2011 NFL Draft Reaction: NFC Teams
NFL Draft May 2nd. 2011, 1:40pm
The 2011 NFL Draft (finally!) is over. I broke down the NFC, and Jason Lisk has the AFC, which will be posted later. I didn’t bother with grades, just links (and some links to grades), and thoughts on what the picks might mean for each team heading into free agency. If I had to “rank” the four best drafts in the NFC, I’d go with (no order): Detroit, San Francisco, Washington, Minnesota. The four worst would be: Carolina, Chicago, Tampa and St. Louis.
Washington Redskins
16. Ryan Kerrigan, linebacker, Purdue
41. Jarvis Jenkins, defensive end, Clemson
79. Leonard Hankerson, wide receiver, Miami
105. Roy Helu, running back, Nebraska
146. DeJon Gomes, safety, Nebraska
155. Niles Paul, wide receiver, Nebraska
177. Evan Royster, running back, Penn State
178. Aldrick Robinson, wide receiver, SMU
213. Brandyn Thompson, cornerback, Boise State
217. Maurice Hurt, guard, Florida
224. Markus White, linebacker, Florida State
253. Chris Neild, nose tackle, West Virginia
The worst secondary in the NFC waited until the 5th round to grab a DB, then took another in the 7th. I’m guessing they’ll make a run at Nnamdi Asomugha in free agency. The other biggest need was a QB – with Donovan McNabb all but gone, you’re looking at Rex Grossman or John Beck – and they didn’t get one, either. That’s another question for free agency or via trade (Hasselbeck? Orton?). Despite not filling the two biggest needs, I liked the draft: Kerrigan will bookend Orakpo; Hankerson could be the team’s No. 2 WR; and Nebraska RB Roy Helu could be the backup RB with Clinton Portis gone.
Dallas Cowboys
9. Tyron Smith, tackle, USC
40. Bruce Carter, linebacker, North Carolina
71. DeMarco Murray, running back, Oklahoma
110. David Arkin, tackle/guard, Missouri State
143. Josh Thomas, cornerback, Buffalo
176. Dwayne Harris, wide receiver, East Carolina
220. Shaun Chapas, fullback, Georgia
252. Bill Nagy, center/guard, Wisconsin
Three offensive lineman to help keep Tony Romo healthy, but their 2nd and 3rd picks are both injury risks. If Murray is healthy, that’ll help offset the loss of rapidly declining Marion Barber; Carter could be an opening day starter if his ACL is fully healed. Could Dwayne Harris be their new return man, because Dez Bryant is too valuable to risk on every punt return? I don’t know if they did enough to beef up the 26th rated defense in the league, one that gave up 27 ppg. Perhaps that’s the goal in free agency.
Philadelphia Eagles
23. Danny Watkins, guard/tackle, Baylor
54. Jaiquawn Jarrett, safety, Temple
90. Curtis Marsh, cornerback, Utah State
116. Casey Matthews, linebacker, Oregon
120. Alex Henery, kicker/punter, Nebraska
149. Dion Lewis, running back, Pittsburgh
161. Julian Vandervelde, guard/center, Iowa
191. Jason Kelce, center, Cincinnati
193. Brian Rolle, linebacker, Ohio State
237. Greg Lloyd, linebacker, UConn
240. Stanley Havili, fullback, USC
Got some help for Mike Vick, beefed up a secondary that struggled late in the season, and overall, I thought they had the 2nd best draft in the division. (The Philly Daily News didn’t think so.) Did they not go cornerback in the 1st round because they were afraid of Jimmy Smith’s background, or because they think that can land Nnamdi Asomugha via free agency? For a team that gave up 123 yards to James Starks in the playoffs, I might be upset they front seven wasn’t strengthened. Think they could have success with a 2nd Pittsburgh running back? Shady McCoy has been terrific. Greg Lloyd is the son of former Pittsburgh star Greg Lloyd. Lastly: It’s been real, David Akers.
