Fri. – Day 2 Draft Thread (best available etc.)

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  • #67903
    Agamemnon
    Moderator


    Some of the players left. 5 picks to go. I see 5 players I know. But, I haven’t really looked at any of these players closely.

    Agamemnon

    #67907
    zn
    Moderator

    Deadpool wrote:

    My Bigboard after Day 1

    1. Myles Garrett – DE – Texas A&M – Top edge rusher in the draft. No real holes in his game. Just an explosive, smooth athlete.

    2. Jonathan Allen- DL – Alabama – Could play a 4-3 end in base set, move inside on passing downs or could be a 3-4 end. Serious pass rush from the inside.

    3. Leonard Fournette – RB – LSU – A hammer between the tackles and enough speed to take it to the house. Rare athleticism for his size at the position. Just a punisher. Going to have to watch his weight.

    4. Malik Hooker – S – Ohio State – A ballhawk with a ton of range and instincts. One of my altime safety favorites since I started doing this.

    5. Jamal Adams – S – LSU – a rare heat seeking missle SS that has very good coverage skills. Great instincts and an absolute hammer. Not your typical in the box safety.

    6. Marshaun Lattimore – CB – Ohio State – Very fluid cover corner with great feet. Is active in run support and is more then willing to stick his nose in the middle of things.

    7. Christian McCaffery – RB – Stanford – Multiple position threat. Slot, RB, PR, KR you name it. Best pass catching RB in draft. 4.48 speed with incredible feet, is patient with burst. Just lacks some bulk.

    8. Derek Barnett – Edge – Tennessee – A terror off the edge that was a sack machine. Not a liability against the run. More athletic then given credit for and plays with an edge.

    9. Soloman Thomas – Edge – Stanford – Quick first step, strong and more of an athlete then we are used to seeing from Stanford lineman. A tad raw and size wise a tweener but his skill set is just too much to ignore.

    10. O.J. Howard – TE – Alabama – A gifted pass catcher with the ability to block. A true size/ speed TE.

    11. Haasan Reddick -OLB – Temple – I like him more then most. But he is your new age 4-3 OLB. Smooth sideline to sideline with the speed to match up with these weapon TEs.

    12. Mike Williams – WR – Clemson – Not a homerun hitter, but has great size and is a master at going up and getting the ball. Not a plodder though.

    13. Reuben Foster – ILB – Alabama – A thumper that has learned to stop leading with his head. Instinctive, agile, sideline to sideline and nasty. Can cover. Questionable character IMO.

    14. Corey Davis – WR – Western Michigan – A favorite of mine for a few years now. He’s a size/speed/weight WR that has great hands and super college production. Level of Competition doesn’t botehr me.

    15. Ryan Ramczyk – OT – Wisconsin – (pronounced Ram check) Top LT in a weak OT class. Great build for the position. Good bend and a decent hand punch. Tad raw and prolly starts on the right side.

    16. Jabrill Peppers – SS – Michigan – Was fun to watch play all over at Michigan, but in reality, he is a SS only and a to return guy with freakish athletic ability. Smooth and fast, but lacks the weight to be a OLB in the pros.

    17. Mitch Trubisky – QB – North Carolina – 1 spot lower then I had Goff last year. Has all the tools, a tad short at 6-2″ but that isn’t a big deal to me. 13 college starts tells me he needs time to develop. Good mobility, good arm, few interceptions with a 68% completion %.

    18. John Ross – WR – Washington – An obvious speed freak (4.22) but undersized at 5-8 and 188. Vertical threat, can take the top off a defense, whatever term you like. A Desean Jackson type WR.

    19. Dalvin Cook – RB – Florida State – Here’s your homerun threat. Incredible balance and feet. Just an amazingly athletic RB that has pass catching skills. Off the field red flags.

    20. David Njoku – TE – Miami – Athletic freak with great size for the position but only 13 starts. A serious mismatch TE.

    21. Cam Robinson – OT – Alabama – A natural RT where speed won’t affect him as much. Could be an OG. A mauling run blocker that has had issues against athletic, quick rushers in the passing game.

    22. Takkarist McKinley – OLB – UCLA – IMO a 3-4 OLB that is at his best going forward. Explosive, quick and pretty smooth. A natural edge rusher.

    23. Zach Cunningham – ILB – Vanderbilt – A 3 down ILB. Love his insticts, ability to cover (watch the Engram Ole Miss game) and ability to shed. A tad narrow framed and never had a int. in

    24. Charles Harris – Edge – Missouri – An athletic, speed rusher. More of a 3-4 OLB then a 4-3 end. Played with and without his hand in the dirt.

    25. Marlon Humphrey – CB – Alabama – Here’s where it gets fun as far as CB rankings. I like his size/ speed combo along with his agressiveness in run support. He had a few hiccups in pass coverage this year, but nothing alarming IMO.

    26. Caleb Brantley – DT – Florida – A 3 tech in a 4-3 defense. A very disruptive interior lineman. Excellent quickness off the snap. Interviewed poorly at the combine.

    27. Deshaun Watson – QB – Clemson – Althetic QB that thrives in high pressure situations and seems like a natural leader. I question his accuracy and decision making with the football. The system he comes from will make for an adjustment period.

    28. Taco Charlton – DE – Michigan – A riser on my personal board all year. A classic, long 4-3 end that can get after the QB.

    29. Quincy Wilson – CB – Florida – Another bigger (6′-1″ 210 lb) CB that is physical. Faster than quick. Needs to stay focused.

    30. Tre’Davious White – CB – LSU – 5′-11″ so average size, a 4 year starter that got better every year, including his level of aggresiveness. Smooth CB trending upward IMO.

    31. Forrest Lamp – OG – Western Kentucky – could also be a OC. Prolly goes much higher then I have him but too much depth at CB and edge rushers puch him down. A OT with average arm length moving him inside. Uses his hands well and is aggresive in run blocking. Kinda narrow lower half.

    32 . Gareon Conley – CB – Ohio State – 6′-0″ 195 CB that has good length to play against bigger WRs and enough speed to match up with quicker WRs.

    33. Malik McDowell – DT – Michigan State – 6′-6″, 295 lbs. – played inside and out. Great length and hand use. Can play with a high motor (can also disappear)

    34. Kevin King – CB – Washington – 6′-3″, 200 lbs. A lanky CB. Hass played slot and outside as well as starting his career as a FS. Smooth with nice speed and a willing tackler. A tad raw from moving around the defense so much.

    35. Evan Engram – TE – Ole Miss – At 6′-3″ 235 lbs. with a 4.4 40 time is he a WR a slot WR or a TE? At TE he has elite speed that could create matchup issues. At WR not so much. Have heard his work ethic is second to none.

