm length isn’t great, but the guy was a three year starter and stud while playing in the SEC. He was going against top tier edge rushers and delivered week after week. Film is more important than measurables and I think the Pats go with a guy who can protect QB Drake Maye.

5 Jacksonville Jaguars – Mason Graham, DL, Michigan

Graham is the best player available here and the Jags defense is in desperate need of help.

6 Las Vegas Raiders – Armand Membou, OT, Missouri

Membou can plug in at RT and give the Raiders one of the best tackle combinations in the league. This should help Geno Smith and the Raiders compete for a playoff spot.

7 New York Jets – Tyler Warren, TE, Penn State

Justin Fields will need more weapons around him and Warren absolutely fills that need. He can line up all over the field and inject some life into their offense.

8 Carolina Panthers – Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan

In a prove it year for the Bryce Young, the Panthers need some young playmakers on offense. Loveland can immediately make an impact.

9 New Orleans Saints – Jalon Walker, Edge, Georgia

Walker is the best remaining player here and can line up at LB or Edge rusher depending on where the Saints need him. On an older team, he can provide some infusion of youth.

10 Chicago Bears – Mykel Williams, Edge, Georgia

The Bears did a fantastic job improving their offense bringing in Ben Johnson to be their HC/play caller and beefing up their offensive line. Now they improve their defense with a great edge rusher. The Bears should compete to make the playoffs.

11 San Francisco 49ers – Will Johnson, CB, Michigan

Johnson is probably a top 5 talent in the draft. He had some minor injuries that have dropped his stock, so the Niners get him for a discount. For an older team that has lost a lot of talent, they are happy to take the best player available here.

12 Dallas Cowboys – Kelvin Banks, OT, Texas

The Cowboys are at their best when they have a great offensive line. They need to rebuild it and Banks is a great option who Dallas fans are likely familiar with.

15 Minute Blitz Episode 27

https://open.spotify.com/show/7FRSwrllknwemMVvghqlRQ

https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-15-minute-blitz-230527724/

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/15-minute-blitz/id1775746291

https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/23d6848d-e967-470e-b1f1-8996bd205feb/15-minute-blitz

Insane Value of TEs in the NFL

Trey McBride signed a 4 year deal for $76 million dollars to become the highest paid TE ever and I was shocked. Not shocked that McBride got the contract he got, but shocked at how little tight ends are paid. To put in perspective, the $19 million average per year would rank 21st among WRs. As we talk about a lot on this blog though, average value and total value of a contract mean very little in the grand scheme of things. It’s all about total guaranteed money. In that sense, McBride got a record $43 million guaranteed, which would be 17th among WRs.

For both of those values, McBride is behind guys like Calvin Ridley. To put this in perspective, last season Ridley had 64 catches for 1,017 yards and 4 TDs in 17 games and McBride had 111 catches for 1,146 yards and 2 TDs in 16 games.

Why do I keep comparing TEs and WRs? Because guys who pretty good WRs make as much as star TEs and star WR blow TE salaries out of the water. And they shouldn’t…

While top level WRs tend to put up decently better numbers receiving than top level TEs, TEs provide much more than just receiving, while WRs do not. Truly great TEs provide help in the run blocking game as well as create more matchup nightmares than WRs. A guy like Rob Gronkowski is too fast for a LB to cover, but too big for a DB. How do you stop him? You need to direct multiple guys each play to try to slow him down. This may mean having a DE chip him and have a LB and DB double cover him. This frees up other guys to get open and leads to less guys available to pressure the QB. And if they are foolish enough to leave him 1 on 1, you feed your star TE and let him dominate the game. Star WRs can warrant double coverage or matchup mismatches, but it doesn’t tend to be as extensive or involve as many players as is the case with a star TE.

So if you are telling me I can pay a guy who will do what a star TE does $43 million guaranteed and $19 million per year over 4 years or a star WR $112 million guaranteed and $40.25 million per year over 4 years, I am taking the star TE every time. That frees up so much other money for me to build my team up to better contend for a Super Bowl.

Don’t just take my word for it. The Pats/Bucs with Gronk as their star TE went to 6 Super Bowls and won 4. The Chiefs with Kelce as their star TE have gone to 5 and won 3.

The value of return you get for TEs make having a star TE one of the best investments in all of sports.

