By Derek Arnold
For the third time in just over a calendar year, the Ravens travel to Foxborough to take on the New England Patriots on their home turf. So will this trip end in heartbreak like the 2009 regular season meeting, or in jubilation as the playoff matchup did?
The Patriots have won 22 consecutive regular season home games.
They are coming off their bye week, a situation in which Bill Belichick coached teams are 8-2 since 2000, and have not lost since 2002.
In short, it won’t be easy, but if the Ravens play a solid game, they could have the talent on both sides of the ball to hand the Patriots their well overdue post-bye week loss.
Tom Brady is having another stellar season so far in 2010, completing 69.7 percent of his passes for 911 yards and 9 touchdowns to go with only two interceptions. In the first meeting with Baltimore last year, “Tom Terrific” was just that, going 21/32 for 258 yards and a critical touchdown to Randy Moss. In the playoff game however, a time during which Tom has been exceptional during his career, the Ravens held Brady to 23/42 for 154 yards, and picked him off three times. One area in which B’More has had success against the Patriots, though, is in pressuring Brady. They sacked him three times in each of those 2009 meetings, and Terrell Suggs especially seems to dominate Pats’ left tackle Matt Light. Even last season, when Suggs was generally playing poorly, he got to Brady and forced a fumble in both games. He, and the rest of the Ravens’ pass rush, will need to be equally effective against Brady, who has only been sacked five times in four games, on Sunday.
The Pats’ offense is also dealing with the much ballyhooed departure of All-World wide receiver Randy Moss, who was traded to Minnesota during New England’s bye week. Moss was not particularly effective against the Ravens last year (managing just 8 catches for 98 yards and 1 score total in the two games), but his presence on the field undeniably opens things up for the Patriots’ very strong underneath passing game. Guys like Wes Welker, and more recently Julian Edelman, have found great success running routes against linebackers with Moss taking the coverage deep with him. New England reacquired Super Bowl XXXIX MVP Deion Branch from Seattle, and he and second-year wideout Brandon Tate will try to pick up Moss’s slack.
Perhaps the more dangerous weapon in the Patriots’ passing attack Sunday will be rookie tight end Aaron Hernandez. Hernandez, out of the University of Florida, has 18 receptions for 240 yards already (for comparison’s sake, Moss had 9 for 139), and at 6′1″ 245 lbs., could pose a big matchup problem for the Ravens. Ravens’ linebackers struggled mightily in pass coverage in the preseason, and will have their hands full this week. As a whole, the Ravens’ 2nd-ranked pass defense will face easily their biggest challenge of the young season. Though Kyle Orton managed over 300 yards last week, the defense held him in check while it mattered, allowing the offense to build a comfortable lead through the early part of the game, before Orton racked up some yards with the game out of hand. Even sans Moss, they’ll have to play their best game of the year to beat Brady and the Patriots.
On the other side of the ball, the Ravens have a clear advantage over the Pats’ young and struggling defense. New England is 29th overall and 28th against the pass, so Joe Flacco and the Ravens’ passing game could be in for a big day. In the playoff game, of course, it was Ray Rice and the running attack that won the game, racking up 234 total yards on the ground. Flacco, meanwhile, was just 4/10 for 34 yards and an interception. I don’t expect New England to allow such a one-dimensional attack to be successful again, so B’More will have to be much more balanced from the start to have a chance. Fortunately, with the additions of Anquan Boldin and T.J. Houshmandzadeh, along with Todd Heap and Ed Dickson, the Ravens have plenty of weapons to turn to, should New England shut down the run as they were unable to do in January.
One area where the New England defense has excelled is in catching errant passes from opposing quarterbacks. The Patriots have seven interceptions, tied for third highest in the NFL, through just four games. Let’s hope Flacco leaves his patented “back foot floater” at home, or he could be in for a long day.
The Patriots’ special teams have also been a strength, as evidenced by their single-handedly costing the Miami Dolphins’ special teams coach his job two weeks ago. Brandon Tate is averaging over 33 yards per kick return, and the Patriots have blocked several punts. Fortunately for the Ravens, they have the ultimate special teams trump cards in their excellent kickers. Billy Cundiff has 11 touchbacks already this season, and Sam Koch’s incredible directional punting skills were on full display against the Broncos’ dangerous returner Eddie Royal. Although the Ravens’ return games have been disappointing as a whole in 2010, the coverage has been solid, and John Harbaugh’s special teams background could be a great asset for the team in Foxborough.
