BillsFanForever19 Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago (edited) 20 hours ago, GunnerBill said: - - - - - WARNING: LONG POST - - - - - I get it, for some people this is still too soon and they haven't digested the the trauma of Sunday sufficiently to be thinking ahead to April. However, it is the week after the Conference Championship games which means it is time for version 1 of my 2025 Mock Draft. For any new readers I do three mocks every year: Version 1 - a two rounder, no trades, released late January; Version 2 - a one rounder allowing myself trades after free agency; Version 3 - a one rounder, no trades, in the 48 hours before the draft and that is the one I then score myself against for accuracy (the last three years I have rightly called 27, 27 and then 28 of those picked in the first round correctly though not to the exact right teams I hasten to add). There is at least the additional excitement of three Bills picks to get stuck into this year rather than two, so let's get started!! - - - Round 1 - - - 1 – Tennessee Titans – Shedeur Sanders – Quarterback, Colorado It’s clear the Titans are done with the Will Levis experiment already and therefore this pick is undoubtedly going to be a Quarterback. I think most people feel Cam Ward is the consensus QB1 in this class but Brian Callahan’s offense feels like more of a fit for Sanders who is a more traditional pocket passer. 2 – Cleveland Browns – Cam Ward – Quarterback, Miami If Deshaun Watson was definitely going to be healthy then I could see Cleveland passing here and going another direction or trading out. They still might trade back for a sizeable bounty but if Watson is not playing while costing you $72m on the cap in 2025 your only shot at keeping a competitive roster and getting serviceable QB play is with a cost-controlled rookie signal caller. 3 – New York Giants – Travis Hunter – Cornerback / Wide Receiver, Colorado The Giants are so talent deficient they should not overthink this. Yes, they need a Quarterback, but if the top two are gone then they should just take Hunter who is the best player among a relatively weak crop of first round talents. I’m not sold that it is sustainable to be a long-term two-way player in the NFL but select him, then worry about where or how you use him later. 4 – New England Patriots – Tetairoa McMillan – Wide Receiver, Arizona The Patriots look like they might have their Quarterback of the future in Drake Maye and so everything they do this offseason should be about maximising his chance to develop further. They already provided him a proper Head Coach, this pick has to be offensive line or offensive playmaker. I think McMillan is better than the blockers available and so he should be the selection. 5 – Jacksonville Jaguars – Mason Graham – Defensive Tackle, Michigan There are needs literally all over this roster and Trent Baalke just paid for that with his job. I’ve leaned towards Graham not just because they need a dominant player in the middle of that defensive line but because I think they need some of the toughness and attitude he will bring to a defense that played soft way too often in 2024. 6 – Las Vegas Raiders – Abdul Carter – Edge Rusher, Penn State The Raiders have bigger needs in the secondary but Carter is the best player on the board at this spot and with speculation about Maxx Crosby’s long term future with the team and him coming off an ankle surgery I think pass rusher is a sneaky need. It means giving up on 2023 first rounder Tyree Wilson, but they are onto their second new General Manager since that pick was made. 7 – New York Jets – Will Johnson – Cornerback, Michigan Aaron Glenn, a former Jets defensive back, inherits a roster where every starting defensive back except for Sauce Gardner is an impending free agent. We know from his time in Detroit that Glenn loves to leave his corners 1v1 on the outside and so you better have two guys capable of holding up in those looks. Johnson wasn’t quite as good in 2024 as 2023 but is still a high-level prospect. 8 – Carolina Panthers – Jalon Walker – Edge Rusher, Georgia Given that Ikem Ekwonu showed signs of improvement at left tackle in 2024 the Panthers biggest need is probably edge rush help to replace Brian Burns who they traded away last spring. Walker played more off the ball linebacker in college but projects best as a stand up 3-4 outside linebacker at the pro level where his athleticism should make him a pass rush weapon. 