New York Giants
19. Prince Amukamara, cornerback, Nebraska
52. Marvin Austin, defensive tackle, North Carolina
83. Jerrel Jernigan, wide receiver, Troy
117. James Brewer, tackle, Indiana
185. Greg Jones, linebacker, Michigan State
198. Tyler Sash, safety, Iowa
202. Jacquian Williams, linebacker, South Florida
221. Da’Rel Scott, running back, Maryland
Jones was an All-American LB for the Spartans; Scott was a standout performer for the Terps (the next Willie Parker?); Sash was a first team All Big 10 defensive back; Jernigan was a small school star who had one incredible bowl game; and Austin would have been a Top 15 pick if he wasn’t suspended for the season (and didn’t have some character issues). The defense, which was abysmal in 2009 and better in 2010, should be improved enough to get them into the playoffs in 2011, assuming Eli can keep his interceptions down (league-high 25 picks).
Chicago Bears
29. Gabe Carimi, tackle, Wisconsin.
53. Stephen Paea, defensive tackle, Oregon State.
93. Chris Conte, safety, California.
160. Nate Enderle, quarterback, Idaho.
195. J.T. Thomas, linebacker, West Virginia.
Cutler was sacked a league-high 52 times, so a lineman was necessary. Paea, the bench-pressing machine, will be called upon to fill the Tommie Harris void. But did they really get better? Perhaps they’ll add a legit No. 1 WR in free agency. I’m not sure they did enough to hold off the hard-charging Lions in what should be a competitive NFC Central. Unlike last year’s favorable schedule, the Bears open with Atlanta, New Orleans, and Green Bay.
Minnesota Vikings
12. Christian Ponder, quarterback, Florida State.
43. Kyle Rudolph, tight end, Notre Dame.
106. Christian Ballard, defensive tackle, Iowa.
139. Brandon Burton, cornerback, Utah.
168. DeMarcus Love, tackle/guard, Arkansas.
170. Mistral Raymond, defensive back, South Florida.
172. Brandon Fusco, center, Slippery Rock.
200. Ross Homan, linebacker, Ohio State.
215. D’Aundre Reed, defensive end, Arizona.
236. Stephen Burton, wide receiver, West Texas A&M.
If you’re a needs-based guy, you’ll like this draft: QB, DT, and CB were all needs. The aging offensive line added two players. Homan has bulked up since his All Big-10 season, and could eventually take over for Ben Leber. I’m bullish on Rudolph. Minnesota could do the same kind of damage the Patriots did last year with two tight ends. But it all boils down to Ponder, who I think will find success in his first two years because like Ben Roethlisberger, he’s going into a good situation with a solid foundation (AP, Harvin and Rice, assuming he stays). This isn’t to say Ponder will win Super Bowls, but I do think he’ll be good enough that the Vikings could flirt with .500 this year.
13. Nick Fairley, defensive tackle, Auburn.
44. Titus Young, wide receiver, Boise State.
57. Mikel Leshoure, running back, Illinois.
157. Doug Hogue, linebacker, Syracuse.
209. Johnny Culbreath, tackle, South Carolina State.
Beyond the Suh-Fairley tandem in the middle that everyone’s frothy about, Titus Young is a speedster to stretch defenses and hopefully take some of the pressure Calvin Johnson. Young has been called a poor man’s DeSean Jackson. Leshoure will be a nice compliment to Jahvid Best. These three top 60 picks, plus a healthy Matthew Stafford, are enough to get Lions fans thinking playoffs. (Or, like Michelle Beadle, thinking Super Bowl.) From 0 wins in 2008, to 2 in 2009, to 6 in 2010 … I think .500 should be the goal, not the playoffs. The schedule’s too difficult: Opening with two playoff teams, then going on the road to play Minnesota and Dallas, then home for two of three against 2010 playoff teams (Chicago, Atlanta).