Now, when you see my prediction, some may accuse me of “flip-flopping” or of pandering to the audience earlier in the week when I picked the Patriots to win in my chat with Foxboroblog.
However, I did that interview on Tuesday, and in the days since then I have been convinced otherwise. Through listening to the local and national pundits, and watching Playbook on the NFL Network, I’m now much more confident that the Ravens can pull out a victory against the favored Patriots.
Baltimore Sun columnist Mike Preston says he “can’t figure out how” the Patriots will beat the Ravens.
All three guys (Brian Billick, Sterling Sharpe, Joe Theisman) on NFL Network picked the Ravens.
All the Boston-area media who were guests on Baltimore talk radio this week picked the Ravens.
Six of the 8 ESPN personalities picked the Ravens (even Steeler-loving Raven-hater Merrill Hoge!)
Bill Belichick was the one that called Steve Bisciotti nearly three years ago and told him to hire John Harbaugh. He regretted that phone call, if just a bit, last January. Let’s hope he regrets it again, just a bit, Sunday.
Ravens win in a squeaker.
http://www.bmorebirdsnest.com/
Richard Sherman Scout
Cornerback
Stanford
6-3 194
Draft Board Overall Prospect Rank: #86
Draft Board Overall Cornerback Rank: #13
Rating: 70 (Late 3rd)
40 time: 4.49
2/19/11: I was watching the Senior Bowl and I saw this one cornerback making play after play and my reaction was “who the hell is that kid?” Turns out he was Stanford cornerback Richard Sherman, a mid-week injury replacement. I was instantly intrigued. He looked like Chris Cook, another prospect I overlooked going into Senior Bowl week last year, that I eventually fell in love with as a prospect. Cook ended up going 34th overall to the Vikings.
I had to do more research. I found out he was listed at either 6-2 or 6-3, and 190-195, a little skinny but definitely good size. He was a former wide receiver, who had only played the cornerback position for two years, which instantly reminded me of Sam Shields, the 2010 undrafted free agent, former wide receiver turned cornerback who only had one year experience at the position. He ended up being a huge part of the Packers Super Bowl run this year.
He’s certainly raw on tape, but I love his upside. For someone who has been playing the position for 2 years, he’s very instinctial. He doesn’t look like a former wide receiver, with the exception of his size and ball skills. He needs some work on technique. He had one huge mental blunder at the end of the half in the Senior Bowl that should have led to an allowed touchdown, but Andy Dalton underthrew a wide open Leonard Hankerson significantly (almost ended up a pick).
However, he could excel as a deep cover corner, an athletic cornerback with great and ball skills, and very instinctual play that’s only going to get better with more experience. He struggles against the run and needs to bulk up about 10 pounds without losing athleticism to become less of a liability against the run. I don’t think he can play free safety as some as saying he should. He has the height, but he lacks the run stopping and tackling abilities a safety needs. He has Antonio Cromartie type upside with his athleticism and ball skills, but his weaknesses as a press corner and as a run stopper.
