Sabtu, 27 April 2019

2019 NFL Draft: Grades, analysis for every fourth-round pick - CBS Sports

Are you ready for some Day 3 draft action? I'll be providing my grades for every pick made on Day 3, starting here with the fourth round. You can see those grades and analysis for every pick shortly after it's made below. And you can check out all our awesome CBS Sports HQ coverage of the draft at the top of this post.

If you want to do all that plus track the best available prospects and get access to every pick in the draft on one page, you can watch CBS Sports HQ and my grades in our draft tracker.

Grades: Round 1 • Round 2 • Round 3 • Round 4 • Round 5 • Round 6 • Round 7  

Round 4

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https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/2019-nfl-draft-grades-analysis-for-every-fourth-round-pick/

2019-04-27 17:50:00Z
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Big WR Hakeem Butler Is Cardinals' Choice In Fourth Round - AZCardinals.com

When Hakeem Butler met with the Cardinals and Kliff Kingsbury at the Scouting combine, the Iowa State wide receiver told Kingsbury that he had wanted to play for Kingsbury at Texas Tech – but Kingsbury never extended a scholarship offer.

Saturday morning, Kingsbury – talking to Butler after the Cardinals made the 6-foot-5, 227-pounder the first pick of the fourth round – issued a mea culpa.

“He told me he wasn’t going to make the same mistake twice,” Butler said.

Butler gives the Cardinals the big receiver for which they’ve been looking. At his height, he has the ability to go up and over defensive backs for the catch, something he turned into an art form for the Cyclones. Many projected him to go as high as the second round.

Butler acknowledged he was a little disappointed he lasted until the fourth, but “I’m just blessed, excited and thrilled to be in this position, honestly.”

The Cardinals have now bolstered a wide receivers room with two of their first five draft picks, adding smaller speedster Andy Isabella of UMass with their second second-round pick Friday. Both figure to fit nicely into a unit with Larry Fitzgerald and Christian Kirk.

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https://www.azcardinals.com/news/big-wr-hakeem-butler-is-cardinals-choice-in-fourth-round

2019-04-27 17:03:45Z
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2019 NFL Draft Show: Live Grades & Reactions for Rounds 4 & 5 - Bleacher Report

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_Xf9SsV54k

2019-04-27 15:55:12Z
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2019 NFL Draft: Grades, analysis for every second-round pick, from Byron Murphy to D.K. Metcalf - CBS Sports

Want to know what I think of every pick made in the second round of the 2019 NFL Draft? You can check below for my grades for all 32 second-round picks. You can click the links below to get the latest grades as we go through Saturday. You can also watch me on CBS Sports HQ as I break down all the biggest storylines from the draft.

If you want to do all that plus track the best available prospects and get access to every pick in the draft on one page, you can watch CBS Sports HQ and our grades in our draft tracker.

Grades: Round 1 • Round 2 • Round 3 • Round 4 • Round 5 • Round 6 • Round 7  

Round 2

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https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/2019-nfl-draft-grades-and-analysis-for-every-second-round-pick/

2019-04-27 15:00:00Z
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2019 NFL Draft: Hart’s Day 3 Big Board for the Denver Broncos - Mile High Report

After two days of excitement the 2019 NFL Draft is heading into its third day. It’s been a wild ride thus far but you can expect more fireworks tomorrow. But before we get into the top prospects that are available to draft, let’s delve into what the franchise was able to accomplish yesterday.

The Denver Broncos were huge winners yesterday evening and were able to get three high-quality players in Dalton Risner, Drew Lock and Dre’Mont Jones. Risner and Lock had first-round grades on my board with Jones coming in as a Top 50 overall player. Broncos Country should be elated that the team has bolstered their offensive tremendously, as well as fortifying their defensive trenches with a disruptive interior pass rusher.

If you would have told me all four of those players would have been Broncos — I would have laughed. I couldn’t have ever expected all of those prospects to be drafted by Denver without mortgaging future draft capital to do so. I’m absolutely stoked for the future of this team and there is no doubt in my mind Denver is better poise to compete next season and beyond after what has all transpired.

It’s time to give some major credit to John Elway who maneuvered the board masterly and picked up the picks necessary to improve the roster dramatically. Had the franchise not moved down in the first-round, they wouldn’t have been able to get all of those players. It’s also important to keep in mind the Broncos still hold a future third-round pick in the 2020 NFL Draft from the Pittsburgh Steelers.

All and all, 82 of my Top 100 prospects were selected in that time-frame. Yodny Cajuste was selected by the New England Patriots at the 101st selection. After 102 picks, only 17 prospects remain from my board. The Broncos only have three selections left: 149, 157 and 239.