    36. Garett Bolles – OT – Utah – Good feet with a nice punch that allows him to mirror opponents. A tad older then other prospects at 24, was out of football for 2 years.

    37. Obi Melifonwu – S – UConn – 6′-4″ 225 lb. rangy safety that is ultra athletic and can work in the box or play man. In any normal year, would be the top S off the board.

    38. Budda Baker – FS – Washington – plays bigger then his 5′-10″ 195 lb frame. Plays fast, plays sideline to sideline and is a willing tackler. Poor hands…

    39. TJ Watt – OLB – Wisconsin – either a 4-3 SSLB or more likely a 3-4 OLB. Excellent edge rusher who also does well setting the edge. (get ready for a run on OLB )

    40. Jordan Willis – OLB – Kansas State – 3-4 OLB. Another good pass rusher that can set the edge and is more athletic then he gets credit for.

    41. Tyus Bowser – OLB – Houston – 3rd 3-4 OLB. Exposive first step and good bend get him to the QB. Missed a month of his senior year after breaking an orbital bone fighting a teammate…

    42. Pat Mahomes II – QB – Texas Tech – The gunslinger in this class that has tons of ability and like every other QB, needs time. Confident, mobile and a huge arm. Decision making can be iffy.

    43. Jarrad Davis – ILB – Florida – Sideline to sideline finisher. Athletic and decent in coverage. Only hole is he can be over aggresive and get washed out.

    44. Curtis Samuel – WR – Ohio State – A combo WR/RB in college. Will be a WR in the pros. Good hands, good route runner and as dangerous as anyone in the draft in the open field.

    45. Adoree Jackson – CB – USC – undersized at 5-10″ 186 lbs. More athlete then football player at this point. Going to start in the slot and will need technique work, but has ball skills.

    ***

    46. Dan Feeney – OG – Indiana – I like him as a RG. Plays with a nasty streak.+ pass protecter that came from a zone scheme. Can pull. Plays with patience, ie, doesn’t lunge.

    47. Tim Williams – OLB – Alabama – Gets after the QB as an OLB. Explosive with bend that makes him an excellent pass rusher. Needs work setting edge in run game.

    48. Sidney Jones – CB – Washington – A smooth corner with tremendous ball skills and is decent in run support and can blitz. Narrow frame may be a concern, but IMO he plays bigger then he is. NOTE: injury at proday keeps him from playing his season.

    49. DeShone Kizer – QB – Notre Dame – Built well for a QB, athletic, a good arm to make all the throws. Shows some touch at times. I wish I liked him more, but he teases you one game with his talent and then it disappears. Needs some time (like every other QB this year) to develop.

    50. Dion Dawkins – OG/OT – Temple – Excellent balance to go along with good technique. I like him inside as a guard where he can use his power.

    51. Derek Rivers – OLB/DE – Youngstown State – I really like this FCS kid as a 3-4 OLB. He is what I like to call a speed to power converter. Can set an edge. Should be a better pro then college player. Needs to develop some pass rush moves.

    52. Chidobe Awuzie – CB – Colorado – 6′, 200 lb corner that is smooth with loose hips and plays inside and out. Can get a tad handsy at times.

    53. Alvin Kamara – RB – Tennessee – Explosive with some wiggle and good balance. Not as instinctive as the first 3 RBs on my list.

    54. Fabian Moreau – CB – UCLA – Another smooth athlete with elite top end speed. Good size for the position. Inexperienced due to position change and it shows at times. Torn pectoral at Pro Day.

    55. Carl Lawson – DE/OLB – Auburn – Explosive off the edge, also good at setting the edge. Injury history and needs to develop more pass rush moves.

    56. Teez Tabor – CB – Florida – Prototypical size for position, athletic and mirrors well and has recovery speed. Had some lapses in coverage this season and a miserable 40 time is concerning.

    57. Adam Shaheen – TE – Ashland – Rare size, speed, athleticism for the position. 6′-6″ 278 lbs and ran a 4.78. Can block but needs work. Major step up in competition.

    58. Raekwon McMillan – ILB/OLB – Ohio State – Downhill with instincts. Plenty of speed and shows some pass coverage ability. Struggles taking on blocks.

    59. JuJu Smith-Schuster – WR – USC – Strong, physical WR. Hands catcher and wins contested balls. Good route runner. Troubles with seperation.

    60. Chris Wormley – DT – Michigan – Played inside and out. good bullrush. Quick but not explosive. Athletic for his size. Lacks what I would call a suddenness to his game.

    61. Desmond King – S- Iowa – Played corner for the Hawkeyes but lack of speed will move him to safety. Instictive with ball skills. Physically limited.

    62. Josh Jones – S – NCST – Size/speed combo with ball skills that can be over aggressive at times.

    63. Gerald Everett – TE – South Alabama – Another WR in a TE body that plays fast and eats up turf. Willing blocker. Needs route running work.

    64. Chris Godwin – WR – Penn St. – Excellent route runner with good hands. Plays slower then his timed speed.

    65. Cooper Kupp – WR – Eastern Washington – Route technichian with excellent hands playing in the slot. Can he play outside?

    66. Tarell Basham – DE – Ohio – Another speed to power athlete. High motor and can set an edge. Needs pass rush moves.

    67. Cordrea Tankersly – CB – Clemson – Nice length for the position. Does well to mirror WRs and good production. Concerned about instincts / too handsy for my liking.

    68. Marcus Maye – S – Florida – Prototypical size for position. Makes plays on the ball and plays sideline to sideline. Can get lost in coverage at times.

    69. Marcus Williams – S – Utah – Another prototype sized S that has instincts and plays sideline to sideline. needs to get stronger.

    70. ArDarius Stewart – WR – Alabama – WR that gets it done. Nothing flashy, plays tough, wins contested balls and tough to tackle.

    71. Ahkello Witherspoon – CB – Colorado – 6′-3″ 200 lb. size/speed combo with loose hips but needs to add weight.

    72. Taylor Moton – OT/OG – WEstern Michigan – Big and strong and needs to be a guard. has played OG and OT. Footwork and balance issues force him inside.

    73. Dorian Johnson – OG – Pitt – Big, strong with an excellent lower body for a OG. Needs to stay engaged in blocks longer at times.

    74. Zay Jones – WR – East Carolina – High production with good hands. Has played inside and out. Competes. Average play speed IMO. Lots of production came after team was desperately behind.

