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Bumhead
Sep 26, 2022

Ornery and Hornery posted:

At this point I want Seattle to draft Stroud. The best qb prospects go early in the draft and despite the *many* problems with Seattle, it’s unlikely they will crack the top 10 again anytime soon. Geno is good but getting old. Gotta take a hot qb prospect when you can.

BUT! Hypothetically if we are answering your question: I want Anderson Jr more than Carter at this point. Seattle’s D scheme has been varied the last few seasons and they are experimenting with 4-3, 5-2, and 3-4 looks. Anderson is useful in all of those - he’s basically scheme agnostic. I think Carter would not be maximizing his potential in a 3-4.

I hope Seattle resists the sirens call of taking a defensive player at the top of the draft. It will be much better for the long term to take a qb. But if Seattle spends their two 1sts and two 2nds on defense then maybe a playoff run could happen.

If you were the hawks FO would you gamble with Geno and draft defense for a playoff push or would you draft for the future with a QB up top?

I like posting about the Seahawks, thank you for reading :)

This is music to my ears as a Lions fan looking at that Rams pick and the QB situation.

Houston are taking a QB but I don't think Seattle or the Bears are trading themselves out of grabbing Anderson or Carter. If that Rams pick continues to hang around 4/5, I'm happy for the Lions to go and take Stroud or Levis without needing to trade up.

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Forrest on Fire
Nov 23, 2012

I think Doltos is good at this, actually.

And I think Arizona's already nebulously good QB just suffered a major injury jeopardizing his mobility. What's the dart throw QB class for teams that aren't actually trying to win?

Chucktesla
Jul 13, 2014

Checking in to say that Anthony Richardson is an insane talent and any team picking in the 20s that needs a QB Of The Future should draft him

Diva Cupcake
Aug 15, 2005

McShay Mock 1.0
https://www.espn.com/nfl/draft2023/...b-landing-spots

quote:

1. Houston Texans (1-11-1)
Bryce Young, QB, Alabama


According to ESPN's FPI, the Texans have an 82.6% chance to land the top pick. And considering their 25.7 Total QBR is better than just the Panthers this season, there shouldn't be any surprise about their intentions here. Houston simply has to upgrade on Davis Mills/Jeff Driskel, and Young -- my QB1 in the class -- can be the franchise building block it desperately needs.

Scouts will knock Young's frame (he's listed at 6-foot), but there is no debating his high-level processing ability, excellent ball placement to all three levels of the field and mobility when forced to go off schedule. He has regularly lifted a lackluster offensive supporting cast in Alabama this season, and he can do it again with the Texans. Plus, he'd be matched up again with John Metchie III, the former Bama receiver who missed his rookie season while being treated for leukemia but caught 96 balls from Young in 2021.

2. Seattle Seahawks (via 3-10 DEN)
Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia


This pick is a higher than Seattle thought it would be when it sent Russell Wilson to Denver in March -- and it will have options here. First, if the Seahawks aren't sold on Geno Smith long term, they can happily select Ohio State passer C.J. Stroud and let Smith walk in free agency. Second, they can trade back with a team that wants Stroud and pick up even more picks for their ongoing rebuild. Or third, they can add a difference-making defender.

It's still early to project trades or truly evaluate Smith's future, so I'm opting for the third option -- and going with Carter over Alabama's Will Anderson Jr. Seattle has a bigger need on the interior than edge, and I think Carter could be dominant there with a lightning-fast first step and plenty of disruptive power. He reminds me of Quinnen Williams.

3. Chicago Bears (3-10)
Will Anderson Jr., OLB, Alabama


Bears GM Ryan Poles would be thrilled with this scenario. Chicago is another trade-back candidate here, because Stroud is still out there. But then again, my No. 1 prospect is still available. After dealing away Khalil Mack and Robert Quinn, the Bears need edge rushers, and Anderson is explosive, instinctive and overpowering. Over the past two seasons, he has averaged more than a sack per game (27.5) and has piled up 56 tackles for loss and 131 pressures. That kind of production would be welcomed to a defense that has just 16 sacks this season (last in the NFL).

4. Detroit Lions (via 4-9 LAR)
C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State


Everything fell perfectly for the Lions here, allowing them to draft their signal-caller of the future without moving up. Stroud has thrown 37 touchdown passes this season -- and still has as many as two games left -- and is third in the nation in QBR (87.7). Jared Goff has played well under center of late, but he's not the long-term answer. Stroud -- who makes good decisions with the football, displays great touch and has a big arm -- could learn behind Goff for a season before Detroit moves on and builds around a talented passer on a rookie deal. Detroit has a top-five offense right now (26.2 points per game), and a very good supporting cast is already in place.

5. Philadelphia Eagles (via 4-9 NO)
Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas


This is a serious luxury pick for the 12-win Eagles after landing this selection from the Saints in the 2022 offseason. Per ESPN Stats & Information research, the last time a team went to a Super Bowl (as ESPN's FPI projects) and then had a top-five draft pick was 1992, when Washington won the championship and then drafted Desmond Howard fourth overall via a trade-up. I considered Clemson defensive tackle Bryan Bresee here, because GM Howie Roseman values the interior defensive line, and pairing Bresee with Jordan Davis up the middle would give Philadelphia quite the run-stopping duo. However, Miles Sanders is set to be a free agent, this offense leans heavily on the run (433 rushes, second most in the NFL), and Robinson is a special prospect with elite size, speed, power and elusiveness.

I know the "it's too early for a running back" arguments are coming, and I agree 99% of the time. But why spend heavily on re-signing Sanders or bringing in another back in free agency when Robinson -- who is an upgrade -- is available here on a rookie deal? Robinson cruised to 1,580 yards and 18 TDs on the ground this season while breaking 91 tackles. Dropping him into the league's best offense would be scary for every other team. Philly also has another first-rounder down the board ...

6. Atlanta Falcons (5-8)
Will Levis, QB, Kentucky


The Falcons are yet another team that needs an upgrade at QB. Marcus Mariota flashed this season but ultimately hasn't been a solution, and we'll see what they get out of Desmond Ridder, who is set to start in Week 15. I'm envisioning Levis -- who probably has the strongest arm in this class -- driving the ball on a rope to Drake London and Kyle Pitts, or using his mobility and sturdy 232-pound frame to extend plays and contribute to Atlanta's strong run game. Levis still needs some developing, especially when it comes to decision-making, but the traits are outstanding.

With the rest of the NFC South all scrambling for answers under center after this season, Atlanta could be primed to emerge from the pack once Levis settles into the pro game and cleans up his mistakes.

7. Indianapolis Colts (4-8-1)
Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern


Everyone knows Indy needs a quarterback, but it shouldn't be reaching for the fourth-best passer in the class at No. 7. I'm sure the Colts will attempt to move up, but let's not forget about the other problems with this roster. You can't blame all 46 sacks allowed (tied for the NFL's most) on Matt Ryan's lack of mobility, especially considering the offensive line's 46.8% pass block win rate is dead last in the NFL. Skoronski might not have ideal length at 6-foot-4, but his quickness and technique pop on tape. Plus, he is a stout run-blocker, which would open things up for Jonathan Taylor. Skoronski could slide into the left tackle role and help fix a unit that fell off quite a bit in 2022.

