Well here we are I switched this one up a bit and combined a new
mock with a mock the way I think it should happen with my grades and views on
players. The first player seen is how I think it will happen and the second are
mine. Enjoy.
First Round
1) Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Jameis Winston, QB, Florida State | I still have an urge
to put Mariota here as I like him more long term than Winston but every time I
think about Mariota's future I think about how great it would be if he got a
year or two to work on his skills a la Aaron Rodgers. So my pick matches the mock
pick and sends the former Seminole to Tampa. | Jameis
Winston, QB, Florida State
2) Tennessee Titans | Leonard Williams, DT, USC | Williams is a perfect fit in Tennessee's defense and would be an anchor and a force for that defense. That won't mean much for the current regime if they don't find a quarterback to take the team to a new level. Mariota is the second best quarterback in the class and is a ways above Grayson and Hundley and for me he can be your franchise. | Marcus Mariota, QB, Oregon
3) Jacksonville Jaguars | Dante Fowler Jr., Edge, Florida | Jacksonville is looking for a LEO (weak side LB) in their defense and an edge player. Fowler was good but limited at Florida and his workout numbers match up. Beasley has put on some weight and was very productive at Clemson and is my best top rated Edge player. | Vic Beasley, Edge, Clemson
4) Oakland Raiders | Kevin White, WR, West Virginia | Kevin White is a high upside one year wonder out of West Virginia. He was great this year and deserves to be rewarded and regarded highly. That being said, where White may have a slight athleticism advantage, Alabama's Amari Cooper has multiple years of tape, is more developed in the little things and has multiple years of very impressive tape. For me the difference is the subtle and not-so-subtle ways Cooper creates separation off the line and his understanding of body control that puts him ever-so-slightly above White. | Amari Cooper, WR, Alabama
5) Washington Redskins | Vic Beasley, Edge, Clemson | Washington lost Brian Orakpo in free agency, but they sit in a perfect position to pick up a very good Edge player at their pick. Beasley is my #1 player on my board and the best edge. I seem to be a bit high on him. Beasley is already gone in my mock but Bud Dupree is a monster athlete who shows flashes on tape but needs to continue to refine his technique to become an even bigger beast of a player. | Bud Dupree, Edge, Kentucky
6) New York Jets | Marcus Mariota, QB, Oregon: | The majority of mocks have Mariota falling; Although many are starting to put him back up at 2 whether that's to Tennessee or to a team that moves up for the Oregon QB. Mariota is gone in my mock but that allows the Jets to place another piece at the skill positions. Kevin White is a monster athlete and broke out at West Virginia this year. White isn't as polished as Cooper but has an upside that is higher than Cooper's. | Kevin White, WR, West Virginia
7) Chicago Bears | Amari Cooper, WR, Alabama: | Cooper is one of my favorites in this draft because of his polish and ability to make an impact right away. His hands and feet off the line allow him to get in good position right away and should translate in year one. With Cooper in Oakland thanks to GM Brock (I hate myself for writing that that way.) I went with Leonard Williams to be the rock on which the next great Bears defense is built. You can find suitable help in the middle in later rounds but a true two gap player with heavy hands would be a huge win for a defense in year 1 of a 3-4 overhaul. | Leonard Williams, DT, USC
8) Atlanta Falcons | Bud Dupree, Edge, Kentucky: | Pure and simple the Falcons need help on both lines especially on the edges and both mocks found a way to address that but on opposing sides of the ball. We've addressed Dupree a couple of picks before this and he would give Atlanta young talent on the edge that they haven't had in a few years. With his upside and raw bits he would be a great fit to learn under the tutelage of Dan Quinn the new Falcons head coach. With Dupree off the board already as well as the elite edge players I went to fix the other need offensive line help. Jake Matthews is the left tackle of the future and a great pick from a year ago and Fisher would slot in as a bookend on the right that would make a very good duo for a long time coming. Fisher has flaws but he's a mauler and a very good athlete despite some lower body injuries in his college career. | Jake Fisher, OT, Oregon