NFL Comparison: Poor man’s Antonio Cromartie
Safeties 2011
Updated 4/12/11
QB RB FB WR TE OT G C DE RLB DT 3-4 DE NT MLB OLB CB S K P
Scoring System
100 Once in a decade prospect
95-99 Elite talent
90-95 Solid top 10 pick
85-90 Solid first round pick
80-85 Late 1st-early 2nd
75-80 Solid 2nd round pick
70-75 Solid 3rd round pick
65-70 3rd-4th round pick
60-65 4th-5th round pick
55-60 5th round pick
50-55 6th round pick
45-50 7th round pick
40-45 Undrafted, invite to training camp
30-40 Career practice squader
20-30 No NFL future
0-20 No football future
1. Rahim Moore 79 (UCLA)
2. Aaron Williams 77 (Texas)
3. Deunta Williams 75 (North Carolina)
4. DeAndre McDaniel 74 (Clemson)
5. Jeron Johnson 68 (Boise State)
6. Quinton Carter 63 (Oklahoma)
7. Tyler Sash 62 (Iowa)
8. Eric Hagg 59 (Nebraska)
9. Marcus Gilchrist 57 (Clemson)
10. Shiloh Keo 56 (Idaho)
11. Will Hill 55 (Florida)
12. Ahmad Black 53 (Florida)
13. Joe Lefeged 52 (Rutgers)
14. Jaiquawn Jarrett 51 (Temple)
15. Chris Conte 51 (California)
16. Da’Norris Searcy 49 (North Carolina)
17. Nate Williams 48 (Washington)
18. Chris Prosinski 48 (Wyoming)
19. Duke Ihenacho 47 (San Jose State)
20. Mark LeGree 46 (Appalachian State)
21. Chris Culliver 46 (South Carolina)
22. Jerrard Tarrant 45 (Georgia Tech)
23. Jermale Hines 45 (Ohio State)
24. Mike O’Connell 44 (Iowa State)
25. Jonathan Nelson 42 (Oklahoma)
Seahawks 2011 Needs
Free Agency Priorities
Quarterback
Charlie Whitehurst is the only quarterback on the roster as of now. I don’t think Whitehurst is very good at all, based on what I saw from him last year, so I think they should either resign Matt Hasselbeck or go after a veteran. They might do neither of those things and instead just add a backup as they have so much invested in Whitehurst to not give him a shot for a full season, but I think that would be a mistake.
Defensive Tackle
Brandon Mebane is a free agent and they’re really thin at the position if they don’t resign him. I don’t know why they didn’t address this position through the draft.
Defensive End
Raheem Brock is a free agent and they don’t really have much of a replacement on the roster for him so they really need to either resign him so sign another impact player at the position.
Cornerback
Kelly Jennings sucks and was part of the reason why they ranked 24th against the pass. However, they didn’t address the cornerback position early in the draft so he resigning him might be their best option at the position.
Safety
Mark LeGree might be just a 5th round pick, but sadly, he might offer an immediate upgrade over Lawyer Milloy. That doesn’t mean he’s good, so they might be best off adding a strong safety opposite Earl Thomas in free agency.
Draft Needs
Quarterback
Matt Hasselbeck will likely be their starter next year. However, that doesn’t mean he’s going to play all 16 games or that he’ll be their starter in 2012. He’s a talented, but injury prone soon to be 36 year old (in September). Charlie Whitehurst had one good game against the Rams, but was terrible in every other chance he got to play. He couldn’t even move the ball on Tampa Bay’s banged up defense week 16. I don’t think Jake Locker falls past them at 25 and if Locker isn’t there, a guy like Ricky Stanzi is going to be there in the 2nd round. They can find a young quarterback.
Offensive Tackle
Though he was injured a lot this year, Russell Okung showed that if he stays healthy, he’ll be well worth the 6th overall pick in the 2010 draft at the end of his career. He shutdown Julius Peppers one-on-one twice, and that was with two bad ankles. However, Sean Locklear at right tackle isn’t very good at all and he’s a free agent. They need a replacement for him. If Locker isn’t there at 25, someone like Derek Sherrod could be the pick. Besides, their depth behind Okung at left tackle is pretty bad so if he were to get hurt again, they’d be screwed. They could double dip at this position.
Drafted James Carpenter (#25)
Running Back
Their leading rusher in their loss to Chicago was a wide receiver, who got one carry. Marshawn Lynch had that one amazing run against New Orleans, but he’s also wildly inconsistent. Leon Washington and Justin Forsett don’t have the size to carry the load. They ranked 31st in total rushing yards and 29th in YPA. Pete Carroll likes to go running back by committee so he probably wouldn’t draft one early, but I could see him adding another running back to the mix in the mid to late rounds.
Cornerback
They ranked 24th against the pass last year and Kelly Jennings is a free agent. They need to add a cornerback relatively early in the 2011 NFL Draft.
Drafted Richard Sherman (#154), Drafted Byron Maxwell (#173)
Safety
Lawyer Milloy’s performance against Chicago was almost as bad as Roman Harper’s performance against Seattle. He was completely mismatched against the athletic Greg Olsen. Of course that begs the question, why was Milloy, who will be 38 in November, starting at strong safety all year. I mean, the man was on Pete Carroll’s 90s Patriots teams. He was there before Carroll was. He was the Patriots’ strong safety BEFORE Rodney Harrison. Why did Carroll think this guy could cover Greg Olsen, who is one of the most athletic tight ends in the league?