8. Las Vegas Raiders (5-8)
Tyree Wilson, DE, Texas Tech


I thought a little about quarterback -- Derek Carr isn't due any guaranteed money after this season -- and offensive tackle, but only four teams have fewer sacks over the past two seasons than the Raiders (60). Chandler Jones and Clelin Ferrell have both been disappointing, and Ferrell is a free agent after this year. I just moved Wilson up to fourth in my rankings, and teaming him up with Maxx Crosby and Jones would spark this juiceless pass rush.

9. Pittsburgh Steelers (5-8)
Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State


Offensive line is the biggest need, and Johnson is an easy mover with quickness, power, improving technique and versatility to play multiple positions. He settled in as the Buckeyes' left tackle this season, allowing just one sack, and he'd go a long way in helping protect Kenny Pickett. The Steelers didn't use any draft picks on the line in April and have allowed 34 sacks this season (tied for ninth most). It's time to get a cornerstone for this unit.

10. Arizona Cardinals (4-9)
Bryan Bresee, DT, Clemson


Defensive linemen J.J. Watt and Zach Allen are both free agents after this season, and Leki Fotu is set to follow after 2023. Bresee could help fill that need on a struggling defense. His numbers won't wow you, and he missed some time this season, but when he's 100 percent, Bresee is an incredibly talented run-stuffer with the length and bend to make a big impact and play a role as an interior pass-rusher. Cornerback (Penn State's Joey Porter Jr.) and edge rusher (Myles Murphy, Bresee's teammate at Clemson) could make sense, too.

11. Carolina Panthers (5-8)
Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida


OK, this one is going to raise some eyebrows. Full disclosure, taking Richardson this early is way too rich for my blood. He lacks experience and isn't NFL ready. We've seen a QB with 13 or fewer starts go this high only two other times since 2000, per ESPN's Stats & Information (Alex Smith and Mitch Trubisky). But what choice do the Panthers have? If they can't find an answer in free agency and end up picking outside the top 10, they might resort to desperate measures in desperate times.

Richardson's physical traits are excellent, too, including elite mobility, great size (6-foot-4 and 232 pounds) and a rocket arm. If Carolina can make a savvy coaching hire and get the right staff in place to develop him, then this could absolutely work. The Panthers have been outside the top 20 in QBR for the past four seasons and are last this year (21.9), so it's time to invest in a signal-caller in the draft -- even if that means reaching a bit. One other thing to watch: I think the Panthers could try to get ahead of the Falcons and Colts to draft Will Levis.

12. Houston Texans (via 5-8 CLE)
Michael Mayer, TE, Notre Dame


We got Houston a quarterback atop the board, so how about a security blanket target for Bryce Young here in the middle of the first round? Mayer is a big target with a wide catch radius and the strength to run over defenders after the catch. And after back-to-back seasons with 800-plus receiving yards and seven or more TD catches, he might be the safest prospect in the class. He'd be a reliable pass-catcher, a go-to option in the red zone and an effective in-line blocker for the Texans. Pretty solid Thursday night for GM Nick Caserio.

13. Jacksonville Jaguars (5-8)
Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU


The Jaguars spent on Christian Kirk, Evan Engram and Zay Jones, and all three pass-catchers have played well this season. Plus, Calvin Ridley should be in the mix next season after Jacksonville acquired the suspended wideout at the deadline. But Trevor Lawrence still needs a big receiver. He excelled with Tee Higgins and Justyn Ross in college, and Johnston fits that same mold at 6-foot-4, 215 pounds. With 903 receiving yards through 12 games, Johnston has a wide catch radius, strength after the catch and good vertical speed. I love this fit.

14. Green Bay Packers (5-8)
Myles Murphy, DE, Clemson


The Packers took a step backward this season and have a bunch of needs, including safety, receiver, offensive line, tight end and edge rusher. I'm going best available in Murphy, my No. 8 prospect. He brings burst, power and bend off the edge, and he'd prove versatile in Green Bay's scheme. Rashan Gary will be coming off a torn ACL next season, and the Packers have managed only 24 sacks this season (tied for 26th). Murphy has the tools to be a force in the NFL.

15. New England Patriots (7-6)
Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia


Simply put, the Patriots won't find significant success with Mac Jones at quarterback if they can't keep him upright. They've allowed 32 sacks and posted a 57.8% pass block win rate this season -- both registering as 19th best in the NFL. Jones has the size, quick feet and upper-body strength to improve this unit. He hasn't allowed a single sack this season in 13 starts at left tackle, and Isaiah Wynn is on an expiring contract, so there will be a need at one of the team's tackle spots in the offseason.

16. Detroit Lions (6-7)
Joey Porter Jr., CB, Penn State


OK, time to address the Lions' defense. We're all excited about the potential of Will Levis in that offense, but if they keep giving up 6.2 yards per play (last in the NFL), it won't matter too much. Jeff Okudah has been up and down after being the No. 3 overall pick in 2020, and Amani Oruwariye and Mike Hughes are both expected to be free agents in the spring. Porter -- the son of former Steelers edge rusher Joey Porter -- is my top cornerback, showcasing high-level recognition skills, and he'd give that defense more scheme flexibility. He didn't have a pick this season, but he did have 11 pass breakups. Detroit walks away from Round 1 with two hard-nosed, physical playmakers on either side of the ball.

17. New York Jets (7-6)
O'Cyrus Torrence, G, Florida


This Jets offensive line is still very thin despite a handful of recent moves. Mekhi Becton has played one game over his past two seasons, and George Fant, Connor McGovern, Nate Herbig, Dan Feeney, Mike Remmers and Laurent Duvernay-Tardif are all free agents after 2022. Alijah Vera-Tucker -- a 2021 first-rounder -- has been very good but is out for the season because of a triceps injury.

Enter Torrence, who has allowed one sack over 47 career starts. His 347-pound frame is tough to get around, and he plays a technically sound game. Not only would Torrence provide interior protection for whomever starts at QB in 2023, he'd also help spring Breece Hall (also out for the year) as an excellent run-blocker.

18. Seattle Seahawks (7-6)
Brian Branch, S, Alabama


It's all defense in Round 1 for Seattle, after it took Jalen Carter at No. 2 -- and Branch can impact every area of that side of the ball. You'll see him down near the line of scrimmage trying to make a run stop, blitzing through gaps, holding up in coverage and showcasing his range and instincts on the back end. He fits this system and would be a great complement to rookie corners Tariq Woolen and Coby Bryant. Jamal Adams is turning 28 next season, while Quandre Diggs will be 30, so adding to the safety room would be prudent. But Branch has played quite a bit of slot corner, and that's where I'd expect him to make an impact early in his career.

