The Daily Briefing Friday, May 5, 2023

THE DAILY BRIEFING

On March 30, the NFL pounded its chest on how many non-white males were getting big-time jobs.

The NFL took another step at the owners meetings to increase diversity throughout the league while continuing to face criticism and a lawsuit for lack of representation among head coaches.

 

Each team is now required to have a person in charge of diversity, equity and inclusion. Currently, 15 clubs have a DEI head and two others have someone leading that department and another one.

 

“They actually have to have specific roles and deliverables that are in their job description so that is a big thing,” NFL executive Jonathan Beane said in an interview with The Associated Press. “The reason why that’s so important is we have to have a single point of accountability at the clubs where they are focused on driving it throughout their organization, in football operations and coaching, in business operations, engaging with ownership to make sure that this is a priority throughout the whole ecosystem of a club.”

 

The league has reached milestone points in diverse hirings in the front office, but critics point to the sidelines where there are only three Black head coaches in a sport that had 56.4% Black players in 2022.

 

The NFL now has seven minority team presidents, including five who are Black and three women, and nine general managers, including eight Black men.

 

But there are six minority head coaches overall. Mike Tomlin (Pittsburgh Steelers), Todd Bowles (Tampa Bay Buccaneers) and DeMeco Ryans (Houston Texans) give the league three Black head coaches entering a season for the fifth year in a row.

 

“While increased diversity in executive roles could lead to increased diversity on the sidelines, progress on this front has remained stagnant for years,” said Devan Rawlings, the author of Revelio Labs’ NFL report. “The NFL has a significant disparity between the diversity of its players and that of its coaching staff — the largest among men’s major leagues — and this has not changed despite a large pool of diverse former players that could meet a demand for coaching talent.”

 

Brian Flores, the former Miami Dolphins head coach, sued the league and three teams last year, saying the NFL was “rife with racism,” particularly in its hiring and promotion of Black coaches. Flores was an assistant with the Pittsburgh Steelers last season and is the new defensive coordinator for the Minnesota Vikings.

 

“I will acknowledge our representation of diverse head coaches, in particular Black head coaches, is certainly below our expectation and is not where anyone wants it to be or knows it needs to be,” said Beane, the senior vice president, chief diversity and inclusion officer for the NFL.

 

“We have way too much talent out there to have the representation among the head coaches that we have. However, I think it’s really, really important to look at other areas that are CEO-type positions, that are critical positions to the success or failure.”

 

The number of minority presidents and GMs are the most in NFL history. The league didn’t even have its first Black president until the Washington Commanders hired Jason Wright in August 2020. Kevin Warren (Chicago Bears), Sashi Brown (Baltimore Ravens), Sandra Douglass Morgan (Las Vegas Raiders) and Damani Leech (Denver Broncos) have joined him in the past two years.

 

Just four years ago, Miami’s Chris Grier was the only Black GM in the NFL. Kwesi Adolfo-Mensah (Minnesota Vikings), Ryan Poles (Chicago Bears), Andrew Berry (Cleveland Browns), Martin Mayhew (Washington Commanders), Brad Holmes (Detroit Lions), Terry Fontenot (Atlanta Falcons) and Ran Carthon (Tennessee Titans) have joined him.

 

“And we know we still can do better,” Beane said. “Those are roles that are extremely vital. There is no role that is less important than the other. Head coach is vital, but GM is just as important. President is just as important. They all drive to the success of the organization and you need all three of those thriving in order to be successful. And so when we look at whether we’re making progress, we have to look at all of the roles in an organization, especially in senior roles. So it’s not just head coach. All of these other roles are vital and determine the success and failure of a club.”

 

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell agrees there’s room for improvement.

 

“We still feel like there’s better work and more work ahead of us,” Goodell said last month. “There’s progress, and we’re pleased to see progress, but it’s never enough. We always look to sort of say, ‘How can we do better?’”

But two Democrat state attorneys general think crimes are being committed.

The attorneys general of New York and California announced Thursday that they are investigating allegations of workplace discrimination at the NFL, citing lawsuits filed by employees that describe gender, racial and age bias, sexual harassment and a hostile work environment.

 

Attorneys General Letitia James, of New York, and Rob Bonta, of California, said they have issued subpoenas to NFL executives as part of an examination into the workplace culture at the the league’s corporate offices in both states.

 

The officials, both Democrats, said they are exercising their legal authority to seek information from the NFL regarding allegations of gender pay disparities, harassment, and gender and racial discrimination.

 

The investigation focuses on the league’s corporate offices, not specific teams or players.

 

“No person should ever have to endure harassment, discrimination, or objectification in the workplace,” James said in a statement. Bonta said he and James have “serious concerns about the NFL’s role in creating an extremely hostile and detrimental work environment.”

 

The league said it would cooperate with the investigation but called the allegations “entirely inconsistent with the NFL’s values and practices.”

 

“The NFL offices are places where employees of all genders, races and backgrounds thrive. We do not tolerate discrimination in any form,” league officials said in a statement.

 

James and Bonta cited a 2022 New York Times story that detailed allegations of gender discrimination by more than 30 female former NFL employees.

 

The women described a sexist culture at the NFL that they said persisted despite promises of reform that commissioner Roger Goodell made after the 2014 release of a video that showed Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice punching his fiancee.

 

One former NFL executive, Theresa Locklear, who held the position of director of business intelligence and optimization, told the Times that after the Rice video became public, managers were told to speak to their staffs about the video and the league’s response to it.

 

Locklear said that when she met with her team, a male employee, Aaron Jones, argued that Rice’s fiancée was partly at fault because she had egged Rice on, and other men on the call seemed to agree.

 

Jones told the Times that he had never spoken to Locklear about Rice and would never have argued that a woman was to blame for her assault.

 

The attorneys general also cited a lawsuit filed this year in Los Angeles Superior Court by Jennifer Love, a former director for NFL Enterprises who attributed her 2022 layoff to retaliation for her complaints of “pervasive sexism” and a “boys’ club” mentality.

 

NFL spokesperson Alex Riethmiller said the league had no comment on Love’s lawsuit.

 

The wide-ranging investigation by New York and California officials into employment practices at the NFL appears to be unprecedented, although complaints of race and sex discrimination have dogged the league and individual teams.

NFC EAST
 

NEW YORK GIANTS

DT DEXTER LAWRENCE has been paid per Adam Schefter of ESPN.com:

New York Giants All-Pro defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence reached agreement Thursday on a four-year, $90 million extension, including $60 million guaranteed, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

 

The deal makes Lawrence the third highest-paid defensive tackle in the NFL.

 

It comes after Lawrence had elected to stay away from the start of the voluntary portion of the Giants’ offseason program because of a contract disagreement, a source told ESPN in April. He had remained in contact with the team and coach Brian Daboll as he dealt with his contract situation.

 

Lawrence, 25, was on the fifth-year option of his rookie contract. He’s coming off a breakout season in which he recorded a career-best 7.5 sacks.

 

Lawrence was the 17th overall pick in the 2019 draft. The Clemson product has played in 64 games over his first four seasons, missing only two games.

 

The 6-foot-4, 342-pound lineman has recorded 16.5 sacks, 116 tackles and four forced fumbles in his career.

NFC SOUTH
 

CAROLINA

Although QB BRYCE YOUNG may be Carolina’s Week 1 starter – nothing has been publicly promised.  Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk.com:

There’s been a presumption that Panthers quarterback Bryce Young will start right away. That presumption might not become the reality.

 

Earlier this week, Panthers G.M. Scott Fitterer explained the process for deciding when to put Young on the field.