9 – New Orleans Saints – Mykel Williams – Edge Rusher, Georgia Cam Jordan may one day get consideration for the Hall of Fame, but he is 35 years old and has only six sacks over the last two seasons combined. Chase Young, who played reasonably well in a rotational role in 2024 is a free agent. I don’t have a first-round grade on Williams but he has the classic Mickey Loomis edge rusher profile and I think he’d be in play here. 10 – Chicago Bears – Will Campbell – Offensive Tackle, LSU If the Chicago Bears want to be taken seriously as a franchise they need to stop trotting Braxton Jones onto the field and telling the world they are fine at left tackle. Ben Johnson arrives as Head Coach having benefitted significantly from the best tackle combination in the league during his spell as Detroit’s offensive coordinator. His rebuild starts here. 11 – San Francisco 49ers – Kelvin Banks Jr – Offensive Tackle – Texas Here comes the run on tackles. Trent Williams has been elite for most of his career in San Francisco after arriving from Washington, but he is now 36, missed 7 games in 2024 and didn’t look totally healthy even when suiting up. Kelvin Banks has the elite athleticism that Kyle Shanahan loves and he could slot in and play at guard as a rookie before taking over from Williams if needs be. 12 – Dallas Cowboys – Ashton Jeanty – Running Back, Boise State This one is too easy. Jerry Jones showed when taking Zeke Elliott in the top five back in 2016 that he is not scared of drafting a running back early and the Cowboys running back room was comfortably the worst in the NFL in 2024. Add to that they have just hired Brian Schottenheimer as their Head Coach, who loves to run the football, and all the dots are adding up. 13 – Miami Dolphins – Malaki Starks – Safety, Georgia The only safety currently signed for the Dolphins in 2025 is Patrick McMorris who they drafted out of Cal in the 6th round of last year’s draft. It looks very likely that they will lose Jevon Holland in free agency and Jordan Poyer should retire. That leaves them in desperate need at the spot and Starks is one of the best players in this draft. He can play deep, in the box or at nickel and have impact. 14 – Indianapolis Colts – Tyler Warren – Tight End, Penn State Who knows where the Colts are with the Anthony Richardson experiment? But given the paucity of alternative options I think it is likely they give it one more shot in 2025. If they are going to do that then more help is needed around him and Tyler Warren is just a tremendous football player. He can play in line, in the slot, wide out, running back, wildcat Quarterback... wherever you need him to. 15 – Atlanta Falcons – James Pearce – Edge Rusher, Tennessee I feel like I mock an edge rusher to the Falcons in round one every single year and instead they select an offensive player. It hasn’t worked and their 7-year playoff drought is tied for the second longest active streak. They still need pass rush and Pearce is a scheme fit. Going into the year he looked like being a top 10 pick, but if he does slide a bit outside that range Atlanta should snap him up. 16 – Arizona Cardinals – Kenneth Grant – Defensive Tackle, Michigan The Cardinals could still use some help on the offensive line but you would think Jonathan Gannon, a defensive coach, has to fix the defense going into year three of his tenure. They could go edge rusher or corner but their current nose tackle, a critical piece in the 3-4 scheme, is a former 6th rounder they picked up off the street after Houston cut him. Grant would be a huge upgrade. 17 – Cincinnati Bengals – Luther Burden III – Wide Receiver, Missouri Tee Higgins tallied 911 yards and 10 touchdowns in only 12 games in 2024. He is going to get paid – Brandon Aiyuk’s $30m AAV is the likely comparator – and I just don’t see the Bengals going there. That will annoy Joe Burrow no end, and so I suspect they will try and placate him by drafting a receiver. Burden is probably more a replacement for Tyler Boyd than Higgins, but that is also a need. 18 – Seattle Seahawks – Armand Membou – Offensive Tackle, Missouri Other than Charles Cross, who is a stud at left tackle, the rest of the Seahwaks offensive line was a mess in 2024, not helped by Connor Williams their center retiring halfway through the season. Membou might not be getting the buzz he deserves at this stage but it will come. I think his best spot might be guard but he can play right tackle too if Abraham Lucas continues to struggle with injuries. 19 – Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Jihaad Campbell – Linebacker, Alabama The Buccs offense was excellent in 2025, ranking top five in yards and points, but their defense was mediocre and Todd Bowles will be under pressure to get more out of his side of the ball. They particularly struggled at the second level and while bringing Lavonte David back, aged 35, was a serviceable sticking plaster, Campbell would give them a long-term solution at linebacker. 