19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-7)
Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon


Tampa Bay will definitely need offensive line help, though the top four linemen are all off the board. It will also have to solve its quarterback future elsewhere if Tom Brady retires. So I'm focusing instead on the cornerback spot opposite Carlton Davis III, because Jamel Dean and Sean Murphy-Bunting are both pending free agents. Gonzalez is a strong press corner with good speed, physical traits and versatility, and he picked off four passes this season. The Bucs have only seven interceptions this year (tied for 24th), so a ball-hawking defensive back like Gonzalez would be welcome.

20. New York Giants (7-5-1)
Jordan Addison, WR, USC


Finding a Daniel Jones replacement on Day 1 likely won't be an option this late, and I'm guessing the Giants stick with Jones on a short-term contract and add some competition for him in free agency or on Day 2 of the draft. But New York has to add pass-catchers, regardless of who is throwing to them. Sterling Shepard can't stay healthy, Kenny Golladay has been a massive disappointment, and Kadarius Toney is now in Kansas City. The current depth chart reads Darius Slayton, Isaiah Hodgins and Richie James. That isn't going to get it done. So how about pairing Wan'Dale Robinson (out because of a torn ACL) with Addison, an explosive receiver with ability to come down with 50-50 balls, stretch the field or pick up extra yards in open space? That should boost an underwhelming pass offense.

21. Washington Commanders (7-5-1)
Kelee Ringo, CB, Georgia


Here come all the corners in a hurry! Washington moved on from the struggling William Jackson III at the trade deadline and now needs depth at cornerback. Ringo has the length at 6-foot-2 and man coverage skills to perfectly fit Jack Del Rio's defense and help boost the Commanders' takeaway count (seven interceptions this season, tied for 24th). He has great speed, and I'm expecting him to rise draft boards after he shows off those wheels at the combine.

22. Tennessee Titans (7-6)
Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State


Only the Bears and Ravens have fewer WR receiving yards this season than the Titans (1,303), and rookie first-rounder Treylon Burks has just 25 catches and hasn't stayed healthy. Worse, Tennessee has watched A.J. Brown dominate in Philadelphia after it traded the star receiver there on draft night in April. The offensive line and edge rush spots should be addressed, too, but receiver has to be fixed.

Smith-Njigba's five-catch, 43-yard season might be concerning, but the hamstring injury that limited him in 2022 shouldn't impact him in his rookie year. And he's only one year removed from more than 1,600 receiving yards and nine TDs while fighting for targets alongside Chris Olave and Garrett Wilson. This guy is a smooth route runner with good acceleration and soft hands, and he'd be a prime target for Ryan Tannehill/Malik Willis out of the slot.

23. Los Angeles Chargers (7-6)
Cam Smith, CB, South Carolina


J.C. Jackson signed a big-money deal with the Chargers this past offseason but then struggled and went down for the year with a knee injury. I like Asante Samuel Jr., but Los Angeles needs some depth here. Its nine interceptions and 7.3 yards allowed per attempt are both middle-of-the-pack numbers, and when you face Patrick Mahomes twice a year, supporting the secondary is never a bad call. Smith is versatile, instinctive and quick, and he ended up with six pass breakups this season.

24. Denver Broncos (via 9-4 SF/MIA)
Jahmyr Gibbs, RB, Alabama


This is a tough one. The defense is solid, Denver doesn't really need another receiver, and Russell Wilson is locked in as the quarterback. I'd love to get the Broncos another offensive tackle, but there's a decent drop-off in talent there after Broderick Jones. Gibbs is pretty intriguing, even for a three-win team. My 20th-ranked prospect, he's elusive with burst in and out of cuts and is a very effective pass-catcher out of the backfield. Gibbs not only rushed for 850 yards so far this season but also caught 42 passes. He could make the sort of impact we see regularly from Alvin Kamara and Dalvin Cook. And while Javonte Williams will return after tearing his right knee's ACL and LCL, it remains to be seen how effective he'll be off that injury while entering the third season of his four-year rookie deal.

25. Baltimore Ravens (9-4)
Clark Phillips III, CB, Utah


The Ravens are tied for second in interceptions (14), and Phillips would only add to their ball-hawking ways. He had six picks this year and shows the fluid hips and speed to stick with receivers in coverage. Toss in that Marcus Peters and Kyle Fuller are both on expiring deals, and this makes sense. And yes, I hear the cries for a receiver, but with the top three off the board, I think Baltimore might lean on the position that presents better value here and defer its search for another wideout to Day 2 (or free agency). Don't count out Boston College's Zay Flowers or UNC's Josh Downs, though.

26. Cincinnati Bengals (9-4)
Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois


Six cornerbacks in the past 11 picks, and the Bengals get a good one here. Witherspoon allowed fewer than 10 yards as the primary defender in eight of 12 games this season, and he had more interceptions (three) than TDs and 20-plus-yard catches against combined (two). Plus, Cincinnati's CB group thins out a bit after the season with Eli Apple and Tre Flowers hitting free agency. I love Witherspoon's physicality, and while he'll need to run well at the combine to lock down a first-round spot, his tape is a treat to watch. If not cornerback, the Bengals could maybe reach for an offensive lineman because that unit is still very flimsy (38 sacks allowed, sixth most).

27. Minnesota Vikings (10-3)
Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College


If one of those six corners slides, I could see them landing here. Or maybe the Vikings reach down the board for linebacker Drew Sanders (Arkansas) or center John Michael Schmitz (Minnesota). But with Adam Thielen turning 33 this offseason, they should be looking for another complement to Justin Jefferson at receiver. Flowers has terrific instincts and elusiveness, forcing missed tackles and scoring 12 touchdowns this season. He's only 5-foot-10, but he could do damage out of the slot in this offense immediately as a rookie.

28. Buffalo Bills (10-3)
Antonio Johnson, S, Texas A&M


Johnson is great working close to the line of scrimmage, making plays against the run and in underneath coverage. With Jordan Poyer (turning 32 this offseason) headed toward free agency, and Micah Hyde (will be 33 late in the 2023 season) set to do the same after next year, it's time for the Bills to think about their future at the safety position. Johnson played only nine games this season, but he still had 72 tackles and forced three fumbles.

29. Dallas Cowboys (10-3)
Lukas Van Ness, DE, Iowa


Van Ness could be a steal this late on Day 1. He has footspeed and power as a pass-rusher and the versatility to come off the edge or bump inside. I wouldn't rule out a cornerback, receiver, linebacker or lineman here, but this one is all about the value. Bringing in Van Ness -- who has six sacks this season -- would help shore up the edge rush and continue to allow the Cowboys to move Micah Parsons around.

30. Kansas City Chiefs (10-3)
Jared Verse, DE, Florida State


The Chiefs pieced together an effective pass-rush this season, but 17 of their 42 sacks have come on blitzes. Carlos Dunlap is under contract for only this season, and Chris Jones and Frank Clark are set to be free agents after next season. Kansas City drafted George Karlaftis in Round 1 in April, but it needs more. Verse overwhelms blockers with his speed and power and is disruptive in the backfield (14 tackles for loss). Alternatively, Kansas City has both starting offensive tackles unsigned after this season, and it could still use more receiving options, so either of those positions could warrant a look.