 

“We’re going to rely on our coaches — Jim Caldwell, Frank Reich, Thomas Brown — to decide when it’s right,” Fitterer said. “We don’t have a timeline. We’re not saying, ‘Hey, this guy’s gonna start the first game or we’re not going to play him at all this year.’ When the time is right or we felt like he’s got enough of a mastery of the offense where he can go out and operate this and be successful, that’s when he’ll be out there.

 

“We went out and signed Andy Dalton for a reason. He played as a rookie. He’s got a lot of experience. He understands his role and he can play good football. If Andy’s the guy to start the season, and he’s the starter right now heading into the season, then he’ll be the guy. When Bryce is ready or Matt Corral is ready whoever it may be, that’ll be the time they go in. We say it’s open competition, but Frank did say, ‘Hey, Andy’s he’s our guy right now. He’ll walk into the season as the starter and then as you know, the young guys compete underneath him, then they’ll go in when they’re ready.”

 

Dalton has been there and done that, two years ago in Chicago. He went from QB1 to QB2 once Justin Field was ready to go.

 

The challenge for the Panthers becomes knowing exactly when the right time has arrived to make Young the quarterback. If it happens too early, it can impact his long-term development. It can contribute to a potential boom becoming a bust.

 

That’s why plenty of busts aren’t simply the fault of the player. The team must know how to develop the player and when to insert the player into the lineup. For many players who don’t pan out, particularly at the quarterback position, the reality is that their career was mismanaged by the teams that picked them.

 

TAMPA BAY

Linebackers coach Larry Foote downplays LB DEVIN WHITE’s discord.  Kevin Patra of NFL.com:

Tampa Bay Buccaneers linebacker Devin White’s trade request was never going to be honored by the club. White wants a long-term contract as he enters the final year of his rookie contract, but assistant coach Larry Foote, a former 13-year veteran, downplayed the contract squabble.

 

“Well, he’s not going to be the first (making such a demand), and he’s not going to be the last. We know that,” Foote said on Wednesday. “Like I told him, he gets paid $11 million this year — those are champagne problems.”

 

Foote noted that he’d like White to be at the voluntary workouts, but based on the depth of the linebacker’s experience, it’s not the end of the world for him to miss this portion of the offseason. Foote also noted that the standoff concerns contract details, not on-field issues with the staff or scheme.

 

“It’s money,” Foote said. “You’re looking out at the guaranteed money, and he wants his money now. He has to understand the organization is preparing for next year, so we have to meet somewhere in the middle.

 

“I don’t know how it’s going to play out. They picked up his fifth-year option. A lot of players, they don’t get that option. But it’s money, and I understand that. Like I said, he’s not the first and he’s not going to be the last. It’s part of the game.”

 

White is set to make $11.706 million on the fifth-year option. From the Bucs’ perspective, that’s the ninth-highest cash figure for an off-ball linebacker in 2023. But for White, it lacks long-term security. The LB market wasn’t kind this offseason, with only Tremaine Edmunds and Bobby Okereke signing for $10-plus million per year in free agency.

 

White earned a Pro Bowl nod in 2021 but has been on a roller coaster ride after being the No. 5 overall pick in 2019, struggling mightily at times last season. But head coach Todd Bowles stuck with the athletic tackler through it all.

 

Despite the 25-year-old having starting 62 games over his career, Foote identified areas where White could improve to earn that next long-term contract.

 

“Everything. Just get better,” Foote said. “Pre-snap stuff. Zone coverage. Even blitzing better. Attacking the run. In the offseason, you want to look at any plays, explosive plays, that you gave up and we want to minimize that. Just little things, new ideas that we’re putting in.

 

“Every year you have to be better than the next year. This league demands it. So far, during (White’s) short career, he’s been evolving.”

 

Perhaps a big season will lead to a significant long-term contract for White. Then the LB can pop champagne bottles.

NFC WEST
 

SAN FRANCISCO

The DB’s barber just brought this up a few minutes ago as we talked about the Eagles “NFC supremacy.”  We’re not as confident as WR DEEBO SAMUEL is of the 49ers superiority, but we agree that we just don’t know who would have won the NFC Championship Game if it was a fair fight. Michael David Smith of ProFootballTalk.com:

The Eagles beat the 49ers 31-7 in the NFC Championship Game, but San Francisco wide receiver Deebo Samuel says the better team didn’t win that day.

 

Samuel says that there is “No question” the 49ers were the better team, and that San Francisco would have won if not for losing quarterback Brock Purdy to an elbow injury.

 

“We lost because we played with 10 people,” Samuel told Complex.com.

 

Samuel said the Eagles are his “most hated team” and that he’s sick of hearing people say the Eagles were better than the 49ers last year or will be better than them this year.

 

“All the trash talk coming from the Eagles fan base and the players, you just get tired of that,” Samuel said.

 

The Eagles are the current favorites to win the NFC, with the 49ers right behind them. The two teams will meet in the regular season, and an NFC Championship Game rematch could be coming as well. Samuel likes the 49ers’ chances, if they’re healthy.

 

SEATTLE

Count rival GM John Lynch impressed by what the Seahawks did last week.  Josh Alper of ProFootballTalk.com:

The Seahawks picked several starters in the 2022 draft and those players helped the team advance to the playoffs despite low expectations coming into the season.

 

That postseason trip ended with a road loss to the 49ers and 49ers General Manager John Lynch thinks that there could be another matchup like that coming this year. The Seahawks had four picks in the first two rounds of this year’s draft and Lynch said on KNBR that his counterpart John Schneider “as good at this job as anybody in our league” while complimenting the work that Seattle did last week.

 

“We feel the Seahawks coming,” Lynch said, via 49ersWebzone.com. “They’re really good. They had a really good draft last year. I think they’ve repeated it this year. But the most important thing is that we continue to focus upon ourselves, and I think we continue to make our roster better. I think this draft class will only add to that. And we’re excited about our football team.”

 

The 49ers also won both regular season games against the Seahawks on their way to the NFC West title last year and the results of this year’s matchups between the teams should go a long way toward determining if they can hold onto the crown.

AFC NORTH
 

BALTIMORE

Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk.com has the numbers on the deal signed by QB LAMAR JACKSON:

It was signed and sealed on Thursday. The details have now been delivered.

 

Here are the full details of the new five-year contract signed by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, per a source with knowledge of the terms.

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1. Signing bonus: $72.5 million.

 

2. 2023 base salary: $7.5 million, fully guaranteed.

 

3. 2024 option bonus: $17.5 million, fully guaranteed.

 

4. 2024 offseason roster bonus: $750,000, fully guaranteed.

 

5. 2024 base salary: $14.25 million, fully guaranteed.

 

6. 2025 option bonus: $22.5 million, fully guaranteed at signing.

 

7. 2025 offseason roster bonus: $750,000, guaranteed for injury at signing and fully guaranteed in March 2024.

 

8. 2025 base salary: $20.25 million, guaranteed for injury at signing and fully guaranteed in March 2024.

 

9. 2026 offseason roster bonus: $750,000.

 

10. 2026 base salary: $51.25 million, $29 million of which is guaranteed for injury at signing and fully guaranteed in March 2025.

 

11. 2027 offseason roster bonus: $750,000.

 

12. 2027 base salary: $51.25 million.

 

The deal also includes a no-trade clause, and a no-tag clause. After 2027, he becomes an unrestricted free agent.

 

The contract contains $135 million fully guaranteed at signing. After one season, the full guarantee moves to $156 million. After two years, it becomes $185 million.

 

It’s a three-year, $156 million deal, with a lingering guarantee of $29 million for the fourth year. The $29 million would be subject to offset.

 

The cash flow is $80 million in year one, $112.5 million through year two, $156 million through year three, $208 million through year four, and $260 million through year five.