Green Bay Packers
32. Derek Sherrod, tackle, Mississippi State
64. Randall Cobb, wide receiver, Kentucky
96. Alex Green, running back, Hawaii
131. Davon House, cornerback, New Mexico State
141. D.J. Williams, tight end, Arkansas
179. Caleb Schlauderaff, guard, Utah
186. D.J. Smith, linebacker, Appalachian State
197. Ricky Elmore, linebacker, Arizona
218. Ryan Taylor, special teamer, North Carolina
233. Lawrence Guy, defensive end, Arizona State
One of the best offenses in the league … went offensive on its first three picks and five of its first six. That’s pretty scary, assuming guys like Cobb and Green pan out. I really like the TE Williams. If the Packers do nothing in free agency, they still have to be the 2012 Super Bowl favorite, right?
Atlanta Falcons
6. Julio Jones, wide receiver, Alabama
91. Akeem Dent, linebacker, Georgia
145. Jacquizz Rodgers, running back, Oregon State
192. Matt Bosher, kicker, Miami
210. Andrew Jackson, guard, Fresno State
230. Cliff Matthews, defensive end, South Carolina
They mortgaged the immediate future – no 1st or 4th round picks next year – to make a run in 2011. If Rodgers and save Turner 100 carries, Dent upgrades into a mediocre LB corps, and Jones can walk into the No. 2 WR role and catch in the neighborhood of 50-60 catches, a Super Bowl is within reach. My only hangup? 48-21. That was a brutal beatdown of a division-winning, 13-victory team playing at home.
New Orleans Saints
24. Cameron Jordan, defensive end, California
28. Mark Ingram, running back, Alabama
72. Martez Wilson, linebacker, Illinois
88. Johnny Patrick, cornerback, Louisville
226. Greg Romeus, defensive end, Pittsburgh
243. Nate Bussey, linebacker, Illinois
What’s not to love? A fantastic DE and should start from week one; a Heisman Trophy-winning who should help you save $11 million (Reggie Bush), and a 2nd-team All Big 10 linebacker. Spending five of the six picks on defense was the right move for a team that gave up 41 points and 415 yards to offensively-challenge Seattle in a playoff game.
Tampa Bay Bucs
20. Adrian Clayborn, defensive end, Iowa
51. Da’Quan Bowers, defensive end, Clemson
84. Mason Foster, linebacker, Washington
104. Luke Stocker, tight end, Tennessee
151. Ahmad Black, safety, Florida
187. Allen Bradford, running back, USC
222. Anthony Gaitor, cornerback, Florida International
238. Daniel Hardy, tight end, Idaho
With an NFC-low 26 sacks, the Bucs needed to bolster their frontline and did it with the nation’s sack leader (Bowers) and a guy who was better as a junior (Clayborn). The problem? Both have healthy issues. Best case scenario: Bowers and Clayborn are healthy to split time at DE, Foster steps in at LB for Rudd, and Josh Freeman shocks everyone on offense again. Problem is, Atlanta and New Orleans are two of the best teams in the NFC. I think Tampa only gets into the playoffs if Brees or Ryan go down. Six of the Bucs’ eight draft picks were captains on their respective college football teams, so there’s that.
1. Cam Newton, quarterback, Auburn
65. Terrell McClain, defensive tackle, South Florida
97. Sione Fua, defensive tackle, Stanford
98. Brandon Hogan, cornerback, West Virginia
132. Kealoha Pilares, wide receiver, Hawaii
166. Lawrence Wilson, linebacker, UConn
203. Zachary Williams, guard/center, Washington State
244. Lee Ziemba, tackle, Auburn
Worst-case scenario: Steve Smith leaves and DeAngelo Williams does, too. Cam Newton physically fights with Jimmy Clausen over No. 2 and then struggles on the field. The defense isn’t improved, and the Panthers go 2-14 and get the first pick, again. Then you’re looking at not being able to trade Newton – his contract plus a bad rookie year – and you’ve got Andrew Luck staring you in the face. Then what? Trade the No. 1 pick for a boatload and watch Luck tear it up elsewhere? Sorry to be so negative. At any rate … didn’t love their draft. This team is loaded with holes and they didn’t exactly land many impact plaers.