31. Philadelphia Eagles (12-1)
Isaiah Foskey, DE, Notre Dame


ESPN's FPI has the Eagles winning the Super Bowl in this projection and closing out Day 1 of the draft. After getting Bijan Robinson earlier, Philly would likely pivot to the defensive side of the ball. Brandon Graham is in the last year of his deal, Derek Barnett tore his ACL in September, and Robert Quinn is just a rental after coming to town at the trade deadline. So while the Eagles lead the NFL in sacks (49), they will still be looking for pass-rush help opposite Josh Sweat after the season. Foskey uses his great initial burst to put offensive tackles on their heels, and he had 11 sacks in each of the past two seasons. Other spots for the projected champs to consider would be the secondary and linebacker.

Chucktesla posted:

Checking in to say that Anthony Richardson is an insane talent and any team picking in the 20s that needs a QB Of The Future should draft him
I can probably talk myself into the Jets taking him and forcing him to sit for 2 years. He wont drop that far though.

Forrest on Fire
Nov 23, 2012

I will laugh very hard if the Broncos draft a RB in the first. Eagles shouldn't either even if he's a Saquon level talent at RB. But Denver's entire offense needs upgrades, drafting RB to resolve it is idiotic.

Ornery and Hornery
Oct 22, 2020

Yeah that mock has some head scratchers but overall it’s not as hot take-y as I was expecting.

Chucktesla posted:

Checking in to say that Anthony Richardson is an insane talent and any team picking in the 20s that needs a QB Of The Future should draft him

Gonna have to agree with this sage poster.

Grittybeard
Mar 29, 2010

Bad, very bad!

Forrest on Fire posted:

Eagles shouldn't either even if he's a Saquon level talent at RB.

I don't know man, Bijan is pretty goddamned good and Texas for some reason underused him so it's not like he's got a lot of college wear on him.

#5 is real high for sure. But I'd imagine someone is taking that guy earlyish unless he tests or interviews super poorly at the combine.

kiimo
Jul 24, 2003

There's like zero chance the Eagles are taking a RB with the 5th pick what year does McShay think it is?


A luxury pick? With QBs on the board? Why would they do that when they can trade down for a huge haul

Danny LaFever
Dec 29, 2008


Grimey Drawer
I'm curious about Stroud.

How much better is his college tape than Goff's? Since Goff went 1.

He looks like a really accurate passer and has a lot of issues with pressure in his face. A similar problem to Goff.

I guess I'm trying to see just how much of an improvement he would be on Goff.

Ornery and Hornery
Oct 22, 2020

kiimo posted:

There's like zero chance the Eagles are taking a RB with the 5th pick what year does McShay think it is?


A luxury pick? With QBs on the board? Why would they do that when they can trade down for a huge haul

Yeah it makes no sense for the Eagles to take a RB there. Trading down or drafting a relative blue chip player are both waaaaaaay more value.

DeimosRising
Oct 17, 2005

¡Hola SEA!


He explains very clearly that he’s not assuming trades because how would you even begin to guess who they would trade to and what that team would then need. Mock drafts are pretty silly to begin with but if you’re doing trades you’re straight up writing football fan fiction

EmbryoSteve
Dec 18, 2004

Taste~The~Rainbow

My blood sugar is gon' be like

~^^^^*WHOA*^^^^~

Seahawks drafting a safety in the 1st when they have like 40 million of cap space in diggs and adams next year is insane

Kalli
Jun 2, 2001



Meanwhile, Patriots tackle? yep, 100% that's the pick

The Puppy Bowl
Jan 31, 2013

A dog, in the house.

*woof*
The Ravens don't have a second round pick. If they wait till the end of day two to draft a WR there will be riots.

Doltos
Dec 28, 2005

🤌🤌🤌
I very much want Addison on the Giants but I don't think he'll test very well and I'll be disappointed at his fall

Alaois
Feb 7, 2012

lmao at the panthers taking Anthony Richardson in the 1st round

Nervous
Jan 25, 2005

Why, hello, my little slice of pecan pie.

Alaois posted:

lmao at the panthers taking Anthony Richardson in the 1st round

I mean, what else are they going to do with the 31st pick?

EmbryoSteve
Dec 18, 2004

Taste~The~Rainbow

My blood sugar is gon' be like

~^^^^*WHOA*^^^^~

Alaois posted:

lmao at the panthers taking Anthony Richardson in the 1st round

If they dont the seahawks will with their 2nd 1st rounder. He has "I can fix him, he has all the tools" profile that the seahawks love.

Dont pay attention to how that strategy has(n't) worked

3 DONG HORSE
May 22, 2008

I'd like to thank Satan for everything he's done for this organization


Broncos picking a running back in the first would be peak shoot me in the face. jUst get a fooking quarterback you dont HAVE to play RW


gently caress

Gonz
Dec 22, 2009

"Jesus, did I say that? Or just think it? Was I talking? Did they hear me?"
Broncos should draft nothing but defense and make their current defense even better, which would help them win games when they score under 16 points a game in perpetuity.

A lot of 13-10 wins under this plan.

EmbryoSteve
Dec 18, 2004

Taste~The~Rainbow

My blood sugar is gon' be like

~^^^^*WHOA*^^^^~

Gonz posted:

Broncos should draft nothing but defense and make their current defense even better, which would help them win games when they score under 16 points a game in perpetuity.

A lot of 13-10 wins under this plan.

Are you pete carroll?

Manoueverable
Oct 23, 2010

Dubs Loves Wubs
I highly doubt Anthony Richardson will develop like Josh Allen and right now it would be extremely foolish to draft him with anything higher than a fourth.

YOLOsubmarine
Oct 19, 2004

When asked which Pokemon he evolved into, Kamara pauses.

"Motherfucking, what's that big dragon shit? That orange motherfucker. Charizard."

Manoueverable posted:

I highly doubt Anthony Richardson will develop like Josh Allen and right now it would be extremely foolish to draft him with anything higher than a fourth.

I’m pretty skeptical of Richardson as well but a second rounder seems fine for his potential.

Ornery and Hornery
Oct 22, 2020

Ravens gonna draft Anthony Richardson at the end of the first after Lamar leaves

TheGreyGhost
Feb 14, 2012

“Go win the Heimlich Trophy!”
Tier 1 of the QB prospects effort post. I will probably adjust my reads of these guys over time, but this is my usual starting point for when I start looking at prospect comparisons. A reminder—calling someone Josh Allen as a prospect <> Josh Allen now.

Coleridge Bernard Stroud - Ohio State

Full disclosure, I have watched every single snap of his college career.

I like to start these with positive notes, so let’s consider his best attribute first. If you are trying to build a vertical stretch offense that uses your sidelines as a constraint, he might be one of the best prospects you’ll see. Of the big 4, he’s the only one that can throw deep to any third, with anticipation, at any speed necessary. Every other QB in the class struggles with at least one of those. If you look at some of his work in Mills, Scissors, or the Deep post, he is downright surgical in maximizing a receiver’s range and putting a ball where a defender may be close but not really able to contest. Watch the rose bowl, Michigan state games, or some of his throws against Utah to see what I mean.