 

As G.M. Eric DeCosta explained on Wednesday’s #PFTPM, it’s basically the 2022 offer made by the team, with enhancements. And the enhancements get him the highest three-year cash flow of any player in league history — $93 million more than Patrick Mahomes received.

Jackson is excited to have an upgraded receiver room and sets an ambitious target.  Kevin Patra of NFL.com:

Baltimore Ravens star quarterback Lamar Jackson agreed to a five-year, $260 million contract last Thursday, making him the highest-paid player in NFL history.

 

More than two years in the making, negotiations between Jackson, who represents himself, and Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta took a bumpy course. Jackson made his March trade request public, and Baltimore used the non-exclusive franchise tag on the quarterback.

 

In the end, it all ended up as dust in the rearview mirror.

 

“They say the best things come to those who wait. We waited for a while, and here we are,” DeCosta said at Thursday’s press conference announcing the signing.

 

The non-exclusive mechanism allowed Jackson to negotiate with other clubs. The 2019 NFL MVP said Thursday that other teams called him, but he never really harbored an interest in leaving Baltimore.

 

“To be honest with you, I really didn’t care for other teams, really,” Jackson said. “I just really wanted to get something done here. I wanted to be here. I was like, man, OK, other teams cool, but I want to be a Raven. … I really wanted to get this done before anything, before my time up and branch off somewhere else. I really want to finish my career here and win a Super Bowl here.”

 

Jackson declined to get into specifics of what changed during the months of negotiating and tweaks made to previous offers. He added that Jalen Hurts’ contract, announced 10 days prior to his own agreement, didn’t affect his deal. NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported Jackson’s deal includes a no trade clause, a no franchise tag clause and a $72.5 million signing bonus with $185 million in total guarantees upon signing. The Ravens QB will make an average of $52 million per year.

 

“Today, we’re gonna keep it about the future,” he said when asked about the trade request and perception of negotiations. “I’m not really worried about what happened in the past. We’re gonna keep it about these next five years and keep it about what’s going on today.”

 

Jackson the player always wanted to re-sign in Baltimore, but Jackson the businessman patiently waited for the right deal before signing.

 

“It’s a business. It’s a business at the end of the day,” he noted. “If you’re gonna represent yourself, you’ve gotta have a strong mind. I wouldn’t say you get out there and out your feelings in it because it’s not about feelings. … It’s a grown-man thing at the end of the day. So you’ve gotta be a grown man if you’re gonna handle business.”

 

The 26-year-old said the consistent statements from DeCosta and head coach John Harbaugh throughout the process that he was their quarterback of the now and future underscored his desire to remain a Raven.

 

“It means a lot just to have guys, your head coach, and GM, wanting you to be here and believing in you, believing you can help your team achieve the almighty, ultimate goal within football and the NFL football at that,” Jackson said. “I wouldn’t want to go no other place.”

 

With a new deal signed, Jackson can now focus on the 2023 season. He said he felt fully recovered from the PCL injury that knocked him out of the final six games of the Ravens’ 2022 campaign, including a playoff loss to the Bengals.

 

This offseason, Baltimore revamped the offense, hiring coordinator Todd Monken, signing star receiver Odell Beckham Jr. and drafting Zay Flowers in the first round, among other moves.

 

From what he’s seen of the new playbook and the additions, Jackson is excited to get on the gridiron.

 

“I’m very eager, to be honest with you,” he said. “I think I told someone, I want to throw for 6,000 yards with the weapons we have. … I’m not an individual award type of guy or a stat watcher. I just want to do that because no one has ever done that, and I feel like we have the weapons to do it. We’ve got explosive guys. Like coach said, the new additions Zay, OBJ, and we got (Rashod) Bateman gonna be 100 percent healthy, too. … Can’t forget about Mark (Andrews), can’t forget about my boy Mark, and (Isaiah) Likely. So, can’t wait to get rolling.”

Kind of a double standard – management has to say nothing but it wants Jackson and believes in him, but it’s perfectly fine for Jackson to demand a trade.

 

CINCINNATI

Paul Dehner, Jr. of The Athletic on how the Bengals pulled off a draft that has been widely praised.

As the Bengals’ selection with the 28th pick drew nearer last Thursday night, the frequency of phone calls in the draft room inside Paycor Stadium picked up.

 

Interest surged from teams at the top of the second round to move up and three teams switched four spots in front of Cincinnati.

 

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“We were fielding a ton of trade calls,” Bengals director of college scouting Mike Potts said. “We had upwards of five offers to move back.”

 

Trade offers for picks at this point aren’t rare. Especially with quarterback Will Levis dropping and multiple top edge rushers sliding down the board. None more notable to the Bengals than Myles Murphy, of Clemson, who lived on the upper half of their top-28 draft board.

 

The calls were welcome. Options for a team always looking to add extra picks, specifically over three days with only their original seven picks and a voluminous mid-round bank of players at target positions.

 

“I was looking for an opportunity to add a pick or two,” director of player personnel Duke Tobin said.

 

Extra picks come coated in gold for an organization that moved back in the second round four of five years at one point for more draft capital.

 

The first inflection point of the weekend arrived when the Jaguars took offensive tackle Anton Harrison at 27 and Cincinnati went on the clock. The Bengals made their first statement.

 

Murphy’s presence meant the offers were stoutly rejected.

 

“Yeah, never really crossed our minds when he fell down to us,” Tobin said.

 

The conviction spoke volumes. It also launched three days of reemphasizing an organizational mission statement.

 

Find the talent, then bet on players most likely to extract it. Lean into chemistry. Double down on filling the room with the right people.

 

1-28                 Myles Murphy                  Edge                Clemson

2-60                DJ Turner                          CB                  Michigan

3-95               Jordan Battle                      S                   Alabama

4-131             Charlie Jones                    WR               Purdue

5-163              Chase Brown                  RB                   Illinois

6-206              Andre Iosivas                 WR                   Princeton

6-217              Brad Robbins                 P                       Michigan

7-246               DJ Ivey                         CB                     Miami

 

Just because a winning culture now exists doesn’t mean the time has arrived to sprinkle in character risks.

 

“Why would we do that?” Potts said. “That formula we have right now has been successful. You try to veer off the path and get too cute is where you end up screwing up. As long as I’ve got influence in it, we are not going to stray away from what has been successful. Trusting our evaluations, trusting our board and trusting our sources on the character of guys.”

 

This trust delivered a draft defined by details that symbolized what the Bengals want to be about.

 

About the whiteboard in Charlie Jones’ living room.

 

About cutting off a tape breakdown with Jordan Battle after three plays.

 

About being approached in the hallways about Chase Brown.

 

About serendipitous walks across downtown Indianapolis with DJ Turner.

 

About a conversation with Mike Brown during Andre Iosivas’ visit.

 

These are the details uncovered by scouts with boots on the ground that solidified the Bengals weren’t just majoring in talent acquisition, but acing human resources. Details capable of injecting enough spice into a bubbling culture to propel the Bengals over the hump from contender to champion.

 

Details that often sucked debate out of the draft room.

 

“It happened that the best players were also good people,” Tobin said. “That makes the decisions easier.”

 

The Bengals utilize their top-30 visits with intent. Tight end Dalton Kincaid, edge Nolan Smith, cornerback Emmanuel Forbes and Murphy all were visitors to Paycor Stadium leading up to the draft. Many visits connect with missing medicals from non-combine participants or players with background issues the team wants to investigate. There are also players who come to town because they could end up at the center circle of conversations for a first-round pick. In this case, Kincaid, Murphy and Smith all went off within five picks of each other.