    75. Montravius Adams – DT – Auburn – Disruptive, plays low and explosive. Lets blockers get into his body too often.

    76. Pat Elfein – OC/OG – Ohio State – Strong lower body, plays with patience. Good hands. A little stiff .

    77. Ryan Anderson -OLB – ALabama – Excellent hand work and sets a mean edge. More of an effort pass rusher. Not explosive, not real rangy.

    78. Larry Ogunjobi – DT – Charlotte – 6′-3″ and plays low with decent explosiveness off the snap. Short arms and could use more size in his game.

    79. Antonio Garcia – OT – Troy – very athletic with +feet. Needs to add some weight, short arms not ideal.

    80. Chad Hansen – WR – Cal – good size @ 6′-2″ and deceptive speed. Plays smooth and physical. Good hands. needs to create more seperation.

    81. Cameron Sutton – CB – Tennessee – Instinctual CB with good hands and smooth feet that needs to add some size.

    82. Isaac Asiata – OG – Utah – has played OG/OC – A flat out non-stop mauler thjat can be over aggressive at times.

    83. Davis Webb – QB – Cal – Big arm, big body. Comes from a air raid offense so needs to sit and learn…

    84. Ethan Pocic – OC – LSU – Tall and athletic for a center. Good hand usage. Not strong and can get leveraged.

    85. Justin Evans – S – Texas A&M – Some of the best ball skills in the draft and is always around the ball. Likes to hit, but doesn’t tackle. Needs more size.

    86. DeMarcus Walker – DE – Florida – Has excellent hand work, nice array of pass rusah moves and finds ways to get to the QB. Very inconsistant when you watch him from game to game.

    87. Joe Mixon – RB – Oklahoma – does it all. Excellent burst, can thump between the tackles, excellent pass catcher and has excellent feet. As a human being, the guy is a repeat offender dirtbag I wouldn’t touch.

    88. Dalvin Tomlinson – DT – Alabama – Big, thick space eater in the middle. Not very athletic, but does the dirty work.

    89. Jordan Leggett – TE – Clemson – Good length for the position at 6′-5″. Hands catcher that really puts pressure on the seam. Can block. Stiff and needs to put in consistant effort.

    90. Amara Darboh – WR – Michigan – Excellent size and ran a 4.45 but doesn’t play to that speed. Physical, heady player.

    91. Eddie Jackson – S – Alabama – Rangy S that has played CB. Has good ball skills and is a +punt returner. Average athlete.

    92. D’Onta Foreman – RB – Texas – excellent feet and athleticism for a big back. Needs to work on ball security.

    93. Taywan Taylor – WR – West. Kentucky – Slot WR that gets seperatuion with his athleticism and speed. Does let the ball get into his body.

    94. Jourdan Lewis – CB – Michigan – undersized nickel CB that plays much bigger then he is. Great feet. Good speed and athletic. Just lacks size.

    95. Carlos Henderson – WR – Louisiana Tech – Under-rated WR that has top end speed, ok runner, good hands and has returner experience. Is he a slot guy in the NFL? Step up in competition.

    96. Charles Walker – DT – Oklahoma – Strength and quickness is very good. Consistancy is not. When is is is right, he is tough to stop. Concussions could be an issue.

    97. Nathan Peterman – QB – Pitt – Average physically, inc. his arm. Came from a pro style offense so can drop back. mechanics need work, but he is accurate.

    98. Dede Westbrook – WR – Oklahoma – Smooth route runner that is dangerous with the ball in his hands. Extremely light in the weight deptartment.

    99. Kendall Beckwith – ILB – LSU – Physical, old school MLBer that is willing to take on blockers. Average athletically. torn ACL may have him drop.

    100. George Kittle – TE – Iowa – Good blocker, +hands that can press the seams and is more of a reciever then your typical Iowa TE. needs route work.

    101. Rasul Douglas – CB – West Virginia – Big, physical CB at 6′-2″. Excellent awareness with OK speed. Burner WRs will give him trouble. Serious concerns about his smarts.

    102. Alex Anzalone – OLB – Florida – Can play inside and out, 3-4 or 4-3. Good moving forward or backward. Injury history concerns.

    103. Tanoh Kpassagnon – DE – Villanova – A tall, long 3-4 DE that uses his athelicism and long arms to get to the QB. Good at setting the edge and holding his ground. Not explosive.

    104. Eddie Vanderdoes – DT – UCLA – Athletic and powerful. Looked better pre-ACL tear. Played all last year and seemed off. Knee is an issue.

    105. Anthony Walker Jr. – ILB – Northwestern – instinctive middle LBer works best going downhill. A little limited athletically.

    106. Jake Butt – TE – Michigan – A tough in-line chain moving TE with strong hands. OK as a blocker. Tore his ACL in bowl game.

    107. Trey Hendrickson – DE – Florida Atlantic – Good burst with good arm use. Uses a couple of rush moves. Force fumble machine. A little small and can have issues setting the edge.

    108. Roderick Johnson – OT – Florida State – Tall OT with long arms and uses them well with a solid punch. Strong. Balance and movement issues make him a RT.

    109. Malachi Dupree – WR – LSU – good size at 6′-2″ 200 lbs, solid hands with excellent body control. QB play makes him a hard eval. Doesn’t play to his 4.5 speed.

    110. Jaleel Johnson – DT – Iowa – Athletic with a revved up motor for a big kid. Excellent hand use. Gets upright at times and issues once a blocker gets into his body.

    111. Bucky Hodges – TE – Virginia Tech – Tall, smooth TE with 4.57 speed. Will work the seam and the redzone. Needs route work. Hands can be iffy at times.

    112. Duke Riley – OLB – LSU – Downhill read and react LBer. Average athlete.

    113. Blair Brown – OLB – Ohio – Instictive, downhill LBer that finishes. A tad undersized.

    114. Josh Reynolds – WR – Texas A&M – Long WR with 4.5 speed that wins jump balls. Wins contested balls and is a vertical threat. Thin framed that has problems with the jam.

    115. Carlos Watkins – DT – Clemson – Big and athletic. Good hand use. Can get leveraged by OGs, needs to play lower.

    116. Samaje Perine – RB – Oklahoma – A bruiser back with yards after contact power. Not much wiggle.

    117. Nico Siragusa – OG – San Deigo State – A muscular fire hydrant. Excellent run blocker. Needs work on pass pro.

    118. Elijah Qualls – DT – Washington – A 6′-1″ space eating fire hydrant. Short arms and legs make it difficult for him to make plays.

    119. Daeshon Hall – DE – Texas A& M – High motor guy that has played as a LB and DE. IMO a 4-3 DE. Can set the edge against the run and has shown he is athletic enough to rush the passer. 1 yr as a DE makes him raw.