Seattle Seahawks
25. James Carpenter, tackle, Alabama
75. John Moffitt, guard, Wisconsin
99. K.J. Wright, linebacker, Mississippi State
107. Kris Durham, wide receiver, Georgia
154. Richard Sherman, defensive back, Stanford
156. Mark LeGree, safety, Appalachian State
173. Byron Maxwell, special teamer, Clemson
205. Lazarius Levingston, defensive tackle, LSU
242. Malcolm Smith, linebacker, USC
Did they have an awful draft (F) or a very good one (B+)? Depends: If Carpenter and Moffitt are starting by midseason, they’ll look smart. Would a better move have been to bundle up some of these picks and fill their biggest need, QB? And are Sherman or LeGre going to be ready to play safety, because Lawyer Milloy got his AARP card in the offseason. Durham is a Don Banks’ favorite who played in AJ Green’s shadow at UGA. That’s two pretty solid drafts in a row for Pete Carroll.
San Francisco 49ers
7. Aldon Smith, linebacker, Missouri
36. Colin Kaepernick, quarterback, Nevada
80. Chris Culliver, cornerback, South Carolina
115. Kendall Hunter, running back, Oklahoma State
163. Daniel Kilgore, guard, Appalachian State
182. Ronald Johnson, wide receiver, USC
190. Colin Jones, safety, TCU
211. Bruce Miller, linebacker, Central Florida
239. Mike Person, tackle/guard, Montana State
250. Curtis Holcomb, cornerback, Florida A&M
My favorite pick here was Hunter, who I think will be a nice 3rd down back, or maybe even challenge Anthony Dixon for the backup role. All the pundits love Kaepernick, and if he’s as good as advertised, the 49ers could win the division. The sixth-best run defense didn’t get much pressure on the QB in 2010 (36 sacks), and Smith will look like a hit if he is moderately effective. I thought Jim Harbaugh’s first draft was the best in the division, narrowly over the Cardinals.
Arizona Cardinals
5. Patrick Peterson, cornerback, LSU
38. Ryan Williams, running back, Virginia Tech
69. Rob Housler, tight end, Florida Atlantic
103. Sam Acho, linebacker, Texas
136. Anthony Sherman, fullback, UConn
171. Quan Sturdivant, linebacker, North Carolina
184. David Carter, defensive end, UCLA
I actually heard a sports fan on the radio say that if the Cardinals can get Donovan McNabb or Kevin Kolb, they could be a really dangerous team. Upon closer inspection … maybe that guy wasn’t totally clueless? Peterson and Rodgers-Cromartie will form a nice CB tandem. Ryan Williams should get some carries with either Tim Hightower or Beanie Wells (one may be traded). It’s sounds more and more like Larry Fitzgerald is going to stick around. But will the worst rushing defense in the NFC (145 ypg) will be improved? Acho is a bit undersized. Sturdivant was a Butkus award semifinalist as a junior, but limited by a hamstring injury last season. The offensive line needs work, too. So maybe 2012 is more likely before the turnaround begins?
St. Louis Rams
14. Robert Quinn, defensive end, North Carolina
47. Lance Kendricks, tight end, Wisconsin
78. Austin Pettis, wide receiver, Boise State
112. Greg Salas, wide receiver, Hawaii
158. Jermale Hines, safety, Ohio State
216. Mikail Baker, returner, Baylor
228. Jabara Williams, linebacker, Stephen F. Austin
229. Jonathan Nelson, safety, Oklahoma
Really needed a No. 1 WR for Sam Bradford and got two guys who are No. 3 options in Pettis and Salas, plus a tight end. Could have used an RB to take some pressure off Steven Jackson, who had by far his worst year as a pro. The defense continues to improve, and Quinn/Long could be bookends for a decade. The defense will once again keep the Rams in games, and St. Louis fans just have to hope that Bradford catches onto the Josh McDaniels offense quick. If McDaniels can resurrect the career of a guy like Brandon Lloyd, maybe he can work wonders with this merry bad of average WRs.