 

With Murphy, only 21, a notable trait — beyond those comprising his near-perfect 9.71 Relative Athletic Score — stood out.

 

“He was smart,” director of pro scouting Steven Radicevic said. “Really, really smart.”

 

To see it firsthand backed up endorsements already acquired. When Potts was a college free-agent quarterback for the Steelers once upon a time, he was there with Nick Eason. Eason later became the Bengals’ defensive line coach for two years before moving to the same position at Clemson, coaching Murphy the last two years. The type of relationship where a strong stamp of approval carries weight.

 

Personality verification matched a 6-5, 270-pound body type out of Bengals edge defender central casting and a relentless motor which is a signature trait of every member of Cincinnati’s current defensive line.

 

“It’s eye-popping when you see a guy his size running a play down, down the field,” Potts said, eliciting visions of 330-pound DJ Reader chasing Chiefs running back Jerick McKinnon 18 yards downfield on a screen last December.

 

Tasty mid-round trade bait was close, but the match with Murphy was too strong.

 

“Unless we were blown away by an offer, we were going to stick with a high-caliber guy like that,” Potts said. “If we felt like we weren’t dropping down a level of player, we probably would have moved back and taken the best possible offer we had there.”

 

The message came in only minutes after the Bengals selected Michigan cornerback DJ Turner in the second round at the 60th pick.

 

It was almost impossible to believe.

 

“I got a text from his agent, it was a picture of Myles and DJ when they were kids at a birthday party,” Radicevic said. “They were both friends at this party, standing next to each other. Little did they know they would be drafted in round one and two to the Bengals. It’s crazy how life works sometimes.”

 

The two grew up friends and eventually football stars outside of Atlanta and now that friendship circles back in Cincinnati. Nobody realized until after the fact. Although, those weren’t the two friends the Bengals thought they were reuniting with the pick.

 

Dax Hill was Turner’s Michigan defensive backfield teammate. Area scout Andrew Johnson thought both would be an option last year when Turner was first draft-eligible. He knew Turner was considering coming out and ready if he did. When Turner opted to return, Johnson took notice of the difference during two school visits and three games in the fall.

 

“He played a lot more confident this year than he did in 2021,” Johnson said of Turner, who ran a combine-best 4.26 40, but did a better job of utilizing it in his final season. “He’s going to be the fastest, quickest athlete on the field just about every game. He’s right up there with the Tyreek Hills of the world when it comes to speed and explosiveness.”

 

Potts took note of the edge Turner displayed during their interview at the combine and his willingness to throw his body around in games, despite being just 178 pounds.

 

On top of an endorsement from Steve Clinkscale, Michigan co-defensive coordinator, a friend dating back to Johnson’s time roaming the University of Kentucky, he received further validation of Turner’s Bengals personality fit by happenstance. Turner’s combine training recovery suite was at the Bengals’ hotel and leaving Lucas Oil Stadium for the 20-minute walk ended up another chance to see the real person.

 

“I bumped into DJ and did that walk together two or three times,” Johnson said. “That’s an important part of scouting is just to keep getting exposures to these guys. The more you can be around them when maybe they don’t have their guard up. At no point did I have any hesitation about his personality. He’s very professional, very smart. He was raised very well. He’s confident. He’s really, really bright.”

 

Potts debated crossing third-round pick Jordan Battle off their combine interview list. Working the Southeastern Conference for the Bengals for years, he’d heard every endorsement imaginable about this four-year starter for the Crimson Tide.

 

“We were like, ‘Are we wasting an interview with this guy?’” he said. “We know he has phenomenal character.”

 

He’s held in elite regard in Tuscaloosa on the level of No. 3 pick Will Anderson and former first-round pick Minkah Fitzpatrick in terms of football IQ, leadership and the complete intangible package.

 

Everyone turned out happy they didn’t cancel.

 

“One of the best interviews I’ve ever been a part of,” Radicevic said.

 

The headline moment was Potts starting with about 10 game clips designed to talk through situations and football knowledge.

 

“We had to cut the tape portion of the interview off after about three plays,” Potts said. “It was unbelievable the way he was talking through every minor detail of all 22 people that were on the field. It was like he had a cheat sheet or answer key to the plays that were going to be shown to him. We ended up just having casual conversation with him. I didn’t think it was possible to elevate him in our eyes in terms of the person we were getting, but he did that in that interview.”

 

Plotting personality with productivity and four years starting for Nick Saban, Battle became the top safety target for the Bengals, a second-round-level player and welcomed addition to a crowded position restocking after the losses of Jessie Bates and Vonn Bell.

 

“I don’t want to sell him as just a great person,” Potts said. “We wouldn’t take a guy just because he has great character. We had high grades on the guy as a player. He’s a starting-caliber safety in this league.”

 

Christian Sarkisian might have been the first NFL scout to track the progress of Charlie Jones. The Purdue receiver and Bengals’ fourth-round pick grew up about 20 minutes away from the hometown of the Bengals’ area scout and a local star he consistently kept tabs on.

 

When Jones transferred from the University of Buffalo to Iowa just to be a walk-on, it caught Sarkisian’s eye. Jones sat out a year, eventually earned a scholarship and worked his way up to 2021 Big 10 return specialist of the year. But the plodding Hawkeyes offense wasn’t doing anything for his receiver profile. He transferred to Purdue to link up with high school friend and Boilermakers quarterback Aidan O’Connell.

 

“The first thing he does when he gets there, he buys a big whiteboard for he and Aidan to put in the middle of their place,” Sarkisian said. “In their free time, they were having their own position meetings. That really showed up in the kid’s route running, his reliability, his consistency. You never see that kid be out of place coming out of a break.”

 

Potts and Sarkisian were both at Purdue’s season opener against Penn State when Jones went off for 153 yards on 12 receptions with a touchdown. Most notably, many of those targets came against Joey Porter Jr., the No. 32 pick to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

 

He ended up leading the FBS in receptions.

 

“He bet on himself twice,” Sarkisian said. “It’s still paying off for him.”

 

This drew Sarkisian to be joined by special teams coordinator Darrin Simmons and receivers coach Troy Walters in West Lafayette for pro day. A cold, blustery day on the Purdue campus pushed the receiver workout indoors. With the Bengals eyeing Jones as an answer in the return game in the AFC North, Simmons wasn’t about to settle for pristine conditions.

 

“Darrin brought the 40-50 scouts who were freezing cold outside and Charlie Jones, who was freezing cold, outside to see if he could return punts in the cold and wind,” Sarkisian said. “It was great.”

 

The 30 minutes of torturing the traveling scout battalion and testing Jones put an exclamation point on him as an answer the team has searched for as a backup receiver for two years.

 

“He’s quick in and out of cuts and he’s got excellent hands,” Tobin said. “He’s got vertical speed and an awareness for the game. It was good to get a couple receivers in the middle later rounds that could come on for us. We hadn’t done that in a while.”

 

When Sarkisian and Radicevic walked the hallways at Illinois during campus visits or games, they wouldn’t need to probe for evaluations on running back Chase Brown or his twin brother, Sydney, a star safety.

 

Those associated with the program couldn’t wait to inform them.

 

“The way they speak about him and his brother is unlike any other,” said Radicivec, who was a crosschecker behind Sarkisian at the school.

 

“When you hear the way people talk about him who are around him on a daily basis, it fires you up,” Sarkisian said. “Not only is he a great alpha, leader, hard worker, all that, he really, really cares about his teammates.”

 

Brown’s backstory might be the most remarkable of any prospects in the draft, having moved from Ontario, Canada, to Florida and lived with a host family amid a tumultuous childhood in a family ravaged by addiction and uncertainty.

