Friday, March 31, 2023

Mass Momentum Plays

In the early days of football, with rules restricting open-field running, play became centered on the area where the ball was put into play. Wedge formations were the rage among the colleges competing in the emerging sport. In 1889, Walter Camp’s modified wedge at Yale became known as the “shoving wedge.” Football historian Alexander Weyand described Camp’s “shoving wedge” in The Saga of American Football:

The players ranged themselves in a wedge with only the center on the line of scrimmage. Each man placed his hands on the hips of the man in front. When the ball was snapped, the players closed in tight and shoved. The ball carrier was protected on all sides. 

Sound familiar? Other than “only the center on the line of scrimmage,” that is the formation and play that the Philadelphia Eagles ran to fantastic success in short yardage situations last season. In the 1880s, football teams didn’t have to position seven players on the line of scrimmage. The Eagles adapted the formation to today’s rules. 

There’s a reason that Camp’s formation, strategy, and play hasn’t been used for 120 years. It’s illegal. It was made illegal for a simple reason. In 1890, 23 players died on the football field. In 1891, it was 22. In 1892, it was 26. That pattern continued into the 1900s. Injuries are a part of football. Injuries will always be a part of football. It’s a violent game. In the early decades, it was more than violent. The game was deadly. After 19 players had been killed and 159 critically injured playing the game in 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt ordered the decision-makers of football to change the game or see it abolished by Executive Order. 

Camp’s “shoving wedge” and all mass momentum plays were tossed from the game. These plays were gone for more than a century until Nick Sirianni and his coaches dusted it off. No matter how much flattery is tossed at the Eagles for their innovation, they weren’t innovative with their short-yardage play. They revived a play that was banned from football. That’s the reason it hasn’t been a playbook staple. This mass momentum play is illegal. 

Today’s football decision-makers had a decision to make this offseason. The question of whether to allow the Eagles, and the rest of the league, to deploy this dangerous play moving forward was on the table. The word around the campfire was that those decision-makers decided that the Eagles shouldn’t be punished for their fantastic success with the play. It’s one of those decisions that’s “shocking, not shocking.” The league has repeatedly shown that it doesn’t really care about player safety. In this case, the league also shows that it knows nothing or doesn’t care about the game’s past. The Eagles’ mass momentum play has been illegal in football since 1906. The NFL is a “copy-cat” league. This play will spread around the league. It’ll continue until one of the game’s franchise quarterbacks is seriously hurt. It will happen and the league could’ve/should’ve prevented it. 

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Minnesota Vikings First Round Favorites

The 2023 NFL Draft is less than a month away. A few scattered Pro Days still remain but the opinions on players are mostly set. The Minnesota Vikings have the 23rd pick in the first round. The dream of all teams is to have a roster that is talented and balanced and that all draft selections can focus on “best player available.” It rarely works that way. In reality, all teams have needs. This Vikings team has many needs. Despite serious salary cap restraints, they managed to massage a few of those needs. Many needs remain. In no particular order, here are those needs.

Vikings Draft Needs
Interior defensive line
Cornerback
Linebacker
Wide Receiver
Quarterback
Interior offensive line

Actually, the only positions that have little to no need are safety, tight end, running back, and offensive tackle. 

Here are some of my favorite draft prospects that could be available when the Vikings are on the clock with the 23rd pick.

Vikings First Round Favorites
Interior defensive line:
Bryan Bresee, Clemson
Calijah Kancey, Pittsburgh
Mazi Smith, Michigan

Cornerback:
Deonte Banks, Maryland
Emmanuel Forbes, Mississippi State
Joey Porter Jr., Penn State
Brian Branch, Alabama
-Branch played safety in college. If the Vikings were to select him, I imagine he’d be a “chess piece” player mostly playing as an extra corner. 

Linebacker:
Nolan Smith, Georgia
Drew Sanders, Arkansas
Daiyan Henley, Washington State
Trenton Simpson, Clemson

Wide Receiver:
Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Ohio State
Zay Flowers, Boston College
Quentin Johnston, TCU
Jordan Addison, USC

Quarterback:
Hendon Hooker, Tennessee
Will Levis, Kentucky

Interior Offensive Line:
O’Cyrus Torrence, Florida
Steve Avila, TCU

Despite a potentially potent trio of Danielle Hunter, Marcus Davenport, and Za’Darius Smith being on the roster, edge rusher is still a position that could be addressed in the first round. Especially if any of the following are available.

Lukas Van Ness, Iowa
Myles Murphy, Clemson
Will McDonald IV, Iowa State

If I were to condense the above first round favorites to a favorite 10, that list might look something like this.

Current Favorite 10
Bryan Bresee
Deonte Banks
Jaxon Smith-Njigba
Zay Flowers
Mazi Smith
Emmanuel Forbes
Quentin Johnston
Joey Porter Jr.
Lukas Van Ness
Hendon Hooker

The list will probably look different tomorrow. 

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

NFL Rule, Bylaw, and Resolution Changes

It wasn’t just photographs and interviews at the NFL Owners Meetings in Arizona this week. The real purpose of the meetings is league business and some of that business was voting on changes to the league’s riles, bylaws, and resolutions. Here are those that were approved.

Approved Rules

-Permit the use of “0” as a jersey numeral. Allow kickers and punters to use any jersey numeral between 0-49 and 90-99.

-Make the adjustment of the play clock following an instant replay reversal consistent with other timing rules. 

-Expand the replay official’s jurisdiction to allow for review on failed fourth-down attempts.

-Change the definition of a launch to leaving one or both feet. 

-Make the penalty for tripping a personal foul.

-Make the penalty for illegally handing the ball forward consistent with other illegal acts, such as illegal passes. 

-Make the penalty for illegal punts, drop kicks, or placekicks consistent with other illegal acts, such as illegal passes. 

-Prevent the offense from benefitting by an extension of the half as a result of their foul.

-Clarify use of the helmet against an opponent by removing the “butt, ram, or spear” language and incorporating those actions into impermissible use of the helmet. 

Approved Bylaws

-Change the claiming period to Monday for players who are waived on the Friday and Saturday of the last week of the regular season. 

-Insert strength of victory as the second tiebreaker for awarding contracts. 

-Adjust the rules for postseason signings to account for standard elevations rule; freeze postseason rosters at 4pm ET on the Wednesday following the last week of the regular season. 

Approved Resolutions

-Make the regular season and postseason transaction deadlines the same; change the transaction deadline for Saturday night postseason games to 4pm ET on Saturday. 

-Provide greater clarity as to a player’s availability for a game. 

-Establish one preseason roster reduction date and related procedures. 

***

A few other potential changes were tabled until the owners gather again in May. 

-Replace the fading onside kick with a 4th-and-20 offensive play. 

-Make fair catches on kickoffs inside the 25-yard line a touchback. 

-Allow for an emergency third quarterback to be active on game day.