    120. Jonnu Smith – TE – Florida International – Another seam pressing TE with 4.6 speed. Decent blocker. Doesn’t have natural hands.

    121. – Vince Biegel – OLB – Wisconsin – 3-4 OLB with a high motor. Plays the run well. At his best playing downhill. Needs to get stronger (once he gets engaged, tough to disengage)

    122. Eric Magnuson – OL – Michigan – Gets the OL designation because I feel he could play multiple positions. Experience at OG and OT. I think he ends up inside. Needs to get stronger.

    123. -Dawuane Smoot – DE – Illinois – 6′-3″ 265 lb DE/OLB tweener with 4.77 speed. High motor, good athlete with some speed to power that I like. Can have issues against the run.

    124. Noah Brown – WR – Ohio State – A big, physical WR that wins contested catches and moves the sticks. Really raw and young.

    125. John Johnson – S – Boston College – Has played CB and S. Smooth with +footwork. Excellent ball skills and gets sideline to sideline. Needs to play more physically as a S.[/color]

    #67908
    zn
    Moderator

    LMU93 wrote:

    my best available going into Friday

    RB Dalvin Cook
    OG Forrest Lamp
    OT Cam Robinson
    DL Malik McDowell
    CB Kevin King
    CB Chidobe Awuzie
    QB DeShone Kizer
    LB Tim Williams
    S Obi Melifonwu
    CB Quincy Wilson
    LB Zach Cunningham
    DE Chris Wormley
    DE Jordan Willis
    S Budda Baker
    DE Carl Lawson

    #67909
    zn
    Moderator

    Merlin wrote:

    Well, just off the top of my list there’s…

    1. A few very strong CB options (King, Awuzie, Lewis)
    2. Four solid wideout options (Jones, Godwin, Juju, Kupp)
    3. Two very good interior OL (Lamp, Feeney)
    4. One very good LB (Cunningham)

    Tomorrow night’s gonna be fun! I wouldn’t move up because the quality of that round 3 pick is going to be excellent. Nor would I give up a round 4 pick in this draft. Too many players I really like in that range. Let the draft come to you at 37.

    If they insist on interior OL, Lamp isn’t the only option. I also like Feeney a LOT, not a lot of dropoff there.

    And the wideouts are going to depend on what exactly they’re looking for. If it’s what we think, an X type, then they’ll have some solid options.

    CBs as expected will have most value. If you want offense desperately might want to buckle up lol.

    #67915
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    i’d take a real hard look at mcdowell.

    tons of potential there. i think not being able to play one position hurt him.

    could be a load at defensive end.

    • This reply was modified 7 years ago by InvaderRam.
    #67917
    zn
    Moderator

    i’d take a real hard look at mcdowell.

    tons of potential there. i think not being able to play one position hurt him.

    could be a load at defensive end.

    MALIK MCDOWELL

    6’6″
    295LBS

    ANALYSIS

    STRENGTHS Slippery and long. Combination of arm length and flexible torso allow him to slither into gaps and create disruptions for blockers. Freaky combination of size and athleticism. Can overwhelm blockers with pure strength and explosiveness when his feet are right. Strong enough in lower half to play through contact and cause stress in the pocket. Has tremendous amount of untapped potential waiting to be unlocked. Quick, strong hands in pass rush. Able to attack the edge with club-and-swim pet move. Can crank up a pocket-caving bull rush. Can redirect his weight and maintain pursuit of scrambling mobile quarterbacks. Long frame and play speed can close out perimeter runs and foil them before corner is turned. Elite playmaking radius. Explosive lateral movement and quickness. Can bound from one gap to the next in Sparty’s slanting defensive front. Will be extremely difficult to cross face as he learns the position. Has experience up and down the defensive line.

    WEAKNESSES Footwork and technique are a mess. Plays with inconsistent base width and overall balance. Struggles to keep feet clean and ends up on the ground. Lines up in narrow, three-point stance from interior and struggles to fight back against down blocks and double teams. Can be washed out of his gap too often. High center of gravity made interior work a challenge at times. Can bend, but lets high pad level get the best of him. Doesn’t consistently utilize his length with first hands. Has to become better at controlling the point of attack with his natural attributes. Needs to punch and control rather than leaning on blockers. Production doesn’t match up with the traits and the talent. Scouts concerned about work ethic and leadership.

    DRAFT PROJECTION Round 1

    SOURCES TELL US “He has a chance to be a dominant player in our league. I mean dominant. It hasn’t turned on for him all the way yet but if it does, he could be like Mario Williams. He’s just a little lazy and I worry about whether he is going to be a self-starter.” — NFC North area scout

    NFL COMPARISON Ezekiel Ansah

    BOTTOM LINE Has similar physical traits and abilities of Arik Armstead and DeForest Buckner, but may not share their football character. McDowell lacked production along the interior and could benefit from a move to a defensive end spot in a 4-3 or 3-4 front. McDowell is raw, but when he flashes, it can be blinding. McDowell is an explosive, ascending prospect with All-Pro potential if he grows into his body and takes the necessary coaching.

    -Lance Zierlein: http://www.nfl.com/draft/2017/profiles/malik-mcdowell?id=2557970

    #67919
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    Everybody likes stars, but at this point, I just want players. You know, WRs that catch the ball. etc. I am not interested in potential, unless they like football.

    Agamemnon

    #67921
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    Everybody likes stars, but at this point, I just want players. You know, WRs that catch the ball. etc. I am not interested in potential, unless they like football.

    yeah. i like home runs. but i’ve got a high strikeout rate…

    #67925
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    NFL

    Find this article at:
    http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000803469/article/2017-nfl-draft-best-remaining-prospects
    2017 NFL Draft: Best remaining prospects

    NFL.com
    Published: April 27, 2017 at 10:05 p.m.
    Updated: April 28, 2017 at 12:13 a.m.

    Here are the top remaining players in the 2017 NFL Draft, based on NFL Media senior analyst Gil Brandt’s rankings of the top 150 prospects (number by player’s name is where Brandt had them originally ranked).

