2011 Week 7 Rankings

32(32). Miami Dolphins 0-5

The NFL is great because any team can win on any given Sunday. Except the Dolphins. This team sucks. How they hell have they been on Monday Night Football twice already? Who picks these Monday Night Games. Next week we have Baltimore/Jacksonville. Any idiot can pick the winner of that team. There’s no suspense or drama. These are teams scheduled for MNF this year; Denver, Miami (x2), St. Louis (x2), Jacksonville (x2), Kansas City (x2), Minnesota, Seattle. Huh?

How hard is it to go, okay, New England/Dallas, Brady, Romo, that’s exciting, that’s going to be the Monday Night Football game? New England is on MNF twice. They played Miami and then they’ll play Kansas City. Those are going to be absolute blowouts. That shouldn’t be nationally televised. Patriots/Jets, Patriots/Chargers, Patriots/Eagles, hell, Patriots/Bills would have been an awesome MNF game. But no, we get Patriots/Chiefs and Patriots/Dolphins.

31(30). Indianapolis Colts 0-6

I hope Indianapolis gets Andrew Luck. I know Miami needs him more and probably deserves him more, but there’s no drama around Miami drafting Luck. If Indianapolis gets the #1 pick, they have to make a choice between drafting Luck and risking pissing off Peyton Manning or trading Luck and risking Luck winning multiple Super Bowls elsewhere while the Colts are perennial 5-11, 6-10 teams with Curtis Painter after Manning leaves.

30(31). Jacksonville Jaguars 1-5

The Jaguars have scored more than 14 points once this season. They have the fewest points in the league of any team other than St. Louis, who has played one fewer game than them. They have a rookie quarterback completing less than 50% of his passes. They’ve lost 8 of their last 9 and haven’t scored over 20 in their last 8. But yeah, put this team on national television. I’m sure they can give the Baltimore Ravens a game. The Ravens may have Ray Rice and Ray Lewis and Ed Reed and Haloti Ngata and Terrell Suggs and Joe Flacco, but the Jaguars have Maurice Jones Drew …oh and Blaine Gabbert.

29(28). Minnesota Vikings 1-5

Donovan McNabb had the worst 19 for 24 I’ve ever seen last week against Chicago. With the way the Bears were stuffing the line of scrimmage, McNabb probably should have completed 24 of 24 and for more than 177 yards. Adrian Peterson was held to 39 yards on 12 carries. The Bears had a game plan. Stuff Peterson, make McNabb beat you and he couldn’t do it. The offense had so much more life in it once Christian Ponder took over. Before that point, the Vikings had put in absolutely no effort in a 39-10 loss to the Bears.

Now they have to make a decision on whether or not to start Ponder. Starting him is always a risk. You don’t want him doing what Blaine Gabbert is doing, stinking it up and losing confidence. There’s no need to rush him. This team’s not going anywhere this year anyway, but if they feel he’s ready then I say go for it.

28(29). Kansas City Chiefs 2-3

On bye.

27(24). St. Louis Rams 0-5

The Rams almost covered a 15 point spread in the first half. So close. Luckily for them, the Packers took their foot off the gas up 24-3 at halftime and didn’t humiliate the Rams like they could have. The good news for the Rams is that Brandon Lloyd is coming to town. Lloyd led the league in receiving last year in Josh McDaniels’ offense and he’s not doing so bad this year either. If they can sign him to a short extension, that trade makes a lot of sense, especially since it was just a 5th rounder.

Even if they can’t resign him long term, it was still a good move because Sam Bradford desperately needs help at receiver and unlike the Broncos, the Rams seem to understand the importance of surrounding your franchise quarterback with weapons in his developmental stage. The bad news for the Rams is that the guy who is supposed to be throwing him the ball, Sam Bradford, won’t be 100% this week with an ankle injury.

26(25). Arizona Cardinals 1-4

On bye.

25(26). Carolina Panthers 1-5

Cam Newton has played awesome for a rookie, but he’s obviously getting frustrated with his team’s lack of wins. That makes sense. This guy has won everywhere he’s been. However, the lack of wins has not been his fault. The defense sucks and their schedule has been brutal Arizona (1-5), Green Bay (6-0), Jacksonville (1-5), Chicago (3-3), New Orleans (4-2), Atlanta (3-3). Fortunately, Newton has 3 straight home games now to try to right the ship, with the reeling Panthers, the lowly Vikings, and the overrated Titans coming in town with a bye sandwiched in between.

24(27). Denver Broncos 1-4

I’m convinced John Elway and John Fox are just looking for an excuse to run Tebow out of town, but the fans would riot, so they can’t do it until he’s proven himself a failure. Why else would they trade his top receiver and the league’s leading receiver a year ago for a 5th round pick? I get that he’s in a contract year, but a 5th round pick? If they let him leave as a free agent they’d probably get at least a 4th round pick as compensation. Hopefully Tebow can continue to get it done. Eric Decker is a solid receiver.

23(23). Seattle Seahawks 2-3

On bye.