9) New York Giants | Brandon Scherff, OT, Iowa: | The Giants do a very good job of drafting defensive linemen the problem in recent years has been the players they have brought in to rebuild their offensive line to give Eli time to throw. Scherff can play tackle but he will probably be best suited at guard and for the Giants that fills a huge need. For me Scherff is still there but I think 1) Peters is a higher upside talent with greater athleticism and 2) plays at a position where it is tougher to find a longtime player late in the draft. Peters had some troubles at Washington but as a talent he's one of the best corners in the draft. | Marcus Peters, CB, Washington
10) St. Louis Rams | Trae Waynes, CB, Michigan State: | The draft community loves Waynes and I think he's a good player but he's a bit stiffed hip, with the fourth slowest corner in the short shuttle and a three cone that was on the bad side of meh. Like many Michigan State corners he is very hands-y and uses contact to his advantage with the lack of illegal contact penalty. I'm not saying he's going to bust but that combination is a bit scary to me. Those concerns led me in a different direction and brought me to Dorial Green-Beckham. I don't have the resources, the connections or the time that NFL front offices to look into all the concerns and the allegations at Missouri are horrible but I'm basing my rankings on talent alone which I'm aware has moral flaws but is the way it gets done. | Dorial Green-Beckham, WR, Missouri
11) Minnesota Vikings | Devante Parker, WR, Louisville | I think I'm too low on
Parker, who sits at 21 on my big board, and I would love this pick for the
Vikings. Parker is a talented receiver with explosion and good hands, who
fights for the ball while on the field. If this is the direction Minnesota
decided to go I would have nothing but praise for the pick. I'd pick Gurley
here although I will probably talk myself into Praker as the pick here. Gurley
to me is the only transcendent talent at RB and if his knee checks out this
weekend in Indy he's the only RB I would take in the first round considering
the depth at the position this season and that's saying a lot. | Todd
Gurley, RB, Georgia
12) Cleveland Browns | Randy Gregory, Edge, Nebraska | Cleveland is an enigma for me this year and it has a lot to do with Barkevious Mingo, his injury and his output. I like Mingo and when healthy he and Paul Kruger are a really nice duo. Gregory is built a lot like Mingo and brings some of the red flags on-field that Mingo did moving from mostly having his hand in the ground transitioning to dropping in coverage some and needing refinement in techniques. Now Mingo is only in his third year and was a top ten pick so it might not be time to be looking for replacements just yet. I went in a slightly different direction for my pick. I chose Malcolm Brown the DT out of Texas, I think Brown has a pretty good chance to end up the second best 3-4 tackle of the group ahead of shelton. Brown could play the 0 or the 5 in Cleveland but I thought his best tape last year came when he had a two-gap responsibility than when trying to disrupt off one-gap. | Malcolm Brown, DT, Texas
13) New Orleans Saints | Danny Shelton, NT, Washington | New Orleans needs help up front on both sides of the ball and probably needs to target a receiver or two late, but early the biggest needs are on defense. What I think happens is that Rob Ryan gets an athletic NT to anchor the middle of a defense that has a myriad of problems. For me we finally get to a player that I'm much higher than most on, Eric Rowe a corner from Utah. His numbers were great at the combine and what excites me is this is a player who changed positions from S to CB for his senior season and although he was rocky at times and looked a little unsure he has all the tools to be great when he finally gets comfortable at the position. | Eric Rowe, CB, Utah
14) Miami Dolphins | La'el Collins, OT, LSU | La'el Collins draws differing reviews around #DraftTwitter, some see him as a top three or four tackle, some see him as only a guard, and some see him as a middling tackle prospect who will stick around a while but never amount to much more than a stop-gap. For me Scherff is a better version of what Collins is, but neither is necessarily a bad pick for a team that still needs major upgrades on the offensive line. | Brandon Scherff, OT, Iowa