    15. Cam Robinson, OT, Alabama
    25. Dalvin Cook, RB, Florida State
    27. Quincy Wilson, CB, Florida
    28. Kevin King, CB, Washington

    32. Chidobe Awuzie, CB, Colorado
    33. DeShone Kizer, QB, Notre Dame
    35. Curtis Samuel, RB, Ohio State
    36. JuJu Smith-Schuster, WR, USC
    38. Marcus Williams, S, Utah
    39. Josh Jones, S, North Carolina State
    40. Jordan Willis, DE, Kansas State

    41. Forrest Lamp, G, Western Kentucky
    44. Marcus Maye, S, Florida
    45. Malik McDowell, DT, Michigan State
    46. Zach Cunningham, LB, Vanderbilt
    47. Tim Williams, LB, Alabama
    48. Chris Wormley, DE, Michigan
    49. Ryan Anderson, OLB, Alabama
    50. Dan Feeney, OL, Indiana

    51. Chris Godwin, WR, Penn State
    52. Pat Elflein, C, Ohio State
    53. Justin Evans, S, Texas A&M
    54. Ethan Pocic, C, LSU
    55. Budda Baker, S, Washington
    56. Dorian Johnson, OL, Pittsburgh
    57. Daeshon Hall, DE, Texas A&M
    58. Davon Godchaux, DT, LSU
    59. Tedric Thompson, S, Colorado

    61. Jourdan Lewis, CB, Michigan
    62. Zay Jones, WR, East Carolina
    63. Cooper Kupp, WR, Eastern Washington
    64. Malachi Dupre, WR, LSU
    65. Samaje Perine, RB, Oklahoma
    66. Teez Tabor, CB, Florida
    67. Dion Dawkins, OL, Temple
    68. Tyus Bowser, OLB, Houston
    69. Obi Melifonwu, S, Connecticut
    70. Desmond King, CB, Iowa

    71. ArDarius Stewart, WR, Alabama
    72. Dalvin Tomlinson, DT, Alabama
    73. Raekwon McMillan, LB, Ohio State
    74. Jordan Leggett, TE, Clemson
    75. Dawuane Smoot, DE, Illinois
    76. Josh Malone, WR, Tennessee
    77. Carl Lawson, DE, Auburn
    78. Duke Riley, OLB, LSU
    79. Alvin Kamara, RB, Tennessee
    80. Sidney Jones, CB, Washington
    81. Brian Hill, RB, Wyoming

    82. Davis Webb, QB, Cal
    83. Joshua Dobbs, QB, Tennessee
    84. Isaac Asiata, OG, Utah
    85. Cam Sutton, CB, Tennessee
    86. Zach Banner, OT, USC
    87. Jeremy Sprinkle, TE, Arkansas
    88. D’Onta Foreman, RB, Texas
    89. Josh Reynolds, WR, Texas A&M
    90. Vince Biegel, LB, Wisconsin

    91. James Conner, RB, Pittsburgh
    92. Roderick Johnson, OT, Florida State
    93. Alex Anzalone, LB, Florida
    94. Shaquill Griffin, CB, Central Florida
    95. Jaleel Johnson, DT, Iowa
    96. Tanoh Kpassagnon, DE, Villanova
    97. Julie’n Davenport, OT, Bucknell
    98. Dede Westbrook, WR, Oklahoma
    99. Nathan Peterman, QB, Pittsburgh
    100. David Sharpe, OT, Florida
    101. Caleb Brantley, DT, Florida
    102. George Kittle, TE, Iowa
    103. Ricky Seals-Jones, TE, Texas A&M
    104. Fabian Moreau, CB, UCLA
    105. Gerald Everett, TE, South Alabama
    106. Ishmael Zamora, WR, Baylor
    107. Bucky Hodges, TE, Virginia Tech
    108. Chad Hansen, WR, Cal
    109. Taylor Moton, OL, Western Michigan
    110. Nazair Jones, DT, North Carolina

    111. Nico Siragusa, OL, San Diego State
    112. DeMarcus Walker, DL, FSU
    113. Brad Kaaya, QB, Miami
    114. John Johnson, S, Boston College
    115. Kendell Beckwith, ILB, LSU
    116. KD Cannon, WR, Baylor
    117. Kenny Golladay, WR, Northern Illinois
    118. Jake Butt, TE, Michigan
    119. Danny Isidora, OG, Miami
    120. Adam Shaheen, TE, Ashland

    121. Cordrea Tankersley, CB, Clemson
    122. Carlos Watkins, DT, Clemson
    123. Montravius Adams, DT, Auburn
    124. Carlos Henderson, WR-KR, Louisiana Tech
    125. Amara Darboh, WR, Michigan
    126. Anthony Walker, LB, Northwestern
    127. Tarell Basham, DE, Ohio
    128. Taywan Taylor, WR, Western Kentucky
    129. Derek Rivers, DE, Youngstown St.
    130. Donnel Pumphrey, RB, San Diego St.

    131. Antonio Garcia, OT, Troy
    132. Howard Wilson, CB, Houston
    133. Kareem Hunt, RB, Toledo
    134. Jehu Chesson, WR, Michigan
    135. Jessamen Dunker, OG, Tennessee St.
    136. Fadol Brown, DE, Ole Miss
    137. Collin Buchanan, OT, Miami (Ohio)
    138. Avery Gennesy, OT, Texas A&M
    139. Larry Ogunjobi, OT, UNC-Charlotte
    140. Jonnu Smith, TE, Florida International

    141. Shelton Gibson, WR, West Virginia
    142. Jeremy McNichols, RB, Boise St.
    143. Mack Hollins, WR, North Carolina
    144. Tarik Cohen, RB-KR, North Carolina A&T
    145. Jalen Myrick, CB, Minnesota
    146. Zane Gonzalez, K, Arizona State
    147. Brandon Barnes, TE, Alabama St.
    148. Ben Gedeon, ILB, Michigan
    149. Ahkello Witherspoon, CB, Colorado
    150. C.J. Beathard, QB, Iowa

    Agamemnon

    #67926
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    http://www.espn.com/nfl/draft/bestavailable

    They give some nice thumbnail video on each player.

    Agamemnon

    #67929
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    Plenty of CBs left, to get value.

    Agamemnon

    #67930
    wv
    Participant

    This draft is still about Mr. Goff.

    w
    v

    #67931
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    The green line is actually the start of the 7th round. This table doesn’t show the comp picks in each round.

    Agamemnon

    #67932
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    This draft is still about Mr. Goff.

    w
    v

    You think the Snead will go offense at #37?