22(21). Cleveland Browns 2-3

Isn’t it karma that Peyton Hillis sits out a game with strep throat and then confesses he could have played but his agent advised him not to given that he’s looking for a new deal and then a week later he actually gets hurt? The Madden Curse is really starting to work in interesting ways. This is why you don’t give running backs big money. Too inconsistent, too injury prone, and too unimportant in the modern NFL. The Browns have a solid back in Montario Hardesty for the future. Move on from Hillis and don’t overpay this bum.

21(11). Washington Redskins 3-2

Wow, so much for this team. Rex Grossman got worse every week and it eventually culminated in his 4 interception performance last week against the Eagles. They came into that game leading the NFC East. Now they’re the favorite to finish last. Grossman has been benched and I don’t expect John Beck to be all that great either. He won’t be as bad as Grossman was last week, but forgive me if I don’t expect that much from him. There’s a very good chance this team finishes as the 6-10/7-9 team we all felt they were coming into the season.

20(22). Cincinnati Bengals 4-2

The Bengals absolutely ripped off the Raiders by getting a first and a second rounder for Carson Palmer. It was a brilliant football move to flip a quarterback that they weren’t even using and frankly didn’t even need because Andy Dalton is better than him anyway for a 1st and a 2nd round pick. However, if you ask Sports Illustrated’s Jim Trotter, Mike Brown was not smart in making this move. He was, instead, racist.

Trotter tweeted “if you’re wondering why black players feel there’s a double standard in the nfl, mike brown’s handling of carson palmer is another example.” He later clarified that he was not meaning to call Mike Brown a racist but I could tweet, “Chad Henne is fucking terrible” and then later tweet, “I didn’t mean to insult Chad Henne.” It wouldn’t change anything.

Trotter is referring to the fact that Chad Ochocinco demanded a trade and did not receive one back in 2008, but Carson Palmer demanded a trade and received one. I’ll give you a simple explanation for this. Carson Palmer sucks (oh wait, is that racist against white people?). Chad Ochocinco was one of the best receivers in the game at the time. When Washington offered 2 1st rounders for him, Brown felt it wasn’t worth it. If Washington had offered 5 1st round picks for him, maybe he would have felt differently.

Plain and simple, the Raiders blew the Bengals away with their offer for Palmer. Brown would have been a moron not to pull the trigger, especially with how well Andy Dalton is playing right now. Plus, isn’t it also possible that Mike Brown LEARNED FROM HIS MISTAKES not trading Ochocinco when his value was still high in 2008 and decided not to make the same mistake with Palmer and wait for his value to deflate to trade him which Brown ultimately had to do with Ochocinco?

19(20). Chicago Bears 3-3

The Bears have to travel all the way to London to play a game against the Buccaneers in a shitty stadium in front of people who don’t even like football. Can you guess I don’t like the London game? By the way, I’m still not sold on this team. Minnesota didn’t even show up last week so that was hardly an impressive win. If they beat Tampa Bay this week, we’ll talk, but they don’t have an impressive win on the schedule and their offensive line still has problems, however good they looked against Minnesota.

18(18). New York Giants 4-2

Yes, the Giants did rebound from an embarrassing home loss to Seattle with a 3 point win over Buffalo at home last week, but their 2nd half schedule still is a huge issue. They have a brutal 2nd half schedule @New England (5-1), @ San Francisco (5-1), vs. Philadelphia (2-4 could have everything together by then), @ New Orleans (4-2), vs. Green Bay (6-0), @ Dallas (2-3), vs. Washington (3-2), vs. NY Jets (3-3), vs. Dallas (2-3). Philadelphia and Dallas will still finish with better records than them.

17(19). Tennessee Titans 3-2

On bye

16(17). Oakland Raiders 4-2

The Oakland Raiders have traded a 1st and a 2nd rounder for Carson Palmer. Maybe Al Davis is still alive after all. How the hell is Carson Palmer worth a 1st and a 2nd rounder? The Raiders now have no picks until the 5th round this year, after not having a first rounder last year, and they also won’t have a 2nd rounder next year. This team is basically mortgaging their future for the chance to win 9 games max this year and it’s going to really piss me off if they succeed because I made a bet with a friend that the Raiders wouldn’t win more than 8 games.

Why do you think we NEVER and I mean NEVER see starting quarterbacks traded midseason? How the hell is Carson Palmer supposed to learn this offense and these receivers in time for this week’s game against Kansas City or even the rest of their games for the rest of the season, especially since Palmer has been sitting on his ass counting his money and throwing darts at a picture of Mike Brown since March?

Actually, you know what, I think this is beyond Al Davis. Al Davis would be smarter than this. I think they just replaced Al Davis with a cardboard cutout of him and a Magic 8 Ball. “Should we trade our entire future for Carson Palmer?” “Signs point to yes.” If this is true, I hope they used this picture of Al Davis for the cardboard cutout. I wouldn’t be surprised if that request was in old Al’s will.

 

15(16). Dallas Cowboys 2-3

This may be hard to believe, the Cowboys last 11 games have all been decided by 4 points or less (5-6 in that span). They’ve looked good at times, they’ve looked bad at times, but they’ve kept it close. Overall, I think this team is too young and immature to be consistent enough to win more than 8 or 9 games. They’re a fairly average team.