Another discussion that was tabled to the May meeting was the league’s power to flex Sunday games to Thursday night. Roger Goodell often honks that the NFL is all about the fans. It should be. The fans pay for all of it. Securing the power to move a game from Sunday to Thursday is a screaming “F—-you!” to the fans. NFL games have already been priced out of the budget of many families. Imagine a family of five that has saved, budgeted, and planned all year for an NFL game. Now, 15 days from that glorious day, Goodell and the suits decide that game is going to be played three days earlier than planned. Nice. Then there’s the competitive disadvantage forced on teams that have to play more than one game on a short week. Goodell and his NFL isn’t about the fans. It isn’t even about the players. The NFL is all about the money. 


Tuesday, March 28, 2023

All-Free Agent Team

Just for fun and to pass some time, here’s a team made up of the best free agents that are still available.

All-Free Agent Team

Offense

Quarterback
Lamar Jackson

Running Backs
Kareem Hunt
Leonard Fournette

Fullback
Derek Watt

Wide Receivers
Odell Beckham
Marvin Jones

Tight End
Irv Smith Jr.

Tackles
Donovan Smith
George Fant

Guards
Dalton Risner
Gabe Jackson

Centers
Ben Jones

Defense

Defensive Ends
Frank Clark
Yannick Ngakoue

Defensive Tackles
Poona Ford
A’Shawn Robinson

Linebackers
Anthony Barr
Kwon Alexander
Myles Jack

Cornerbacks
Shaquill Griffin
Marcus Peters

Safeties
Adrian Amos
John Johnson

Special Teams

Kicker
Mason Crosby

Punter
Matt Haack



Monday, March 27, 2023

A Couple More Minnesota Vikings Mock Drafts

Here are a couple more stabs at a Minnesota Vikings mock draft. One includes a first-round trade back. There other doesn’t.

With a first-round trade:

I traded the Vikings #23 pick for the Cardinals #34, #66, #168.

Round 2 (#34)
Adetomiwa Adebawore, DL, Northwestern

Round 3 (#66)
Hendon Hooker, QB, Tennessee

Round 3 (#87)
Garrett Williams, CB, Syracuse

Round 4 (#119)
Jalen Moreno-Cropper, WR, Fresno State

Round 5 (#158)
Aubrey Miller Jr., LB, Jackson State

Round 5 (#168)
Chandler Zavala, OG, North Carolina State

Round 6 (#211)
Starling Thomas V, CB, Alabama-Birmingham

Without a first-round trade:

Round 1 (#23)
Bryan Bresee, DT, Clemson

Round 3 (#87)
Jonathan Mingo, WR, Mississippi 

Round 4 (#119)
Kyu Blu Kelly, CB, Stanford

Round 5 (#158)
Jake Haener, QB, Fresno State

Round 6 (#211)
Aubrey Miller Jr., Jackson State, LB

With more players and a quarterback with a higher ceiling, it’s easy to favor the draft with the trade. Adetomiwa Adebawore may even have a higher ceiling than Bryan Bresee. I do like the NFL potential of Jonathan Mingo and Kyu Blu Kelly. Jake Haener would be an interesting mid-round quarterback if the Vikings don’t make a bold attempt to secure a quarterback in the early rounds. 

I’m also starting to fall for Aubrey Miller Jr as a later round pick. He’s been a part of most of my recent attempts at a mock draft. 

Sunday, March 26, 2023

Flea Flicker Top 5 Draft Prospects By Position

The 2023 NFL is about a month away. Here’s another look at the top prospects at each position. 

Quarterbacks
1. Bryce Young, Alabama
2. C.J. Stroud, Ohio State
3. Anthony Richardson, Florida
4. Will Levis, Kentucky
5. Hendon Hooker, Tennessee

Running Backs
1. Bijan Robinson, Texas
2. Jahmyr Gibbs, Alabama
3. Devon Achane, Texas A&M
4. Tyjae Spears, Tulane
5. Zach Charbonnet, UCLA

Wide Receivers
1. Jaxon Smith-Nikgba, Ohio State
2. Jordan Addison, USC
3. Zay Flowers, Boston College
4. Quentin Johnston, TCU
5. Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee

Tight Ends
1. Michael Mayer, Notre Dame
2. Dalton Kincaid, Utah
3. Darnell Washington, Georgia
4. Luke Musgrave, Oregon State
5. Sam LaPorta, Iowa

Offensive Tackles
1. Peter Skoronski. Northwestern
2. Paris Johnson Jr., Ohio State
3. Broderick Jones, Georgia
4. Anton Harrison, Oklahoma
5. Darnell Wright, Tennessee

Interior Offensive Linemen
1. John Michael Schmitz, Minnesota
2. O’Cyrus Torrence, Florida
3. Steve Avila, TCU
4. Joe Tippmann
5. Luke Wypler 

Edge Rushers
1. Will Anderson Jr., Alabama
2. Tyree Wilson, Texas A&M
3. Lukas Van Ness, Iowa
4. Keion White, Georgia Tech
5. Myles Murphy, Clemson

Defensive Tackles
1. Jalen Carter, Georgia
2. Bryan Bresee, Clemson
3. Calijah Kancey, Pittsburgh
3. Maxi Smith, Michigan
4. Adetomiwa Adebawore, Northwestern

Linebackers
1. Nolan Smith, Georgia
2. Drew Sanders, Arkansas
3. Daiyan Henley, Washington State
4. Trenton Simpson, Clemson
5. Jack Campbell, Iowa

Cornerbacks
1. Devon Witherspoon, Illinois
2. Christian Gonzalez, Oregon
3. Joey Porter Jr., Penn State
4. Deonte Banks, Maryland
5. Cam Smith, South Carolina

Safeties
1. Brian Branch, Alabama
2. Antonio Johnson, Texas A&M
3. Ji’Ayir Brown, Penn State
4. Sydney Brown, Illinois
5. Jammie Robinson, Florida State




Saturday, March 25, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger. Again.

Free agency is winding down but Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and Kevin O’Connell continue to reshape and craft the Minnesota Vikings roster. With limited salary cap room, they’ve managed to retain several players and as well as add a few players. For as far over the cap that the Vikings were at the start of the offseason and how close that they are to the cap now, it’s remarkable how active they’ve been. 

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger

Players re-signed:
Nick Mullens, QB
Alexander Mattison, RB
Garrett Bradbury, C
Ben Ellefson, TE
Blake Brandel, OT
Khyiris Tonga, DT
Kenny Willekes, DE
Greg Joseph, K
Andrew DePaola, LS
Austin Schlottman, C
Olisaemeka Udoh, OT
Jonathan Bullard, DT

Players signed:
Josh Oliver, TE
Marcus Davenport. Edge
Byron Murphy Jr., CB
Dean Lowry, DE
Brandon Powell, WR
Troy Reeder, LB

Players signed elsewhere:
Eric Kendricks, LB - Los Angeles Chargers
Adam Thielen, WR - Carolina Panthers
Patrick Peterson, CB - Pittsburgh Steelers
Dalvin Tomlinson, DT - Cleveland Browns
Duke Shelley, CB - Las Vegas Raiders

The Vikings started the offseason with 4 restricted and 15 unrestricted free agents. Eric Kendricks and Adam Thielen were released before the start of free agency and added to the list. Thomas Hennigan was released last week. 12 of the Vikings free agents have been re-signed. Kendricks, Thielen, Peterson, Tomlinson, and Shelley have settled in with new teams. Four of the unrestricted free agents remain unsigned. Hennigan makes it five recent Vikings on the open market. 