    Agamemnon

    #67934
    zn
    Moderator

    From MMQB-

    Day 2 Mock Draft
    With a wild Round 1 in the books, a look ahead to how Friday night’s second and third rounds might play out…

    http://mmqb.si.com/mmqb/2017/04/28/nfl-draft-friday-day-2-rounds-2-3-mock-draft

    ROUND 2

    No. 33 Green Bay Packers (from Cleveland): Chidobe Awuzie, CB, Colorado
    He’s a player I thought Green Bay might target had they stayed in the first. A hard-hitter, he’ll fit very well in Dom Campers’ system.
    No. 34 Seattle Seahawks (from San Francisco): Kevin King, CB, Washington
    Seattle stays local and gets the cornerback many believed they would snatch in Round 1. King will be a seamless addition to the Legion of Boom.
    No. 35 Jacksonville Jaguars: Forrest Lamp, G, Western Kentucky
    Here’s how Jacksonville is making Blake Bortles’ life easier in 2017: a workhorse running back and reinforcing the offensive line. No excuses now.
    No. 36 Chicago Bears: Jordan Willis, DE/OLB, Kansas State
    Chicago gave up a ton to get Mitchell Trubisky. Adding a grind-it-out pass rusher like Willis helps soften the blow.
    No. 37 Los Angeles Rams: Zay Jones, WR, East Carolina
    Jared Goff needs weapons and Jones will be a go-to-guy. He was incredibly productive in college—he’s the FBS all time leader in receptions—and impressed scouts at every stop of the draft process.

    No. 38 Los Angeles Chargers: DeShone Kizer, QB, Notre Dame
    The Chargers take a stab at Phillip Rivers’ eventual replacement. It’s the perfect situation for Kizer to step into.
    No. 39 New York Jets: Dalvin Cook, RB, Florida State
    Jets GM Mike Mccagnan is a subscriber of “best talent available.” That’s unquestionably Cook, who might just make New York’s offense fun to watch, no matter who is playing quarterback.
    No. 40 Carolina Panthers: Cam Robinson, OT, Alabama
    Christian McCaffrey will help Cam Newton succeed in 2017, but so too will an improved offensive line.
    No. 41 Cincinnati Bengals: Joe Mixon, RB, Oklahoma
    The thinking on Mixon is this: If you’re going to draft him—and absorb the PR blow—you might as well do it sooner rather than later. Cincinnati feels like the right organization.
    No. 42 New Orleans Saints: Zach Cunningham, LB, Vanderbilt
    More help for the defense is just what New Orleans needs. Cunningham is a tackling machine.
    No. 43 Philadelphia Eagles: Alvin Kamara, RB, Tennessee
    Christian McCaffrey and Dalvin Cook are studs, but Philadelphia was wise to wait. Similarly, Kamara can contribute as a runner and in the pass game.
    No. 44 Buffalo Bills: JuJu Smith-Schuster, WR, USC
    He’s a big, physical possession receiver (and happens to be the youngest player in the draft, turning 21 in November). Smith-Schuster is also advanced as a blocker.
    No. 45 Arizona Cardinals: Davis Webb, QB, California
    Webb loves to study (the son of a coach, he’d eventually like to coach himself). He’ll learn for a year or two under one of the best in Carson Palmer.
    No. 46 Indianapolis Colts: Tanoh Kpassagnon, DE, Villanova
    He’s 6′ 7″ with nearly 36-inch arms, and he’s athletic to boot. Kpassagnon might be a little raw, but the upside as a pass-rusher is tremendous.
    No. 47 Baltimore Ravens: Chris Wormley, DL, Michigan
    He’s 6′ 5″, a shade under 300 pounds and versatile, though he’s especially tough against the run. Scouts rave about Wormley’s high character as well.
    No. 48 Minnesota Vikings: Dan Feeney, G, Indiana
    It’s no secret the Vikings need help at guard, especially with Alex Boone the only interior lineman signed past 2017. A four-year starter at IU, Feeney was instrumental in Telvin Coleman’s and Jordan Howard’s breakout seasons.
    No. 49 Washington: Budda Baker, S, Washington
    This ends up being a dynamite defensive draft for Washington (which may still be using Scot McCloughan’s draft board). Johnathan Allen and Budda Baker are two dynamic young talents, and Baker provides a centerfielder to go with box safeties Su’a Cravens and D.J. Swearinger.
    No. 50 Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Obi Melifonwu, S, Connecticut
    I love the athletic safety in defensive coordinator Mike Smith’s sys-tem. Melifonwu’s best years are definitely ahead of him.
    No. 51 Denver Broncos: Larry Ogunjobi, DT, Charlotte
    He’s only been playing football since his sophomore year of high school, and he’s not quite a finished product. A couple years of coaching and he could be one of the league’s premiere defensive tackles.
    No. 52 Cleveland Browns (from Tennessee): Marcus Maye, S, Florida
    Maye can set the tone with his physicality. Myles Garrett, Jabrill Peppers, Maye—the defense might not be bad in 2018.
    No. 53 Detroit Lions: Malik McDowell, DT, Michigan State
    The Lions get a gem with the hometown prospect. At 6′ 6″, 295 pounds McDowell’s length and explosiveness will make him a mainstay of Detroit’s pass rush.
    No. 54 Miami Dolphins: Pat Elflein, OL, Ohio State
    Mike Pouncey has been bothered by injuries to his back and hip, and the Dolphins could be looking for a successor. Elflein could be a stud at any position on the interior, especially in run blocking.
    No. 55 New York Giants: Tyus Bowser, OLB, Houston
    One of draft season’s fastest risers finds a home in New York. Bowser will become a favorite weapon of defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo.
    No. 56 Oakland Raiders: Alex Anzalone, LB, Florida
    No question, inside linebacker is one of Oakland’s biggest needs. Anzalone could be a three-down starter in this league, should he stay healthy.
    No. 57 Houston Texans: Taylor Moton, OL, Western Michigan
    He’s 6′ 5″, 319 pounds and has played both guard or right tackle. It wouldn’t take long for Moton to help protect Tom Savage (or Deshaun Watson).
    No. 58 Seattle Seahawks: Tarell Basham, DE, Ohio
    The Seahawks load up on pass rushers. Basham’s size (6′ 4″, 269 pounds, 34 1/4-inch arms) and production (11.5 sacks, 16 tackles for loss in 2016) are certainly attractive.
    No. 59 Kansas City Chiefs: Rasul Douglas, CB, West Virginia
    He’s physical and lengthy, exactly the type of corner that could plug in well in Bob Sutton’s D.
    No. 60 Dallas Cowboys: Quincy Wilson, CB, Florida
    The Cowboys need to re-stock depth in their secondary after a free-agency exodus. Wilson is a good start.
    No. 61 Green Bay Packers: D’Onta Foreman, RB, Texas
    The Packers lost Eddie Lacy in free agency and are in year two of the Ty Montgomery experiment. Needless to say: Green Bay needs a running back. Foreman has great speed for his size (6-foot, 233 pounds).
    No. 62 Pittsburgh Steelers: Justin Evans, S, Texas A&M
    The Steelers continue to rework their secondary; Evans and 2016 second-rounder Sean Davis would be an interesting pair of safeties
    No. 63 Atlanta Falcons: Dorian Johnson, G, Pittsburgh
    More O-line help, always, for the Falcons. Johnson is tough, smart, and technically sound—a great fit for Dan Quinn’s “brotherhood.”
    No. 64 Carolina Panthers (from New England): Daeshon Hall, DE, Texas A&M
    Myles Garrett gets all the acclaim, but Hall has potential to be a terrific pass-rusher. He’s still learning the nuances after switching from linebacker.