 

“The early life adversity this kid has gone through has made him extremely family-oriented and loyal and very mature,” Sarkisian said. “That’s what you are getting. An all-around great human who works his tail off and runs aggressively and violently.”

 

His style meshed with Bret Bielema at Illinois to become the heartbeat of the program that kept feeding him the ball to the tune of 25 touches per game over the past two seasons.

 

The knocks on him came from how much the Illini featured Brown. Was the 23-year-old being used too much? The Bengals came away unconcerned with that argument because of clean medical testing and an athletic profile as impressive as any back in the class, including the fastest top speed by any back at the Senior Bowl and only behind Bijan Robinson in RAS (9.81).

 

“The lower-body strength, contact balance, athleticism tested off the charts and you can see it on the tape,” Radicevic said, admitting they were targeting him earlier than the fifth round.

 

A realistic thought entered the equation that when the Bengals took Jones, they were waving goodbye to Brown.

 

“We were holding our breath in a lot of rounds,” Potts said.

 

This would be one. Not wanting to give up any more selections and taking a calculated risk, they survived the wait.

 

“We were pleased when he was there looking at us,” Tobin said. “For me, it was an easy pick at that point.”

 

When Johnson checked in on 6 a.m. practice on Sept. 15 at Princeton University, he set out to see more of the two-sport athletic wonder, Iosivas, who set the FBS record for 60 meters in the heptathlon before leading the Ivy League in receiving.

 

Further digging found a detail that morphed him from a longshot to a project with a real path to the Bengals.

 

“It was impressive how he was able to juggle football and track,” Johnson said. “During spring ball he would be doing track during the day, so he wouldn’t be at football — he’s at track practice. But he would go to all the meetings and do the workouts with the strength coach on his own time. Then he would stay up in the summer working out with the football team.”

 

The pieces were coming together. Competitiveness and work ethic to attack both sports and oodles of intelligence to refine his receiver skills once he’s doing the sport full time for the first time.

 

It put a circle on his name when the staff went to the Senior Bowl and Iosivas more than held his own in one-on-ones against top competition.

 

“That really sparked our interest,” Tobin said.

 

Then an important truth came up later in the evening.

 

“The most interesting thing is when you talk to most of the DBs at the Senior Bowl, asking them who the best receiver you faced down there, they were all saying he was,” Radicevic said. “He had some good reps against Tyrique Stephenson, a corner from Miami who we thought very highly of.”

 

The Bengals opted to bring him in for a visit — the only team to do so — partially for more exposure to everyone in the organization as his name kept coming up. Notably, a certain prominent Dartmouth product.

 

“It was great to get him in front of ownership, especially Mike Brown, the Ivy League connection there,” Radicevic said. “I know they had a long conversation.”

 

These vignettes of a draft season, the chats in the hallway, the effort during a hot summer practice, the background from teammates, and proof of dedication to the game, all add up.

 

In this case, they added up to a draft where talent and character converged. Last year, too often a desired player — or group of them — was plucked off before them.

 

Not this year.

 

“There was never a time when one of the guys we wanted to select went one or two spots ahead of us,” Radicevic said. “We pretty much stuck to the board and we got the players we liked in each round.”

 

A board built on details led to finding people as much as players. A strategy with proof of concept around these parts. There would be no shifting from it now, the roster primed for a Super Bowl run as any time in franchise history.

 

“Sure, there’s guys you talk about you might be concerned about for this reason or that reason, and I never swear those guys off, but this draft was a little easier from that standpoint,” Tobin said. “The guys we wanted from a physical standpoint were also great kids.”

AFC EAST
 

BUFFALO

All systems are go for the new stadium in Orchard Park with a signed lease agreement that forbids the team from even thinking about moving to another location.

After years of working on a new stadium deal for the Buffalo Bills, the final step to fully moving forward with construction was taken Thursday with the 11-member Erie County Legislature unanimously approving the deal for a 30-year lease.

 

The new stadium is scheduled to open in 2026. Major construction on the project is scheduled to begin in June.

 

“We want to thank Governor [Kathy] Hochul, the County Executive and all of our public partners for bringing this process to a successful conclusion,” Bills executive vice president & COO Ron Raccuia said in a statement. “All of the legal agreements and public-private partnerships with the county and the state are signed. There are no more documents. All the focus is now on construction and the opening of the stadium, which will start immediately.”

 

The vote came exactly one month after the Bills, New York state and Erie County signed all the documents for the project. The legislature then had 30 days to review those documents, with the deal largely expected to pass.

 

“As much as everybody would like to think the Bills were never moving, there was always a risk being a small market and larger markets that were interested in the team,” Erie County executive Mark Poloncarz said after the signing of the documents. “So, because of the tremendous work of so many, including from the Pegulas’ team, I can guarantee you that this team is staying here for the rest of my life and everyone will be able to cheer on the Buffalo Bills for decades to come.”

 

The deadline for the final negotiations was pushed back multiple times with unforeseen events this past year, including co-owner Kim Pegula suffering cardiac arrest in June 2022 and multiple historic blizzards in Buffalo.

 

The original cost for the stadium was $1.4 billion, with the state and county responsible for a combined $850 million in funding for the project — the largest amount of public funds for an NFL stadium at the time. The Tennessee Titans have since surpassed that with more than $1.2 billion in public funding committed to a new domed stadium in Nashville.

 

The price tag of the new stadium in Buffalo has already gone up to $1.54 billion, but Bills owners Terry and Kim Pegula are responsible for covering any excess costs.

 

Included in the documentation for the new deal is a community benefits agreement that includes the team investing at least $3 million a year in the community, with that amount adjusted every year by the price index (subject to a maximum increase of 2.2% a year). That would raise over $100 million over the terms of the lease.

 

It also includes a nonrelocation agreement that has language against the team even considering moving and says that the Bills shall not “entertain any offer or proposal to relocate the Team to a location other than the Stadium.”

 

The Bills’ new home will be across the road from Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, New York, which is where the team’s practice facility is also located. The Bills are working with architectural firm Populous as well as with Legends, a consulting group working on stadium development.

 

In March 2022, the NFL owners unanimously approved the Bills’ proposal for a new stadium, and the Bills officially reached an agreement with the state and Erie County on the new $1.4 billion stadium.

 

The open-air stadium will be built on a 242-acre site, will cover approximately 1.35 million square feet and will feature 60,000-62,000 seats, with the team moving to a personal seat license model for all season tickets to assist in funding from the team side. The stadium will not have a dome, but it will include stacked seating and a canopy overhang to protect fans from the elements.

 

The canopy will cover 65% of the seats and help protect against wind and precipitation. It will work together with the perforated multidimensional exterior skin of the stadium that creates wind confusion to prevent swirling winds from getting to the field level.

 

Highmark Stadium opened in 1973 and is the fourth-oldest NFL stadium. The current stadium’s lease was scheduled to end in July, but now extends to 2028 with this agreement. The construction of the stadium was originally 100% publicly financed. New York state will own the new stadium.

 

MIAMI

Marcel Louis-Jacques of ESPN.com says the Dolphins went off script in making their draft picks.

If the Miami Dolphins proved anything during this year’s draft, it’s that they know how to learn from previous mistakes.

 

This four-man class might not make the same waves other teams will experience from a full slate of picks, but it served a specific purpose — addressing areas that nearly sank the Dolphins last season.

 

Drafting cornerback Cam Smith in the second round didn’t fill a glaring need, especially after they traded for Jalen Ramsey in March. But the Dolphins were a Xavien Howard injury away from an emergency at cornerback, with Byron Jones and Trill Williams both missing last season, and Nik Needham missing 11 games.