Drafted Mark LeGree (#156)
Center
Chris Spencer isn’t very good. Max Unger could slide in to the center spot, but that would leave a gap at right guard.
Drafted John Moffitt (#75)
Wide Receiver
Matt Hasselbeck’s receivers really let him down against Chicago. Mike Williams is their #1 option, which is risky because of Williams’ past. Golden Tate was decent as a rookie. Brandon Stokley stepped up huge in the playoffs, but he’s 35 in June. Ben Obomanu is inconsistent and sounds like a Star Wars character.
Drafted Kris Durham (#107)
Defensive Tackle
They stop the run well at full strength, but once guys started getting hurt, they struggled. Depth is needed.
Defensive End
Like defensive tackle, they didn’t deal well with injuries at this position either. Kentawn Balmer sucks.
Drafted Lazarius Levingston (#205)
Should Round 2
Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4 Round 5 Round 6 Round 7
St. Louis Rams- WR Golden Tate (Notre Dame)
Detroit Lions- CB Donovan Warren (Michigan)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers- S Taylor Mays (USC)
Kansas City Chiefs- TE Rob Gronkowski (Arizona)
Philadelphia Eagles- DE Carlos Dunlap (Florida)
Cleveland Browns- S Chad Jones (LSU)
Oakland Raiders- OT Anthony Davis (Rutgers)
San Diego Chargers- RB Ryan Matthews (Fresno State)
Buffalo Bills- WR Brandon LaFell (LSU)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers- DE Jason Pierre Paul (South Florida)
Miami Dolphins- S Morgan Burnett (Georgia Tech)
New England Patriots- 3-4 DE Tyson Alualu (California)
Denver Broncos- 3-4 DE Mike Neal (Purdue)
New York Giants- DT LaMarr Houston (Texas)
New England Patriots- CB Javier Arenas (Alabama)
Carolina Panthers- TE Dennis Pitta (BYU)
San Francisco 49ers- CB Kareem Jackson (Alabama)
Kansas City Chiefs- OT Jason Fox (Miami)
Houston Texans- S Nate Allen (South Florida)
Pittsburgh Steelers- RB Toby Gerhart (Stanford)
New England Patriots- RLB Jermaine Cunningham (Florida)
Cincinnati Bengals- MLB Sean Lee (Penn State)
Philadelphia Eagles- OLB Roddrick Muckelroy (Texas)
Green Bay Packers- CB Myron Lewis (Vanderbilt)
Baltimore Ravens- WR Eric Decker (Minnesota)
Arizona Cardinals- OT Ciron Black (LSU)
Dallas Cowboys- S Reshad Jones (Georgia)
Seattle Seahawks- G Mike Johnson (Alabama)
New York Jets- WR Dezmon Briscoe (Kansas)
Minnesota Vikings- QB Jevan Snead (Mississippi)
Indianapolis Colts- OLB Daryl Washington (TCU)
New Orleans Saints- RB Jonathan Dwyer (Georgia Tech)
Go on to Round 3
Or go back to the “Will” Mock Draft
Or check out other mock drafts
Or make your own
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Steelers Season Preview
By Sean Geddes
If you’re a Pittsburgh Steelers fan, this, more than maybe any other time before, is a season of football that is long overdue. The offseason lasted far, far too long. When camp pads started popping in Latrobe, PA just a few short weeks ago a breath of fresh, cool air most likely blew across your face that took you back to a time not so long ago. Better days. Football days. Championship days.
I know I felt it.
After an offseason of turmoil, an offseason of questions no one ever wanted to ask, when we saw our franchise quarterback embroiled in another incident that nobody would ever want to be on either side of, when we saw our budding (in more ways than one) star, a Superbowl MVP wide receiver shipped away for what could be rationalized as pennies in NFL currency, and change over on the coaching staff on all sides of the ball; only one thing could save us from this mess, this malaise, this never ending nightmare of accusations, of allegations, of reaffirmations and (perhaps) some self-contemplations… We, Steelers Nation, needed football back.
