Friday, May 23, 2008

NFL Draft Grades: AFC North

The AFC North was a division that as a whole had solid draft days, and brought in quite a bit of talent. Whether it was Flacco, Mendenhall, Rivers or Sweed, the North did a great job and nobody in the division had a bad draft and helped themselves a lot.

Baltimore Ravens

Round 1
1 - QB Joe Flacco, Delaware (18)
Round 2
2 - RB Ray Rice, Rutgers (55)
Round 3
3 - LB Tavares Gooden, Miami (71)
4 - SS Tom Zbikowski, Notre Dame (86)
5 - OG O'Neil Cousins, UTEP (99)
Round 4
6 - WR Marcus Smith, New Mexico (106)
7 - OT David Hale, Weber St. (133)
Round 5
/ -
Round 6
8 - SS Haruki Nakamura, Cincinnati (206)
Round 7
9 - WR Justin Harper, Virginia Tech (215)
10 - RB Allen Patrick, Oklahoma (240)

Overall, Baltimore mightily impressed me in the middle of their draft. They went into the weekend with no 3rd round pick, and ended with three of them. Not many people were aware leading up to the draft, just how much the Ravens loved Joe Flacco, and they got the guy they wanted, and they traded down (before in turn trading up) to get him. Although most will question how early he went, he is the franchise caliber guy coaches and GM's pray for. Landing a speedy RB to be the lightning to McGahee's thunder in Rutgers' Ray Rice was a wise move. My favorite NFL caliber player in the draft was Tom Zbikowski, so the pick was a very good one. Getting a fantastic project lineman in O'Neil Cousins was a nice addition, and Miami linebacker Tavares Gooden is too similar to his new teammate Ray Lewis not to like the pick; smart, sure tackler, and sheds blocks well. Haruki Nakamura doesn't have much NFL potential, but can be an excellent addition on special teams, and can help in patches. As well in round 7, both Allen Patrick and Justin Harper could have easily gone in round 5 and on, so you can't question those either. A nice draft, but they could have addressed their O-line a little more.

Grade: C+


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Cincinnati Bengals

Round 1
1 - LB Keith Rivers, USC (9)
Round 2
2 - WR Jerome Simpson, Coastal Carolina (46)
Round 3
3 - DT Pat Sims, Auburn (77)
4 - WR Andre Caldwell, Florida (97)
Round 4
5 - OT Anthony Collins, Kansas (112)
Round 5
6 - DT Jason Shirley, Fresno St. (145)
Round 6
7 - FS Corey Lynch, Appalachian St. (177)
8 - TE Matt Sherry, Villanova (207)
Round 7
9 - LB Angelo Craig, Cincinnati (244)
10 - WR Mario Urrutia, Louisville (246)

It was no secret that the Bengals would be taking a defender at #9, but the question was who? Again, it was no secret that they were coveting defensive tackle Sedrick Ellis, but with New Orleans trading up, it wasn't meant to be. However, linebacker Keith Rivers, a teammate of Ellis' at USC, was quite the consolation prize. Rivers is a very instinctive linebacker and is extremely sound at the position. He is stout at the point of attack, and while he isn't a great coverage linebacker, he helps against the run, which is a must for the Bengals at this point. In round 2, you have to respect the risky pick. Jerome Simpson was obviously their guy if they were willing to select him in round 2. Most would disagree with the pick, but Coastal Carolina's Jerome Simpson has indefinite #1 WR potential. Round 3 was a solid round as well; landing a run stuffer up the middle in Auburns Pat Sims, and another WR to add depth in the elusive Andre Caldwell of Florida. Kansas offensive tackle Anthony Collins may have been a steal in round 4. He has good size and is a solid pass blocker for depth in case Levi Jones goes down. At the very least, he will provide a possible successor to an aged Willie Anderson at right tackle. Another huge nose tackle in Jason Shirley was a nice addition (6'5 - 335 lbs.) to help slow down opposing ground attacks. Another nice selection was the 6'6, 232 lbs. red zone monster that is Mario Urrutia of Louisville. Overall, the Chad Johnson/TJ Houshmandzadeh situation(s) may have forced the Bengals into making one too many picks at wide receiver, but they added solid talent nonetheless, although they could have addressed the defense a little more.