Similarly, he unquestionably has an NFL arm. He’s never winning long throw or hard throw, but he’s more than capable of giving you speeds and angles in the Rodgers/Murray range. He’s shown those speed and angle changes within his release without having to change arm angles which indicates he’s very conscious of his release point and feels the ball well.

So what gives? Rare vertical ability without arm talent caveats of being a fastball guy or moonballer should theoretically mean he’s capable of doing the single hardest thing to do from day one. Well, there’s a question of the things he doesn’t do that makes me question how he works from day one.

First off, let’s talk about processing. For those who don’t remember my stupid effort post from last year, the Ohio State passing offense is a bit of an odd duck because of the parts it merges. Ryan Day is Kelly guy who loves motion and optionality to essentially guarantee any play can morph into something workable if the initial coverage would win. Think the option routes of the run and shoot, where you get away with it through superior pass blocking and receiving talent and don’t have to do things like half roll your QB to keep him alive. As such, his QBs tend to hold the ball a while by design. Fields was the most pronounced at this, but Stroud has the same eye discipline of staring downfield where he knows he will eventually have an opening, which he usually reads correctly and does.

Now, he makes good anticipation throws off those reads but even a nominal “failure” of holding the ball and reading is better than staring down a receiver or blindly throwing. Those both are decent percentage plays that won’t put your team in a bad position. That said it’s a play concept that is executed differently in the league. Tag/option routes are a thing, but the overall tendency is that you change things at the line and read things before the snap based on tendencies to simplify things and guarantee you’re on the same page with a receiver then apply that post-snap read in addition. Telling them to make a slant work depending on what coverage they see is a lot simpler than telling them to decide if a slant or sluggo is a better move—think of it as finding a hole or space. Usually the guy who gets the option routes in an NFL offense is an Amari Cooper or JaMarr Chase who runs clean and can attack at any field portion—you’re more willing to let other receivers specialize or run specific routes with the knowledge they should adjust them. So, that in mind, we need to consider that his work pre-snap is more important now while acknowledging that his post-snap reads get the ball largely to the correct spot. The problem is, what happens if your pre-snap work is wrong?

In big games and short yardage situations (red zone/4th down), CJ flatly misses obvious reads at the line. Watch Penn State or Notre Dame and you’ll see him get blitzed in moments where the pressure is obvious, but he’s too locked in on a space to change and doesn’t feel the pressure until it’s too late. I hesitate to call this failing under pressure, because it’s not a situation where he suddenly misses wildly or makes huge mistakes and often still makes great throws, but you don’t get extra points for making things harder on yourself. He compounds this by being a dude who absolutely hates checking down over the middle, which looks like a mixture of holding the ball long enough for inside defenders to crash and looking for the big play, despite the fact that just checking to the flat every time is less likely to get yardage than throwing the check when a guy hasn’t had a defender crash down. My theory is that he’s likely treating these situations with a QBs first lesson in dealing with blitzes—throw into the pressure. The problem is, that’s one of the easiest traps to set for a defensive coordinator, and it’s something that you theoretically should help solve for with protection calls so you can keep your receiving options instead. Sometimes, he gets around this by accident by just depending a drop or turning something into a half roll. The deep drop tends to work better just off of his ability to keep his body in a line, but the half roll is frustrating because his unwillingness to grab easy yardage means guys cheat backwards in scramble situations and make receivers work back.

This also brings me to my final major concern—what those checks at the line indicate. Remember, there are essentially two types of calls at the line: change the protection and change the play. If he’s missing protection calls, maybe he’s making audibles at the line to get favorable route combos in the vacated space to hit the constraint. Well, he somehow has fewer responsibilities there than Fields did. The coaches have openly said he only has limited audible control at the line and frequently send in “check with me” calls instead of letting him make the calls himself, which means they frequently run far too much play clock and get behind. This didn’t happen with Fields, or even Haskins for that matter. Those guys had near full audible control and were known for making quick glances pre-snap to take a favorable matchup or box. Maybe it’s a factor of reducing things to keep CJ loose or Day being a control freak, but it’s very very odd to me that a guy who is this good at narrow window throws and pattern recognition just isn’t trusted the same way as his predecessors at the line, especially when he has so many motion and shift controls that the offense has picked up which he clearly is told to key on.

From a purely physical profile, he probably needs to work on his feet as well. If you watch him miss long throws or feel pressed to get downfield, he will miss high more frequently than not. Two mechanical issues cause this. He will occasionally throw his own release point off by planting his back leg and dropping too far compared to his front leg (the Dwayne Haskins back foot special). Similarly, because he is aware of when he’s leaking power, he will wind up more than he needs to and do a half circle going up to his shoulder. On the Tebow scale, it’s about 1/3 of a Tebow, but it does make him occasionally predictable in the vertical game and cost him some rhythm and timing. Relative to other QBs, these are fairly small, I think he actually handles his steps and pocket footwork very well with just occasional overstepping leading to some of those back leg problems, but it is worth noting that he probably has a few extra MPH he could get on the ball without much work.

So what do I see as a good fit for him? Flatly, I would love him with someone in the Arians tree. He can handle the verticality and post-read work, maybe even some drop back play action to take advantage of his accuracy there. Just get him established in proper pre-read procedures and keep him from overthinking things. The McVay system gets credit at times for being training wheels, but it’s reliance on spacing the middle and cluster sets isn’t going to simplify things for a guy who hates checking down and is at his best throwing vertically—that system is predicated on horizontal stretches to create alleys that later turn vertical. Maybe you could consider something like what the Lions do iterating off of Payton’s stuff to let receivers work and take advantage of tag routes to avoid needing some of the tweener personnel. Alternatively, something like the Titans system that use motion and personnel to essentially create gravity in a passing game with odd pieces like TEs or RBs might make sense because he’s the type of QB who can actually do something with it long-term, even if it’s less user-friendly at the start due to the time it takes to develop feel on the narrower margin windows. Basically do anything to keep him away from Shannyball and the offense entirely predicated on 6 yard balls over the middle.

As a prospect, I like him as a more physically put-together Tua post snap—same type of point guard post-snap recognition mixed with bizarre lack of trust pre-snap and occasional self-inflicted difficulties from looking downfield or missing checks. I would also compare him to Derek Carr on some levels where I see his downfield and sideline ability as something potentially special but don’t love what he does in the first 5 yards of the field and worry that he falls in love with the 10+ yarder too much. Both of those guys came from a position of confidence and trusting their arms enough that they threw some rough picks in early in their careers, Carr from too tight of windows, Tua from too narrow for his soft moon balls. Carr has done better at cleaning that up but also has more margin inherent in his velocity. Stroud’s arm is in between those guys (if closer to Carr), but I do worry about that same initial correction when he doesn’t have utterly dominant receivers and has to adjust. The dolphins essentially had to retrain Tua to look at the middle and then realized even that wouldn’t work and grabbed some receivers so far you could just throw moon balls and play the hits. Carr, they just started letting him rip and realized turning 50/50 into 60/40 downfield would develop space elsewhere and gave him reps to figure it out. Stroud’s smart enough to figure it out, but those are important moments for patterning your game long-term. Definite first round guy, not worried about him as a first 16 prospect because he’s not any riskier than anything else we’ve seen there.