It’s unlikely that any of the players below will be available — but expect the unexpected when it comes to the draft. I’ll also outline some sleeper picks outside of my Top 100 to look out for at positions of need. Let’s get to it!

Hart’s Best Players Available for Day 3

40. Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, S — Florida

46. Hakeem Butler, WR — Iowa State

52. Riley Ridley, WR — Georgia

60. Amani Hooker, S — Iowa

64. Kelvin Harmon, WR — NC State

65. Jarrett Stidham, QB — Auburn

67. Deionte Thompson, S — Alabama

68. Amani Oruwariye, CB — Penn State

73. Joe Jackson, DE — Miami

76. Anthony Nelson, DE — Iowa

78. Mack Wilson, LB - Alabama

80. Isaiah Johnson, CB — Houston

86. Blake Cashman, LB — Minnesota

89. Drew Samia, OG — Oklahoma

90. Ryan Finley, QB — North Carolina State

92. D’Andre Walker, EDGE — Georgia

96. Isaiah Buggs, DE — Alabama

Hart’s Sleeper Selections for Day 3

Keep in mind this list is nowhere near exhaustive. These are just players I believe would help address needs for the franchise. Here are some quick observations on where value may present itself.

There are still a handful of quality prospects in the secondary. This year’s wide receiver class is incredibly deep and I think the Broncos are poised to add another target in the fifth-round at the position. There are also some quality defensive lineman and edge rushers available too. Linebacker is quite thin but there are some hidden gems there with those listed below offering future starting potential.

Julian Love, CB — Notre Dame

Corey Ballentine, CB — Washburn

Jimmy Moreland, CB — James Madison

Ka’dar Hollman, CB — Toledo

Kris Boyd, CB — Texas

Jordan Brown, CB — South Dakota State

Iman Marshall, DB — USC

Malik Gant, S — Marshall

Jonathan Crawford, S — Indiana

Evan Worthington, S — Colorado

Joe Giles-Harris, LB — Duke

Te’von Coney, LB — Notre Dame

Vosean Joseph, LB — Clemson

Terrill Hanks, LB — New Mexico State

Tyrel Dodson, LB — Texas A&M

T.J. Edwards, LB — Wisconsin

Renell Wren, DT — Arizona State

Daylon Mack, DT — Texas A&M

Lamont Gaillard, C — Georgia

Keelan Doss, WR — UC-Davis

Keesean Johnson, WR — Fresno State

Anthony Johnson, WR — Buffalo

Stanley Morgan, WR — Nebraska

Travis Fulgham, WR — Old Dominion

Dillion Mitchell, WR — Oregon

Emanuel Hall, WR — Missouri

Jalen Jelks, EDGE — Oregon

Justin Hollins, EDGE — Oregon

Jordan Brailford, EDGE — Oklahoma State

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https://www.milehighreport.com/2019/4/27/18519268/2019-nfl-draft-harts-day-3-big-board-for-the-denver-broncos

2019-04-27 13:00:00Z
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As three ex-Alabama players lost out in the NFL draft, Nick Saban won yet again - AL.com

In the shadow of the final game of their Alabama careers, four players were invited to a news conference emceed by Nick Saban at the Mal Moore Athletic Complex.

It was there where the world learned that Quinnen Williams, Jonah Williams, Josh Jacobs and Irv Smith Jr. had decided to enter the NFL Draft.

Fifteen weeks later, each one of those Crimson Tide stars was chosen in the first two rounds — going anywhere from Pick No. 3 to Selection No. 50.

They got their face time on television, and soon enough they’ll also have big signing bonuses thanks to their high slots in the rookie wage scale. As they celebrated their newfound fame and fortune, a few of their former teammates suffered in silence, watching and waiting for their names to be called before coming to the sobering realization that it just wasn’t going to happen. Three rounds had passed and 102 players filled the draft board by the end of Day 2. But safety Deionte Thompson, linebacker Mack Wilson and cornerback Saivion Smith were nowhere to be found among the list of selections.

Once again they were excluded from the party just like they were back in January when the three former Crimson Tide defenders were conspicuously absent at that draft declaration news conference hosted by Saban.

It was not by coincidence.

Saban will usually only celebrate the players he gives his blessing to go pro, and it was clear Wilson, Thompson and Smith didn’t receive that endorsement.

Saban has long made the case that if a player with remaining eligibility isn’t projected to be chosen within the first two rounds he is better served returning to school and improving his stock. Before this year, 24 of Alabama's 31 early entrants during Saban’s tenure had been selected within that range, a 77-percent hit rate.