14(15). New York Jets 3-3

The Jets beat the Dolphins last week, but they certainly didn’t look good doing it. They once again didn’t go over 300 yards of offense, even though the Dolphins “defense” can’t cover or rush the passer. They couldn’t go over 300 yards of offense they week before against New England’s miserable defense either and we all know what happened the week before against Baltimore.

Against Miami, the Jets went 3 and out on their first 4 drives and that game could have easily been 24-20 instead of 24-6 had the refs called an obvious PI on Revis on a pick six in the red zone and had Brandon Marshall not made stupid mental mistakes all night. But, a win’s a win and the Jets have to be feeling better about themselves going into their game against San Diego this week. Can they win that one is the big question now.

13(14). Atlanta Falcons 3-3

Had Michael Vick not gotten hurt week 2 in Atlanta, the Falcons could have easily been 1-4 with one win by 2 over Seattle coming into last week. Last week they beat Carolina by 14, but they didn’t outplay them with the exception of a couple turnovers. I still have them out of the playoff picture, especially with Tampa Bay’s win over New Orleans, but the Falcons did prove last week they can still protect their home field, so long as it’s not against Green Bay.

12(10). Philadelphia Eagles 2-4

And…they’re right back in it. Told you not to count them out. The Giants have a brutal 2nd half schedule, the Redskins are imploding right before our eyes, and the Cowboys haven’t been all that impressive this year either. The Eagles are definitely in the mix at 2-4 in a division that has surprisingly been one of the weakest this year, after many predicted the NFC East to be among the strongest.

11(13). Tampa Bay Buccaneers 4-2

Tampa Bay proved last week with a win over New Orleans that their huge road loss to San Francisco was a fluke. Besides, it’s not like San Francisco is too bad of a team themselves. Aside from that loss to San Francisco, they haven’t lost by more than 7 since their 5th game of last year, 17 games, a stretch in which this young team is 11-6. With Washington fading and with head to head wins over both Atlanta and New Orleans, Tampa Bay has the inside track to a playoff spot and actually leads the NFC South as of right now. I think New Orleans overtakes them by a game or two when it’s all said and done with a home win over Tampa Bay, but this is still a very impressive squad.

10(9). Pittsburgh Steelers 4-2

The Steelers seem to have a tendency of taking their foot off the gas against weaker opponents. Both Indianapolis and Jacksonville have hung with them, despite the fact that they established a 14-0 early lead over Jacksonville last week. This is still a solid team that can make the playoffs with 10 or so wins in a weak AFC, but they’re not quite the Steelers of old. They play Arizona this week, who employs a ton of former Steeler assistants on their staff, so if they take their foot off the gas this week, perhaps looking forward to their rematch with New England next week, Arizona will beat them.

9(8). Houston Texans 3-3

The Texans haven’t looked good in their past 2 weeks without Mario Williams and Andre Johnson, but I think the Texans are good enough to reestablish their AFC South dominance this week with a win over overrated Tennessee, even without Andre Johnson. They’ll get Johnson back likely next week as their schedule gets easier. I still think this team wins the division with around 10-11 wins.

8(7). Buffalo Bills 4-2

No shame in losing to the Giants in New York. There aren’t a lot of really good teams in the league this year so a team like Buffalo who is solid to above average gets rated a little higher than they would most years. The Bills go on a bye before they play imploding Washington in Buffalo. They still have two games to go against Miami and they also play Denver. That’s at least 8 wins there easy. I think they can at least split with the Jets, so 9 wins. I think they lose to New England (rematch) and San Diego and split Dallas and Tennessee the last 2 games on their schedule. That’s 10 wins there.

7(5). Detroit Lions 5-1

The question now becomes, how will Detroit handle adversity. After starting 5-0, the Lions lost as favorites last week against a good San Francisco team. They can either regress as a young team with high expectations or they can learn from their mistakes and come back better than they were before, which would be a very good thing because they haven’t had an impressive win since week 2, meaning a game in which they looked good for 4 quarters. I say it’s 50-50 right now.

6(12). San Francisco 49ers 5-1

I don’t think I’ve been this wrong about a team before. I thought the 49ers would suck, but instead they’re awesome. Who would have known that 7 weeks would be all Jim Harbaugh would need to turn around this locker room culture (also how bad of a coach was Mike Singletary?!). They get better every week and are at least one of the top 3, if not the top 2 teams in the NFC. I would say something on handshakegate, but this is the biggest non-story ever. Seriously. ESPN made it their lead story on a day when an IndyCar driver burst into flames and died.

5(6). Baltimore Ravens 4-1

The Ravens had an impressive win against Houston last week, but that wasn’t full strength Houston. Besides, I’m still not quite sure how good banged up Houston is. However, that win certainly didn’t hurt them. The only reason they’re not higher here is Joe Flacco’s inconsistencies. In Flacco’s 5 games, he’s thrown for over 300 yards twice, but also under 200 yards twice.