Bryce Young - Alabama

Do you remember Doug Flutie? Not in the sense of “designed QB run” but the guy who in the hands of a competent Madden player would scramble right and then throw downfield because anyone can get open after 6 seconds or escape downfield if you played blanket zone. Bryce comes as close to inspiring the antsy, annoyed feeling as any QB I’ve seen in a while. He’s more elusive than most running QBs not named Kyler Murray but not as deadly as Lamar, and he has just an uncanny ability to make fringe plays in space that feel like he’s always getting away with something. Dude has a lot of plays that he absolutely should have taken and been dead on (Texas) where he got away with it and made a big play. That is, in a sense, his entire game in a microcosm—getting away with a handful of things that should kill him because of game sense.

So let’s talk for a minute about escapability. For years, this was a roundabout way of saying a scrambling QB was less valuable because they took obvious hits in the open field and overused the ability to “give up” on reads as opposed to reading all 4 receivers on Spider Y Banana. “Oh what happens when someone makes him throw?” The answer for Bryce has historically been “he’s probably fine???” He routinely makes timing throws over the middle and at the sticks where I’m impressed at his ability in and out of the pocket to see and throw things that other QBs with his height disadvantage just haven’t done. Teams that contained him learned that he can step up and hit a seam or mesh guy. Teams that flush him learn he can figure out if the sky or hook defender doesn’t have the range to close the receiver on his side. If Stroud has a tendency to feel like a guy who has studied all the post-snap film, Bryce feels like a guy who studied all the pre-snap and breakdown plays. He even recognizes the vertical game, though I think the offense this year may have created some bad habits. You can see it in the year over year look at the offense, where the receivers go from having two extremely gifted space eaters who know when to sit down or beat a guy versus a bunch of physically talented receivers that just can’t put things together or improvise. In that sense, we should probably talk about Bryce as an individual before we start trying to assess his performances.

When I watch a guy who runs this well, there’s an immediate check you make: “what do his feet do when he stops to throw”. The mobile quarterback stereotype is the guy who foresakes planting his feet and form for moments where he makes a team choose what they’re going to defend. Bryce, to his credit, looks like he tries to gather his feet when he can, particularly when he looks deep. He does the shuffle/hop step and pretty much always either gets a plant foot down or has learned the type of cruise missile release where he can overcorrect for a lack of plant and arc a ball. I think the fact that he’s a better agility runner than pure speed helps a bit—guys like RG3 did a lot but ultimately wanted to run in a line and make minor cuts. Bryce looks for space laterally, and he’s got the ankle and knee work to somehow keep it all going. That works if you have the arm to push a ball on limited motion and it’s even better if you can get your feet down and into a ball on a dime, which he has shown an ability to do.

So let’s talk about his ball placement. When you watch him with Williams and Metchie, it looks like he’s borderline psychic inside the numbers and just feels where they’ll end a route from before the snap. When you watch him with anyone else, you realize immediately that he plays in an offense that is predicated on a level of execution that doesn’t work with most college receivers. If you watch guys like Brooks, they will be two steps slow of the timing route on an in or round a flag route in such a way that a corner catches up. Bryce is good enough that this usually just means it becomes a 70/30 ball, but a lot of his bad or multi pick games look like situations where a receiver is out of sync and lets a corner surprise them. With better receivers, he objectively throws these guys open—we’ve already seen it on tape. You do question if he necessarily needs receivers of that caliber to maximize his ability which hints at some of my concerns. It also doesn’t help that they don’t really run the ball well anymore so no one respects their play action anymore.

So what bugs me? Bryce has exactly one rap to beat—how’s the arm strength? I have very good confidence in his air; he’s not Mahomes but he can objectively lead guys or get a ball up when he needs to which is the difference between being Kyler or modern Russ. What worries me is his ability to rip the ball. When you watch his deep balls, he loves to lead guys on a carry but doesn’t always throw the ball hard, whether to an open guy or just hitting a vertical window. I’m of the mind that I think he has the arm to do it but has picked up some bad habits from borderline needing to run the scramble drill this year to keep that offense in the game. If you scramble, you can open a window and chuck it downfield. A lot of guys use that to get away with soft, arcing throws. The best NFL QBs at this point are able to create 80% of that receiving space but make a faster throw where a guy can get RAC as opposed to catching a ball and getting thrown down. When you throw to Jameson Williams, this doesn’t hurt. When it’s jacorey brooks, it does. He has to learn when to call the scramble early and maximize his throwing windows.

Additionally, we do have to have the small quarterback dialog. First off, he’s probably 5’10 if I had to guess. Can’t be more than 190, maybe 180. At that size, I don’t want him taking hits, especially with his frame being more slight than most slot receivers. I don’t see evidence of the sight line issues that Russ has. When his body breaks down though, what happen? His arm, when maxed out, torques pretty violently like Mayfield. Is that sustainable for him at 30? Is it reasonable to think he does much more than improve his velocity with footwork? Probably not, considering there’s just only so much mass he can throw at the ball when he’s maximizing his own acceleration in his arm. I’m not sure this is enough to say no to him, but it’s a knock that is unique to him in this class, and it will impact his fit with some teams.

People will compare him to Kyler. I flatly think Kyler was a better prospect. More consistent velocity, similar ball placement, similar running ability, less slight of frame. I do think he can give you a similar offense without much additional work, at least in the short term. To me, Bryce looks like what we got out of Watson in the passing game, right down to the bizarre picks, but his ball arc and movement look more like something between Kyler and Ryan Tannehill. He’s another guaranteed first rounder to be, but the longer this goes on the more I feel like he should be QB2.

Will Levis - Kentucky

Remember when Jamarcus Russell was a huge prospect because he had Josh Allen’s arm before Josh Allen? He basically never showed anything more than gunslinging to extremely talented receivers in open windows, but we all got so enamored with the tools that we didn’t look at his actual tendencies. He basically soured an entire generation on “tools” guys because why wouldn’t you have your poo poo together before you get to the league. Reader, I am very worried that Will Levis is going to be that player for “mechanics” guys.

Let’s talk for a minute about “ideal” mechanics and where that’s evolved. We’ve essentially grown in the last 40 years from there being “1 perfect mechanic” to “can you repeat it consistently, and how accurate/on time is it?”. We have never had this many bizarre or unorthodox style throwing motions since the days of Joe Namath and people not caring about throwing motions because throwing means you’re losing the game. The flip side is, this has essentially ruined our brains into questioning what the “best” set really would be if so many things make it work for so many guys.

Enter Will Levis. His wrist and arm look like he’s been in the league for 10 years while in the throwing motion. No hitch. No exaggerated elbow pull. Just ball at ear level, pull around, exit angle determines the arc. Need touch? He can soften it up with his shoulder or his wrist. Need a short curl? He will release the ball in front. When he is kept clean in the pocket so he doesn’t have to think about his feet and actually steps perfectly, he has shown the most speeds and angles of anyone not named CJ Stroud in this category. He has a Rodgers/Fields caliber arm, both in velocity and ability to take something off. Zero concerns about if he can theoretically hit NFL throws.