One of the seven who wasn’t, former safety Ronnie Harrison, has become the example Saban uses most often when making the argument that players only hurt themselves when they leave to go pro before they’ve maximized their potential. Earlier this month, the Alabama coach — in the most oblique way possible — questioned the decision Harrison made last year when he bypassed his senior season, entered the draft and was picked in the third round by the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Saban had tried to persuade Harrison to remain in Tuscaloosa for one more year just as he had successfully done in similar conversations with players who came before him — namely Mark Barron, Jonathan Allen and Reuben Foster.

The difference was that Harrison didn’t heed Saban’s advice.

“If you look at the number of guys that were first- and second-round draft picks, there were very few guys that had failed careers,” Saban said April 6. “Now, we have guys that have no draft grades, seventh-round grades, free-agent grades, fifth-round grades that are going out of the draft. And the person that loses in that is the player.

“If you’re a third-round draft pick, and we had one here last year -- I’m not going to say any names -- goes and starts for his team, so he’s making third-round money, which is not that great. He’d be the first guy taken at his position this year, probably, and make $15-18 million more. So, the agent makes out, the club makes out, and now they’ve got a guy that’s going to play for that kind of money for three more years. And everybody out there’s saying, ‘Well, get to your next contract.’ Well, there’s obviously 50 percent of these guys that never get to a next contract. And that doesn’t mean all the rest of them got to one, either.”

Saban used Harrison to illustrate his point. But the fiery safety landed in a better spot than where Thompson, Smith and Wilson are destined to go once the final four rounds of the draft are completed Saturday.

Together, these three men could prove to be cautionary tales who force future Alabama stars contemplating an early start to their NFL careers to consider Saban’s counsel more carefully before making a choice that could have negative consequences both for the player and the program.

For Thompson, Smith and Wilson, it’s not what they envisioned when they elected to chase their NFL dreams.

But as they rued their fates Friday, Saban went to bed knowing that months after that draft announcement news conference he was proven right yet again.

Rainer Sabin is an Alabama beat writer for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @RainerSabin

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https://www.al.com/alabamafootball/2019/04/as-three-ex-alabama-players-lost-out-in-the-nfl-draft-nick-saban-won-yet-again.html

2019-04-27 12:01:00Z
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John Elway says Drew Lock is here to learn and compete as a backup - Mile High Report

The last time Denver drafted a quarterback, they tried this same approach. Everyone knew Paxton Lynch needed time and seasoning before he even had a chance to be a competent starter, as he was as raw as they come out of the draft.

However, the issue then was Denver was fresh out of Plan As at quarterback and were starting a seventh-round pick, Trevor Siemian, in the meantime. We all know that the pick of Paxton Lynch didn’t pan out, but Denver’s plan to sit Paxton Lynch and have him learn and develop didn’t work out either.

When asked about it in hindsight last year, Elway admitted that they would have handled things differently with Lynch if they could do it over.

“That was a miss,” Elway said. “There was a miss there and I think without making excuses there was some circumstances that happened where when you have a young quarterback – you’ve got to be in the same system. You’ve got to be able to have him develop within a system. I’m not sure we were fair to Paxton. He was in three systems in three years.

That’s likely why after Denver let their third offensive coordinator in three years go at the end of the season, Elway’s goal for this offseason wasn’t necessarily to dive straight into finding a quarterback just yet, but first developing an environment where a quarterback can thrive.

That’s one reason Rich Scangarello is here - with a very clear vision for the offense and what it needs to be. Once that is established, Scangarello has talked about flexibility within that and adapting what you’re doing to fit your players, but you have to first establish what you’re doing.

Elway reiterated this philosophy a few days ago leading up to the draft at his pre-draft news conference:

“As I’ve said so many times, obviously the quarterback is very important and the skills of the quarterback are very important, but also what you put around the quarterback and the system that the quarterback’s going to be in is very, very important too. I think it’s all of those factors.

You don’t just draft a quarterback and stick him in with what you’re doing. You’ve got to figure out what’s the best fit for you and what you’re going to do on offense. I think for us, what we’re working for and what I’d like to do is see us have some consistency offensively in what we’re doing. We’ve had three different coordinators the last three years, so we’re working together to get consistency there. That’s why that part is more important than the guy you’re sticking into it.”

All of this is laying the groundwork so that when you do bring a quarterback you think can be “the guy,” he has a system and structure around him that enables him to be successful.

We saw this with #1 overall pick Jared Goff. Many wanted to write him off as a bust under Jeff Fisher and whatever they were doing on offense, but bring in an offensive coach who has a plan and a scheme that helps your young quarterback, and you have one of the top offenses in the NFL.