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69 Responses to “2011 NFL Draft Reaction: NFC Teams”
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May 2nd, 2011 at 1:44 PM
Greg Lloyd is the son of former Pittsburgh star Greg Lloyd.
Wait a second– was this the kid who Greg Lloyd Sr. stuck a gun in his mouth b\c of bad grades?
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:44 PM
Nm, I should have just clicked the link.
(head down in shame)
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:48 PM
I was really happy with the Cardinals draft. I think Peterson, Williams, and Housler all start as rookies, and Acho will work hi way into the rotation as well.
A quality QB (not even elite) makes this team dangerous if they get average line play on offense.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:48 PM
We got next year’s first-round pick a year early, and only had to give up Shane Vereen to do it.
/I like it
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:49 PM
Yup…and they never do anything in free agency so that qualifier doesn’t even have to be presented
Loved the Cobb selection and when they took that RB from Hawaii Mayock said “The rich just got richer”, I’ll take him at his word on that
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:50 PM
Kolb maybe. McNabb no. I think they would be better off trying to get Orton over Mcnabb
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:51 PM
Biggest question for Atlanta has to be getting off the field defensively on third down. I hope that LB brings a pass rush AND coverage skills as they need a compliment to Abraham.
The rematch between GB and Atlanta on Sunday night should be fantastic assuming everybody is healthy for the contest.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:53 PM
In a word, no.
As for the 49ers, they have a lot of holes and their first two picks are “developmental” guys. Trent Balke, the 49ers GM, was on the radio the day of the first round talking about developing Smith after that pick and I was left scratching my head. I like the pick talent-wise, but don’t you usually want to draft a guy that can step in right and contribute right away from the 7 spot? With all the holes they have, I would have thought they would draft a couple guys that could have an immediate impact.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:53 PM
The only pick I didn’t like from the Saints was the last one–Bussey. Too light to play OLB, too heavy to play SS. But hey, it was a supplemental 7th round pick.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:53 PM
thanks falcons!
/waves
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:54 PM
Detroit had the best 1st round pick but I don’t think their draft overall was that great. No defensive backs, at ALL?
I’ll be happy if he just makes the team and plays special teams. But spence apparently thinks he’s not good enough even for that.
Big Rape is obviously a stretch but I agree with this. Plus new offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave has said that the offense will be built around the players’ strengths and what they’re most comfortable doing (imagine that!!) instead of the cultish be-all end-all system Chilly had.
Painfully stupid pick when I first heard about it but I guess it sort of makes sense. Next year is Shiancoe’s last year on his contract, Kleinsasser’s old, so this gives them a talented and cheap player who can both catch and block. But still, a freaking TE?? Come on.
Weirdest pick of the draft might’ve been Dallas picking Bruce Carter. Is he even going to play in 2011? Why use a 2nd on him then?
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:55 PM
No offense, but we are talking about a team that was 15 minutes from missing the playoffs altogether. There are about 4-5 teams that can win the NFC.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:56 PM
I think Jaquizz is going to be an impact player for the Falcons. He is going to benefit from not being the player that opposing team’s defenses key on during the game. Get him the ball in space and he is going to eat yards on screens.
The best thing for the Lions would be to go .500 this year or maybe 7-9. Get some wins but continue to build a young aggressive defense. Fairley was a great pick for the future of the team. They can add DB’s in Free Agency and in future drafts.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:56 PM
But other teams might. What if the Saints sign a DE like Ray Edwards or a WR like Santonio Holmes?