Unsigned free agents:
Chandon Sullivan, CB
Irv Smith Jr., TE
Kris Boyd, CB
Olabisi Johnson, WR
Thomas Hennigan, WR

The Vikings are still uncomfortably close to the salary cap. For that reason, they have decisions to make on the contracts of Dalvin Cook and Za’Darius Smith. Depending on one’s perspective, the re-signing of Alexander Mattison either further complicates or makes easy the decision on Cook’s roster status. The same can be said of the signing of Marcus Davenport on Za’Darius Smith’s roster status. The thought of three elite pass rushers (Danielle Hunter, Davenport, and Smith) on the roster is intriguing but it’s tough to do when the team is so tight against the salary cap. I’m much probably more conflicted with Cook’s situation. I hate the thought of losing him. I don’t think that he’s regressed anywhere near as much as many people seem to believe. The Vikings issues with the run game last season were a team-thing rather than a Cook-thing. In a couple of the most memorable games in a very memorable season, it was an explosive play by Cook that ignited comebacks. He’s also a team leader. The Vikings have lost enough of those this offseason. Hopefully, we see a resolution with the Smith and Cook situations soon. 

The offseason marches on.

Friday, March 24, 2023

Flea Flicker Mock Draft 3.0

The first wave of free agency is winding to an end. Teams have added players and some draft needs have changed. It’s time for a new mock draft. 

1.   Carolina Panthers: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
2.   Houston Texans: C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
3.   Arizona Cardinals: Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia
4.   Indianapolis Colts: Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida
5.   Seattle Seahawks (via Denver): Will Anderson, Jr., Edge, Alabama
6.   Detroit Lions (via Los Angeles Rams): Tyree Wilson, Edge, Texas Tech
7.   Las Vegas Raiders: Will Levis, QB, Kentucky
8.   Atlanta Falcons: Lukas Van Ness, Edge, Iowa
9.   Chicago Bears: Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern
10. Philadelphia Eagles: (via New Orleans): Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
11. Tennessee Titans: Jaxon Smith-Nijgba, WR, Ohio State
12. Houston Texans (via Cleveland): Nolan Smith, Edge, Georgia
13. New York Jets: Michael Mayer, TE, Notre Dame
14. New England Patriots: Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State
15. Green Bay Packers: Dalton Kincaid, TE, Utah
16. Washington Commanders: Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon
17. Pittsburgh Steelers: Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia
18. Detroit Lions: Calijah Kancey, DT, Pittsburgh
19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU
20. Seattle Seahawks: Will McDonald IV, Edge, Iowa State
21. Los Angeles Chargers: Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas
22. Baltimore Ravens: Darnell Wright, OT, Tennessee
23. Minnesota Vikings: Bryan Bresee, DT, Clemson
24. Jacksonville Jaguars: O’Cyrus Torrence, G, Florida
25. New York Giants: Jordan Addison, WR, USC
26. Dallas Cowboys: Darnell Washington, TE, Georgia
27. Buffalo Bills: Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College
28. Cincinnati Bengals: Deonte Banks, CB, Maryland
29. New Orleans Saints (via SF thru Miami): Cam Smith, CB, South Carolina 
30. Philadelphia Eagles: Brian Branch, DB, Alabama
31. Kansas City Chiefs: Adetomiwa Adebawore, Edge, Northwestern

Due to dirty deeds, the Miami Dolphins forfeited the 21st pick in the first round pick of the 2023 NFL Draft. So, there will only be 31 picks in the first round. 

Thursday, March 23, 2023

The Vikings Add A Couple More

With free agency winding down the Minnesota Vikings returned to the pool of available players. Yesterday, the Vikings announced they had agreed to terms with a couple former players of the Los Angeles Rams.

Troy Reeder, LB
Brandon Powell, WR

Both players were on the Rams team that won Super Bowl LVI. Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell, offensive coordinator Wes Phillips, quarterbacks coach Chris O’Hara, and new assistant inside linebackers coach Thad Bogardus were coaches on that Rams team. There’s a familiarity with these new players. 

Troy Reeder actually spent the 2022 season with the Los Angeles Chargers. Reeder joined the Rams as an undrafted free agent out of Delaware in 2019. He totaled 230 tackles, 11 tackles for loss, eight quarterback hits, five sacks, eight passes defenses, two interceptions, and two forced fumbles over the three seasons. He started 25 of 49 regular season games and five of six playoff games. He rotated in on defense and played special teams during Super Bowl LVI. Following that Super Bowl win, Reeder joined the other Los Angeles team in free agency. For the Chargers, he primarily played on special teams. As for this opportunity with the Vikings, he’ll probably compete for a starting role but projects as linebacker depth and special teams. Reeder is a friend and high school teammate of Vikings right tackle Brian O’Neill.

Brandon Powell joined the Rams during the 2021 season. His biggest play was an unfortunate 61-yard punt return touchdown against the Vikings. He made a more significant contribution last season. 24 catches for 156 yards. He had 17 rushes for 80 yards. He was also the Rams primary kick and punt returner. He’s a nice gadget player and projects as such for the Vikings. He should compete with Jalen Reagor and perhaps a rookie, or two, for the punt return job. 

Despite serious salary cap limitations, the Vikings have added six new players in free agency.

Josh Oliver, TE
Marcus Davenport, OLB
Byron Murphy Jr., CB
Dean Lowry, DE
Troy Reeder, LB
Brandon Powell, WR

The reshaping of the Vikings roster continues. 




Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Coaching Staff

The Minnesota Vikings have finally filled all of the vacancies on their coaching staff. Compared to the overhaul last year, the changes this year were relatively few. The biggest change was at defensive coordinator. After a brutally disappointing season, Ed Donatell was fired. Former New England Patriots play-caller and Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores was hired. A few other assistant coaches left Minnesota for advancement or opportunities elsewhere. 