And so it’s here.
Don’t let the opening of this fool you. It wasn’t all doom and gloom in the city of bridges this summer. Dick LeBeau got into the Pro Football Hall of Fame after what was in reality, what I felt our offseason was… far, far too long. In typical Coach Dad fashion, he took his moment in the sun to reflect some back on his men. The Steelers defense.
Troy Polamalu and Aaron Smith are back from shoulder and knee injuries respectively, and look to round out a group of both veterans and young players that are always poised for greatness under LeBeau’s tutelage. Casey Hampton returns to anchor the middle of the veteran defensive line bookended by Smith and grizzled (no… literally) veteran Brett Keisel. The “ideal people” for the defensive line, according to LeBeau, will be taking on double teams all season to protect our brigade of ‘backers starting with veteran captain James Farrior, 2009 Defensive League MVP James Harrison and young beasts Lawrence Timmons and LaMarr Woodley. One of the smartest players to wear a Steelers uniform, also according to LeBeau, Ryan Clark will look to be the balance to Troy Polamalu at the two safety positions, with Ike Taylor, William Gay, Joe Burnett and Keenan Lewis covering wide receivers. To add to this stout group, the Steelers brought back veteran Steelers Bryant McFadden to help with coverage duties, and Larry Foote to be a leader at linebacker as well.
Not to be outdone, offensively, the team brought back Antwaan Randle El to add to a receiving crew (and maybe even throw one or two too) already featuring all time great Hines Ward, the electrifying Mike Wallace and tight end Heath Miller. Rashard Mendenhall will be the young bell cow of this offense at running back, with reliable veteran Mewelde Moore providing both fresh legs and good hands. An unfortunate injury early in camp to Willie Colon left a challenge for new line coach Sean Kugler who came in from Buffalo, and a hole at right tackle which may have been filled by the late veteran signing of Flozell Adams. Justin Hartwig, Trai Essex, Chris Kemoeatu and Max Starks will still be in charge of protecting our quarterback.
And about that quarterback. Before I start, let me be clear, this is Ben Roethlisberger’s team. After what will hopefully be a four game suspension there is little to no chance anyone else will be taking snaps in a Steelers uniform at the start of that fifth game. But who will be taking all of the snaps in the previous games?
Byron Leftwich was resigned after what he would describe as a disappointing season in Tampa Bay. He has taken a majority of the reps with the first team all camp, and has been given every opportunity to prove this can be his team (for a month or so). Byron played well for us in spot and mop up duties two seasons ago, and his experience and proven talent give him the apparent favor of Coach Tomlin and his staff. But this Dennis Dixon? Well, he provides a sizzle that is hard to deny. Between his speed, and potential for playmaking, he will make a strong push for playing time. Local guy and crafty vet Charlie Batch is in the running as well, but looking at camp reps and preseason playing time, it’s fairly clear this is a two man race. For Leftwich’s sake, I hope an actual two man race isn’t part of the criteria.
Special teams will look to rebound from a forgettable season last year, but not because of kicker Jeff Reed or punter Daniel Sepulveda. Joining them are long snappers (yeah, plural) Greg Warren and Matt Stewart… two will enter, one will leave. New ST Coach Al Everest will be have to repair the gaping hole that was kick return coverage last year, and given his track record he should be up to the job. Giving him some young players to help clog the leak won’t hurt either.
Already mentioned were second year DB’s Keenan Lewis and Joe Burnett, 2009 third and fifth rounds respectively. Crezdon Butler (5th round 2010) joined that group of young corners this season. Last year’s first round pick Ziggy Hood (32nd overall) looks to bolster our three man front defensively, along with late round picks Sunny Harris (6th round 2009) and Doug Worthington (7th round 2010). Linebackers Jason Worilds (2nd round 2010), Thaddeus Gibson (4th round 2010) and Stevenson Sylvester (5th round 2010) all will look to continue the legacy of great Steelers linebackers into the future (and our kick coverage current), and all have shown reasons to think the future will be bright.