20 – Denver Broncos – Colston Loveland – Tight End, Michigan The Broncos took a big step forward in 2024 with rookie Quarterback Bo Nix having an impressive debut season but they still need to add more reliable weapons around him. Courtland Sutton is a legitimate #1 outside the numbers but Sean Payton’s best offenses have always liked to utilise the middle of the field with a big slot or a tight end down the seam. Loveland can play that role. 21 – Pittsburgh Steelers – Emeka Egbuka – Wide Receiver, Ohio State While the Quarterback situation in Pittsburgh remains in flux, whoever is playing the position needs more receiving talent. George Pickens is a deep shot, contested catch, specialist but they need a compliment for his skill set. Egbuka is more of a natural separator who has more variety in his route running and can play from the slot or outside. 22 – Los Angeles Chargers – Jahdae Barron – Cornerback, Texas The Chargers defense was excellent in 2024 but both Asante Samuel (coming off an injury) and Kristian Fulton (after an impressive performance on a 1 year deal) are free agents at corner and there is a need for investment at that spot. Barron moved to outside corner in 2024 and was elite for the Longhorns, giving up zero touchdowns while snagging 5 interceptions. 23 – Green Bay Packers – Shermar Stewart – Edge Rusher, Texas A&M The Packers broke tendency last year and drafted an offensive player in round one. However, this class is stronger on defense at the top and so I’d expect them to return to that side of the ball. Stewart is a bigger end whose athletic profile is more impressive than his college production, which reminds me of Rashan Gary who the current regime in Green Bay drafted back in 2019. 24 – Minnesota Vikings – Shanon Revel – Cornerback, East Carolina The early noise out of Minnesota is that the Vikings are locked in on corner early in this draft. Byron Murphy had a career year in 2024, and Stefon Gilmore was fine as a vet sticking plaster, but both are impending free agents and there is not much behind them in the pipeline. Revel suffered an ACL injury early in the college season otherwise he’d likely be a top 15 pick. 25 – Houston Texans – Tyler Booker – Offensive Guard, Alabama Houston’s offensive line play fell off a cliff in 2024 and CJ Stroud’s performance suffered as a result. They particularly struggled on the interior and former first round pick Kenyon Green might be running out of road at this stage after three underwhelming years with the Texans. Booker could solidify that spot and help keep their Quarterback cleaner in 2025. 26 – Los Angeles Rams – Josh Simmons – Offensive Tackle, Ohio State Alaric Jackson had a career year at left tackle for the Rams after moving out from his guard spot, but he is a free agent this spring and his future is open to debate. Add to that Rob Havenstein, their right tackle, will be 33 by the start of next season and the opportunity to draft Simmons, who was trending towards top 10 pick status before tearing his ACL, might be too good to pass up. 27 – Baltimore Ravens – Josh Conerly Jnr – Offensive Tackle, Oregon Ronnie Stanley finally stayed healthy this season, in a contract year no less! However, given that he is due to hit free agency and isn’t quite the force of old there is a chance the Ravens let him walk. If they do they need to draft a replacement and Conerly isn’t the biggest tackle in the world but has good feet and allowed just two sacks in over 1,000 pass block reps the past two years for the Ducks. 28 – Detroit Lions – Nick Scourton – Edge Rusher, Texas A&M Aiden Hutchinson’s injury might not have stopped Detroit claiming the #1 seed in the NFC but it is hard not to imagine him making a difference in their playoff defeat to Washington. They traded for Za’Darius Smith in-season to replace him but they save $4m by cutting the veteran this offseason and Scourton is all motor in a way that I can easily see appealing to Brad Holmes and Dan Campbell. 29 – Washington Commanders – Mike Green – Edge Rusher, Marshall The Commanders are well stocked in the middle of their defensive line with Jonathan Allen and Daron Payne joined by last year’s second round pick Johnny Newton but on the edge their 2024 sack leader Dante Fowler Jnr is an upcoming free agent and Green is an intriguing prospect whose all-round game needs some work but who as a pure pass rusher is dynamite. 30 – Buffalo Bills – Derrick Harmon – Defensive Tackle, Oregon I’m almost certain the Bills selection here is going to be a defensive lineman. I considered the Ole Miss edge rusher Princely Umanmielen among others, but I think Derrick Harmon could slip in seamlessly next to Ed Oliver, be a solid run defender and get some penetration upfield too. He led the FBS in pressures among interior defensive linemen this past season. 