 

And in a conference with some of the best quarterbacks in the league, as general manager Chris Grier said, it’s never a bad time to add cornerback depth.

 

“In this league, and especially in the AFC, with a lot of talented quarterbacks and teams, we can never have enough corners — as we experienced last year with the rash of injuries that we dealt with,” Grier said. “So excited to add [Smith], he’s excited to come, so we’re looking forward to working with him.”

 

Miami’s defensive backs missed a combined 57 games to injuries last season. But even when this unit is fully healthy, there’s an opportunity for Smith to earn meaningful snaps this season.

 

Grier said Smith’s flexibility convinced them he would be a good fit under new defensive coordinator Vic Fangio, who is keen to deploy five defensive backs more often than not.

 

“The cool thing about the defensive backfield in general, I think Vic has hit this on the head a number of times, but five DBs on the field, it happens almost three-quarters of the time in the National Football League now,” Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said. “In Vic’s defense, in his system, if you understand it, there are a lot of different ways you can get on the field. There is some position versatility that if you go back to his history, there have been various people that have played in different spots.”

Former South Carolina defensive back Cam Smith should have a chance to make an impact, despite Miami’s strong personnel, because Vic Fangio’s defense often utilizes five DBs. Charles Brock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

 

The Dolphins made a pick in the third round that might not have made sense on the surface, taking Devon Achane at No. 84 overall, but McDaniel made it clear why the former Texas A&M running back, who ran a 4.32 40-yard dash, was en route to South Florida.

 

“Speed we generally like around here,” McDaniel said. “But I think it’s more of you feel like there’s a fit in terms of a guy fitting within your existing team. You’re always keeping in mind that you’re adding players to the team and really think that that group in particular, the running back room for us is very important.

 

“And he is fast. Chris and I share that — we do have affection for that trait.”

 

The Dolphins re-signed their entire running backs room but lacked a productive third back behind Raheem Mostert and Jeff Wilson Jr. Achane should find a role as a versatile offensive weapon after catching 65 passes in his three seasons with the Aggies.

 

Achane was the only player in college football to record a rushing, receiving and returning touchdown in each of the past two seasons.

 

“I’m a very unique player. I have a very unique skill set,” Achane said. “I can be at running back, I can line up at receiver and they also might want to use me on special teams. So I feel like me having all those good abilities, I feel like it’s hard for a defense to be able to cover us when we’ve already got threats that are already on the team.

 

NEW ENGLAND

TE MIKE GESICKI, unloved by the Dolphins, is excited to be a Patriot.

Life in professional football can yield some awfully winding roads. Just ask Mike Gesicki.

 

A decade after being recruited to Penn State by Bill O’Brien, Gesicki will finally get to play in his offense as a member of the New England Patriots.

 

“OB has a great system and I think it’s exciting to get in the meeting rooms and hear how things are run,” Gesicki said on Thursday afternoon. “The terminology is very basic right now‚ it’s exciting to kind of watch some tape of how it’s been run and things like that. I think it’s going to be exciting, but right now, it’s very, very basic.”

 

A three-star recruit from Southern Regional High School in Stafford Township, New Jersey, Gesicki was right in the middle of O’Brien’s radar when he was the head coach at Penn State from 2012-13.

 

“Unbelievable high school athlete,” O’Brien said. “Football, volleyball, basketball. Comes from a great family. I think it came down to us and Ohio State. And he was one of the few guys, at that time, that we were able to beat Ohio State on. So it was a big deal for us to be able to get him to come to Penn State.”

 

However, O’Brien left to become the head coach of the Houston Texans in 2014, so he never saw the fruits of his recruiting pay off at the college level. Gesicki grew into a stellar tight end for the Nittany Lions, and wound up as a Miami Dolphins second round pick (No. 42 overall) in the 2018 NFL Draft.

 

A decade after Gesicki was a recruit, they’ve both landed in New England and are enjoying the full-circle nature of things.

 

“It’s cool,” Gesicki said. “The relationship formed when he recruited me way back… Kind of picking back up where we left off, it’s awesome. OB’s awesome. Cool. Really excited to get to gel with him and get in this offense and get to work. He knew all the – basketball, volleyball – that kind of stuff with him recruiting me back in the day. It was cool.”

 

THIS AND THAT

 

BEST AVAILABLE FREE AGENTS

Gregg Rosenthal of NFL.com identifies 13 decent players, from the original list of 101, who have yet to sign for 2023:

 

 BEST AVAILABLE

 

Rank 26

Yannick Ngakoue

Edge · Age: 28

Sacks and QB hits sell, but Ngakoue’s inability to stop the run is probably why he’s likely headed to his sixth team in four years. This section of the Top 101 is where the 2023 crop begins to feel thinner than groups from previous years, because there aren’t as many plus starters available.

 

Rank 31

Shaquill Griffin

CB · Age: 28

There is no other position with a greater variance than cornerback, even among quality starters. Griffin has the combination of youth, experience (72 career starts) and a track record of being an asset that is worth betting on as a bounce-back candidate.

 

Rank 35

Jadeveon Clowney

Edge · Age: 30

Another year, another Top 101 free agents blurb for Clowney. He gets a little lower on the list each season; the ugly ending to his time in Cleveland doesn’t bode well for his value.

 

Rank 41

Dalton Risner

OG · Age: 28

Yes, he was that dude who pushed Broncos backup quarterback Brett Rypien on the sidelines on Christmas Day. He’s also started 62 games at an above-average level since entering the league. 

 

Rank 44

Isaiah Wynn

OT · Age: 27

It’s a bad sign that Wynn seemed to fall out of favor with the Patriots before landing on injured reserve, but he’s still a young player with plenty of high-level tape — though it came during his first three seasons.

 

Rank 46

Marcus Peters

CB · Age: 30

One of those cornerbacks who just knows how to play, Peters was effective in his first season back from ACL surgery. He still looks like a starter.

 

Rank 49

Leonard Floyd

Edge · Age: 30

Floyd may not have hit double-digit sacks last season, but he played well down the stretch after getting over a knee injury. The veteran is a quality run stopper who can upgrade plenty of starting jobs around the league.

 

Rank 52

Melvin Ingram

Edge · Age: 34

Every year, I rank Ingram high in this list. Then no NFL team seems to want him, and then he balls out for a while. Even if he goes off-script sometimes, the chaos is worth it.

 

Rank 58

Teddy Bridgewater

QB · Age: 30

Teddy Two Gloves had career highs in yards per attempt (8.6) and touchdown percentage (5.1%) on just 79 pass attempts for Miami, with both of his starts cut short by injury. There are more teams looking for quarterbacks than there are surefire starters in this market, so Bridgewater should have suitors.

 

Rank 66

Frank Clark

Edge · Age: 30

Clark played a lot for the Chiefs — perhaps too much. That helped him rack up more than 50 pressures in each of the last two years, but he’d be better used as a rotational pass rusher at this stage in his career.

 

Rank 69

Bryce Callahan

CB · Age: 31

Injuries threatened Callahan’s career before a resurgent 2022 season with the Chargers playing the slot.

 

Rank 70

Justin Houston

Edge · Age: 34

It’s just silly how Houston never gets old. He is like the edge version of Calais Campbell and isn’t that far from having a case to be in the Pro Football Hall of Fame someday. 

 

Rank 75

John Johnson

S · Age: 27

The last time Johnson was a free agent, he was ranked No. 35 on this list and received a huge contract (three years, $33.75 million) from the Browns. It didn’t pan out, but his former coaches in Los Angeles (either team!) should still want to work with a true center fielder.

 

2023 DRAFT

Adam Rittenberg of ESPN.com has canvassed a bunch of college coaches to get their impressions of where the NFL got it right and wrong in the draft.