On the offensive side, second year wide out Mike Wallace (3rd round 2009) will look to take his game to the next level, replacing Santonio Holmes who took his skills elsewhere. He will be joined by rookies Emmanuel Sanders (3rd round) and Antonio Brown (6th round) who have each shown glimpses of flash early on. First round pick out of Florida, Maurkice Pouncey (18th overall) will bring some much needed new life to an offensive line that has struggled in the recent past. They will be looking to make running lanes for Jonathan Dwyer (6th round 2010) and second year player Isaac Redman (undrafted 2009), who has been turning heads for two seasons between both the preseason and practice squad.
This is a year of tempered, in some case non-existent praise from the Media, but as always high expectations from the fans. A year no one thinks we can do it, but a year us fans know, deep down inside, we love. Our players love. Sleep on the Steelers. Because these fans, our owners, our coaches, our team sleeps on no one. We’ll be ready to play, and we’ll be bringing it on every down, on every drive, in every game… all season. This can be a championship year in Pittsburgh. We know it.
http://www.behindthesteelcurtain.com/
Tennessee/Georgia
Spotlight #1: Georgia OT Cordy Glenn
Spotlight #2: Georgia CB Brandon Boykin
1st quarter
13:02: Glenn looking awesome and powerful here early. Here he has an excellent 2nd level block.
12:34: Glenn blocks well again, excellent powerful hands, great technique, Aaron Murray is getting forever to throw.
11:59: Tackle for a loss on the play, but don’t blame Glenn, who has yet another excellent 2nd level block.
11:12: Glenn powers a guy out of the way for Aaron Murray to get out of the pocket for a decent run, not quite enough for the 1st however. 4th and 1.
10:20: Glenn, high motor, pushing a guy far into the 2nd level after the pass is released. He didn’t stop once the ball is released. He immediately became a 2nd level blocker and overpowered his guy, who wasn’t playing with the same motor.
8:36: Boykin takes a poor angle to the ball after a check down.
6:56: Boykin whiffs on a tackle on an end around.
2:37: Glenn man handles a man in pass protection. He’s so big and strong and he’s just long arms and knows how to use them. You can’t even see the guy behind him he’s so big.
2:02: Glenn doesn’t pick up a secondary block on an outside run that goes nowhere.
0:56: Glenn gets great push on Georgia’s 4th down conversion, a quarterback sneak on 4th and inches. The Bulldogs have converted several short downs in this game and Glenn is a big part of the reason why.
2nd quarter
8:53: Boykin on Da’Rick Rogers, Tennessee’s top receiver, and allows the 12 yard completion. Rogers got separation with speed.
4:35: Excellent job of Glenn of bending his knees. He’s not a natural knee bender and he hasn’t bent as knees as much as you would like in this game, but he did well here.
3rd quarter
11:38: Glenn left to block two guys and has a lot of trouble. It was like he couldn’t decide between them and he let both get pressure.
4:33: Boykin thrown against deep and it’s not completed. Nice recovery by Boykin on what initially wasn’t the best coverage.
1:44: Glenn whiffs on a cut block on a short 3 step drop.
4th quarter
14:12: Glenn struggles on another cut block. He’s not very agile.
4:02: Boykin thrown on, tight coverage, but an excellent throw by the quarterback. Boykin does a good job of mirroring the receiver when he changes directions.
3:23: Completion in Boykin’s area in prevent coverage. Not Boykin’s fault though. He did the right thing on 3rd and 26.
0:00: Cordy Glenn is being scouted as a guard. He’s a former guard playing left tackle for Georgia. I think he could stay at tackle at the next level, albeit right tackle. He’s so big and powerful and uses his hands so well. He’s not a natural knee bender and he doesn’t have great agility and he struggles when he has to do “small guy” type stuff like cut blocks, but he’s so powerful in both run and pass protection. Unless you can beat him off the line, you won’t get past him. He’s also got a great motor and is a great 2nd level blocker. He’s a rising prospect right now and for good reason. He could end up in the first round as a right tackle or a guard when it’s all said and done.
As for Brandon Boykin, he was solid. He wasn’t thrown on a lot and he had a fairly tough assignment, guarding Da’Rick Rogers with Jim Bray throwing to him. He really struggled against the run and he is pretty small at 5-11 180. However, he does cover well and I think he could end up a 3rd or 4th round. He’s also very fast and athletic and can return kicks.