15) San Francisco 49ers | Shane Ray, Edge, Missouri | The Niners lost a boat load of talent this off-season from the retirements of Borland, Willis and Smith, to the free agent signing of Iupati to Arizona and Harbaugh being let go and heading to Michigan this is a roster that needs help. I'm not high on Ray and it all stems from his combine tests in which his 3 cone time was a half second slower than the average for edge players. I just think he has great potential to bust. I went for a corner considering the front seven isn't going to be what it was and the secondary was atrocious. Collins is good and the next in a line of really good corners to come from the bayou. | Jalen Collins, CB, LSU
16) Houston Texans | Todd Gurley, RB, Georgia | We addressed Gurley at 11 when I had him going to the Vikings at 11. He would be a great piece to add to the backfield and a best case scenario replacement for Foster. That would be nice but with Gurley gone in my mock I went for a replacement of Andre Johnson. Parker probably won’t be here on draft day as we’ve seen but if he falls this far the Texans would have a pair of wide receivers that would be scary good with competent QB play. | DeVante Parker, WR, Louisville
17) San Diego Chargers | Andrus Peat, OT, Stanford | Andrus Peat is a big lanky tackle with stiff feet at times that leave him a bit encumbered but he has the best recovery skills of any tackle in this draft. At 6’7” he’s gonna get in your way and he converts his athleticism to power pretty well. For me I’d move inside for the Chargers with Cam Erving who is the best center in the draft by far. The Chargers went through four different centers last season and that can’t continue to happen. | Cameron Erving, C, Florida State
18) Kansas City Chiefs | Ereck Flowers, OT, Miami (FL) | Flowers is a beast of a man who is built like
a brick wall. But his kick slide looks like
(Joe Goodberry) this and it scares me. We’ve talked about Waynes and I think
this is a very good fit with the help that the front seven should afford the
corners in this system. | Trae Waynes, CB, Michigan
State
19) Cleveland Browns (From Buffalo) | Breshad Perriman, WR, UCF | Perriman
is a speedy WR out of UCF who flashed playing with Bortles last season and
blazed at his pro day. The thing for me that keeps him at 13 for me are his
hands, now we saw Benjamin taken last season with iffy hands and that’s why you’ll
see him higher up on most lists but for me it drops him. I went with Carl Davis
for here because that Browns front could really use help up front and I think
Davis could be a nice combo at the five with Brown from earlier inside that
would make a huge difference for the Browns on defense. | Carl
Davis, DT, Iowa
20) Philadelphia Eagles | Jalen Collins, CB, LSU | I
agree with the need at corner but I already have Collins going to San Fran at
pick 15. I went with Byron Jones, a player who absolutely blew up the combine
with his jumps at the combine which included a broad jump over 12 feet. Kelly
loves big athletes and Jones fits that mold and would be a great addition on a
team that needs help across from Byron Maxwell. | Byron
Jones, CB, UCONN
21) Cincinnati Bengals | Malcolm Brown, DT, Texas | If
Brown is still here when the Bengals pick it will be a great choice to help
supplement a line that has had injuries and needs a spark. With Brown off the
board and a first round pick used on a corner last year I think the Bengals
look over the top for help. Collins is the best safety in this year’s class and
would be a great addition to a team that needs help in the back four. | Landon
Collins, SS, Alabama
22) Pittsburgh Steelers | Arik Armstead, DT, Oregon | Armstead will almost assuredly go before this pick.
There is enough smoke to say that a 3-4 team higher up will take the 6’7” 292
pound 5-tech (outside shoulder of the T). Now he doesn’t have Watts level of
athleticism but he shows a series of moves that will allow him to disrupt from
that alignment. I had Armstead too low and have made adjustments to my thinking
after some re-evaluation. I went with Shelton, a freaky nose tackle with a bit
of a questionable motor who shows elite flashes and is worth the risk at 22 for
a Steelers defense that is aging to say the least. | Danny
Shelton, NT, Washington
23) Detroit Lions | Kevin Johnson, CB, Wake Forest | Here, what I think will happen and what I
would do match up. Johnson isn’t the freakiest athlete but he’s probably the
best technician of the corners and a player that has good shot of playing early
in his rookie season at a rather difficult position to do so. | Kevin
Johnson, CB, Wake Forest
24) Arizona Cardinals | Melvin Gordon, RB, Wisconsin | Let me say that I’m a Badger fan and a Gordon
fan, but he isn’t otherworldly enough to warrant a first round pick but will
almost assuredly fall into the back end of the first round. His best assets are
his feet, but he lacks top end speed and his vision has some troubles at times.