Grade: C

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Cleveland Browns

Round 1
/ -
Round 2
/ -
Round 3
/ -

Round 4
1 - LB Beau Bell, UNLV (104)
2 - TE Martin Rucker, Missouri (111)
Round 5
/ -
Round 6
3 - DT Ahtyba Rubin, Iowa St. (190)
4 - WR Paul Hubbard, Wisconsin (191)
Round 7
5 - DE Alex Hall, St. Augustine's (231)

There isn't a whole lot to say about the Browns draft, however, they made their picks count, and worked with what they had and did a solid job. For their first pick, they traded up with the Cowboys to select university of Nevada Las Vegas' linebacker Beau Bell who is an ideal fit as a middle linebacker in the Browns 3-4 defense; considering that their biggest need was defense (primarily linebacker) Beau Bell was a great pickup for the Brownies. Trading up again with the Cowboys, they selected a very good pass catching tight end in Missouri's, Martin Rucker. Not a great blocker, but will add great depth in case Kellen Winslow should go down during the season; they are very alike as well. Round 6 saw them get a steal in the massive nose tackle from Iowa State Ahtyba Rubin who could have easily gone in round 3. Rubin will add much needed depth on what was a porous defensive line last season as a nose tackle behind Shaun Rogers. Both Paul Hubbard and Alex Hall are nice developmental prospects at their respective positions. When talking about the Browns draft, the trades they made must be taken into account. Trading their 1st last season in a trade up for Notre Dame QB Brady Quinn is still a no decision, however adding Corey Williams with their 2nd round pick from Green Bay, a defensive tackle who will play defensive end in the 3-4 helps them mightily. The biggest of all, trading their 3rd and Leigh Bodden for nose tackle Shaun Rodgers all but solidifies their D-line this season, which was by far their worst function.

Grade: B-

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Pittsburgh Steelers


Round 1
1 - RB Rashard Mendenhall, Illinois (23)
Round 2
2 - WR Limas Sweed, Texas (53)
Round 3
3 - DE/LB Bruce Davis, UCLA (88)

Round 4
4 - OT Tony Hills, Texas (130)
Round 5
5 - QB Dennis Dixon, Oregon (156)
Round 6
6 - LB Mike Humpal, Iowa (188)
7 - FS Ryan Mundy, West Virginia (194)
Round 7
/ -

I was a big fan of the Steelers draft, picking up great talent and value at almost all of their picks, not reaching on a single pick. In round 1 they had Rashard Mendenhall, a consensus top 15 pick fall into their laps. With Willie Parker's injury in the playoffs fresh in their mind, it was a pick that had to be made. They off set each other well and will make for a good tandem at running back. Mendenhall's ability goes beyond running however. He is a sounds pass catcher, an above-average blocker, and fell only because he had just a single year of production. Round 2 was a steal of a pick in Texas' Limas Sweed. Sweed reminds the Steelers front office of their former receiver Plaxico Burress; being 6'5 with good hands and great potential to be a solid receiver, off setting 06' 1st round pick wide receiver, the small and fast Santonio Holmes. They came back and selected an ideal outside linebacker for their 3-4 scheme in Bruce Davis. Amassing 24.5 sacks in two years, Davis will help get to the quarterback in a big way. Adding solid depth to their offensive line that is seeing the aging of guys like Marvel Smith and the loss of Alan Faneca with another longhorn in offensive tackle Tony Hills. Dennis Dixon in round 5 is very intriguing and was in the Heisman contention, leading his Oregon Ducks to a possible BCS bid before tearing his ACL.

Grade: B

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...Coming up next, the AFC South.

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