35. RLB Courtney Upshaw A
The Ravens like to trade down when they pick in the late 1st round. It makes a lot of sense. They don’t fall in love with prospects and positions of need so they know they can get a prospect they have 1st round grade on in the early 2nd round. Meanwhile, they know bad teams picking in the early 2nd will be desperate to move up and get another 1st rounder. They could have gotten Upshaw at 29 and it would have been a good pick. This is even better. He adds a team who surprisingly only had one player with more than 5.5 sacks last year (Terrell Suggs).
60. G Kelechi Osemele A
Guard was a major need for the Ravens. Osemele is a great value in the late 2nd round and should be their week 1 starter at guard as a replacement for Ben Grubbs.
84. RB Bernard Pierce C+
This pick I didn’t get as much. I know they wanted another back behind Ray Rice and Bernard Pierce can serve in Willis McGahee’s only role, but it’s not like Rice wasn’t capable of carrying the load by himself. He did it last year. Anthony Allen could be a decent backup and they could have spent a later pick on this position or added a veteran in free agency (Cedric Benson, Ryan Grant, Joseph Addai). For what it’s worth, Pierce fits the range.
Also, this pisses me off as a fantasy football player because it takes away from Rice’s value as Pierce will, at the very least, take away the short yardage carries. Pierce had 27 touchdowns in 11 games at Temple last year, so I guess he’ll be good in that role, but I’m still not sure he’s worth a 3rd rounder. If he only carries the ball 100 times like Ricky Williams did last year, he wasn’t worth this pick. However, any more and he’s just stealing carries from one of the best backs in the league.
98. G Gino Gradkowski C
I didn’t have Gradkowski in my top 250, but he was a hot prospect going into the draft, going on 7 private visits. This is still a little early for him. He’ll compete with Osemele and Jah Reid at guard and could be a potential successor for Matt Birk at center.
130. S Christian Thompson A-
They needed depth at safety. Both Bernard Pollard and Ed Reed are in contract years and Reed, believe it or not, is 34 in September. Thompson fits the range. He was one of my favorite small school prospects out of South Carolina State. I had a 5th round grade on him, but he’s a fine pick in the late 4th in a weak safety class.
169. CB Asa Jackson C
This is a bit of a need, but I didn’t have Jackson in my top 250. This would be fine in the 6th or 7th round, but this is a little early.
198. WR Tommy Streeter A
Streeter is a fantastic value in the 6th round. He could potentially be a successor for Anquan Boldin. At the worst, he can compete with 2011 4th round pick Tandon Doss and whoever else they bring in between now and whenever Boldin is gone. That could be next offseason.
236. 3-4 DE DeAngelo Tyson A
They needed defensive line depth and Tyson fits the range here. He can play nose tackle or defensive end for them.
The Ravens turned in yet another solid draft. Courtney Upshaw and Kelechi Osemele were great values at their spots and fill needs for the Ravens. Christian Thompson could be a long term starter at safety and Streeter could be the same at wide receiver. Gradkowski was a reach and I still don’t get the Bernard Pierce pick so it wasn’t a perfect draft. However, they hit with the picks that counted (their 1st and 2nd rounder) and even got a later pick (4th rounder) out of it.
If they hadn’t made that trade and hadn’t gotten that pick (which they used on Gradkowski), though two picks would have still been A’s so I’m not knocking them much for the Gradkowski pick since he was basically free. The Pierce pick was the one I had the most problem with. He fit the range, but he’ll either take carries away from Ray Rice, one of the best runners in the game, or be wasted. He’s not worth the 3rd rounder they used on him if he just carries the ball 100 times like Ricky Williams did last year.
Grade: A-