4(3). New Orleans Saints 4-2

I’m not knocking New Orleans down too much after their loss to Tampa Bay, particularly because I predicted it. Also, this team was going to lose games. It’s important not to overreact to one loss like ESPN, whose Power Rankings essentially sort the teams by winning percentage. They’ll still finish 12-4 or so. Last week just happened to be one of those 4 losses.

3(4). San Diego Chargers 4-1

On bye.

2(2). Green Bay Packers 6-0

The Packers looked unstoppable once again last week, jumping out to a 24-3 halftime lead over St. Louis and then falling asleep in the 2nd half and still winning 24-3. The Packers have been the most impressive team in the league this year. There’s no question about that. That doesn’t mean they’ll absolutely repeat. I still think the Patriots are going to win the whole thing.

1(1). New England Patriots 5-1

I would have preferred to see the Patriots blow out the Cowboys, but I did enjoy watching Tom Brady work his 2 minute offense magic needing a score to win late. He hasn’t gotten a chance to do that much in the last couple of years because they’ve been winning by so much.

I really believe last week’s win is going to toughen them up. They haven’t won ugly in forever. That was their problem last year. Everything was too pretty and then when the Jets punched them in the mouth, they couldn’t respond. They looked absolutely terrible last week and still beat a quality opponent. Now they head into a bye and I trust Belichick to iron out all of their flaws and have this team playing awesome football out of the bye. 

 

3-4 Defensive End

 

QB RB WR TE OT G C NT DT 3-4 DE DE RLB OLB MLB CB S K P

Updated 4/17/10 

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. Ndamukong Suh (Nebraska) 99

People who love stats get high off of Suh’s stat card. Over the last two years, Suh has 158 tackles, 19 sacks, 3 picks, and 2 touchdowns all as a 6-4 300 pound defensive tackle. He also led his team in pass breakups this year with 10. There’s a reason he received the most Heisman votes of any defensive lineman in NCAA Football history. He may be the most dominant defensive lineman of the decade. He can play both the 3-4 defensive end position and the 4-3 defensive tackle position. He will make a huge impact on the huge from the moment he enters the NFL. I can’t see him falling past the Lions at #2 and he could be the first defensive tackle to go #1 overall since Dan Wilkinson in 1994.

2. Gerald McCoy (Oklahoma) 96

If it weren’t for Suh, we’d all be singing McCoy’s praises right now. He would have been a lock first round pick last year and he came back and followed up his 6.5 sacks in 2008 with a repeat performance this year of 6.5 sacks. He is a top ten pick lock and could go in the top 3, along with Suh, the first time a defensive tackle has gone in the top 3 since 2000. He would be an ideal fit as a 4-3 one gap penetrator in a zone scheme defense but he can play the 3-4 as a defensive end and all 4-3 schemes.

3. Jared Odrick (Penn State) 85

1/27/10: After Suh and McCoy go off the board early, Odrick makes a great case to be the next 3-4 defensive end chosen by displaying great agility, size, and hand use this week. He could also push Brian Price to be the 3rd defensive tackle chosen as well.

Very good agility for his size and good use of his hands to shed blockers, but a DUI back in March of 2009 could hurt his stock. He fits one gap penetrating schemes and also as a 3-4 defensive end. I think he actually would be better at the next level as a 3-4 defensive end which is good because a ton of teams have switched to the 3-4 lately creating a bigger need for natural 3-4 defensive ends like Odrick.

4. Brian Price (UCLA) 85

Burst onto the scene with 7 sacks as a junior this year and should be able to turn that into a first round selection. He may be a bit of a one hit wonder, but if he continues his physical dominance at the next level, he will be a very solid player in the NFL as either a 4-3 defensive tackle or 3-4 defensive end.

5. Tyson Alualu (California) 79

Not a great athlete, but makes up for in with hustle and work ethic which is a major plus for his draft stock in my eyes. He also has experience in a 3-4 scheme as a defensive end, which gives him an advantage over the other 3-4 defensive end prospects in this draft class. He has 13 sacks over the last 2 years and always seems to be in good position to make the tackle. He isn’t an ideal 4-3 defensive tackle at 4-3, but he’ll fit some schemes and can move inside on nickel packages. He can also play some 4-3 left end depending on how a team views him because he has experience as an edge rusher.

6. Mike Neal (Purdue) 79                              

1/30/10: Neal had a bunch of nice hustle plays that won’t really show up on the stat sheet and was a huge part of the front 7 domination by the north. He’s a big undersized to be a defensive tackle, but he fits perfectly as a Darnell Dockett type 3-4 defensive end and I think he goes in the 2nd round.

One of my favorite sleeper prospects, a 4th round pick in many people’s eyes, but a 2nd round prospect here. 10 sacks in 2 years is good, a 4.95 40 at 6-4 300 pounds is better, actually I’m surprised he’s not getting more hype, but the best thing about him is his tenacity and his hustle on the field. Some smart GM could snatch him in the 2nd or 3rd round so he’s likely going to a good home. He reminds me of Darnell Dockett.