Out
Defensive Coordinator: Ed Donatell
Inside Linebackers: Greg Manusky
Assistant Quarterbacks: Jerrod Johnson
Assistant Defensive Line: A’Lique Terry
Assistant Linebackers: Sam Siefkes
Assistant Defensive Backs: Roy Anderson
Assistant Special Teams: Ben Kotwica

In
Defensive Coordinator: Brian Flores
Inside Linebackers: Mike Siravo
Assistant Quarterbacks: Grant Udinski
Assistant Defensive Line: Patrick Hill
Assistant Inside Linebackers: Thad Bogardus 
Assistant Defensive Backs: Michael Hutchings 
Defensive Assistant: Imarjaye Albury
Assistant Special Teams: Dalmin Gibson

Brian Flores has a long, strong NFL coaching resume. He started his professional football career as a scout with the Patriots. He shifted to the team’s coaching ranks and started a steady and fairly quick climb. He was the play-caller that shut down the explosive Los Angeles Rams offense in Super Bowl LIII. That got him a head coaching opportunity with the Miami Dolphins. Mike Siravo has been coaching since 1998. Most of that experience was at the college level with Matt Ruhle. Siravo followed Ruhle to the Carolina Panthers in 2020 to coordinate run defense and coach linebackers. Siravo and Flores crossed paths at Boston College. Siravo was a graduate assistant. Flores was a student and linebacker. Grant Udinski is an internal hire as he spent last season as an assistant to Kevin O’Connell, working on special projects. Thad Bogardus coached outside linebackers for the Los Angeles Rams in 2022. He’s been working with that team’s linebackers or defensive linemen since 2017. So, he shared some time in Los Angeles with Kevin O’Connell. Prior to joining the Rams, Bogardus was a defensive assistant for the Denver Broncos from 2015-16. He earned Super Bowl rings with the Broncos and Rams. The Vikings plucked Patrick Hill, Michael Hutchings, and Dalmin Gibson from the college ranks. Each is young with a promising coaching future in front of them. The Vikings swiped Hill from Deion Sanders’ freshly completed Colorado coaching staff. Gibson was the special teams coordinator and defensive ends coach at Southern Illinois. Hutchings was coaching outside linebackers at Western Kentucky. 

Here’s the Vikings current coaching staff. 

2023 Minnesota Vikings Coaching Staff

Head Coach: Kevin O’Connell

Assistant Head Coach: Mike Pettine

Offensive Coordinator: Wes Phillips
Defensive Coordinator: Brian Flores
Special Teams Coordinator: Matt Daniels

Offense:

Quarterbacks: Chris O’Hara
Assistant Quarterbacks/Chief of Special Projects: Grant Udinski
Run Game Coordinator/Running Backs: Curtis Modkins
Receivers: Keenan McCardell
Assistant Receivers/Quality Control: Tony Sorrentino
Pass Game Coodinator/Tight Ends: Brian Angelichio
Offensive Line: Chris Kuper
Assistant Offensive Line: Justin Rascati
Pass Game Specialist/Game Management Coordinator: Ryan Cordell
Quality Control: Derron Montgomery

Defense:

Defensive Line: Chris Rumph
Assistant Defensive Line: Patrick Hill
Outside Linebackers/Pass Rush Specialist: Mike Smith
Inside Linebackers: Mike Siravo
Assistant Inside Linebackers: Thad Bogardus
Defensive Backs: Daronte Jones
Assistant Defensive Backs: Michael Hutchings
Defensive Assistant: Imarjaye Albury
Quality Control: Lance Bennett

Special Teams:

Assistant Special Teams: Dalmin Gibson

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Receivers

For the first time since 2013, Adam Thielen won’t be a part of the Minnesota Vikings receiver group. He’s with the Carolina Panthers now. Very strange. As he has since the third game of his rookie season, Justin Jefferson tops the the Vikings receiver group. Now, he’s also the leader of the group. After the first wave of free agency, here’s a look at the Vikings receivers.

Minnesota Vikings Receivers

Justin Jefferson
K.J. Osborn
Jalen Reagor
Jalen Nailor
Trishton Jackson
Blake Proehl
Thomas Hennigan

As long as Jefferson’s on the roster, the Vikings receivers will be formidable. Still, he and Kirk Cousins need some help. After his mid-season arrival, tight end T.J. Hockenson immediately became the team’s #2 receiving option. Even with Thielen on the field. Hockenson will continue to be an important part of the Vikings offense and likely the team’s #2 receiving option. That’s great but there’s still a need for receivers to compliment Jefferson and provide additional options for Cousins. For two seasons, K.J. Osborn has been a steady third receiver with Jefferson and Thielen. Osborn had games last season (the comeback against the Indianapolis Colts in particular) in which he played like a game-changing receiver. When he’s gotten opportunities, he’s taken advantage of them. He’s shown that he can be much more than a complimentary receiver. He just has to do it more consistently and more often. The two Jalens (Reagor and Nailor) are intriguing players. Jalen Reagor was a first round pick by the Philadelphia Eagles in the 2020 NFL Draft. He was infamously selected just ahead of Jefferson. Now, they are teammates. The Vikings traded for him just before the start of the 2022 season. He made a few brilliant plays last season. He also made some significant mistakes. His main role was returning punts. His ceiling is very high as his athletic talents are legitimate. Those physical gifts got him drafted ahead of Jefferson. I suppose the hope is that a complete offseason and training camp in the Vikings system will allow Reagor’s terrific talents to hopefully mesh with the team. He’s a wildcard player. If it works, he’s a very high upside player. It it doesn’t work, team and player move on. Jalen Nailor was a sixth round pick in the 2022 NFL Draft. He might’ve been drafted much higher if injuries hadn’t peppered his college career. His first NFL catch was thrown by punter Ryan Wright. It was that sort of rookie season. He scored his first NFL touchdown and torched the Green Bay Packers backups in Week 17. Nicknamed “Speedy,” Nailor may be the fastest receiver on the team. If I had to pick a break out player for the Vikings this season, Nailor would be one of the top options. Trishton Jackson has been on the edge of the roster for a couple seasons. Blake Proehl and Thomas Hennigan have dealt with injuries. All three should have another shot at a roster spot. 

Last season, the Vikings offense had a tendency to stagnate if Justin Jefferson was taken out of the game. Other players must step up and make defenses pay when so much attention is paid to one player. An improved run game will help. So will the emergence of alternate receiving options. K.J. Osborn is a good receiver and a very good football player. Is he more than a complimentary player? The Vikings need a receiver, or receivers, that can take the top off of a defense. Can Jalen Reagor or Jalen Nailor be that player? I like the potential of the three receivers behind Jefferson. Osborn has been productive. The Jalens have yet to do much. Until those three receivers truly establish themselves as a legitimate, every-down threat, receiver is one of the Vikings most significant needs.  




Monday, March 20, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger. Again.

It’s been a week since the “legal tampering” kicked off. It feels like three.  Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and Kevin O’Connell continue to reshape and craft the Minnesota Vikings roster. With limited salary cap room, they’ve managed to retain several players and add a few players. For as far over the cap that the Vikings were at the start of the offseason and how close that they are to the cap now, it’s remarkable how active they’ve been. 