31 – Philadelphia Eagles – Matthew Golden – Wide Receiver, Texas The Eagles could prioritise an edge rusher here or take a corner as a long-term replacement for Darius Slay. However, offensively they need more firepower. When AJ Brown missed four games they went 2-2 and their points per game dropped from 30 to 18. Golden is not a direct replacement and projects more as a slot but he has blazing speed to compliment Brown and DeVonta Smith. 32 – Kansas City Chiefs – Walter Nolen, Defensive Tackle, Ole Miss Kansas City’s roster doesn’t have a ton of needs going into the offseason, but it has a glaring one at left tackle. This is a no-trade mock but in reality, unless they find a guy in free agency, I expect them to move up for one in the draft. If they don’t, they could stand to add some talent and youth to the interior of their Dline and the guy I see when I watch Walter Nolen is a young Chris Jones. - - - Round 2 - - - 33 – Cleveland Browns – Aireontae Ersery – Offensive Tackle, Minnesota It looks like time for an overhaul of the Browns offensive line. Joel Bitonio might retire and Jedrick Wills is a free agent after never really reaching his ceiling in Cleveland. Ersery has some inconsistency and balance issues on tape but he is a big man with surprisingly quick feet and could start early. 34 – New York Giants – Jalen Milroe – Quarterback, Alabama It is a pretty uninspiring veteran market for Quarterbacks this offseason unless you overpay Sam Darnold or hope for some sort of renaissance from Aaron Rodgers or Kirk Cousins. Therefore, if the Giants miss out on day 1 of the draft, as they do in this mock, they might have to take a shot here. 35 – Tennessee Titans – Cameron Williams – Offensive Tackle, Texas The Titans have spent consecutive first round picks in 2023 and 2024 on shoring up the left side of their offensive line but the other three spots are still a disaster and they can’t subject a rookie Quarterback to Jaelyn Duncan at right tackle. Williams is a natural right tackle and slots straight in. 36 – Jacksonville Jaguars – Benjamin Morrison – Cornerback, Notre Dame The Jaguars have a desperate need at corner opposite Tyson Campbell. Former seventh round pick Montaric Brown gave up over 600 yards and 4 touchdowns when targeted in 2024. Morrison’s season was ended early by hip surgery or else he’d likely be a first rounder. 37 – Las Vegas Raiders – Maxwell Hariston – Cornerback, Kentucky And the Raiders secondary is, if anything, even worse than the Jaguars. All four starters could stand to be upgraded and Hariston is a long, toolsy corner who also had injury problems in 2024 which stopped him matching the heights he hit in 2023. Still significant potential though. 38 – New England Patriots – Donovan Jackson – Offensive Guard, Ohio State The Patriots offensive line has been in a constant state of flux in recent years and they need to infuse it with talent to give Drake Maye the best chance to succeed. I think Jackson is a guard at the next level but he did shift over to play left tackle for the Buckeyes in their championship run. 39 – Chicago Bears – Tyleik Williams – Defensive Tackle, Ohio State The Bears had success with a defensive tackle on day 2 of the 2023 draft as Gervon Dexter has developed into a solid 3tech. But they need an upgrade at 1tech alongside him as evidenced by their 28th ranked run defense in 2024. Williams is a bit one dimensional but an excellent run stuffer. 40 – New Orleans Saints – Elic Ayomanor – Wide Receiver, Stanford The Saints ended the season with Maques Valdez-Scantling as their #1 wide receiver which tells you all you need to know about the depth they have at the position. I’m not sure Ayomanor has true #1 receiver potential but he is a good route runner who can separate on the boundary. 41 – Chicago Bears – Wyatt Milum – Offensive Guard, West Virginia All three of the Bears starters on the interior of their offensive line are free agents. Milum is your classic college left tackle who will transition inside at the next level. Possibly to guard but I even think he could be a center long term. 42 – New York Jets – Alfred Collins – Defensive Tackle, Texas The Jets interior defensive lineman are all free agents apart from Quinnen Williams and given that the likes of Javon Kinlaw and Solomon Thomas were Saleh guys who followed him from the 49ers I wouldn’t expect them back. Collins is a big powerful run stuffer who’d compliment Williams well. 43 – San Francisco 49ers – Trey Amos – Cornerback, Ole Miss Charvarius Ward is a free agent and there is speculation that he won’t be back. That would leave them short at corner but Trey Amos could have been built in a lab to play in the scheme of returning defensive coordinator Robert Saleh and would slot straight in on the outside. 