Pats Trade Joe Milton

The Pats have traded backup QB Joe Milton and a 7th rounder to the Cowboys for a 5th rounder.

This is not totally unexpected as there have been a lot of rumors about Milton being traded. The Pats get a little return on investment as they drafted Milton with a 7th round pick and now have used him and a future 7th to get a future 5th.

I saw someone make the point that if Milton didn’t play so well in the Bills game we wouldn’t have been able to trade him for a 5th. But also, if he didn’t play so well vs the Bills, we also would still have the 1st overall pick. So everything comes down to perspective.

Kick-off Rule Change

The NFL will now spot touchbacks at the 35-yard line rather than the 30. The 30 was a good starting point, but only produced a return rate of 32.8%. With the rule change, the league projects the return rate will now be 60% to 70%. In addition to more kickoff returns, teams that do get a touchback get better field position to help score more points. Both outcomes are good for the league and fans watching the games. We have predicted this will happen for some time so it’s good to see it put in place.

PATS GET DIGGS

LFG!!!

After weeks spent doing nothing substantial to address their need for more WRs, the Pats finally do something by signing Stefon Diggs. Despite being 31 and coming off an ACL injury, Diggs was producing much better than any Patriots wide reciever. In 8 games he had 47 catches, 496 yards recieving and 3 TDs. Over the full season only one Pats WR had more catches, only two had more yards, and none had more TDs.

Here’s the most intriguing stat for Diggs. CJ Stroud (in his 2nd year last year, just like Maye will be this year) had a passer rating of 104 and completion percentage of 73% when targeting Diggs. That’s what we’ll hope to see with Maye.

It’s also great to see that Maye pushed hard for Diggs and the team listened to what he had to say. That keeps him and the team hapy.

The deal may look too big financially at 3 years, $69 million. However, it’s only $26 million guaranteed, which is something I’m happy to pay for a guy who will instantly come in and be our WR1.

There are rumors about Diggs being a little bit of a diva. However, on the Pats he will be the go-to target and should get plenty of targets to keep him happy. And if he doesn’t end up liking it here, the Pats can likely get out of the deal after a year.

I think Diggs is hungry and has something to prove. I see this working out well.

15 Minute Blitz Episode 25

https://open.spotify.com/show/7FRSwrllknwemMVvghqlRQ

https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-15-minute-blitz-230527724/

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/15-minute-blitz/id1775746291

https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/23d6848d-e967-470e-b1f1-8996bd205feb/15-minute-blitz

Where Great Offensive Players Come From

It is always interesting to see where great players went to college. We always here how the Big 10 and SEC are the best conferences, but do they produce the best players? I looked at the top offensive QBs and skill players to see here they come from.

The tiers of colleges I am using:

Tier 1: SEC/Big 10/Notre Dame

Tier 2: ACC/Big 12

Tier 3: FBS Non-Power 4

Tier 4: FCS or below

QBS: My Top 12 QBs (refer to my QB tiers blog)

SEC/Big 10/Notre Dame: 7

ACC/Big 12: 3

FBS Non-Power 4: 1

FCS or below: 1

As you can see, the top QBs are spread out in terms of where they are coming from school wise. Yes the top tier produces more than others, but Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, and Lamar Jackson (the last 3 MVPs) all aren’t from that tier. Overall, about half of the top 12 QBs in the league come from the top tier of schools

RBs: Players who ran for 1,000 yards or 10 TDs (also Christian McCaffrey): 18 players

SEC/Big 10/Notre Dame: 12

ACC/Big 12: 4

FBS Non-Power 4: 2

FCS or below: 0

12 of 18 players came from the top tier here.

WRs and TEs: Players who had for 1,000 yards receiving, 100 receptions, or 10 TDs (also DK Metcalf, Puka Nacua, George Pickens, Devonta Smith, Jaylen Waddle, Chris Godwin, Chris Olave, and Brandon Aiyuk)

SEC/Big 10/Notre Dame: 26

ACC/Big 12: 7

FBS Non-Power 4: 2

FCS or below: 1

Here we have 35 of the best WRs and TEs and 26 are from the top tier.

All told, about 75% of the top receivers and 67% of the RBs come from the top tier of schools. Meaning teams should want to look there when drafting skill players.