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger

Players re-signed:
Nick Mullens, QB
Alexander Mattison, RB
Garrett Bradbury, C
Ben Ellefson, TE
Blake Brandel, OT
Khyiris Tonga, DT
Kenny Willekes, DE
Greg Joseph, K
Andrew DePaola, LS
Austin Schlottman, C
Olisaemeka Udoh, OT

Players signed:
Josh Oliver, TE
Marcus Davenport. Edge
Byron Murphy Jr., CB
Dean Lowry, DE

Players released/lost:
Eric Kendricks, LB
Adam Thielen, WR
Patrick Peterson, CB
Dalvin Tomlinson, DT

The Vikings started the offseason with 4 restricted and 15 unrestricted free agents. Eric Kendricks and Adam Thielen were released and added to the list. 11 of the Vikings free agents have been re-signed. Kendricks, Peterson, Tomlinson, and Thielen have settled in with new teams. Six of the unrestricted free agents remain unsigned.

Unsigned free agents:
Chandon Sullivan, CB
Irv Smith Jr., TE
Jonathan Bullard, DL
Duke Shelley, CB
Kris Boyd, CB
Olabisi Johnson, WR

Of those, Duke Shelley might be the most likely return. Special Teams coordinator Matt Daniels might bang the table for Kris Boyd’s return. 

The Vikings are still uncomfortably close to the salary cap. For that reason, they have decisions to make on the contracts of Dalvin Cook and Za’Darius Smith. Depending on one’s perspective, the re-signing of Alexander Mattison either further complicates or makes easy the decision on Cook’s roster status. The same can be said of the signing of Marcus Davenport on Za’Darius Smith’s roster status.
While the thought of three elite pass rushers (Danielle Hunter, Davenport, and Smith) on the roster is intriguing, I’m expecting a trade or release of Smith. I’m much more conflicted with Cook’s situation. I hate the thought of losing him. I don’t think that he’s regressed anywhere near as much as many people seem to believe. The Vikings issues with the run game last season were a team-thing rather than a Cook-thing. In a couple of the most memorable games in a very memorable season, it was an explosive play by Cook that ignited comebacks. He’s also a team leader. The Vikings have lost enough of those this offseason. Hopefully, we see a resolution with the Smith and Cook situations soon. 

The offseason marches on.

Sunday, March 19, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Defense: Then And Now

It’s early but here’s a “then and now” of the Minnesota Vikings defense. “Then” being the Vikings defense that struggled oh-so-mightily last year. “Now” being a potential Vikings defense that is hopefully much improved this year. 

Before we even get to the players, it must be mentioned that the biggest change between “Then” and “Now” is that Ed Donatell is NO LONGER coordinating the defense and Brian Flores IS. As for the players:

Then:


DE

Jonathan Bullard

NT

Harrison Phillips

DE

Dalvin Tomlinson

OLB

Danielle Hunter

LB

Eric Kendricks

LB

Jordan Hicks

OLB

Za’Darius Smith

CB

Patrick Peterson

CB

Cam Dantzler

S

Harrison Smith

S

Cam Bynum


Now:


DE

Dean Lowry

NT

Harrison Phillips

DE

Za’Darius Smith

OLB

Danielle Hunter

LB

Brian Asamoah

LB

Jordan Hicks

OLB

Marcus Davenport 

CB

Byron Murphy Jr. 

CB

Andrew Booth Jr. 

S

Harrison Smith

S

Lewis Cine


Edge players Danielle Hunter, Za’Darius Smith, and Marcus Davenport are on the roster. Much has been made by the media, fans, and Smith himself, that he won’t be with the Vikings this season. Smith said his “goodbyes” on Twitter, for what that’s worth. For now, he’s still with the Vikings. I have no idea what Brian Flores has planned for his Vikings defense. Right now, he has three elite pass rushers. That’s a very good thing. How he plans to deploy them has me out of my damn mind. If all three are on the roster when the season starts, I’d like to see all three occasionally on the field at the same time. 

The Vikings defense in 2022 was terrible. There’s no dodging that. The above “Now” has six new players.  

Dean Lowry
Brian Asamoah
Marcus Davenport
Byron Murphy Jr.
Andrew Booth Jr.
Lewis Cine

Two of the returning players (Harrison Smith and Jordan Hicks) will probably be playing very different positions than they played last year. Za’Darius Smith might be. The only real holdovers from last year are Danielle Hunter getting after quarterbacks and Harrison Phillips over the center. 

In a blink of free agency, the defense of the Minnesota Vikings changed. It immediately improved with Brian Flores. It improved further with the additions of Byron Murphy Jr., Marcus Davenport, and Dean Lowry. The Vikings defense needed to get better. The coaches got better. On paper, the players got better. It’s a very promising start to the offseason. The draft should improve the Vikings defense even further. 






Saturday, March 18, 2023

What’s Left?

Ever since the NFL allowed for a “legal tampering” window, free agency has been reduced to about a week-long affair. There’s little left after the flurry of agreements in that nearly 48-hour negotiation window. A few weeks ago the Flea Flicker ranked the Top 50 Free Agents. 16 of those 50 are unsigned. Six of those 16 were slapped with the non-exclusive franchise tag. 

Franchised tagged:
1.   Lamar Jackson, QB, Baltimore Ravens
2.   Daron Payne, DT, Washington Commanders
5.   Saquon Barkley, RB, New York Giants
7.   Josh Jacobs, RB, Las Vegas Raiders
21. Tony Pollard, RB, Dallas Cowboys 
30. Evan Engram, TE, Jacksonville Jaguars 

Unless a team gets bold and pursues Lamar Jackson, those six are essentially signed. That leaves ten players from the original Top 50 ranking.

14. C.J. Gardner-Johnson, DB, Philadelphia Eagles
17. Bobby Wagner, LB, Los Angeles Rams
31. Isaac Seumalo, G, Philadelphia Eagles
32. Isaiah Wynn, OT, New England Patriots
33. Dalton Schultz, TE, Dallas Cowboys
34. Taylor Lewan, OT, Tennessee Titans
36. Yannick Ngakoue, Edge, Indianapolis Colts
39. Odell Beckham Jr., WR, NA
40. Marcus Peters, CB, Baltimore Ravens
44. A’Shawn Robinson, DT, Los Angeles Rams 

We aren’t even 72 hours into the new league year and only 10 players from the Flea Flicker Top 50 remain unsigned. In the pre-“legal tampering” days, there might only be 20 players signed in the first 72 hours. It’s a different time. There was something romantic about that previous time. There was a wining and dining of the players. The players had an opportunity to meet a potential new team. The team actually got some interaction with a potential new player. Those were the days before social media and instant news. There were creepy beat writers waiting at the airports, team facilities, and restaurants. Now, it’s all agents and numbers. The meet and greet comes after the agreement is done. Perhaps, it’s better to get things done at such a rapid rate. The draft is just over a month away. 



Friday, March 17, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Depth Chart

It’s less than 48 hours into the new league year and the 2023 Minnesota Vikings roster looks and feels much different than the one that preceded it. Jettisoning franchise fixtures like Adam Thielen and Eric Kendricks will do that. After a few additions and several subtractions, here’s a way too early look at the team’s depth chart.