He would be a great compliment to Ellington however, and would give Arizona a
nice little combo in the backfield. Owa Odighizuwa (Oh-dig-gee-zu-wa) is a 5
tech from UCLA with good feet who converts speed to power really well. He’s a
bit underrated by most but his fans are very high on him and you can count me
among them. He would be a great replacement for some of what was lost for
Arizona. | Owa Odighizuwa, DL, UCLA
25) Carolina Panthers | Landon Collins, SS, Alabama | The Panthers were a mess cap-wise last season
and aren’t out of the woods yet and that has hurt them on the line and in the defensive
backfield where they have had to hodge-podge together a unit that at best is
below league average. The addition of Collins would certainly be an upgrade. I,
however, would go Peat or the best available tackle at this point. Newton needs
help from the line and just didn’t get it last season and it greatly effects
the effectiveness of the offense. | Andrus Peat, OT,
Stanford
26) Baltimore Ravens | Dorial Green-Beckham, WR, Missouri | We’ve already addressed Green-Beckham earlier
so I won’t hit on it again but he would be a great replacement for the Torrey
Smith deep ball role. I agree that wide receiver is a good place to look for
the Ravens with the DTs gone in the, “what I would do” mock and that brings me
to Nelson Agholor. Agholor, to me is the best second tier receiver. He lacks
some of the top end athleticism but he’s a big-bodied, sure-handed receiver who
is going to have a long and productive career for whomever drafts him. | Nelson
Agholor, WR, USC
27) Dallas Cowboys | Marcus Peters, CB, Washington | Dallas needs to find running back help in
this draft but there should be a nice selection of talent in the second and third
rounds for them to select from. So we look to the defensive side of the ball.
Peters is probably the best corner in the draft but the character
concerns will probably drop him a bit but should be a boon for Dallas. Peters
is gone in my mock and that leaves me to look front seven for the Cowboys. I’m
high on Bennett who was injured most of last season but was still productive
and able to make plays and set up linebackers for the Buckeyes. I think he
slides into the back of the first for a team that wants a very good ball player
who could surprise with his year one impact. | Michael Bennett,
DT, Ohio State
28) Denver Broncos | D.J. Humprhies, OT, Florida | As we wind down the first round we’re looking
at projections and players that need work and are a bit divisive between
evaluations. This draft has a lot of round 2 and 3 type players but lacks the top
end talents. Humphries is a good athlete and a pretty good tackle and many have
him rated as their top tackle in the draft. He’s a solid athlete with good
size, should be able to add some weight but I’m just a little skeptical of him.
I went Collins mostly because I think even if he doesn’t work out at left
tackle has the size and enough athleticism to kick inside and be very good for
many years. | La'el Collins, OT, LSU
29) Indianapolis Colts | T.J. Clemmings, OT, Pittsburgh | Clemmings was a draft darling before the
senior bowl and combine where the flaws on tape started to show up against
better competition and in his drills. The biggest problem for Clemmings is that
he gets caught stopping his feet and reaching far too often. These are fixable
but will take time to fix and are a big issue against more refined rushers. I decided
to look at the other side of the ball for the Colts with the better of the
tackles gone. Gregory is a lanky pass rusher as we noted earlier and would be
an instant upgrade OLB for the Colts. | Randy
Gregory, Edge, Nebraska
30) Green Bay Packers | Eric Kendricks, ILB, UCLA | Another
agreement on the pick here, with a purge at the ILB spot for the Packers help
is needed if they want to keep Matthews outside. Kendricks is a bit undersized
but he attacks blocks well and plays with impressive instincts and a
willingness to stick his nose in the action. He would be a welcome addition to
a linebacking corps that has had run defense issues and lacked impact in the
middle. | Eric Kendricks, ILB, UCLA
31) New Orleans Saints (From Seattle) | Jaelen Strong, WR, Arizona State | The Saints are an enigma for me and I don’t
have a huge hold on whom they should draft or where they want to go. Strong is
an interesting player to study, he doesn’t get great separation, he has trouble
high pointing, but he fights for the ball and does a pretty good job with the minutia
of the position and if any offense can take advantage of that it’s the Saints.
I noted my concerns about Clemmings but the Saints line has taken some hits
recently and needs help for Brees or whomever comes after. | T.J.
Clemmings, OT, Pittsburgh
32) New England Patriots | Owa Odighizuwa, DL, UCLA | This
is a Pats pick if there ever was one. If Owa is here he will be a versatile
piece for the Pats to play with. Jarrett is and underrated tackle with good
skill and was able to flash for the Bruins the last couple of seasons. With
Wilfork gone the Patriots will need all the help they can get up front. | Grady
Jarrett, DT, UCLA
There’s the first round and especially after the 15-16 range is
going to be very interesting to see what team’s value and go after with their
picks. That should lead to a very entertaining first round and leave a very interesting
best available heading into Friday.