But the game isn’t played in a clean pocket, especially when you are going to get drafted to a team that is drafting high. His tendencies under felt pressure are to essentially bail right, throw a wide check down, or lock in on a read? Sound familiar? Yes, in many ways he behaves like CJ Stroud on paper but without the rationale present of “my guys will beat you downfield”. In fact, they both even get the deer in headlights “completely missed a protection call” look, but despite having a faster release, Levis will either get sacked or fall backwards into an even worse sack. He does not throw the ball away right now, largely because he still thinks of himself as a running quarterback. This extends to somewhat mailing in his play action work because he’s always thinking he can move on and scramble from the read with the space generated by the fake handoff.

Which brings me to his biggest issue, ball placement. As I look at his tape, it seems like he has decent feel for where his receivers are. Despite that, he throws high A LOT. Watch him against Florida or Tennessee and you’ll see a guy who is hitting open receivers but making them jump and lose momentum over the middle because he keeps throwing off his back foot or falling off the ball. People will call this an overthrow, but it’s really just him over striding and failing to feel how far back he’s going to get his foot back around. Same thing when he runs wide, never gets his foot around/in front, falls off the ball, misses high. It’s uncanny that his shoulders, arm, and wrist always look so consistent and good yet get let down by his feet this much.

So let’s talk then about the offense and the way he handles things. Prior to this year, they had Liam Coen—McVay disciple—running the cluster/bunch set passing game. For those unfamiliar, you create miserable pre-snap alignments and run things like wheels, mesh, shallow cross, anything that gets you running towards other receivers on your way to space. When you watch Levis at his best, it’s single coverage on our breaking or fading routes putting a ball on a line or over a receivers shoulder where he can run to grass. At his worst, he’s hanging balls in the post or seam and giving safeties a chance to erase him for giving a receiver a chance to catch a high ball. The biggest problem with his game right now is that it’s incoherent. You don’t want to make him a pure sideline/cluster guy because a high ball can be picked easily in the league from there, and his accuracy leaves when he moves. He’s too inconsistent with his feet and decisions downfield to be a vertical guy given how often he misses the existence of safety help and softens up too much. Right now, he just has an inability to be consistent. Granted, his offensive line was bad this year, but you should theoretically be able to run a brutal quick game with him and they still didn’t because of his inconsistency with his feet.

Additionally, his pre-snap reads are weird. The offense couldn’t block this year, but he’s missing extremely obvious pressure sets and them looking for illogical receivers on throwbacks or other hard throws trying to out-think a blitz. Doesn’t even really do the “throw where the pressure was” consistently, nor does he seem to acknowledge obvious alleys from
the coverage shell in favor of just picking a matchup and staring. I legitimately think someone can kick his rear end with some weird zone calls and blitz traps right now with everything he’s out on tape.

So who is he? To start, a great answer to how Zach Wilson would’ve been treated without an OL made of 30 year olds in college with bad protection calls and absurd overconfidence in his arm. His ability to move yet sudden loss of accuracy with his feet looks a lot like Tannehill did coming out. Somewhere between those two is what we’re looking at. He’s probably going to get picked by a team on the McVay tree that’s comfortable with his grasp of their offense, but I would really really like to see him in something like Daboll or the Cardinals offense with an opportunity to create natural space off of matchups and try to enforce the other team to play man coverage so you can maximize the odds his footwork and inconsistent reads don’t hurt you in the short term. If you can fix his feet, which is at least easier than the upper body, he could easily turn out to be a top 10-15 QB in the league—I’m just not sure about a guy who is inconsistent enough that he can’t make an offense more threatening than this. QB3, maybe 2 if you’re utterly terrified of protecting Bryce.


Anthony Richardson - Florida

Man someone get Josh Allen an edible arrangement for all the money he’s getting tools-y quarterbacks who are dynamic as players but not as throwers when they’re prospects.

Right off the bat, let’s discuss a few things. 1. He is not Josh Allen. Allen had bad receivers, no talent around him, and no history in the QB development pipeline that everyone who comes out of major high schools and colleges out there. 2. He is not Cam Newton. Despite being a similar freakish athlete with raw tools, Cam demonstrated touch, accuracy, and feel for throwing lanes that Richardson has essentially never demonstrated to this point. 3. He is not Patrick Mahomes. Mahomes had 800 different speeds and angles in his arm and needed time to re-learn some footwork and learn an offense that allows him to maximize his own variability.

So, now that the mouthbreathers have been satisfied, why is this guy being talked about as a first rounder? For one, borderline unlimited arm talent. He hits 50 yard balls on a line that essentially Stroud and Levis have shown but needed considerable more effort and footwork to his. He’s probably a 4.5/4.6 runner who can punish soft man coverage and push things up field. He has a feel in space and in the pocket for guys coming up to him and when he needs to extend a play.

So what gives? The man has exactly one speed, and it is FASTBALL. Goal line fade? Hit the receiver in the eye on an upward trajectory. Shallow cross? Better get thrown so hard it breaks a finger while getting tipped to a linebacker. Curl? Throw the ball so hard that it gets to the stands if the receiver mistimes a jump. He has no, and I mean no, ability to consistently take something off or even soften up beyond some type of deliberate shove work. I don’t know how this happens when he’s played quarterback since 2016, but just no one has gotten him to figure out how to change speeds.

So let’s talk about his mechanics and what’s behind this. He winds up, more of a pull straight back than down or overly torquing his shoulders. It shows up on a number of throws particularly deep and on play action, for apparently no reason. My hypothesis right now is that it’s a timing thing—he’s waiting for the guy to open and not consciously trying to put more on it so much as maximize his odds of hitting a spot. Honestly, I don’t worry too much because the ball gets there at an appropriate time regardless. His footwork is surprisingly decent for a guy who moves like he does as well. He steps in to most throws and only consistently shows an error in dropping his back knee too low which flattens balls out at times. This could actually get worse in the nfl when he fees pressure more consistent and can’t run away as simply, but we’re projecting here a bit. Regardless, off-platform throws are not a problem here in him looking significantly worse than throwing within structure from a mechanical standpoint which is nice.

What scares me beyond his touch is his reading and ball placement. First off, he doesn’t really ever read coverages well. Part of that is the offense relying on RPO/Power read looks that give him immediate pick and roll type reads, but bringing out coverage rotations and odd man principles is enough to frustrate him right now into either forcing a ball or just tucking. Coming from Mullen, I’m a bit shocked by that given that Mullen’s guys usually at least know what they see, even if they can’t do anything about it. More or less confirms why he was in Dan’s dog house despite being better than Emory Jones. Napier clearly didn’t believe in his reads or the guys around him either given how hard they leaned on using the option to create any other offensive stress on the field. Beyond all that, he just always puts the ball on a straight line, regardless of the route. That works with slants and hard curls, but this turns you into a predictable thrower for an NFL defense. If I tell my guy to always bail and be ready for the hard throw at the guy’s head, I can set traps for you even in man. You HAVE to be able to soften up just to punish corners who try to cheat for fast ball placements.