Minnesota Vikings Depth Chart

Offense

Quarterback
Kirk Cousins
Nick Mullens

Running Back
Dalvin Cook
Alexander Mattison 
Kene Nwangwu
Ty Chandler

Fullback 
C.J. Ham

Wide Receiver
Justin Jefferson
K.J. Osborn
Jalen Reager
Jalen Nailor
Trishton Jackson
Blake Proehl
Thomas Hennigan

Tight End
T. J Hockenson
Josh Oliver
Johnny Mundt
Ben Ellefson
Nick Muse

Left Tackle
Christian Darrisaw
Blake Brandel
Vederian Lowe

Left Guard
Ezra Cleveland

Center
Garrett Bradbury
Austin Schlottman
Josh Sokol

Right Guard
Ed Ingram
Chris Reed

Right Tackle
Brian O’Neill

Defense

Defensive End
James Lynch
Ross Blacklock
Esezi Otomewo
Kenny Willekes
Sheldon Day

Nose Tackle
Harrison Phillips
Khyiris Tonga
T.J. Smith

Outside Linebacker
Danielle Hunter
Marcus Davenport
Za’Darius Smith
D.J.Wonnum
Patrick Jones
Luiji Vilain
Benton Whitley
Curtis Weaver

Inside Linebacker
Brian Asamoah
Jordan Hicks
Troy Dye
William Kwenkeu

Cornerback
Byron Murphy Jr.
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Tay Gowan
Kalon Barnes

Safety
Harrison Smith
Lewis Cine
Camryn Bynum
Josh Metellus

Special Teams

Kicker
Greg Joseph

Punter
Ryan Wright

Long Snapper
Andrew DePaola

Kick Returner
Kene Nwangwu
K.J. Osborn

Punt Returner
Jalen Reagor
K.J. Osborn

***

With the remainder of free agency and the draft still to come, it’s a start. 





Thursday, March 16, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and Kevin O’Connell continue to reshape and craft the Minnesota Vikings roster. With limited salary cap room, they’ve managed to retain several players and add a few players. With free agency less than 24 hours old, here’s a look at the roster ledger. 

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger

Players re-signed:
Nick Mullens, QB
Alexander Mattison, RB
Garrett Bradbury, C
Ben Ellefson, TE
Blake Brandel, OT
Khyiris Tonga, DT
Kenny Willekes, DE
Greg Joseph, K
Andrew DePaola, LS

Players signed:
Josh Oliver, TE
Marcus Davenport. Edge
Byron Murphy Jr., CB

Players released/lost:
Eric Kendricks, LB
Adam Thielen, WR
Patrick Peterson, CB
Dalvin Tomlinson, DT

The Vikings started the offseason with about 4 restricted and 15 unrestricted free agents. Eric Kendricks and Adam Thielen were released and added to the list. All four restricted free agents have been re-signed. Eight of the unrestricted free agents remain unsigned.

Unsigned free agents:
Chandon Sullivan, CB
Irv Smith Jr., TE
Jonathan Bullard, DL
Duke Shelley, CB
Austin Schlottman, C
Olisaemeka Udoh, OT
Kris Boyd, CB
Olabisi Johnson, WR

Of those, Duke Shelley, Austin Schlottman, and perhaps Oli Udoh might be the most likely return. Special Teams coordinator Matt Daniels might bang the table for Kris Boyd’s return. 

The Vikings are still uncomfortably close to the salary cap. For that reason, they have significant decisions to make on the contracts of Dalvin Cook, Za’Darius Smith, and Harrison Smith. Depending on one’s perspective, the re-signing of Alexander Mattison either further complicates or makes easy the decision on Cook’s roster status. The same can be said of the signing of Marcus Davenport on Za’Darius Smith’s roster status. Harrison Smith has a giant cap hit. His contract needs to be renegotiated. Hopefully, he’s agreeable. The Vikings defense, and a very young secondary, need him. 

I’m expecting a trade or release of Za’Darius Smith and a renegotiation of Harrison Smith’s contract. I’m much more conflicted with Dalvin Cook’s situation. I hate the thought of losing him. I don’t think that he’s regressed anywhere near as much as many people seem to believe. The Vikings issues with the run game last season were a team-thing rather than a Cook-thing. In a couple of the most memorable games in a very memorable season, it was an explosive play by Cook that ignited comebacks. He’s also a team leader. The Vikings have lost enough of those this offseason. We should see a resolution with the Smiths and Cook soon. 

The offseason marches on.

Wednesday, March 15, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Tampering: Day 2

The Minnesota Vikings spent the first day of the “legal tampering” period agreeing to terms with two players from other teams.

Josh Oliver, TE, Baltimore Ravens
Marcus Davenport, Edge, New Orleans Saints

The Vikings spent the second day of the “legal tampering” period re-signing four of their own pending free agents. They also restructured the contract of Kirk Cousins. That opened up some of the salary cap space needed to do the things that they need to do. Yesterday was a busy day. It started with the re-signing of four of their own.

Garrett Bradbury, C
Nick Mullens, QB
Greg Joseph, K
Andrew DePaola, LS

Garrett Bradbury and Andrew DePoala signed three-year deals. Nick Mullens and Greg Joseph signed one-year deals. The re-signing of Bradbury insures that the Vikings will return all five of their starting offensive linemen. Continuity on the offensive line is a good thing. A first round pick in the 2019 NFL Draft, Bradbury’s play was often rough over his first three years in the league. He was much better last season but the overall play of the interior of the offensive line must improve. Hopefully, another year together and another year in the same system with the same coaches will help them improve. With Christian Darrisaw and Brian O’Neill, the Vikings have high level play on the outside. They need the interior of the offensive line to play much closer to that level. The re-signing of Joseph and DePaola reunites them with punter Ryan Wright. The Vikings will return their kicking battery. Continuity is important. Joseph had five game-winning field goals last season. One was from 61 yards. Despite those game-ending heroics, he had some very frustrating moments. He must stop missing extra points. He must make more of his kicks from beyond 50 yards. He has the leg for distance. He proved it with that 61-yarder. Nick Mullens played the bulk of the Week 18 game against the Chicago Bears. It was nice to see a competent, confident backup quarterback. I had no confidence in the previous quarterbacks that backed up Cousins. 

It was a busy Day 2 of the “legal tampering” period. The Vikings got some important internal stuff done. Then they addressed perhaps their biggest offseason need: Cornerback. The Vikings agreed to terms with Arizona Cardinals corner Byron Murphy Jr. He was one of the best man-to-man defenders available in free agency. At 25, he was also one of the youngest. Put mildly, the Vikings defense wasn’t very good last year. They had to get faster and younger. Adding Marcus Davenport and Murphy is a welcome step in that direction. New Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores likes to bring pressure and rely on his corners in single coverage. Murphy is a perfect fit for that aggressive play. A former Cardinal replaces a former Cardinal as the leader of the Vikings cornerback group. Murphy will also likely take on Patrick Peterson’s #7 jersey. 