Second Round
33) Tennessee Titans | Byron Jones, CB, UCONN | The Titans could use help on the outside and Jones or Williams would be a great place to look. Williams recently had a DUI and that will be taken into account by teams. | P.J. Williams, CB, Florida State
34) Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Cameron Erving, C, FLorida State | I don’t think Erving lasts this long but he
would be a boon for the Bucs. Tomlinson/ A.J. Cann are one two on most guard
top ten lists and are a big need for Tampa Bay. | Laken Tomlinson, G, Duke
35) Oakland Raiders | Shaq Thompson, OBLB, Washington | The Raiders could use another linebacker to
play across from Mack and Thompson is an aggressive backer. Whomever coaches
him will need to reign him in and mold a talented but reckless player. They
could also use some more help outside and I’m a fan of Grant’s and like the
value at the top of the round. | Doran Grant, CB, Ohio State
36) Jacksonville Jaguars | Eli Harold, Edge, Virginia | These are two different players and like I
said I’m a bit too low on Armstead and that will probably be the case on where
he goes in the draft but he would be a great pick up for the Jags and would be
a nice addition to the weak side of that defensive line. Harold is a good pass
rusher with tools but will be restricted some to 4-3 teams because of his open
field athleticism. The jags just need players on the defensive side of the
field and Harold would be a nice fit for that staff. | Ark Armstead, DT, Oregon
37) New York Jets | Eddie Goldman, DT, Florida State | Goldman is a fit pick and depth here for the
Jets and a very good rotation player day one. Cann is a very good guard and
would upgrade a unit that needs help on the inside for the run game and the
sake of Geno. | A.J.
Cann, G, South Carolina
38) Washington Redskins | Jake Fisher, OT, Oregon | I
really like Fisher and if he slipped here would be a great bookend to Trent
Williams. Darby is a solid CB and a good football player who would upgrade the
secondary almost immediately. | Ronald Darby, CB, Florida State
39) Chicago Bears | Jordan Phillips, DT, Oklahoma | Phillips is a flashy tackle but has lapses
and doesn’t play nearly technical enough. I’m lower on Carter than most but he
and Kyle Fuller would be a very good set of young corners. | Alex
Carter, CB, Stanford
40) New York Giants | Denzel Perryman, OBLB, Miami (FL) | Perryman is another player that I diverge a
bit from others but he’s a good player and the Giants need linebacker help.
McCarthy would is just a good football player who would fit into the Giants
rotation very nicely. | Ellis
McCarthy, DT, UCLA
41) St. Louis Rams | Devin Smith, WR, Ohio State | The Rams still need WR help no matter who is
the quarterback and Smith has a very nice set of deep skills with just enough
everywhere else to be useful year one. Mason is a crazy athletic guard who
gained more notice after Georgia Tech’s pro day. | Shaq Mason, G, Georgia Tech
42) Atlanta Falcons | Preston Smith, Edge, Mississippi State | I like Smith a good amount better athleticism
than given credit and plays well on the edge. As said earlier the Falcons need
edge help. Fowler was put in great places at Florida but still didn’t impact
the game as much as most give him credit for. He tested alright but he just has
too many holes for me. | Dante
Fowler Jr, Edge, Florida
43) Cleveland Browns | Maxx Williams, TE, Minnesota | Hey, agreement in the second round. The
Browns lost Jordan Cameron in free agency and need a replacement. Williams isn’t
the athlete that Cameron was, but he has a feel for play in space, can block
and was the only good thing about Minnesota’s pass game in 2014. | Maxx Williams, TE, Minnesota
44) New Orleans Saints | Ronald Darby, CB, Florida State | We’ve been over both these players but they
show both sides, Darby is the safer pick, Thompson is a bit spastic but plays
hard downhill and would be an interesting fit inside a 3-4. | Shaq Thompson, OBLB, Washington
45) Minnesota Vikings | Laken Tomlinson, G, Duke | Line
help for a back and Bridgewater is needed. Flowers may be Kahlil 2.0 but he’s
worth a shot at this point in the draft. | Ereck Flowers, OT, Miami (FL)
46) San Francisco 49ers | Benardrick McKinney, OBLB, Mississippi State | The 9ers obviously need linebacker depth with
the departures this offseason. Hicks is a sleeper linebacker and tested well
above average in space and translates that speed to power well. | Jordan Hicks, OBLB, Texas
47) Miami Dolphins | Phillip Dorsett, WR, Miami (FL) | Dorsett is an explosive player in space, with
very good hands and quick twitch athleticism that will complement Landry. Tartt