    ROUND 3

    No. 65 Cleveland Browns: Chris Godwin, WR, Penn State
    The Browns have a ton of picks, but they still can use a little bit of everything. The Penn State wideout is deceptively fast and brings another playmaker to the offense.
    No. 66 San Francisco 49ers: Fabian Moreau, CB, UCLA
    In John Lynch’s first draft, the GM finds a little luck: San Francisco gets a first-round talent (albeit an injured one) at a value rate.
    No. 67 San Francisco 49ers (from Chicago): Josh Jones, S, N.C. State
    Jones is a box safety who loves to hit. That skillset should be familiar to Lynch.
    No. 68 Jacksonville Jaguars: Sidney Jones, CB, Washington
    Just as the Jaguars scooped up Myles Jack in 2016, Jacksonville scores with a first-round talent who tumbled because of injury.
    No. 69 Los Angeles Rams: Marcus Williams, S, Utah
    This was a position of need, even before T.J. McDonald signed a free agent deal with Miami.

    #67936
    Zooey
    Participant

    http://www.therams.com/news-and-events/article-1/RamsDraft-Best-Available-in-Round-2/97aa2c38-e729-415b-9fbd-1fd779996ef3

    The Los Angeles Rams will start day two of the 2017 NFL Draft with the fifth pick (No. 37th overall) in the second round.

    Mel Kiper’s Best Available Day 2 Prospects
    ESPN.com

    Forrest Lamp, OG, Western Kentucky
    Zay Jones, WR, East Carolina
    Kevin King, CB, Washington
    Cam Robinson, OT, Alabama
    DeMarcus Walker, DE, Florida State
    Budda Baker, S, Washington
    Dalvin Cook, RB, Florida State
    Chris Wormley, DT, Michigan
    Malik McDowell, DT, Michigan State
    Josh Jones, S, NC State
    Juju Smith-Schuster, WR, USC
    Zach Cunningham, ILB, Vanderbilt
    Tyus Bowser, OLB, Houston
    Marcus Maye, S, Florida
    Curtis Samuel, WR, Ohio State
    —————

    Todd McShay’s Best Available Day 2 Prospects
    ESPN.com

    Forrest Lamp, OG, Western Kentucky
    Dalvin Cook, RB, Florida State
    Cam Robinson, OT, Alabama
    Kevin King, CB, Washington
    Quincy Wilson, CB, Florida
    Tyus Bowser, OLB, Houston
    Zay Jones, WR, East Carolina
    Jourdan Lewis, CB, Michigan
    Marcus Maye, S, Florida
    Budda Baker, S, Washington
    Alvin Kamara, RB, Tennessee
    Malik McDowell, DT, Michigan State
    Curtis Samuel, WR, Ohio State
    Josh Jones, S, NC State
    Jordan Willis, DE, Kansas State
    —————

    2017 NFL Draft: Best remaining prospects
    NFL.com

    Cam Robinson, OT, Alabama
    Dalvin Cook, RB, Florida State
    Quincy Wilson, CB, Florida
    Kevin King, CB, Washington
    Chidobe Awuzie, CB, Colorado
    DeShone Kizer, QB, Notre Dame
    Curtis Samuel, WR, Ohio State
    Juju Smith-Schuster, WR, USC
    Marcus Williams, S, Utah
    Josh Jones, S, NC State
    Jordan Willis, DE, Kansas State
    Forrest Lamp, OG, Western Kentucky
    Marcus Maye, S, Florida
    Malik McDowell, DT, Michigan State
    Zach Cunningham, ILB, Vanderbilt

    #67938
    Zooey
    Participant

    This draft is still about Mr. Goff.

    w
    v

    You think the Snead will go offense at #37?

    I do. I’m no football insider, but that’s my hunch.

    There is no getting around the Goff situation. They invested heavily in him, and the success of the Rams hinges on him more than any one other player or position. They need to help him. And whether that is OL, TE, or WR, I suspect it will be offense first. And I am guessing WR.

    I will guess, also, that the first defensive guy is probably going to be a pass rusher, unless some irresistible steal drops to them through luck.

    #67940
    zn
    Moderator

    n. They need to help him. And whether that is OL, TE, or WR, I suspect it will be offense first. And I am guessing WR.

    I will guess, also, that the first defensive guy is probably going to be a pass rusher, unless some irresistible steal drops to them through luck.

    I don’t know. Very deep draft. That changes the rules.

    They can get WRs and TEs later in the draft.

    They can also get CBS, OLBs/rushers later in the draft.

    Some were saying this is a draft where you can find starters in round 4.

    Given all that, maybe the thing to do—if they don’t trade down—is to take the highest ranked “fit” at any position that makes sense. (IE not a qb or RB).

    (Oh, z, and, thanks for moving the post.)
    /

    #67945
    zn
    Moderator

    jrry32 wrote:

    I think highly of Lamp. If he falls to us, take him. I think he’s the safest pick in this draft. However, I see all the WRs available, and I don’t feel any desperation to go get Lamp.

    If he goes elsewhere, we can trade back or draft a WR.

    My top players available for us are:
    1. Forrest Lamp
    2. Cooper Kupp
    3. Zay Jones
    4. Chris Godwin
    5. Juju Smith

    I’m not interested in a trade up.

    And I don’t want Cam Robinson. I would have pounded the table for Ramczyk, but Cam Robinson has the same sort of issues that have led to D.J. Fluker and Greg Robinson struggling in the NFL.

    #67946
    zn
    Moderator

    PFF: Day 2 mock draft

    https://www.profootballfocus.com/draft-day-2-mock-draft-jaguars-nab-qb-deshone-kizer-in-round-2/

    (37). Los Angeles Rams

    Zay Jones, WR, East Carolina

    The Rams add the versatile and sure-handed Jones to help young quarterback Jared Goff. Jones lined up all over the field and dropped only six of 164 catchable passes in 2016 and will provide a safe pair of hands for Goff in 2017.