44 – Dallas Cowboys – Princely Umanmielen – Edge Rusher, Ole Miss The Cowboys pass rush has become extremely Micah Parsons dependent and in any event Demarcus Lawrence and Chauncey Golston are both impending free agents. Umanmielen needs to add some muscle to his frame to be a three down player but he can have an immediate impact as a rusher. 45 – Indianapolis Colts – Nick Emmanwori – Safety, South Carolina The Colts secondary hasn’t been good enough in recent years and while they have invested some early picks into the likes of Nick Cross and JuJu Brents they still need more talent. Emmanwori is a do it all safety who can play in the box or as a deep center fielder. 46 – Atlanta Falcons – Omarr Norman-Lott – Defensive Tackle, Tennessee I am sticking with the defensive front for the Falcons in round two. Grady Jarrett has been a brilliant player but is on the decline, nose tackle Eddie Goldman is 31 and about to hit free agency, and David Onyemata is 32. Norman-Lott has some positional flex to play a couple of spots in their 3-4 scheme. 47 – Arizona Cardinals – Landon Jackson – Edge Rusher, Arkansas I am also prioritising defensive line with consecutive picks for the Cardinals. Jackson is a tough projection, despite impressive tape, as he is a very specific scheme fit as a 5tech in a 3-4 front. Adding him to last year’s first rounder Darius Robinson should create more interior pass rush. 48 – Miami Dolphins – Jonah Savaiinaea – Offensive Guard, Arizona Both of Miami’s guard are impending free agents and given they let Robert Hunt and Connor Williams walk last year I don’t expect them to be retained. Savaiinaea is a mobile, zone blocking, lineman so fits in this scheme and has experience at tackle too where Miami also has questions. 49 – Cincinnati Bengals – Azareye’h Thomas – Cornerback, Florida State A big reason Lou Anarumo is no longer the defensive coordinator for the Bengals is he just couldn’t seem to get the secondary right. They ended last season with Dax Hill, drafted as a safety, playing boundary corner. The word on Thomas is teams really like him and he is already rising up boards. 50 – Seattle Seahawks – Carson Schwesinger – Linebacker, UCLA The linebacker spot was a constant problem for the Seahawks in 2024. The signed Ty Dodson and Jerome Baker as free agents before the year, then traded Baker for Ernest Jones in-season and released Dodson. Schwesinger is a one-year wonder but he is fast, instinctive and can hit. 51 – Denver Broncos – Omarion Hampton – Running Back, North Carolina It is pretty clear that Sean Payton was not happy with his running back situation at any stage in 2024. He had five backs on the active roster and tried multiple combinations of them without success. Drafting Hampton, with 30 rushing touchdowns in his last two seasons, would be an upgrade. 52 – Pittsburgh Steelers – TJ Sanders – Defensive Tackle, South Carolina Cam Heyward has been a Pittsburgh Steelers great, but he turns 36 the week after the draft. They need to begin planning for life without him. Sanders has not yet got as much buzz in the process as his tape deserves and he is a similar physical profile to Heyward as an interior pass rusher. 53 – Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Jack Sawyer – Edge Rusher, Ohio State While the Buccs have arguably the best interior pass rush combination in the league with Vita Vea and Calijah Kancey they got very little production from the edge rushers in 2024 and both Joe Tryon and Anthony Nelson are free agents. Sawyer had a great play-off run and may yet rise higher. 54 – Green Bay Packers – Marcus Mbow – Offensive Tackle, Purdue The Packers have a real need at corner but the board is pretty hollowed out there. Therefore, they might look for a replacement for free agent center Josh Myers and they could find it in Mbow who looks like a typical college tackle to pro center conversion project, especially in a zone scheme. 55 – Los Angeles Chargers – Jayden Higgins – Wide Receiver, Iowa State The Chargers offense in 2024 amounted to run it or throw it short to Ladd McConkey and hope he breaks some tackles. They have to develop more of a downfield passing game and Higgins, while not the fastest, is a big boundary receiver who has some initial burst and runs good routes. 56 – Buffalo Bills – JT Tuimoloau – Edge Rusher, Ohio State Even if they take a defensive tackle on day one it’s possible the Bills look for edge help in round two. Dawuane Smoot is a free agent, Von Miller is a likely cut and AJ Epenesa is cuttable too. Tuimoloau is more of a power rusher than an explosive, twitchy guy but the value here might be too good to pass. 57 – Carolina Panthers – Demetrious Knight – Linebacker, South Carolina Shaq Thompson is a free agent, about to be 31 and as brilliant as he has been for the Panthers, it might be time to move on. Joesy Jewell at the other starting linebacker spot is as unathletic as they come so Knight, a six-year college player, will add some dynamism to that group. 