7. LaMarr Houston (Texas) 78                                  

3/1/10: There were questions about his height and because of that, his ability to play 3-4 end, but measuring in at 6-3 instead of 6-1 or 6-2 will help. So will a 4.85 40 at 305 pounds and 30 reps on the bench press.

1/30/10: He had a nice hustle play on a 4th down stop, in which he snuck into the backfield and made the play and overall he just showed why he was one of the best players on Texas’ defense last year with 7 sacks. This game, along with favorable reports out of Senior Bowl practice week, could shoot him into the 2nd round.

A bright spot on a relatively weak Texas defense this year, at least in relation to the offense. He stepped up big time in the National Championship game with 10 tackles and a sack and ended up with 7 sacks on the season against elite competition. He’s a nice 3rd round sleeper with upside, but his form needs some correction and he’s undersized height wise at 6-1 or 6-2.

 

8. Arthur Jones (Syracuse) 73

An amazing physical specimen who has shown flashes of brilliance on the field, but has never quite put it together enough for me to consider him a 1st round prospect. Because of a knee injury late last season, he won’t be a 1st round prospect and if his knee doesn’t check out at the combine, he could slip even more.

9. Alex Carrington (Arkansas State) 70

1/27/10: He has carried his late season momentum into his Senior Bowl week and has stepped up as one of the most dominant defensive line prospects at the Senior Bowl, which is a bit of a surprise because he’s not used to top notch competition. He also has excellent size and athleticism.

A very strong prospect of a small school kid with 10 sacks in 2008 at 6-5 285, but he struggled some in 2009. He did end up with 9 sacks, but 6 of then were in his last 3 games, including an amazing 4 sack showing in the season finale. He is still a nice mid round prospect with similar measurables to Tyson Jackson who went #3 overall last year. He can play 4-3 left end and 3-4 defensive end and maybe some 4-3 defensive tackle in nickel packages, but his best fit is as a 3-4 defensive end where I think he’s a future starter. The level of competition is an issue for him though.

10. Corey Wootton (Northwestern) 70

A very fluid athlete with good size at 6-7 280 and can play both 4-3 left end and 3-4 defensive end. After 10 sacks last season, he could have been a 2nd round pick, but he had knee surgery this offseason and only bounced back with 3.5 sacks this season, so I don’t think he’s much but upside here, but there’s definitely upside for him if he can put his injuries behind him. He could have gone in the 1st round with a strong season this season, but I think he’s a 3rd round pick at best right now, but someone could snatch him up in the 2nd round if they love his upside and are convinced his knee is fine.

11. Vince Oghobaase (Duke) 69                       

3/1/10: On a day of fast 40 times for defensive tackles, that 5.43 40 is going to stand out in a bad way. Especially since he only put up 27 reps on the bench at 303 pounds. I have a feeling his knee might not be 100% which is bad for his stock.

I loved him before the season, but injuries and inconsistencies on the field have brought him back down my board after I called him a 1st round prospect last year. If he can put it all together, he’s a fierce intimidating force on the defensive line as a 315 pound pass rusher who can control multiple blockers and may the edge rushers even better. He can play in both 4-3 and 3-4 schemes.

12. CJ Wilson (East Carolina) 63                            

3/1/10: A very underrated left end prospect, but a 4.75 40 at 290 will get him noticed, as will 32 reps on the bench press. He could be looking at the 4th round after some slow defensive end times today.

A very athletic left end, with 15 sacks over the last two years and the size to play on the line in both a 4-3 and a 3-4 scheme. He’s a bit of a project, but I love his upside with his athleticism and I think he can be a starting left end in the NFL in a few years.

13. Jay Ross (East Carolina) 57

4/2/10: I don’t get this decision. Ross played all of his college career at 315-320 pounds. He played fine and could have been a nose tackle in the NFL and gotten drafted about 2 rounds earlier than if he had not been viewed as a nose tackle prospect. The weigh was not hampering his agility. Yet, he still decided to drop 13 pounds, to 302, which is not nose tackle size. It helped his 40 time, 4.99, but losing the ability to play that coveted position hurts his stock. Instead of 4th round range, he’s looking at 5th or 6th. I drop him from a late 3rd round prospect to a 5th.

Not your average nose tackle, Ross is only 315 pounds, but uses every bit of it to his advantage and uses his hands well. He can also play 4-3 defensive tackle or 3-4 defensive end and actually had a pick this season, though a statistic dip from 4.5 sacks last year to 1.5 this year hurt him because of his lack of elite size. 

14. Clifton Geathers (South Carolina) 54

An athletic freak with freakish long arms, just like his brother, Robert, a starting left end for the Cincinnati Bengals. He comes from a long line of successful NFL players and he may even be more athletic than his brother at 6-7 299, but he was very inconsistent and laksidazecal in college and he’s a project with character issues, but he has upside.

15. Corey Peters (Kentucky) 50

Spent a lot of time in a 3-4 at Kentucky as an end and that will get him highly valued in the late rounds by 3-4 teams, but to 4-3 teams he’s nothing special with 11 tackles for loss and 4 sacks last year and a fairly inconsistent push.