Titans

2010 Record: 6-10
Draft Position: 8
2010 Season Recap: Click Here
Offseason Needs: Click Here
Free Agents/Team Transactions: Click Here
Draft Grades: Click Here
Key Offseason Moves: None
Trevard Lindley
Cornerback
Kentucky
5-11 183
40 time: 4.53
Draft board overall prospect rank: #128
Draft board cornerback rank: #17
Overall rating: 64*
3/2/10: Only benched 9 reps of 225 pounds and had a 4.53 40 at 5-11 183, but he was one of the worst cornerbacks in the cornerback drills. He has really disappointed in this draft preseason and has fallen from one of my favorite underrated prospects, to a 4th or 5th round guy
1/30/10: Whether it be his injuries that are still plaguing him or whatever, this is not the same guy we saw at Kentucky in 2007 and 2008. He looked like a stick figure at his weigh in and was 2 inches shorter than what he was listed at in college and he really has looked out matched by almost every wide receiver he has faced this week and has had a really hard time breaking out of the jam at the line of scrimmage, which is not a surprise because of his extreme lack of bulk.
1/23/10: He had a bit of a down year with a knee injury this year, but when healthy he’s an amazing man on man corner with future #1 corner potential. His wiry frame at 6-1 175 and his lack of elite timed speed will force him out of the 1st round, where he would have been a lock to go last year before he got hurt.
6/20/09: They say the one thing you can’t teach is natural athleticism. While that is true, Trevard Lindley possesses something else that you just can’t teach. Lindley is an average athlete for an NFL hopeful, with a mid to low 4.4s 40 and a skinny frame, but he has that natural ability to guard a wide receiver one-on-one that very few guys in the college game, or even in the NFL have. He rarely lets receivers get separation from him and he isn’t fooled easily. He only had 4 picks last season because wide receivers are rarely open enough when guarded by him for any quarterback with half a brain to throw to them. His man press coverage skills are very similar to those of Leigh Bodden, the man who Chad Johnson said was the best one-on-one cover cornerback in the league today. The fact that Chad Johnson gave someone a compliment other than his own reflection is very high praise for Bodden, but Lindley is just as good. The one thing cornerbacks struggle with when coming into the league, and the reason why most cornerbacks drafted on day 1 don’t play much their first year, is man coverage. That is where Lindley excels and that is why he should start from week 1 in the NFL. Like Bodden did, Lindley would struggle in a cover 2 or Tampa 2, where athleticism is valued over one-on-one coverage skills, but teams that use that defensive scheme aren’t going to draft him. He’d be a great fit for the Packers who use a press man coverage scheme. The Packers’ corners are old so they could be looking for a cornerback come draft day 2010. Lindley needs to put on about 10 pounds of muscle to be able to be at least average as a run stopper for a cornerback, but that shouldn’t be too hard. He’s young and has room to grow. While he’s not a great athleticism, skinny and average speed, he does have good height for a corner, which will also help in man-to-man coverage. He’s going to win more jumpballs than a guy 5-9 or 5-10 would and his uncanny ability to stick to a receiver like glue is going to force a lot of jumpballs when a receiver throws his way. At the end of the day, Lindley is a cornerback that can start from week 1 and soon should be able to be, with a little bit more experience against more athletic corners, that type of corner like Bodden or the Packers’ Al Harris or the Raiders’ Nmandi Asomugha who can single handedly take the opposing team’s #1 option and make him a non-factor.
NFL Comparison: Fred Smoot
*=For a breakdown of what this means, click here
Vikings vs. Patriots
By Cormac Eklof
Well now, if it isn’t Sports Karma, slapping Randy Moss gleefully in the face. Let’s see. Moss fulfil his ‘it’s all about winning!’ mantra now, with Tavaris Jackson or a one legged Brett Favre throwing wobbly passes his way the next few weeks. If Randy Moss ever offers you a horse racing tip, take the field instead. He doesn’t seem very good at picking winners. Joking aside, no need to look too deep into this one, for one reason specifically. The Patriots are 3-0 at home this season. The Vikings on the road? 0-3. Hopefully Moss enjoys his afternoon watching Brady march the Patriots into the end zone a few times, as he chases haplessly after misplaced passes.
The pick: Patriots 31-17
Go back to Patriots Fan Spot
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