On Day 2, the Vikings retained some of their own free agents and a cornerback that the defense desperately needed. Despite the ridiculous number of players across the league that have changed teams over the last two days, free agency actually starts today. Josh Oliver, Marcus Davenport, and Byron Murphy Jr. can actually become Vikings today. It should be an interesting day. With the restructure of Cousins’ contract, the Vikings were briefly under the salary cap. They need to do some more maneuvering to remain under the salary cap when the new league year starts at 4pm eastern. A trade of Za’Darius Smith? A Harrison Smith contract restructure? We’ll see. The past two days have been eventful. That should continue with the actual start of free agency. 





Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Tampering: Day 1

When you’re sitting on the wrong side of the salary cap, there isn’t much room for tampering. The Minnesota Vikings eked out a little room as they did a little tampering. After what they accomplished on Day 1, the Vikings will be adding to new players to the roster when they are legally allowed to do so tomorrow.

Josh Oliver, TE, Baltimore Ravens
Marcus Davenport, Edge, New Orleans Saints

Immediately targeting a tight end in free agency was a surprise to pretty much everyone. With T.J. Hockenson and Johnny Mundt, the position was hardly considered a pressing need. The Vikings targeted Josh Oliver because of one thing the offense didn’t do very well last year. Run the ball. Oliver is arguably the best blocking tight end in the league. With Hockenson and Oliver on the field together, the Vikings offense will become more versatile and less predictable. The biggest offensive problems last season came when defenses took Justin Jefferson out of the game. The Vikings didn’t run the ball well enough to force the defense out of two high safety looks. With two tight ends on the field, one of which can effectively move and remove one of the box defenders, the Vikings should get more single high safety looks. Kirk Cousins and Jefferson should feast. At least on paper, in March, the Vikings offense will be dictating things to the defense this season. Last season, too often, the defense did the dictating. 

When looking over this year’s potentially available free agents, Marcus Davenport repeatedly caught my eye. His freakish natural talent often triggered discussion in the lead-up to the 2018 NFL Draft. In his five years with the New Orleans Saints, it’s only been a parade of injuries, none lingering, that’s kept him from living up to the hype and talent. When he’s been on the field, Davenport has been a very disruptive edge rusher and run defender. I’m surprised that the Saints let him hit free agency, especially with Cameron Jordan getting older. They even chose Davenport over Trey Hendrickson a couple years ago. Now, they’re letting him go. It’s the Vikings gain. Anyway, Davenport’s addition to the Vikings roster likely marks the end of Za’Darius Smith’s time in Minnesota. Judging from his recent actions, it sounds like Smith prefers it that way. After a single productive season with the Vikings, he’s looking for a big payday on the open market. It might not be as open as he hopes as he could be traded rather than released. The Vikings edge rushing, and defense, gets younger and better. With a one-year, prove-it deal, signing Davenport is a low risk with a possibly huge reward. He turns 27 in September. He’s in his best years if he can stay on the field. His next deal could be a big one and the Vikings will have the first shot at it. As for this year, I look forward to Marcus Davenport and Danielle Hunter terrorizing quarterbacks. 

Day 1 of tampering brought a couple surprise additions. Now, it’s on to Day 2. 

Monday, March 13, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Dreams

The “legal tampering” phase of NFL free agency starts today at noon eastern. Seeing as they are still about $7 million over the salary cap, the Minnesota Vikings still have some internal moves and decisions to make. The silly thing about the “legal tampering” period is that the Vikings don’t have to be under the salary cap to be active over the next couple of days. They just have to be under the salary cap at the start of the new league. That’s Wednesday at 4pm eastern. The wild times start soon. Now, is the time for some free agency dreams. Here’s a look at some potential dreamy additions for the Minnesota Vikings.

Needs:
Pretty much everywhere on defense
-linebacker
-cornerback
-defensive tackle
-edge
Center
Receiver

Dream Additions:
Linebackers:
David Long Jr, Tennessee Titans
Azeez Al-Shaair, San Francisco 49ers
Devin Bush, Pittsburgh Steelers
T.J. Edwards, Pittsburgh Steelers 
Tremaine Edmunds, Buffalo Bills

Cornerbacks:
Cameron Sutton, Pittsburgh Steelers
Rock Ya-Sin, Las Vegas Raiders
Nik Needham, Miami Dolphins
Isaiah Oliver, Atlanta Falcons
Tavierre Thomas, Houston Texans
Emmanuel Mosley, San Francisco 49ers
Greedy Williams, Cleveland Browns
Jamel Dean, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Defensive Tackle:
-re-sign Dalvin Tomlinson

Center:
-re-sign Garrett Bradbury

Receiver:
DJ Chark, Detroit Lions
Mecole Hardman, Kansas City Chiefs
JuJu Smith-Schuster, Kansas City Chiefs
Parris Campbell, Indianapolis Colts
Darius Slayton, New York Giants

There was a time when my free agency dreams for the Vikings started with Jamel Dean and Tremaine Edmunds. That was shooting way too high. Both could be among the big winners of free agency. Vikings salary cap guru Rob Brzezinski would have to work some minor miracles to afford one, let alone both. Now, my free agency dreams for the Vikings start with David Long Jr. With the release of Eric Kendricks and potentially Jordan Hicks, it’s a new linebacker day in Minnesota. 2022 third-round pick Brian Asomoah is penciled in as one of the starters. I’d prefer a more experienced player with some starting experience next to him. Long could be that linebacker. He’s had a steady career progression during his four years with the Titans, culminating in a very productive 2022 season. He was arguably more productive than Edmunds last season. I like the thought of Asomoah and Long in the middle of the Vikings defense. I don’t think backs, receivers, and tight ends will be running past and from those two linebackers like they did so easily last season. As for cornerback, perhaps the help will come from a re-signing of Patrick Peterson. If the Vikings want to go younger, adding Cameron Sutton, Rock Ya-Sin, or Nik Needham to the team’s very young group would be a good thing. Greedy Williams could be an interesting addition. He hasn’t been the same player since a training camp injury wiped out his 2020 season. Maybe a change of scenery will bring out the talent that made him one of the top corners in the 2019 NFL Draft. 

As for defensive tackle and center, the best options could be re-signing Dalvin Tomlinson and Garrett Bradbury. Tomlinson might be a priority re-signing. As for Bradbury, he’s had difficulties since the Vikings selected him in the first round of the 2019 NFL Draft. His best season was last season. Perhaps future seasons in the same offense will be even better. Of the free agent centers, the familiar Bradbury might be the best option. A better option at center might be found in the draft. There are several centers at the top of the 2023 NFL Draft with the talent and potential to start immediately. As for receiver, Parris Campbell is an intriguing option. He was an explosive player in college at Ohio State. He was a second-round pick of the Indianapolis Colts in the 2019 NFL Draft. Last season was his first relatively injury-free season. He caught 63 passes. He has terrific speed. A deep threat would be a nice thing for the Vikings to have with so much attention paid to Justin Jefferson on an every down basis. 