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:57 PM
Exactly, along with the fact that repeating doesn’t happen too often either.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:57 PM
After the first couple CB’s were taken. The rest of the pack were pretty much garbage according to analysts. I’m sure the Lions plan to keep Chris Houston then add another in free agency.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:57 PM
Shouldn’t be hard. Singletary and crew gave Dixon every chance in the world to be effective and when Gore went down, it was Westbrook that carried the load.
Not this year. Kaepernick is going to get a big load of the bench this season while Harbaugh molds him. Alex Smith will be the starter for the Niners this season. Book it.
I’ve spent the last 3 days listening to people talk me in to Aldon Smith and Kaepernick, and I just can’t get excited. I thought we needed more quality secondary help, and I still think we could have waited to draft Kaepernick and not have traded away any additional picks.
Nice breakdown, TBL.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:57 PM
I still don’t get the TE pick for the Vikings. Yes he was supposedly the best player at this point in the draft, but I still don’t get it.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:57 PM
figured if i did the AFC i’d riff forever on the Jets. those guys may get an entire post at some point.
if i had to pick the NFC playoff teams today, pre-FA …
Saints, Falcons, Packers are my only locks.
i think the rest is pretty wide open. i like Philly to win the East, but if dallas gets NA, the cowboys would be my pick
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:58 PM
But if free agency opens up to 4 years they are SERIOUSLY screwed.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:58 PM
Man, most Bucs fans and me included REALLY like the Bucs draft. Bowser def has some long term knee issues but way 2 great a value to pass at 51.Nice thing is that Clayborn naturally plays Right DE& Bowers Left DE so neither 1 has to switch positions who will hustle every play.
A do everything LB in Mason and 2 TE’s to back up the brittle K2.Based on what other drafts experts are saying and what knowing the weakness of the team, thought this was another knock out the park draft.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:59 PM
To be the man, you have to beat the man.
/WOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:59 PM
A complement too. That’s terrible.
May 2nd, 2011 at 1:59 PM
After the first couple CB’s were taken. The rest of the pack were pretty much garbage according to analysts. I’m sure the Lions plan to keep Chris Houston then add another in free agency.
A good DL constantly pressuring the QB can easily make a bad secondary look good. I think this was a great pick because since none of the CB/SS positions looked very good.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:00 PM
Then they’ll be a better team than before the signing…I don’t really care who the Super Bowl “favorite” is, still enjoying this afterglow is all
Last year’s Packers were weird in that that was probably one of the more deceptive 10-6 records in that their point differential was near the top of the league and they never trailed by more than 7 the entire season…seems like they figured their shit out at long last when it mattered most, that continues to next season and they should be alright
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:00 PM
Chris Houston?? What’s your backup plan, CC Brown? I’m sure immediate-upgrade Wassau Serwanga is available.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:01 PM
Can that post instead be about Rex answering questions that nobody asked regarding how his team would have won the Super Bowl except that, you know, they weren’t good enough to make it?
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:01 PM
Well said jck49erfan, totally agree. I really wouldn’t have minded seeing them take Prince at #7 and then kaeprnick in the 2nd without trading any picks. Word (for what’s worth) is that the Raiders were going to trade up to take him and that’s why SF made their move like they did to nab him.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:01 PM
Exactly. All I could think of when they described Smith was Jason Pierre Paul and Vernon Gholston (/nods at TBL). Great, he’s an athlete. He can probably do some shit like jump out of a pool flat footed. But can he make an impact for us?
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:04 PM
Yup…and they never do anything in free agency so that qualifier doesn’t even have to be presented
Huge *Asterisk being the Charles Woodson signing.. that set in motion the awesomeness that was last year and the next couple of years.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:05 PM
I would prefer they get huff.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:06 PM
Fuck Al Davis. Taking a project at QB is something you do as a good team without many other holes to fill. I understand there wasn’t the depth/talent at the position (regardless of how many were taken early), but it seems like a stretch. I still think that when all is said and done, Mallett is the best QB in the draft. I would have been perfectly fine taking him.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:06 PM
That crossed my mind but at this point with Thompson he’s the exception that proves the rule
This is where the lockout’s going to have the biggest impact (other than losing games of course should that come to pass), those offseason class room sessions are pretty damn important for a new coach…guys like Bradford might have to learn on the fly depending on when a deal gets done
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:07 PM
Lions can pick up DB’s the next few years. They are not a legitimate contender right now. They could be in 2013. Why should they reach for DBs in this draft?