58 – Houston Texans – Tre Harris – Wide Receiver, Ole Miss The Stefon Diggs trade really didn’t work out for Houston and with him on the road back from an ACL it is not expected that they will retain him. They still have a need though for a possession receiver to compliment Nico Collins and Tank Dell’s big play potential. Harris could provide that. 59 – Baltimore Ravens – Xavier Watts – Safety, Notre Dame The Ravens defense turned the corner after they benched Marcus Williams and moved Kyle Hamilton back to be the deep safety. That meant they definitely lost some of his playmaking ability in the box so they might move him back to his previous spot if they can snag Watts to play deep. 60 – Detroit Lions – Gray Zabel – Offensive Guard, North Dakota State The Lions success in recent times has been built on their offensive line. But left guard Graham Glasgow is 32 and right guard Kevin Zeitler is 34 and a free agent. Zabel has played all five spots on the offensive line in his college career but I see him most likely as a left guard at the next level. 61 – Washington Commanders – Harold Fannin Jnr – Tight End, Bowling Green Zach Ertz has had a nice year as a comfort blanket option for Jayden Daniels during his offensive rookie of the year campaign. But Ertz is 34 and on a 1-year deal so the Commanders might draft a replacement in Fannin who had over 1,500 receiving yards last season and is a willing blocker too. 62 – Buffalo Bills – Isaiah Bond – Wide Receiver, Texas The Bills traded for Amari Cooper mid-season to try and give them a downfield receiver on the boundary, but he is a free agent and most would be surprised if he is retained. Bond is by no means the complete package and he is a #2 receiver more than a #1 but is a vertical threat, big play option. 63 – Philadelphia Eagles – Donovan Ezeiruaku – Edge Rusher, Boston College Bryce Huff was not everything Philadelphia hoped for as their big offseason pass rush addition and Josh Sweat and Brandon Graham both look set to depart. Ezeiruaku is a nice piece for Vic Fangio. He can play as an outside linebacker, a 4-3 end or in a 3 man front in the Eagles’ multiple defense. 64 – Kansas City – Charles Grant – Offensive Tackle, William & Mary Having missed out on the round one tackles, the Chiefs might do so again depending on how they see Charles Grant. He played at left tackle in a heavy zone run scheme at William & Mary but some project him to guard at the NFL level. With the Chiefs he’d likely get a shot to play left tackle. There you go - flame away! The only issue I have with taking a 2nd Round WR is that I want a veteran of Cooper's caliber or greater replacing that spot. And I think it's a forgone conclusion that Mack Hollins is going to be retained at his roster spot. With Keon Coleman, Khalil Shakir, and Curtis Samuel (who's out is after next season, as he'd be an 11m+ Dead Cap hit for this season) under contract and Hollins retained - that only leaves Cooper's spot to be filled. And a 2nd Round Speed WR who is looked at as a #2 is not who I'd want for that spot. If we were to trade for someone like Deebo Samuel and Curtis Samuel were part of the deal, by all means. But if we're to be filling one WR spot (as expected as the number's been 5 the past couple seasons) - it needs to be something bigger than just a Rookie at Pick 62. Edited 12 hours ago by BillsFanForever19 Quote
Bill from NYC Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 1 hour ago, GunnerBill said: I do think corner is in play but by the time the Bills get on the board at their spots end of the 2nd the board is pretty cleared out. One thing time has taught me is that corner (and safety) are always in play for the Buffalo Bills, especially in round one. 1 3 Quote
GunnerBill Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago 27 minutes ago, Bill from NYC said: One thing time has taught me is that corner (and safety) are always in play for the Buffalo Bills, especially in round one. As I have demonstrated to you before though this regime's investment in DBs on the first two days of the draft (3 picks in 8 drafts) is a league low. The only position they have depriotitised more in the first 3 rounds of the draft has been Wide Receiver. 1 Quote