After launching the draft reaction piece in 2021 and following up in 2022, I contacted more than 30 college coaches in recent days to gather their thoughts on the draft. I spoke mostly to head coaches and coordinators in the Power 5, but also some Group of 5 coaches, to break down who went where and why.

 

They came away with thoughts — on the first-round surprises, the quarterbacks, best fits for players/teams, the overall outputs for college programs and, of course, sleepers.

 

Most coaches spoke anonymously.

 

Here’s an evaluation of the 2023 NFL draft through the eyes of college coaches (Note: Coaches are listed according to their roles during the 2022 season).

 

Despite some pre-draft chatter, the top quarterbacks off the board went as expected: Alabama’s Bryce Young at No. 1 overall to Carolina, followed by Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud at No. 2 to Houston. Then, the drama began, as Florida’s Anthony Richardson went No. 4 to Indianapolis, despite starting only 13 games for the Gators and lacking the statistics of a typical top-five pick.

 

“He’s a great talent, and if they can get him to improve the accuracy and the decision-making, then he’ll turn out to be incredible,” said a defensive coordinator who faced Richardson last season.

 

Coaches thought that despite the high pick, Indianapolis made a lot of sense for Richardson, as new coach Shane Steichen developed Jalen Hurts into a Pro Bowler with the Philadelphia Eagles.

 

“I love the Colts taking him because of the scheme,” an SEC coordinator said. “They’ll let him get outside the pocket. He’s like a bigger version of Mike Vick.”

 

Another Power 5 defensive coordinator added: “It’s a college system. [Steichen is] trying to rinse and repeat what he did with Hurts.”

 

Kentucky’s Will Levis also had been pegged as an option for the Colts, and seemed likely to hear his name called soon after Richardson’s. But after attending the first night of the draft in Kansas City, he left without an NFL home, before the Tennessee Titans selected him with the second pick of the second round.

 

Levis had been widely projected in the first half of the first round, but his drop didn’t surprise coaches in the SEC and others who faced him.

 

“It’s just the second round, not like [Day 3],” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “He was crowned last year at this time to be the top pick, without a lot of research. He’s talented, but not first-pick talented.”

 

An SEC offensive coordinator thought Levis going ahead of Tennessee’s Hendon Hooker (third round, No. 68 overall) was “shocking.”

 

Levis threw for 43 touchdowns in two seasons at Kentucky but also had 23 interceptions. “Your No. 1 job as a quarterback is to take care of the football,” the coach said.

 

An SEC defensive coordinator noted that Levis was much better in 2021, when he played behind a strong offensive line and had an elite playmaker in wide receiver Wan’dale Robinson. Kentucky’s coordinator switch from Liam Coen to Rich Scangarello also seemingly worked against him.

 

Coaches generally had a positive view of Hooker but noted he thrived in a system that doesn’t always translate to the NFL. A defensive coordinator who faced Tennessee said Hooker struggled with overthrows on routes breaking toward the middle of the field.

 

“You throw balls high on those routes in the NFL, it’s either going to be picked or you’re going to get kill shots,” the coach said.

 

Stetson Bennett: While Levis and Hooker went a bit later than expected, Georgia’s Bennett’s wait ended in the fourth round as the Los Angeles Rams selected him with pick No. 128. Bennett led Georgia to the past two national championships but lacks prototypical NFL size and will turn 26 in October.

 

“Stetson will be a good backup,” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “He’s going to be like Chase Daniel, just a journeyman, make a career of it in the NFL, or [former Rams backup] John Wolford.”

 

An SEC offensive coordinator added: “It’s the same thing with Brock Purdy a year ago. Stetson Bennett is a winner. I know measurables-wise, it doesn’t work.”

 

From a Power 5 defensive coordinator: “I studied some defenses against Georgia and Stetson Bennett is dismissed as a game manager, but almost all the film shows him as the catalyst.”

 

Jake Haener: A similar description applies to Fresno State’s Haener, who went one spot ahead of Bennett, to New Orleans with pick No. 127. The 6-foot-1 Haener, who began his career at Washington, had 9,013 passing yards and 67 touchdowns over the past three seasons at Fresno State, helping the team to a Mountain West championship last fall.

 

“He’s got an extremely good arm, he’s really accurate,” a Mountain West defensive coordinator said. “The knock on him is his overall size, but then you’ve got the No. 1 pick in the draft [Young], who’s not as big.”

 

A Pac-12 defensive coordinator said: “I watched a lot of tape on Haener from Fresno. He is outstanding.”

 

Aidan O’Connell: Purdue’s O’Connell capped the fourth round, going to the Las Vegas Raiders. Coaches love O’Connell’s accuracy, release and field vision, but noted his lack of mobility doesn’t translate to what the NFL now asks of QBs.

 

“He’ll be a really long-term, good backup, he’ll play forever,” a Big Ten coach said. “He’ll wear a ballcap, hold a clipboard, make a lot of money. He’s so smart and he’s really accurate. But there aren’t many statues anymore [at quarterback].”

 

Tanner McKee: He was one of five Stanford players drafted, despite a team that went 3-9. McKee, who went to the Eagles in Round 6, has impressive size at 6-foot-6 and 231 pounds, and had 5,274 passing yards and 28 touchdowns the past two seasons.

 

“I know he’s got arm talent, but post-snap movement, stuff like that, he really struggled,” a Pac-12 defensive coordinator said. “It will be interesting to see how he does at the next level.”

 

First-round takeaways: Jalen Carter, Lions, WRs delayed

The first round produced plenty of storylines beyond the quarterbacks, especially around the selection of Georgia’s Jalen Carter. No non-quarterback generated more attention going into the draft than the Bulldogs’ defensive tackle. Some coaches saw Carter as the single biggest factor in the team’s back-to-back national championships, and potentially the most talented player on the draft board.

 

“I don’t know if there was a more dominant player I saw,” an SEC offensive coordinator said. “He can change a game from the D-tackle spot. I don’t know who the last one was from the 3-technique, maybe Aaron Donald. He was the difference for [Georgia]. If I was building a team straight out of talent, he’s where I look.”

 

Concerns about Carter dropped him to No. 9 overall with the Philadelphia Eagles, behind three other defensive players. In March, Carter pleaded no contest to misdemeanor charges of reckless driving and racing connected to a January crash that killed teammate Devin Willock and Georgia recruiting staffer Chandler LeCroy. Carter was sentenced to 12 months of probation, a $1,000 fine and 80 hours of community service and will attend a state-approved driving course.

 

Several picks that followed Carter generated reaction, including the Detroit Lions taking Alabama running back Jahmyr Gibbs at No. 12 and Iowa linebacker Jack Campbell at No. 18.

 

A Power 5 head coach joked that he thought middle linebackers couldn’t get drafted in the first round anymore, adding that Campbell could fade on third downs. But Campbell shined in the middle of Iowa’s defense, recording 265 tackles, four interceptions and two forced fumbles in his last two seasons. He also has notable size at 6-foot-5 and 249 pounds.

 

“For an inside ‘backer in today’s game, it’s rare to have one that tall and with his combination of speed,” a Big Ten coach said. “He’s built more like the ones in the ’80s, a 6-4 guy, but he can run. An absolute stud.”

 

Another Big Ten coach added: “For teams that really want a communicating inside linebacker, they’re just hard to get. I think that kid’s special.”

 

Campbell wasn’t the only first-round selection from Iowa who generated some buzz. Defensive end Lukas Van Ness went at No. 13 to Green Bay, giving the team a proven pass-rusher with 13.5 sacks the past two seasons … but zero starts.

