Most Popular This Month

Saturday, April 21, 2018

2018 NFL Draft: Quarterbacks


Our first positional of draft week and we start with the Quarterbacks. This class is good, with Rosen getting my first starter grade since Winston and three guys in the Watson-Mahomes range. I need to spend some time before next draft figuring out how I rank QBs within the Starter, expected starter, probably starter, backup, UDFA ranges. It’s the only position where I’m hesitant to put a player in the starter tier. That is a discussion for another day.

Player
Tm
Ht
Wt
ATT
AY/A
Cmp%
Sk%
Role
Gr
Josh
Rosen
UCLA
76
226
452
8.42
62.61%
5.40%
ES
7.1
Baker
Mayfield
OKLA
73
215
404
12.84
70.54%
6.00%
ES
6.6
Lamar
Jackson
LOU
74
216
430
8.68
59.07%
6.30%
ES
6.6
Sam
Darnold
USC
75
221
480
8.46
63.13%
5.70%
ES
6.6
Mason
Rudolph
OkSt
77
235
489
10.66
65.03%
4.50%
ES
6.1
Josh
Allen
WYO
77
237
270
6.85
56.30%
7.50%
PS
5.8
Mike
White
WKU
77
224
560
7.71
65.71%
7.40%
PS
5.7
Luke
Falk
WAZZ
76
215
534
6.72
66.85%
6.80%
PS
5.7
Logan
Woodside
TOL
73
210
411
9.88
64.23%
5.10%
PS
5.6
John
Wolford
WAKE
72
205
374
9.31
63.90%
3.90%
PS
5.5

My top ten quarterbacks and if you want my Josh Allen take I’ll direct you to my production primer (Here). He has insane upside, he’s nowhere near reaching it at the moment. Rosen is the most pro-ready, but he took a beating at UCLA and his most likely downfall is due to his health concerns. I’ve been unable to separate Mayfield, Jackson, and Darnold in my mind. Darnold and Jackson are upside plays with specific talents. Darnold is a great thrower on the move, but his footwork in the pocket gets lazy, and he makes some curious decisions. Jackson manipulates a pocket well and has improved each of the last two seasons as a passer, while still providing a spark with his legs. Mayfield shows an array of passes, has swagger out the ass, and has made just about every throw you could conceive. The big questions on him are size, and what the impact of losing Lincoln Riley’s scheme be on his production. Rudolph was the second most productive player in my rankings, shows good anticipation, and is calm and cool in the pocket. I have some questions about his arm strength and his adaptation outside of Mike Gundy’s offense, but I like where he’s building from at the next level. As we move past Allen I’ll leave my comments to this… The upside is there, hopefully he makes us all eat our words. Mike White showed up big at the Senior Bowl and had a very successful career at WKU, he takes more chances than he probably should and will need to be more consistent at the next level, but all it takes is a watch of the 2016 game against Bama to see the upside. Luke Falk feels like the quintessential 8th year senior. It seems like he’s been at Wazzou since the turn of the decade, so it’ll be exciting to see him in a new environment. Wherever that turns out to be will need to have an established line to help Falk who’s had trouble with pressure in his face at the college level. Falk can make just about any throw and has had a greater level of autonomy than many people assume in a Mike Leach offense. Woodside is a solid group of 5 quarterback with upside and healthy production from the MAC. He doesn’t wow, but he’ll give you fringe starter upside when called upon with room to grow. Rounding out my top 10 is John Wolford, who’s a low upside, high floor, ACC quarterback who helped the Deacons stabilize.

All in all, it’s a good QB class, and there’s untapped potential to be found farther down the rankings. It will be interesting to see if we get some compare contrasts with players going to places with established starters for the start/sit debate of QB development. As always there will be more this week, and as amateur scouts there is a good amount of info that we aren’t privy to.

No comments:

Post a Comment