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:09 PM
Another thing about Aldon Smith,he’s already going to have to start out behind the 8-ball in his development process due to the lockout. With that division as weak as it is, surprised they didn’t go with a guy who can step in and produced right away.
Though it’s obvious from that draft, that Harbaugh is thinking more term impact then short&is obvious not worried that is 49er’s tank badly after 1st year his job will be in any danger ahla Cam Cameron
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:10 PM
Fag.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:10 PM
You realize that the Niners are a not a good team, and have holes to fill, right?
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:11 PM
D. Love was ranked pretty high going into the year, not sure what happened to make him drop like he did, but hopefully he can help out the O Line.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:11 PM
Bears will get that WR and hopefully an interior lineman in FA. Happy with Carimi and what I’ve been able to read on the others. The OSU kid in a run stopper which fits well within the Bears scheme since the ends are the QB rushers.
Gut says bust. Got a feeling there will be a lot of things blogs will love to cover about this guy. Not of it will be happening on the field though.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:12 PM
I think Harbaughs plan is to tank.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:13 PM
Packer fans are going to love DJ.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:13 PM
Gut says bust. Got a feeling there will be a lot of things blogs will love to cover about this guy. Not of it will be happening on the field though.
Hope you are right on this one
/NFC North
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:14 PM
It’s so tough to say that these teams even filled holes because we have no idea what free agency looks like. If any of the DB need teams land Asomugha their draft looks A LOT better in comparison.
I hate to say this, but I love what the Redskins did. They realize they had a million holes and came out of this draft with 12 players. Sure some won’t work out, but if you have a team with that many issues just go ahead and grab quantity. The Panthers should have been thinking that way too.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:15 PM
Jaworski seemed downright giddy when talking about that pick…didn’t even catch until yesterday that he won the Mackey Award despite Rudolph and Kendricks also being around
Anything that means they can tell Andrew Quarless to go away is a good thing
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:16 PM
Well, if they maul Aaron Rodgers, we all win. Humanity vanquishes another villain. He’s already got two concussions. One more…
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:16 PM
What if the Saints sign a DE like Ray Edwards or a WR like Santonio Holmes?
We wouldn’t go after Santonio because we’re more than likely to use our money to keep Lance Moore. Nothing against Santonio. I just think they wouldn’t offer him as much as he’d want.
I’d much rather target a big FA LB like Rocky McIntosh or David Harris as LB remains the only sizeable hole that we have on defense.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:18 PM
Pierre Paul was pretty good for the Giants last year. I don’t know if there is a comparable to Gholston’s epic bust.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:18 PM
You do realize that’s exactly what both jck49 and myself said about them too right? We are both questioning the picks because they have holes to fill and they drafted two developmental-type players.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:19 PM
This is just retarded. The Lions won 6 games last year, but that number could’ve EASILY been 9. They should’ve won that lame ass bears game, and don’t forget how lucky your faggy jets got.
They should be thinking playoffs and most people will probably agree with that.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:21 PM
I did not…I thought you were questioning the Raiders interest in a QB.
Carry on.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:23 PM
I cant believe I havent heard more of the Eagles and Pats switching 6th round picks, straight up, when they were 1 apart. Have to keep the streak alive! Who says Belichick and Reid dont have a sense of humor.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:23 PM
But it all boils down to Ponder, who I think will find success in his first two years because like Ben Roethlisberger, he’s going into a good situation with a solid foundation
While Roethlisberger did step into a very good situation, it is worth pointing out that they went from 6 wins to 15 in his first year. Obviously he wasn’t worth 9 wins, but I think people forget they weren’t very good the year before he came.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:24 PM
Have you considered that Harbaugh might have a long-term vision for the franchise and not want to put band-aids on something for a quick fix?