    (69). Los Angeles Rams

    Taywan Taylor, WR, Western Kentucky

    One of our highest-graded receivers over each of the last two seasons, Taylor excels down the field hauling in more than 1,600 yards on deep passes over the last two seasons; comfortably the most among receivers in this draft class.

    #67951
    wv
    Participant

    You think the Snead will go offense at #37?

    ================

    I dunno, maybe they take that Notre Dame QB with their first pick.

    I mean, what if a QB is the BPA ?

    w
    v

    #67953
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Yeah, I don’t want Cam Robinson. I hear he has his worst games against top talent. That bothers me.

    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick

    #67954
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    You think the Snead will go offense at #37?

    ================

    I dunno, maybe they take that Notre Dame QB with their first pick.

    I mean, what if a QB is the BPA ?

    w
    v

    Agamemnon

    #67955
    zn
    Moderator

    I dunno, maybe they take that Notre Dame QB with their first pick.

    I mean, what if a QB is the BPA ?

    w
    v

    Rams don’t really do BPA. They do “value/fit.” So a player has to be a fit, a good value at the spot they’re picking, though if a special player falls to them they will use their “BPA but with an asterisk” formula. THat is, they ain’t gonna take a qb or RB, but, if there’s something like a safety there with transcendent value for the pick, they will do that. For example they took Donald even though they already had Brockers and Langford.

    #67957
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    http://www.nfl.com/videos/nfl-network-path-to-the-draft/0ap3000000803833/Brian-Baldinger-s-Mock-Draft-Day-2

    Day 2 Mock draft. why the heck do they alwways have the Rams doing something stupid. Who the heck is Kamara? A RB? Really. Why would we take a RB.

    Agamemnon

    #67959
    Agamemnon
    Moderator

    I like his stuff.

    Agamemnon

    #67960
    zn
    Moderator

    Silva & Norris’ Round Two Mock

    http://www.rotoworld.com/articles/nfl/71715/61/silva–and–norris-round-two-mock

    I teamed up with Rotoworld draft analyst Josh Norris to create this second-round mock draft, relying on our collective understanding of prospect skill sets, team needs, and Norris’ knowledge of pre-draft buzz, team visits, and private workouts. As scored by The Huddle Report, Joe Marino of NDT Scouting produced the most accurate mock draft in the nation for round one, matching 9-of-32 players to their selecting teams. My mock score was mediocre as usual, although I’ll take tying Mike Mayock and beating Bob McGinn. For round two, I’d be pleased getting four or five picks right.

    33. Packers – Washington CB Kevin King – I’m guessing King goes here or 34 if Packers trade out.
    34. Seahawks – UConn DB Obi Melifonwu – Freak athlete at 6’4/224 fits Seahawks DB profile.
    35. Jaguars – Pittsburgh QB Nathan Peterman – Tom Coughlin turns page on Blake Bortles era.
    36. Bears – Michigan DT Chris Wormley – A fallback target after passing on Solomon Thomas.
    37. Rams – Western Kentucky OL Forrest Lamp – Year-one starter at any of the O-Line positions.
    38. Chargers – Utah FS Marcus Williams – Shores up safety after they passed on Malik Hooker.
    39. Jets – Kansas State EDGE Jordan Willis – Willis is the best edge pass rusher left on the board.
    40. Panthers — Alabama OT Cam Robinson – Takes over as the Panthers’ right tackle in year one.
    41. Bengals – Oklahoma RB Joe Mixon – Mixon is rumored to be Cincy’s top round-two target.
    42. Saints – Auburn EDGE Carl Lawson – Saints put a pass rusher in front of their first-round CB.
    43. Eagles – Florida State RB Dalvin Cook – Philly was rumored to be considering Cook at No. 14.
    44. Bills – East Carolina WR Zay Jones – Many dots connect here. Robert Woods replacement.
    45. Cardinals — Colorado CB Chidobe Awuzie – Addresses the big hole opposite Patrick Peterson.
    46. Colts – Houston EDGE/LB Tyus Bowser – One of the draft’s most versatile edge presences.
    47. Ravens – USC WR JuJu Smith-Schuster – Baltimore was in the receiver market in round one.
    48. Vikings – Indiana OG Dan Feeney – Vikes address glaring OG need with a high-floor prospect.
    49. Redskins – Tennessee RB Alvin Kamara – Adds playmaking ability to Skins’ weak RB stable.
    50. Buccaneers – Washington DB Budda Baker – Playmaking safety/slot corner addresses need.
    51. Broncos – Michigan State DL Malik McDowell – McDowell becomes their new Malik Jackson.
    52. Browns – California QB Davis Webb – Josh Dobbs & DeShone Kizer also in play for Cleveland.
    53. Lions – NC State S Josh Jones – Would push for starting snaps at strong safety right away.
    54. Dolphins – Temple G/T Dion Dawkins – Power blocker starts at guard for Miami in year one.
    55. Giants – Western Michigan T/G Taylor Moton – Put simply, Giants need guys who can block.
    56. Raiders – Vanderbilt ILB Zach Cunningham – Inside linebacker is Raiders’ biggest need left.
    57. Texans – Florida S Marcus Maye – The Texans should also look at offensive line help here.
    58. Seahawks – Florida DB Quincy Wilson – Seattle doubles down on secondary help in Round 2.
    59. Chiefs – Colorado CB Ahkello Witherspoon – Long, athletic corner to book end Marcus Peters.
    60. Cowboys – Florida CB Teez Tabor – Cowboys trust Tabor’s game tape here over his slow forty.
    61. Packers – Youngstown State EDGE Derek Rivers – Checks boxes for athleticism and production.
    62. Steelers – Penn State WR Chris Godwin – Steelers known to love this contested-catch specialist.
    63. Falcons – Ohio State G/C Pat Elflein – Elflein likely starts at right guard for Atlanta in year one.
    64. Panthers – Villanova DL Tanoh Kpassagnon – An athletic defensive lineman with freakish length.

    #67966
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    jrry32 wrote: I think highly of Lamp. If he falls to us, take him. I think highly of Lamp. If he falls to us, take him. I think he’s the safest pick in this draft. However, I see all the WRs available, and I don’t feel any desperation to go get Lamp.

    been thinking about it. yeah. lamp is my pick.

    IF. and i don’t know if the rams worked him out or not. IF. he is able to line up at center.

    he would solidify that oline.

    i suspect he’ll be gone though.

    other picks i wouldn’t mind are malik mcdowell, tyus bowser, kevin king, marcus williams, josh jones.

    if they can’t get lamp in the second. get pocic in the third.

    but they should be able to get a very good player with the 37th pick.

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