Ray Stonada Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 14 minutes ago, GunnerBill said: The only position they have depriotitised more in the first 3 rounds of the draft has been Wide Receiver. And at WR, this has resulted in too much redundancy and not enough dominance. Shakir, Samuel, Coleman and Kincaid all operate best out of the slot, so they didn't have enough snaps, and meantime we had no number one X receiver who can beat press coverage. Either Amari wasn't able to be that, or wasn't given the chance. We need that explosive reciever badly. A starting lineup of Shakir/Samuel at slot, Coleman/Hollins at WR2, and an explosive player at WR1, stresses a defense much more than what we were doing with Shakir, Coleman and Hollins. 1 1 Quote
Bill from NYC Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 33 minutes ago, GunnerBill said: As I have demonstrated to you before though this regime's investment in DBs on the first two days of the draft (3 picks in 8 drafts) is a league low. The only position they have depriotitised more in the first 3 rounds of the draft has been Wide Receiver. Yes, you have made this clear. Tre White (in lieu of Mahomes) and Kaiir Elam both say hi. Quote
GunnerBill Posted 11 hours ago Author Posted 11 hours ago 1 minute ago, Bill from NYC said: Yes, you have made this clear. Tre White (in lieu of Mahomes) and Kaiir Elam both say hi. Yes. They do. It is those two and Cole Bishop. That's it. In 8 drafts. Quote
Bill from NYC Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 2 minutes ago, GunnerBill said: Yes. They do. It is those two and Cole Bishop. That's it. In 8 drafts. Yes and James Williams, Henry Jones, Thomas Smith, Jeff Burris, Antoine Winfield, Nate Clements, Donte Whitner, and Leodis McKelvin also send their regards. The list of running backs also wanted to say hi but I told them to check in later. 1 Quote
GunnerBill Posted 11 hours ago Author Posted 11 hours ago 4 minutes ago, Bill from NYC said: Yes and James Williams, Henry Jones, Thomas Smith, Jeff Burris, Antoine Winfield, Nate Clements, Donte Whitner, and Leodis McKelvin also send their regards. The list of running backs also wanted to say hi but I told them to check in later. None of which have any relevance to this regime. Quote
Bill from NYC Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Just now, GunnerBill said: None of which have any relevance to this regime. Of course you are 100% correct. It's just leftover burnout on my end. 2 Quote
ChronicAndKnuckles Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 20 hours ago, D. L. Hot-Flamethrower said: Thanks! That was helpful to get me looking forward again. The defense is in need of a huge talent upgrade, as is the receiver room needing a boundary guy. Don’t sleep on Cooper with a full offseason. He could be the guy Quote
aristocrat Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 9 minutes ago, ChronicAndKnuckles said: Don’t sleep on Cooper with a full offseason. He could be the guy is he gonna get faster cause he's lost his speed? not his hands just speed 1 Quote
TheBeaneBandit Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 2 hours ago, aristocrat said: is he gonna get faster cause he's lost his speed? not his hands just speed 2 year deal with a draft pick who is probably mostly a one trick pony but that trick is speed. With our draft pick slots and the group of free agents available it's probably the best we can hope for. Gonna have to target a Trey Hendrickson in free agency and go heavy defense in the draft. Quote
MarlinTheMagician Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Don't like it. Not sold on Harmon and Texas fans don't care that much for Bond - criticize his effort and they prefer Golden. Quote
ChronicAndKnuckles Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 5 hours ago, aristocrat said: is he gonna get faster cause he's lost his speed? not his hands just speed Speed is only a fraction of his game. He had 1200 yards last year. I don’t think he fell off a clip in that short amount of time. I’m still reserving judgment until he has a full offseason to work with. In-season trades are difficult to gauge right away. Quote
dave mcbride Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 6 hours ago, Bill from NYC said: Of course you are 100% correct. It's just leftover burnout on my end. The Bills arguably lost to KC because of fielding marginal, low-athletic-skills secondary players vs KC. It's a huge need. 1 Quote
Bill from NYC Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, dave mcbride said: The Bills arguably lost to KC because of fielding marginal, low-athletic-skills secondary players vs KC. It's a huge need. Imo Taylor Swift presents a better argument. Quote
Sojourner Posted 13 minutes ago Posted 13 minutes ago 10 hours ago, ChronicAndKnuckles said: Don’t sleep on Cooper with a full offseason. He could be the guy The third round pick didn’t warrant the production. Can’t see it being the dramatic difference we need even with an off-season. Quote
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