I’m also not 100% sure he does anything pre-snap beyond pointing at the read target and saying hike. His current offense isn’t asking him to do protections, and he did it poorly enough to make Mullen pick a subpar option. He could have a natural feel for it given his spatial awareness in the pocket, but it’s just another thing to add to the list of items he needs to work on.

So, let’s discuss his future. If he fixes everything and developed even a top 15 mental game, Richardson could be a pro bowler on the tools he has. He is maybe 10% less in the raw arm strength than Mahomes/Allen/Herbert, but he is a better runner right now than any of them. The question is, do you have a fanbase that can handle the growing pains? Do you have a coach who will give him 2 years to show any growth? Is the light every actually going to come on for a guy who has played the position for 8 years, had quarterback coaching this whole time, and isn’t coming at this from a lack of knowledge? I don’t know. I think he reminds me a lot of Allen or Herbert where the misses on tape are so bad I just can’t get past them, but his immediate running ability probably buys him more initial time than he would otherwise have in a league that tolerates growth for guys with his ceiling. I struggle a lot to think of an adequate comparison even with those two. He’s a worse passer right now than either, and the adage of guys rarely improving their completion percentage in the NFL comes to mind. On the other hand, he literally only has one speed and should have so many more options than this with just some really obvious drills and work. The sky is the limit here, but he’s in a position where he could be called a legitimate Josh Allen prospect or just a Terelle Pryor where he never puts the arm to work. Don’t think of this as a test of what prospect he best resembles—think of it as a test of character for the NFL team that wants to try to make this work. If you get him in the 2nd, roll the dice. If it’s a 1st but you’re replacing a starter in two years, maybe. Otherwise? There’s a lot of red flags here that say to me he’s not going to have the sudden growth Allen or Herbert did because it’s not like he was undiscovered or misused in college. QB4 as is with potential to make assholes of us all


Quick hits on the guys without first round potential to come.

Ornery and Hornery
Oct 22, 2020

So… regarding Richardson… you’re telling me there’s a chance :clint:

TheGreyGhost
Feb 14, 2012

“Go win the Heimlich Trophy!”

Ornery and Hornery posted:

So… regarding Richardson… you’re telling me there’s a chance :clint:

Sure, just like there’s a chance he’s Cardale Jones, Kaep, or Allen. He’s by far got the most obvious failure State to me but his upside is quite literally top 5 QB if he fixes every single thing. I’m not inclined to believe the league as a whole suddenly knows what to do with projects like him, but man if you could get him figured. He’s a better version of what Willis was last year as a prospect.

Ornery and Hornery
Oct 22, 2020

Everyone in TFF loves and appreciates you, TheGreyGhost :)

I am surprised you said Richardson doesn’t have top tier elite arm strength though. I thought he had the power (of GreySkull).

Ironic Twist
Aug 3, 2008

I'm bokeh, you're bokeh
Thank you very much for the effort posts, TGG, they're absolutely appreciated.

No Butt Stuff
Jun 10, 2004

One of my favorite parts of Draft threads is reading old draft threads. Here's 2017. https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3797562

Just reading the Mahomes stuff and remembering that I agreed with it was so disappointed when we drafted him instead of Watson.

This is why I just try to learn the names and convince myself the Chiefs are good at drafting when they reach for a guy I don't understand. (Except CEH. what the gently caress)

kiimo
Jul 24, 2003

quote:

Makes really wild, stupid throws that always seem to work out. I'm talking hop passes and falling forward bombs.



where's the lie

Diva Cupcake
Aug 15, 2005

No Butt Stuff posted:

One of my favorite parts of Draft threads is reading old draft threads. Here's 2017. https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3797562

Just reading the Mahomes stuff and remembering that I agreed with it was so disappointed when we drafted him instead of Watson.
I really wanted Watson. Instead we chose a safety.

mcmagic
Jul 1, 2004

If you see this avatar while scrolling the succ zone, you have been visited by the mcmagic of shitty lib takes! Good luck and prosperity will come to you, but only if you reply "shut the fuck up mcmagic" to this post!

Diva Cupcake posted:

I really wanted Watson. Instead we chose a safety.


Turns out we both were wrong lol

fsif
Jul 18, 2003

lol

https://twitter.com/NFL_DougFarrar/status/854714275444674560

Diva Cupcake
Aug 15, 2005

mcmagic posted:

Turns out we both were wrong lol
I know. Fiz also had a comment that he's too small to survive and now Watson is like 6'3" 220 and compared to like Bryce Young who is maybe 5'11" 200 and expected to go #1 overall. The discourse is pretty funny in restrospect.

Also the sexpest thing.

mcmagic
Jul 1, 2004

If you see this avatar while scrolling the succ zone, you have been visited by the mcmagic of shitty lib takes! Good luck and prosperity will come to you, but only if you reply "shut the fuck up mcmagic" to this post!

Diva Cupcake posted:

I know. Fiz also had a comment that he's too small to survive and now Watson is like 6'3" 220 and compared to like Bryce Young who is maybe 5'11" 200 and expected to go #1 overall. The discourse is pretty funny in restrospect.

Also the sexpest thing.

QB size discourse is so different now. It doesn't seem to matter at all anymore....

SKULL.GIF
Jan 20, 2017


mcmagic posted:

QB size discourse is so different now. It doesn't seem to matter at all anymore....

There's been a lot of QB protection rules and changes between 2017 and today.

mcmagic
Jul 1, 2004

If you see this avatar while scrolling the succ zone, you have been visited by the mcmagic of shitty lib takes! Good luck and prosperity will come to you, but only if you reply "shut the fuck up mcmagic" to this post!

SKULL.GIF posted:

There's been a lot of QB protection rules and changes between 2017 and today.

That is more true for QBs who run the ball on designed plays. I still think smaller QBs even like Wilson and Mayfield have trouble seeing over the line and get more passes knocked down that your league avg QB.

TheGreyGhost
Feb 14, 2012

“Go win the Heimlich Trophy!”

mcmagic posted:

QB size discourse is so different now. It doesn't seem to matter at all anymore....

Legitimately, I think the biggest size concern I have now with someone like Young is a mixture of “man what happens if his arm isn’t 100% and he has to drive the ball with his legs at 30” and “oh god that hit looked bad”. None of that really hinges on his height, but man if I’m not wigged out about a 180 lb quarterback at times regardless of how he’s actually playing.

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Relentlessboredomm
Oct 15, 2006

It's Sic Semper Tyrannis. You said, "Ever faithful terrible lizard."

TheGreyGhost posted:

Tier 1 of the QB prospects effort post.

it blows my mind that anyone is genuinely considering richardson as anything other than a TE conversion or the new Taysom Hill. He's had multiple good offensive coaches, years to learn the basics and he's the worst throwing QB in the SEC somehow. if he was from some no name school, never had much coaching and only played a year then maybe take a flier in the 2nd but the dude's had a lot of time and chances to improve and he's shown jack poo poo. it would be the most miraculous development job of all time to turn him into a solid NFL qb

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