16. John Russell (Wake Forest) 49

17. Swanson Miller (Oklahoma State) 45

18. Brandon Deaderick (Alabama) 43

19. Jeffery Fitzgerald (Kansas State) 42

 

AFC North 2011

 

Baltimore Ravens

Joe Flacco has more wins in his first 3 seasons than any quarterback not named Dan Marino, but there is one thing he’s yet to do and that’s beat Ben Roethlisberger. Flacco has beaten the Steelers twice in those 3 years, but that was when Ben was out of the lineup. Roethlisberger has gotten the best of Flacco… (read more)

Prediction: 14-5 1st in AFC North, lose in AFC Championship

Cleveland Browns

3rd round pick Colt McCoy took over week 6 as the starter, as a rookie, after 5 weeks of Jake Delhomme and Seneca Wallace. He lost by a lot in his debut against the Steelers, but after that, he had 4 straight strong performances. The Browns beat the Saints and the Patriots in consecutive games, and then came… (read more)

Prediction: 11-6 2nd in AFC North, lose in AFC Wild Card

 

Pittsburgh Steelers

Of the last 10 Super Bowl runner ups, only 3 have made the playoffs the next season, combining to win 1 playoff game. The last time a team won the Super Bowl after losing it the year before was the early 70s. The Steelers have made the Super Bowl three times in the Big Ben era. The last two times they made the Super Bowl… (read more)

Prediction: 9-7 3rd in AFC North

Cincinnati Bengals

After winning the division in 2009, hopes were high in Cincinnati, especially with Terrell Owens coming in during the offseason. Unfortunately, Carson Palmer’s struggles, the ego of the T-Ocho show (it’s no coincidence Palmer had his best games when both were hurt), and injuries on defense left them at 4-12… (read more)

Prediction: 3-13 4th in AFC North

 

Anthony Brown

 

Bio: Anthony Brown is a lifelong Washington Redskins fan and 48-year season ticket holder. He has blogged about the Redskins since 2004 and now one of the talents behind Redskins Hog Heaven. Anthony reaches for a deeper understanding of Redskins performance, often challenging conventional wisdom of what’s going on with the team.

Anthony (Tony) Brown

Redskins Hog Haven

http://www.linkedin.com/in/tonybrown2007

http://twitter.com/SkinsHogHeaven 

August 26th Update

 

RB Jonathan Stewart DOWN

The Panthers offense is a mess right now. The Panthers are going to start Cam Newton week 1 as a rookie even though he has a mere 14 career college starts and missed most of the offseason thanks to the lockout. Newton’s rushing ability will be good for Stewart’s and Williams’ YPC. Vince Young had positive effects on Chris Johnson’s YPC. Michael Vick had a positive effect on LeSean McCoy’s YPC. Vince Young even had a positive effect on Travis Henry’s YPC in Young’s rookie year. However, Newton is still extremely raw as a passer which means there won’t be a lot of touchdowns scored in Carolina, which means Stewart and Williams won’t score much.

RB DeAngelo Williams DOWN

The Panthers offense is a mess right now. The Panthers are going to start Cam Newton week 1 as a rookie even though he has a mere 14 career college starts and missed most of the offseason thanks to the lockout. Newton’s rushing ability will be good for Stewart’s and Williams’ YPC. Vince Young had positive effects on Chris Johnson’s YPC. Michael Vick had a positive effect on LeSean McCoy’s YPC. Vince Young even had a positive effect on Travis Henry’s YPC in Young’s rookie year. However, Newton is still extremely raw as a passer which means there won’t be a lot of touchdowns scored in Carolina, which means Stewart and Williams won’t score much.

RB Peyton Hillis DOWN

Peyton Hills and Montario Hardesty each got a series with the first team in Cleveland’s 3rd preseason game. Hardesty seems to be back and able to play after injuries in his first season and earlier this preseason. The Browns coaching staff wants to keep Hillis fresh after he wore down late last season so Hardesty should see a large minority of the carries on 1st and 2nd downs, possibly even alternating every series with Hillis. The good news for Hillis is that Brandon Jackson, who was signed as a 3rd down back this offseason, is hurt with turf toe, a lingering injury. That means Peyton Hillis would be the 3rd down back. New Head Coach Pat Shurmur says he sees Hillis as a big part of this passing offense next season. Hillis will also remain the goal line back, for obvious reasons.

RB Montario Hardesty UP

Hardesty appears healthy and should see his fair share of carries on 1st and 2nd downs in Cleveland. He doesn’t catch a lot of passes and won’t stay in on 3rd down and he won’t get the goal line carries, but he should get a significant enough amount of yards to be worth a spot on your fantasy team, especially since he’s a Peyton Hillis injury away from being the lead back.

 

RB Tim Hightower UP

Roy Helu didn’t see a single first half carry for the Redskins in their 3rd preseason game. Mike Shanahan is obviously not impressed with the rookie 4th round pick. Ryan Torain could still steal some carries from Hightower once he’s healthy, but Mike Shanahan seems to consider Tim Hightower a lead back. He’s done this thing before with random running backs with a lot of success. He won’t score a lot in Washington’s miserable offense, but he’s running well and should get a lot of all purpose yards and give you plenty of catches in PPR.