Or take the example of our friends in Kansas City. Andy Reid had an offensive system in place, a veteran quarterback who knew how to run it, and talented skill position players that operated well within it. All that being already established allowed them to be patient with their draft pick, Patrick Mahomes, and we have painfully seen how that has turned out.

So what does all this have to do with Drew Lock?

I would argue this has more to do with Elway and his continual learning and evolving his philosophy on the quarterback position.

This is about ensuring that this time is different than the last time Denver drafted a quarterback, and Elway is taking very clear steps to make sure it is different.

The first steps were set in motion this offseason when Elway brought in an offensive coordinator with experience in a proven offensive system, and then by locking in a veteran quarterback who could manage it.

The next step is establishing from Day 1 that Lock is not here to compete for a starting role. In his comments after the second day of the draft wrapped up, Elway repeatedly said his goal for Lock is to come in and learn - both from Joe Flacco and coach Scangarello.

“Very bright kid,” Elway said about Lock. “We’re excited to have him because he does a nice job. He wants to be good. He is a competitor. The great thing too is that he knows the situation here and that is that Joe is the starter and he’s got a great opportunity to sit behind him and watch the guy and learn and get better.”

I think the bottom line is he’s coming to compete as a backup. Joe’s the starter. When we look at, it we’re hoping Drew is the future, But Joe is the starter, is going to be the starter and he’s going to battle. We tend to look at it as the Brett Favre-Aaron Rodgers type situation [with the Packers]. He’s going to have time to sit and watch Joe and take his time and learn and continue to get better. We feel we’re in a good situation there. Plus, we had guys compete for backup positions and he’ll be thrown in that bunch.”

This is a wise approach for not only where Denver is at right now, but specifically for a guy like Drew Lock, who, while talented, is extremely raw and needs time and work before attempting to become an NFL starter.

This is the consensus from every analyst and evaluator that has watched Lock play. Many are split on what his true ceiling could be, but no one disagrees that he, out of perhaps all the other prospects, needs time and development.

Those same things were said about Paxton Lynch as well, yet circumstances had him attempting to compete for a starting role in an offense he hadn’t learned, and learning a brand new one next year.

I’m not here to make excuses for Lynch, or say that he could have become something more than what he is currently. I’m merely pointing out that in hindsight and a perfect world, Denver’s approach may have looked more like what it is attempting today.

Slowly bringing along a second-round pick, while an established veteran is the clear starter, is an environment much more conducive to learning, than expecting a top-10 pick who isn’t near being ready to beat out a 10+ year NFL quarterback.

“I’m hoping that it allows us to let him grow. The expectation is not as high as it would be with a top-10 pick. That’s what he needs. He’s going to need that time and the patience and continue to work with it. He’s going to be able to watch Joe and how Joe works, and Joe has done it at a very high level for a very long time. He’s got a great guy to follow, watch, learn and see how it’s done.”

In addition to watching Flacco and learning from him, Elway specifically mentioned Lock getting to work with Scangarello on the points of his game that need the most refinement.

“Drew obviously has a lot of talent, he’s got a lot of arm talent, but he’s got to work on a lot of different things too. I think when you look at what he did in college offensively, he’s in the spread offense and wasn’t under the center very often. With what we’re going to do offensively, he’s going to have a lot of work to do.

I think technique is always a big thing. We talk about accuracy and accuracy a lot of times comes down to technique and throwing on rhythm. We believe he has a ton of talent, but we also believe he has a lot left to work on. It’s nice to be able to have a coach that’s worked with a stable of abilities that he does have. I think [Broncos Offensive Coordinator] Rich [Scangarello] and everybody is excited to work with him.”

All of these comments by Elway send a very clear message not only to Lock, but also to the team, and to the fans. Lock may very well be the future, or at least that’s the hope, but he has plenty to work on before that day comes.

Until then, the Broncos will continue with the plan they established before Lock was a Bronco, one that now includes Noah Fant, Dalton Risner, and a host of other young players from last year learning a new offense along with their quarterback Joe Flacco.

Let’s remember this the first time Flacco struggles, and a twinge inside of us wants to call for Drew Lock to take his place.

I can’t tell you for sure if this plan will work or not. But I can tell you that I feel more confident in both Denver’s approach to and longterm outlook on the quarterback position than I have in a long time.

Poll

How do you like this approach...a second time?

  • 63%
    Love it - "It’s the right move, Elway1"
    (82 votes)
  • 3%
    Hate it - "It’s going to end up another QB controversy"
    (5 votes)
  • 33%
    I’ll wait and see if it works out - but I like the plan
    (43 votes)
130 votes total Vote Now

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https://www.milehighreport.com/2019/4/27/18519447/elway-says-drew-lock-is-here-to-learn

2019-04-27 11:00:00Z
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