billsfan89 Posted April 9 Posted April 9 On 4/6/2025 at 1:45 AM, gobills404 said: The fact that there’s so many Bills fans who think that drafting a fat NT in the first round will help us get over the hump in the playoffs is legitimately insane to me. It’s like they’re living in an alternate dimension where our pass defense isn’t the biggest flaw in the playoffs . Context is key here. For one the draft class is very strong at DT so if you can get a high end DT at pick 30 when that caliber of DT usually goes in the top 15-20 makes the longer term value in roster construction good. Also the Bills run defense in the regular season and against the Ravens in the second half in the playoffs was at times very vulnerable up the middle. The DT position is also longer term not that strong Larry O and Daquon are older so there's a need to have a good young player there. I say this as someone whose also very concerned about the corner spot however, DT is also the teams second biggest defensive need and if you can get a high end prospect there that's a good use of a pick in my opinion. 3 1 Quote
RochesterLifer Posted April 9 Posted April 9 1 hour ago, billsfan89 said: Context is key here. For one the draft class is very strong at DT so if you can get a high end DT at pick 30 when that caliber of DT usually goes in the top 15-20 makes the longer term value in roster construction good. Also the Bills run defense in the regular season and against the Ravens in the second half in the playoffs was at times very vulnerable up the middle. The DT position is also longer term not that strong Larry O and Daquon are older so there's a need to have a good young player there. I say this as someone whose also very concerned about the corner spot however, DT is also the teams second biggest defensive need and if you can get a high end prospect there that's a good use of a pick in my opinion. Agreeing with you, I’ll add that a strong, run-stuffing DT frees the rest of our front seven to be more effective by tying up blockers and eliminating the need to compensate. With the remainder of the DL able to focus more on penetration, our corners don’t need to cover as long nor our safeties crash as hard. Our lack of strength at 1DT had a cascading effect with the interior vulnerability compromising everyone. With a big-boy pick #30, we can automatically bolster the performance of the other ten positions. 1 1 Quote
MiracleAtRich1393 Posted April 9 Posted April 9 1 hour ago, RochesterLifer said: Agreeing with you, I’ll add that a strong, run-stuffing DT frees the rest of our front seven to be more effective by tying up blockers and eliminating the need to compensate. With the remainder of the DL able to focus more on penetration, our corners don’t need to cover as long nor our safeties crash as hard. Our lack of strength at 1DT had a cascading effect with the interior vulnerability compromising everyone. With a big-boy pick #30, we can automatically bolster the performance of the other ten positions. The keystone 1 Quote
billsfan89 Posted April 9 Posted April 9 1 hour ago, RochesterLifer said: Agreeing with you, I’ll add that a strong, run-stuffing DT frees the rest of our front seven to be more effective by tying up blockers and eliminating the need to compensate. With the remainder of the DL able to focus more on penetration, our corners don’t need to cover as long nor our safeties crash as hard. Our lack of strength at 1DT had a cascading effect with the interior vulnerability compromising everyone. With a big-boy pick #30, we can automatically bolster the performance of the other ten positions. We saw just how flat out dominant the defense was when Daquon was healthy, a little bit younger, and performing as a big time run stuffer and pocket collapsing DT in 2022-2023. It was a big time difference maker for the defense. A big boy like Grant or Harmon would make a big impact for all 3 levels of the defense. 3 1 1 Quote
Richard Noggin Posted April 9 Posted April 9 12 minutes ago, billsfan89 said: We saw just how flat out dominant the defense was when Daquon was healthy, a little bit younger, and performing as a big time run stuffer and pocket collapsing DT in 2022-2023. It was a big time difference maker for the defense. A big boy like Grant or Harmon would make a big impact for all 3 levels of the defense. Just a slight step down I'd add Collins and Tyleik Williams to this list of stout, first two days DT targets. 3 1 Quote
MikePJ76 Posted Thursday at 11:04 AM Author Posted Thursday at 11:04 AM FWIW, Dane Brugler has Harmon at 16 and grant at 25 in his top 100. his write up on ezieraku made me like him a little more and he has him at 22. And at 30 he has Jahdee Barron. seems impossible that guy would get to 30. I heard Bryan broaddus talking about him the other day and said he is Trent Mcduffie. 1 Quote
Pecker Posted Thursday at 11:45 AM Posted Thursday at 11:45 AM (edited) I really like Alfred Collins TX personally. Him and Isaiah Bond also from TX are really under rated I think. hook um Beane ! Edited Thursday at 11:45 AM by Pecker Quote
nosejob Posted Thursday at 03:01 PM Posted Thursday at 03:01 PM 3 hours ago, MikePJ76 said: FWIW, Dane Brugler has Harmon at 16 and grant at 25 in his top 100. his write up on ezieraku made me like him a little more and he has him at 22. And at 30 he has Jahdee Barron. seems impossible that guy would get to 30. I heard Bryan broaddus talking about him the other day and said he is Trent Mcduffie. He seems like a slam dunk day one impact ,but isn't he a slot corner? Quote
Dillenger4 Posted Thursday at 03:28 PM Posted Thursday at 03:28 PM After deep thought - I would love a CB on day 1. But is there a CB worthy (to start for us) by pick 30? Or do we move up for CB? 1 Quote
MrEpsYtown Posted Thursday at 08:44 PM Posted Thursday at 08:44 PM I like Harmon also, he seems a great fit for what we do. I saw some expert compare him to DaQuan Jones somewhere, which plays. Quote