QB Michael Vick DOWN

The Eagles offense looks out of sync right now. I don’t know if it’s Maclin being out or defensive coordinators having a whole offseason to figure out how to stop Vick, but this is not good for Vick’s fantasy value. Maclin should be back week 1, but he won’t be 100%. Normally I don’t like to overreact to the preseason, but Vick is being drafted as high as the top 5 as a quarterback. This has to be worrisome.

WR DeSean Jackson DOWN

The Eagles offense looks out of sync right now. I don’t know if it’s Maclin being out or defensive coordinators having a whole offseason to figure out how to stop Vick, but this is not good for Jackson’s fantasy value. Maclin should be back week 1, but he won’t be 100%. 

RB Ray Rice UP

Ray Rice got all of the goal line looks in Baltimore first preseason game. It seems that Ricky Williams will be nothing but a backup. The Ravens have rushed for 33 touchdowns in the last 2 seasons. If they rush for 16 or 17 this year, it’s very conceivable that Rice could get 12, plus an addition 2 through the air since he’s such a great pass catcher.

 

Bears Week 6 Analysis

 

By JP Hochbaum

Now that I have time to digest entirely what happened and I am no longer slightly inebriated I would like to revisit what went wrong in the Bears game.

Cutler- He needs to get better at blitz recognition if he is to succeed in Martz’s offense. The Seahawks game planned to blitz a cornerback/safety whenever the Bears were in sets where three receivers were lined up one side and thus it was hidden from the tackle on that side to pick up. This is where either a running back should pick up the block or Cutler recognizes the blitz and quickly gets rid of the ball. I also think he is doing a great job at not throwing interceptions, but I think he is now overcompensating his fear of throwing a pick and holding the ball too long. If Cutler could get his act together it really doesn’t matter how bad the o-line is, this offense could be great.

Martz- He needs to gameplan better and run the damn ball. The balance last game was 80% pass and 20% run. No team, unless you’re the Patriots or Colts, could get away with this. The seven step drop that caused a safety was incredibly stupid and the adjustments he showed against the Cowboys have seem to have disappeared.

The O-line- they actually performed decently because we didn’t see DE’s and DT’s beating us as bad as before. The pressure came on the outside from the secondary and we can’t really fault their run blocking when they only get 12 attempts a game.

Wide receivers- Since on a tv I can’t see how they are running routes I can’t really say they had a good or bad game. I could only assume they aren’t being very helpful and while I like Knox he seems to miss on some big opportunities and it killed me watching several catches for first downs fall short when the receivers ran backwards.

The defense- It seems Peppers met his kryptonite in rookie LT Okung. Tillman made Mike Williams look like he was an all-pro receiver. Urlacher didn’t do much without his Robin. They didn’t play horrible altogether but the big names were glaringly absent and no turnovers is telling of this.

The special teams- Well I believe Desmond Clark could get even less time after being called for a hold on Mannings’s potential game winning kick return. Hester is back and now has a a chance to break a record with the next line drive punt that heads his way.

All in all this is a team that has the talent to be the front runner of a very weak NFC. But as with almost any other team it comes down to how they fix their problems. If Martz and Jay can overcome a weak and young o-line it can be done. 

http://www.dabearsandbulls.com/ 

Go back to Bears Fan Spot 

 

Bills Moves 2011

() FA Rank 

QB Brian Brohm

TE David Martin

TE Jonathan Stupar

TE Scott Chandler

3-4 DE Marcus Stroud- signed with Patriots 2 years

3-4 DE John McCargo

MLB Paul Posluszny (#24)

Posluszky had 155 tackles last year, 2nd most in the league, and has 375 tackles in 3 years as a starter. He also has experience in a 3-4 and a 4-3.

MLB Keith Ellison

MLB Akin Ayodele

CB Drayton Florence

CB Ashton Youboty

S Donte Whitner

S George Wilson- resigned 3 years

S Jon Corto- resigned 

Offseason moves:

Resigned Jon Corto

Resigned Donte Whitner

Cut Marcus Stroud

Draft 

 

Brian Hartline

 

By Paul Smythe 

There has been talk this offseason about who will be the receiver who starts opposite of Brandon Marshall.

While I am not 100% positive who will be the other starter, I am 90% positive that Brian Hartline will be the starter. Some people may think that I am speaking too early, but I’m not sure about that.

Hartline has already emerged in training camp, and has shown flashes of greatness in less than a week. In a recent training camp he had a (to quote Ben Volin of The Palm Beach Post) “sick” catch that we will hopefully see more of during the season.

One of the reasons I am so confident in Hartline starting is that Head Coach Tony Sparano said that Hartline is currently the number 2 receiver, but that both Greg Camarillo and Davone Bess will have roles.

It may seem to early to crown Hartline as an official starter, but I don’t see him not being one. He was the best scoring wide receiver last year and he didn’t have near as many receptions as Bess or Camarillo.

Don’t get me wrong I love Davone Bess and Greg Camarillo. Greg Camarillo is actually my favorite offensive player on the Miami Dolphins, but I would still rather have a threat like Hartline in the game as the starter.