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:25 PM
Apparently $750/
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:26 PM
Apparently $750/hour for lawyers can only get you breakfast analogies.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:28 PM
Do the Redskins have that many roster positions? If you have that many picks, it makes a lot of sense to trade a couple 5th/6th rounders to move up a few. If you cut a bunch of guys, then the picks aren’t worth anything anyway.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:30 PM
Didn’t hear that, but I love it.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:30 PM
um, why you lumping JPP with Gholston?
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:31 PM
Absolutely. And I hope that’s the case with this draft. I’m still skeptical that these are the right answers, but I guess I have to give the guy a little bit of a break to see what he actually accomplishes.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:32 PM
Yes, but teams doing that usually trade down and stockpile picks to fill holes. This team stayed put in the first round and then traded UP to grab their “long-term vision” QB. It just seemed like a confusing draft, because they possible could have gotten Smith lower than 7th and possibly Caepernick in their original slot and held onto those picks they dealt away. And drafting the clear #2 rated CB (Prince) in that 7th spot wouldn’t have been a quick fix, that would have been addressing a need with a solid player that can fill that need for years to come.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:32 PM
Do the Redskins have that many roster positions? If you have that many picks, it makes a lot of sense to trade a couple 5th/6th rounders to move up a few. If you cut a bunch of guys, then the picks aren’t worth anything anyway.
Um yeah. Some of those current roster spots are filled by expensive not talented players. Smart move to bring in some younger, cheaper, and hopefully better players. Trading UP has only gotten the Skins in trouble in the past.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:33 PM
Geez….didn’t realize he had an ok year last year.
I’m an idiot. Please strike my comparison from the record. I’ll do research next time before making poor comparisons.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:34 PM
As a fan I wish the skins would have drafted a few bigger names but overall I am happy. They drafted a ton of players and should be able to start to turn over their roster and get rid of a bunch of the dead weight. For a team that is year in and year out one of the oldest in the league this draft should be a step in the right direction.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:37 PM
I’m not saying go to the first round. I’m just saying you could package a couple 7ths and a 5th to get into the fourth, if there is a guy you want. If most of these late guys make the team, then the point is moot, I just wouldn’t judge a draft class by volume, but rather by how many actually make the team/an impact.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:37 PM
That’s debatable. Jimmy Smith should be better if he stays clean.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:40 PM
jthussler… To clarify, I’m not saying the 49ers had a “bad” draft, just that it was a little confusing in their picks and direction. I do think Smith and Capernick are talented, and I really hope they do pan out.
I’m just saying that all “experts” were saying that Peterson and Prince were the two top talents at DB in this draft, they weren’t talking up Smith like they were those two at all. Probably by a 2-1 margin too.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:44 PM
Yes, but teams doing that usually trade down and stockpile picks to fill holes. This team stayed put in the first round and then traded UP to grab their “long-term vision” QB.
Everyone is saying they should of traded down, but how? Once Julio Jones was taken, there was no value at all in 7th overall pick. No one wanted it and why would they? I’m sure they tried to trade down. No one thinks about this, at all. The draft played out in the worst possible manner for the Niners considering that they didn’t see Gabbert or Locker as franchise QBs (and good for them). Once Arizona took Peterson the writing was on the wall.
The only reasonable player I think they could of taken at 7 was Prince and even then I think it’s a bit of a reach…I’m not sold he’s going to be a stud. Neither am I that Smith is, but at least he fills a much more premium position than corner.
May 2nd, 2011 at 2:46 PM
Also…Robert Quinn, though he is a 4-3 d end and the Niners run a 3-4. So there’s that to consider as well.
May 2nd, 2011 at 3:12 PM
this analysis needed more Jason Lisk.