Augie Posted Thursday at 09:31 PM Posted Thursday at 09:31 PM 1 hour ago, XXXtraAnchovies said: First, I don’t even pretend to have “a board” or anything. I’m just learning about these guys. He’s far more nimble than I thought he would be. I had seen the highlight of him chasing a guy down, but that’s a rare event. I wonder how much it would help if he started each play when everyone else did. He seemed to be the last guy moving a lot, but I’m more intrigued after watching that. Quote
RenoNVBillsfan Posted Thursday at 11:31 PM Posted Thursday at 11:31 PM The consensus I’ve read is that Mason Graham, DT will be selected anywhere between #8-12 in rd #1. However, whomever the Bills see as a legit next in line, I really hope Beane jumps ahead to grab them. DT is critical, even double dipping w/i 1st 3 picks. If it’s K. Grant or D.Harmon, go get em, Beane! 1 Quote
gonzo1105 Posted Thursday at 11:36 PM Posted Thursday at 11:36 PM 2 minutes ago, RenoNVBillsfan said: The consensus I’ve read is that Mason Graham, DT will be selected anywhere between #8-12 in rd #1. However, whomever the Bills see as a legit next in line, I really hope Beane jumps ahead to grab them. DT is critical, even double dipping w/i 1st 3 picks. If it’s K. Grant or D.Harmon, go get em, Beane! I think it’s Derrick Harmon but it’s all over the place you’ll hear Walter Nolan mostly would be my guess. I think you might only see 3 DTs in the first Quote
JP51 Posted Friday at 02:47 PM Posted Friday at 02:47 PM On 4/10/2025 at 7:45 AM, ***** said: I really like Alfred Collins TX personally. Him and Isaiah Bond also from TX are really under rated I think. hook um Beane ! Bond is gonna be a UDFA unless the Chiefs take him in like the 6th cause he fits their family profile.... Quote
MikePJ76 Posted Friday at 05:10 PM Author Posted Friday at 05:10 PM Joe has a write up on wr options for Buffalo based on Dane brugler’s guide. https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6270635/2025/04/11/bills-nfl-draft-2025-wide-receiver-fits/?source=user_shared_article seems like these guys think golden makes it to 30 now. Quote
MikePJ76 Posted yesterday at 02:24 PM Author Posted yesterday at 02:24 PM (edited) Joe has his penultimate mock up. https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6273291/2025/04/14/buffalo-bills-mock-draft-nfl-2025-prospects/ The pick at No. 30 — Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan The Bills haven’t used a draft selection on a one-technique defensive tackle since they took Harrison Phillips in the third round in 2018, but the need for them to select one in 2025 is as clear as it has ever been. The Bills have 33-year-old DaQuan Jones as the only one-technique who is a lock for the final roster, and he’s out of contract after 2025. Generally speaking, taking a player at that position with this early of a pick isn’t an ideal use of a draft resource if the player is only going to be an early-down run-stuffer. But if they can become a three-down asset, that’s where the pick becomes a worthwhile investment. That’s where the 6-foot-3, 331-pound Grant comes in, who is a tremendous run-stuffing one-technique with some projectable pass-rushing ability. At this point, Grant is more of a clean-up pass-rusher than one who disrupts the pocket, and early on in his career, he may be nothing more than that early-down asset who has to come off the field for obvious pass-rushing situations. However, there is more of a nimbleness to his movement abilities than other massive one-technique run-stuffers. He’ll never dip and rip through blockers, but through his power and movement skills, there is a path to seeing him develop as an asset on third downs. With a drop-off at the position from Grant to the next batch of one-technique defensive tackles, No. 30 could be the right time to strike. He could become the starting one-technique alongside Ed Oliver as early as this season, shifting Jones into more of a rotational role. The pick at No. 56 — Oluwafemi Oladejo, Edge, UCLA The pick at No. 62 — Shavon Revel Jr., CB, East Carolina The pick at No. 109 — Andrew Mukuba, S, Texas TRADE! Trade details: Bills trade Nos. 169 and 170 to Commanders for No. 128 The pick at No. 128 — Brashard Smith, RB, SMU The pick at No. 132 — Tai Felton, WR, Maryland The pick at No. 173 — Carson Vinson, OT, Alabama A&M The pick at No. 177 — CJ Dippre, TE, Alabama The pick at No. 206 — James Burnip, P, Alabama Buscaglia sees smith as the return man replacing codrington. Here is Dane Brugler's summary of Brashard Smith SUMMARY: A one-year starter at SMU, Smith made the transition from receiver to running back in head coach Rhett Lashlee's balanced spread scheme. After three seasons as a pass catcher for Miami, he entered the portal, and Lashlee sold him on making a positional move that would allow him to be SMU's version of Isiah Pacheco. Smith responded with 1,977 all-purpose yards in 2024, No. 4 in the FBS behind only Ashton Jeanty, Cam Skattebo and Omarion Hampton. He was also the only FBS player with at least 1,300 yards rushing, 300 yards receiving and 300 kick-return yards in 2024. A hard-charging athlete, Smith runs with wiggle and balance to elude tacklers and make it tough for defenders to square him up, although he needs to better rely on the blocking scheme to set up defenders. He plucks the ball well outside his frame and can get open on wheels and fades. Overall, Smith needs to continue developing his run discipline and tempo, but he runs hard and explosively with terrific control for abrupt cuts. Given his versatility as a runner and receiver, he has the upside of a dynamic role player who can be flexed across the offense and affect the defensive game plan. GRADE: 4th-5th round Edited yesterday at 02:41 PM by MikePJ76 1 Quote
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