Just a recommendation for all you fantasy football owners out there: pick up Brain Hartline in the late rounds of the draft. He is a sleeper that not many people know about. He will be a nice surprise this year.

http://www.dolphinshout.com

Buccaneers Moves 2011

QB Rudy Carpenter (exclusive rights)

RB Cadillac Williams

RB Kareem Huggins (exclusive rights)

WR Michael Spurlock

WR Maurice Stovall

TE John Gilmore

OT James Lee (exclusive rights)

OT Jeremy Trueblood

OT Demar Dotson (exclusive rights)

G Davin Joseph

DE Stylez G. White

DE Tim Crowder

DE Michael Bennett

OLB Quincy Black

OLB Adam Heyward

OLB Jon Alston

MLB Barrett Ruud

MLB Niko Koutouvides

CB Ronde Barber- resigned 1 year

CB Elbert Mack

S Corey Lynch

K Connor Barth 

Offseason moves:

Resigned Ronde Barber

Cut Jon Alston

Draft

Chandler Jones Scout

 

Defensive End/Rush Linebacker

Syracuse

6-5 266

Draft board overall prospect rank: #49

Draft board defensive end rank: #4

Overall rating: 76 (2nd round pick)

40 time: 4.85

Games watched: Syracuse/Connecticut, Syracuse/Pittsburgh

Positives

·         Great natural athleticism

·         Good size (6-5 266)

·         Great hands

·         Long arms (35 inches)

·         Has the ability to add another 15-20 pounds

·         Moves well for his size

·         Solid production in 7 games in 2011 (30 tackles, 7.5 for loss, 4.5 sacks)

·         Physical

·         Plays with good leverage

·         Good strength to anchor

·         Good burst off the line

·         Solid against the run

·         Good motor

·         Strong work ethic

·         All the intangibles

·         3 year starter

·         Has a strong bloodline (his brother Arthur plays for the Ravens and his other brother Jon is a champion MMA fighter)

·         Was on my first round watch list for 2013 before he declared early

·         Great upside

Negatives

·         Not very productive as a pass rusher (10.5 sacks in 3 years)

·         Injury history

·         Probably declared a year early

·         Disappointing 40 time (4.85)

·         Not a quick twitch athlete

·         Only average speed off the edge

·         Concerned about his speed and quickness to play rush linebacker

·         Inexperienced in coverage

·         Undeveloped as a pass rusher

·         Not a wide repertoire of pass rushing moves

·         Weight room strength (22 reps) doesn’t match up to his on the field strength

NFL Comparison: Will Smith

Chandler Jones is one of the players I had on my first round watch list for 2013 who surprisingly declared a year early (Brock Osweiler, Lamar Miller, Rueben Randle, Stephen Hill, Tommy Streeter, Josh Robinson, etc.). Like most of those players, I have a day 2 grade on Chandler Jones, a 2nd round grade. Stephen Hill is the one exception there because of his amazing Combine.

Jones is a 3 year starter, but managed just 10.5 sacks in those 3 years, 2 as a freshman, 4 as a sophomore, 4.5 as a junior. It’s worth noting that he only played 7 games as a junior due to injuries and could have had a solid sack total had he stayed healthy, but that injury will be a concern for teams going forward. He’s a great athlete who can develop as a pass rusher, but he’s not an elite pass rusher yet.

He’s got long arms and uses his hands well. He gets good burst off the line as well, but he’s not a quick twitch athlete who is going to burn guys off the edge. He also doesn’t have a very mature pass rushing repertoire. He’s solid against the run, but the pass rush isn’t there yet, but, again, he can develop it. He’s got great natural athletic abilities, a strong work ethic, and good bloodlines with his brother Arthur playing for the Ravens and his brother Jon being a UFC Fighter (Jon Bones Jones).

My other concern with him is whether or not he’ll fit a 3-4. He has little to no experience in coverage and he doesn’t seem comfortable in back pedal. He’s also not overly fast off the edge, which is a must for rushing out of a 3-4 scheme as a rush linebacker because they typically start out rushing out of a 2 point stance in space. His 40 time (4.85) was very concerning as well.

He could still be drafted by a 3-4 team, like the Jets at 16, who are known to love him, or the Chargers at 18, but that wouldn’t be his best fit. He reminds me a lot of Will Smith of the New Orleans Saints, a 4-3 end who came into the league at 265, but added 15 pounds to his frame, which Jones can do comfortably. Given that, I think he’s best as a 4-3 end like Smith, who has been solid, but not elite as a pass rusher after going in the first round, with 61.5 sacks in 8 years after going in the first in 2004.

Other options for Jones include Chicago at 19, who is known to be interested, Tennessee at 20, Detroit at 23, New England at 27 or 31, and some 3-4 teams like Green Bay (28), Houston (26), and Baltimore (29). I think it’s pretty unlikely that he’ll fall out of the first round as someone will fall in love with him and his upside, but I have a 2nd round grade on him because his lack of pass rushing ability and production makes him a pretty boom or bust prospect.