is a very intriguing small school athlete that is in a group of safeties in the
second tier that bring some but not all the traits that make the greats. | Jasquiski Tartt, SS, Samford
48) San Diego Chargers | Carl Davis, DT, Iowa | A pair of
Big Ten players here with skills. The Chargers need three things, help on the
lines and at running back. I’ve addressed Davis and Gordon earlier but they are
both good value here especially Gordon. | Melvin Gordon, RB, Wisconsin
49) Kansas City Chiefs | Quinten Rollins, CB, Miami (OH) | Rollins is a small school corner with upside
but needs polishing in press. Smith is an intriguing tackle with good
athleticism and footwork who needs to work on his punch and footwork. | Donovan Smith, OT, Penn State
50) Buffalo Bills | Cedric Ogbuehi, OT, Texas A&M | Ogbuehi is a first round talent with injury
issues and poor tape on the left side. Tevin Coleman is one of my favorite
backs but he needs the right system and a little time to refine his skill set
but will provide big play potential on every play. | Tevin Coleman, RB, Indiana
51) Houston Texans | Stephone Anthony, OBLB, Clemson | The Texans have had trouble finding the right
player to pair with Connor Barwin on the inside and keeping those players
healthy. Anthony played well inside at Miami and Jones is an underrated
producer from Michigan State that should translate to either the 4-3 or 3-4
scheme. | Taiwan
Jones, OBLB, Michigan State
52) Philadelphia Eagles | Nelson Agholor, WR, USC | Agholor
would be the best case scenario at this point for wide receiver for Kelly.
Greene impressed me at Florida State and is a very good possession receiver. | Rashad Green, WR, Florida State
53) Cincinnati Bengals | Michael Bennett, DT, Ohio State | Pretty simple here more talent needed up
front. If Cincy gets Bennett here I’m telling you now I’ll love
this pick. | Eddie
Goldman, DT, Florida State
54) Detroit Lions | Alex Carter, CB ,Stanford | I
think Detroit needs a lot of help outside but Carter and Johnson would be a
nice set. Edwards would be a nice way to move on from Fairley and Suh. | Mario Edwards Jr, DT, Florida State
55) Arizona Cardinals | A.J. Cann, OG, South Carolina | Help up front and on offense as a whole is
needed. These would be good value and be helpful early. | Duke Johnson, RB, Miami (FL)
56) Pittsburgh Steelers | P.J. Williams, CB, Florida State | Get help for a defense losing players at a
alarming rate to retirement and sub-optimal drafting in recent years. | Stephone Anthony, OBLB, Clemson
57) Carolina Panthers | Nate Orchard, Edge, Utah | Hardy
is gone and day two would be a great day to find help for a line with promising
young talent inside. | Preston
Smith, Edge, Mississippi State
58) Baltimore Ravens | Sammie Coates, WR, Auburn | Abdullah
would be a nice addition to a backfield with some bigger runners. Abdullah
really matured the last two years at Nebraska and is a nice adition. Coates is
Green-Beckham security in this case and also a nice player. | Ameer Abdullah, RB, Nebraska
59) Denver Broncos | Tre Jackson, G, Florida State | Need depth on both lines and youth to start filling
the holes that are coming. | Tyeler Davison, DL, Fresno State
60) Dallas Cowboys | Paul Dawson, OBLB, TCU | Dawson
is a very limited athlete but would do well in a scheme that won’t force him
into space. Ajayi could be a home run here filling the Murray void in a one cut
system. | Jay
Ajayi, RB, Boise State
61) Indianapolis Colts | Tevin Coleman, RB, Indiana | Richardson is gone and wasn’t the answer
either player would be an upgrade here and Brown might end up being a steal
here. | Malcolm
Brown, RB, Texas
62) Green Bay Packers | Mario Edwards Jr, DT, Florida State | Raji and Guion are back but depth is needed
and will be a problem sooner rather than later for the Packers. | Jordan Phillips, DT, Oklahoma
63) Seattle Seahawks | Eric Rowe, CB, Utah | If this plays out the Seahawks traded
out of the first and still found major impact at 63 with Rowe. Coates would be
the stretch receiver that many believe they need. | Sammie Coates, WR, Auburn
64) New England Patriots | Danielle Hunter, Edge, LSU | Both good football players, Dawson
more instinctual and Hunter is the higher upside athlete. | Paul Dawson, OBLB, TCU
There you have it I need to tweak the second round a bit next
time around I doubled up a little bit, but overall I like it and it gets a lot
of names out there to think about. As always would love to hear thoughts,
comments or concerns. We’re only two weeks away and I for one am really excited
for this year’s draft.
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