So, my Minnesota Vikings free agency dreams, at the moment, probably start with the additions of:

David Long Jr., LB
Cameron Sutton
Parris Campbell

The free agency fun starts soon. 

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Flea Flicker Mock Draft 2.0: Post-Scouting Combine

The top of the draft is now a bit different. The Carolina Panthers made their move in trading up from #9 to #1 to hopefully grab the quarterback of their dreams. The Panthers sent #9 and #61 picks this year, a first in 2024, a second in 2025, and receiver D.J. Moore to the Chicago Bears for the #1 pick this year. The trade wasn’t a surprise. Everyone knew that the Bears were shopping the pick. The timing is the surprise. It’s so early. Here’s a post-Scouting Combine, post-big trade stab at the first round of the 2023 NFL Draft. 

1.   Carolina Panthers: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
2.   Houston Texans: C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
3.   Arizona Cardinals: Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia
4.   Indianapolis Colts: Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida
5.   Seattle Seahawks (via Denver): Will Anderson, Jr., Edge, Alabama
6.   Detroit Lions (via Los Angeles Rams): Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
7.   Las Vegas Raiders: Will Levis, QB, Kentucky
8.   Atlanta Falcons: Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern
9.   Chicago Bears: Tyree Wilson, Edge, Texas Tech
10. Philadelphia Eagles: (via New Orleans): Myles Murphy, Edge, Clemson
11. Tennessee Titans: Paris Johnson, Jr., OT, Ohio State
12. Houston Texans (via Cleveland): Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU
13. New York Jets: Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia
14. New England Patriots: Brian Branch, DB, Alabama
15. Green Bay Packers: Jordan Addison, WR, USC
16. Washington Commanders: Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon
17. Pittsburgh Steelers: Dalton Kincaid, TE, Utah
18. Detroit Lions: Joey Porter Jr., CB, Penn State
19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Lukas Van Ness, Edge, Iowa
20. Seattle Seahawks: Will McDonald IV, Edge, Iowa State
21. Los Angeles Chargers: Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas
22. Baltimore Ravens: Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
23. Minnesota Vikings: Bryan Bresee, DT, Clemson
24. Jacksonville Jaguars: Michael Mayer, TE, Notre Dame
25. New York Giants: Darnell Washington, TE, Georgia
26. Dallas Cowboys: Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College
27. Buffalo Bills: O’Cyrus Torrence, G, Florida
28. Cincinnati Bengals: Calijah Kancey, DT, Pittsburgh
29. New Orleans Saints (via SF thru Miami): Cam Smith, CB, South Carolina 
30. Philadelphia Eagles: Nolan Smith, Edge, Georgia
31. Kansas City Chiefs: Adetomiwa Adebawore, Edge, Northwestern

Due to dirty deeds, the Miami Dolphins forfeited the 21st pick in the first round pick of the 2023 NFL Draft. So, there will only be 31 picks in the first round. 

Saturday, March 11, 2023

RIP Coach

I thought that I was going to write something about the sad release of Adam Thielen. Then I learned about the heartbreaking passing of Bud Grant. 

Harry Peter “Bud” Grant lived 95 years. It was a long, full 95 years. We should be celebrating that. Right now, that’s hard to do. I knew that I should be prepared for this day but I also knew that I never would be. There was always something so reassuring about Bud Grant’s presence. It started when he was standing, stoic on those snowy Met sidelines. With that vision, this California kid fell for the Minnesota Vikings. Those Vikings teams were other-worldly and he guided them with assured, confident silence. I never knew that a simple look could do and say so much. Despite losing four Super Bowls, it always felt like he had the answers. 

Even after his retirement, both retirements, Bud Grant provided a strong, assured presence. He was provided with an office in the team’s facility. Winter Park and TCO Performance Center. That was reassuring. He wasn’t there often and really had no role. That was reassuring as well. His presence was his role. He was usually with his family or hunting. Maybe both. That was also reassuring. Bud Grant in this world was reassuring. 

I never met the man and I already miss him so damn much. My thoughts and condolences are with his family, friends, and all Vikings and football fans. RIP Coach. 

Friday, March 10, 2023

Compensatory Picks

The NFL announced on Thursday the awarding of 37 compensatory picks to 16 teams for the 2023 NFL Draft. These extra picks used to be limited to a strict 32 for the net loss of free agents from the previous season. The five “extra” picks this year were awarded at the end of the third round to teams that have had a minority employee hired as a head coach or general manager by another club. The San Francisco 49ers have really been cashing in on their practice of hiring strong candidates no matter their race. Three of the five “extra” picks went their way. In total, the 49ers raked in seven compensatory picks. Seven! That’s a complete draft class. They added more compensatory picks than the Minnesota Vikings have draft picks (4). The Vikings gained a sixth round compensatory. Their total draft pick tally is now 5. Some day, maybe the league can boast 32 teams, more importantly 32 owners, that routinely hire people simply because they are the most qualified rather than being rewarded for doing so. Imagine that, a league as diverse in the buildings as it is on the fields. 

Here are the 37 compensatory picks (“extra” compensatory picks denoted by an *)

Round 3
96.   Arizona Cardinals
97.   Washington Commanders
98.   Cleveland Browns*
99.   San Francisco 49ers*
100. Kansas City Chiefs*
101. San Francisco 49ers*
102. San Francisco 49ers*

Round 4
135. New England Patriots

Round 5
167. Los Angeles Rams
168. Arizona Cardinals 
169. Dallas Cowboys
170. Green Bay Packers
171. Los Angeles Rams
172. New York Giants
173. San Francisco 49ers
174. Las Vegas Raiders
175. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
176. Dallas Cowboys
177. Los Angeles Rams

Round 6
210. New England Patriots
211. Minnesota Vikings 
212. Dallas Cowboys 
213. Arizona Cardinals
214. Las Vegas Raiders
215. Washington Commanders
216. San Francisco 49ers
217. Kansas City Chiefs 

Round 7
250. Kansas City Chiefs 
251. Los Angeles Rams 
252. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
253. San Francisco 49ers
254. New York Giants 
255. San Francisco 49ers
256. Green Bay Packers 
257. New Orleans Saints 
258. Chicago Bears 
259. Houston Texans

Total 2023 Compensatory Picks by Team

San Francisco 49ers7
Los Angeles Rams4
Arizona Cardinals3
Dallas Cowboys3
Kansas City Chiefs3
Green Bay Packers2
Las Vegas Raiders2
New England Patriots2
New York Giants2
Tampa Bay Buccaneers2
Washington Commanders2
Chicago Bears1
Cleveland Browns1
Houston Texans1
Minnesota Vikings1
New Orleans Saints1