 

“When’s the last time a guy got picked in the top 20 and didn’t start a game?” a Big Ten coach said. “He’s 6-6 and he’s athletic, there’s no doubt about that.”

 

Another coordinator who faced Iowa added, “That kid was one of the most disruptive players we played against. He just only played 25 snaps.”

 

Coaches liked Tampa Bay’s draft overall, which began with Pitt defensive tackle Calijah Kancey. Only 6-foot-1 and 281 pounds, Kancey led FBS defensive tackles with 7.5 sacks last season, while earning unanimous All-America honors.

 

“That nose tackle, he’s small but he’s really good,” an ACC coach said. “Very disruptive, very twitched up. He’s just smaller.”

 

The first round featured selections of four offensive tackles, three cornerbacks, three quarterbacks, two outside linebackers, two defensive tackles, two defensive ends, two running backs and an inside linebacker before the first wide receiver: Ohio State’s Jaxon Smith-Njigba to Seattle at No. 20. Smith-Njigba began a stretch of four straight receivers, but the string of wideouts was delayed compared to 2022, when six went among the first 18 selections.

 

In 2021, three receivers went in the top 10.

 

“A little surprising, given what the game is these days,” a Power 5 offensive coordinator said. “You want a No. 1, No. 2 receiver, that costs you $20 million a year. You can get these [draft picks] for $20 million for four years. Some teams that needed receivers didn’t make moves.”

 

Among the four receivers in the first round, coaches were most bullish on Boston College’s Zay Flowers, who had 78 receptions last season and 27 career touchdown receptions.

 

“Really good,” an ACC coach said. “He’s got great speed. He had some questionable hands at times, but man, he could run. He ran by some pretty good corners in this league.”

 

USC’s Jordan Addison, the 2021 Biletnikoff Award winner while at Pitt, went just behind Flowers to Minnesota at No. 24. A Pac-12 defensive coordinator mentioned former Green Bay Packers star Donald Driver as a potential NFL comparison for Addison, who shined against zone coverage but “never blew me away.”

 

“I would much rather face Addison than JuJu [Smith-Schuster] or Robert Woods, Marqise Lee, some of these other wideouts that USC has had,” a Pac-12 coach said. “The others could physically mess with you. They were just bigger bodies. Addison is smooth and has really good speed and really good hands. Those other guys just scared me more.”

 

Coaches had plenty to say about the second-rounders, beginning with the first player selected, Penn State cornerback Joey Porter Jr., who went to Pittsburgh.

 

Several coaches thought Porter, a second-team All-America selection who stands 6-foot-2 and plays with an aggressive style, was snubbed by having to wait until Day 2.

 

“He’s just so long,” a Big Ten coach said. “Not very many corners are built like that. You don’t see that kind of length.”

 

Utah’s Dalton Kincaid (No. 26, Buffalo) was the only tight end selected in the first round, but four went in the second round, beginning with Iowa’s Sam LaPorta (Detroit) and Notre Dame’s Michael Mayer (Las Vegas) back to back. Opposing coaches singled out LaPorta’s run-after-catch ability and noted both he and Mayer produced throughout their careers despite lacking great wide receivers around them.

 

Oregon State’s Luke Musgrave (Green Bay) went a few spots behind Mayer despite missing all but two games because of injury in 2022. Musgrave’s size (6-foot-6, 253 pounds) and production, when healthy, jumped out. A Pac-12 defensive coordinator described Musgrave as “a throwback,” noting that he didn’t stand out as a pass-catcher but can be used in many ways.

 

“Teams are going to use him as a down tight end and muscle people,” another Pac-12 defensive coordinator said. “He’s more than adequate as a receiving tight end. He’s not going to wow you in space, but he’s a heck of a player.”

 

UCLA’s Zach Charbonnet (Seattle) was the only running back to hear his name called in the second. Charbonnet, who began his career at Michigan, showed consistency throughout his Bruins career, especially last season, when he eclipsed 75 rushing yards in every game, topped 100 in eight contests and made 37 receptions.

 

“He got better and better and better,” a Pac-12 defensive coordinator said. “He was one of the better players in the Pac-12 by the end.”

 

The second round included a run on Big Ten centers, but the order of selections was notable. Wisconsin’s Joe Tippmann went first at No. 43 overall to the Jets. Fourteen spots later, the Giants selected Minnesota’s John Michael Schmitz, considered by many as the top center prospect in the draft. The Texans made the penultimate pick of the round and went with Penn State’s Juice Scruggs, who started the past two seasons.

 

“You don’t hear of centers that big,” a Big Ten defensive coordinator said of Tippmann, who is 6-foot-6 and 313 pounds. “Wisconsin’s recent centers have been pretty normal sized. I don’t know how well you can move at 6-6 playing center. He doesn’t fit that cookie-cutter profile for that position, but does he have any flexibility to play the guard positions?”

 

Coaches dish on Illinois, Florida and TCU

The draft featured sizable groups from perennial picks producers like Georgia (10 selections), Alabama (10), Michigan (9), Ohio State (6) and Clemson (6). But other teams also stood out for their draft groups.

 

Illinois: After finishing No. 1 nationally in scoring defense last season, Illinois had an excellent draft output. Cornerback Devon Witherspoon went No. 5 to Seattle, the first Illini selected in the top five since 1996. Safeties Jartavius Martin and Sydney Brown went in the second and third rounds, respectively, making Illinois the only team to have three defensive backs selected in the first three rounds.

 

Illinois had never seen three of its defensive backs drafted in the same year since the AFL-NFL merger. Running back Chase Brown, Sydney’s twin, went in the fifth round, as they become the sixth set of twins taken in the same draft.

 

“I was not surprised,” a Big Ten coach said. “We thought those three [defensive backs] for Illinois were as good as you’re going to see in the country, and they were. Just the size and toughness and cover ability, those guys can cover and they can play zone.”

 

Several coaches credited coach Bret Bielema, former defensive coordinator Ryan Walters (now Purdue’s coach) and the Illinois staff for the draft group, but also noted that former coach Lovie Smith deserved some praise. Smith, an accomplished NFL defensive mind who struggled at Illinois (17-39), recruited Witherspoon, Martin and the Browns.

 

“You’ve got to tip your hat to Lovie,” a Big Ten coordinator said. “Those are all Lovie’s guys. That was a talented group that just got drafted. They played them all so young. It paid off for Illinois. It didn’t pay off for Lovie.”

 

Illini defenders at the top of the draft might not be a one-year thing, either. Defensive tackle Jer’Zhan Newton is a first-round pick according to the initial 2024 mock draft by ESPN’s Todd McShay.

 

Florida: Not surprisingly, Georgia and Alabama produced more draft picks than any FBS teams. They headlined an SEC draft haul that included 12 teams with multiple draftees. But Florida somewhat surprisingly tied for fifth nationally with six picks, headlined by Richardson but also including two second-round picks in defensive tackle Gervon Dexter and offensive guard O’Cyrus Torrence.

 

But last year’s team went 6-7. The Gators were the only team with six or more draft picks that had a losing record.

 

“It’s an interesting situation to study,” an SEC coordinator said. “You can say coaching or whatever you want, but [Billy] Napier at [Louisiana] Lafayette was a phenomenal coach. Are there other factors that don’t allow a team like that to win? How many guys can you draft on potential? How do you have three guys drafted off a defense that was one of the worst in the country?”

 

Florida finished 96th in total defense and 86th in points allowed last season. Still, coaches liked linebacker Ventrell Miller, who went in the fourth round to Jacksonville. Torrence, who followed Napier from Louisiana to Florida, also drew good reviews.

 

“He’s a mauler,” said a defensive coordinator who faced Florida. “He’s a big, physical player, really good.”

 

TCU: After reaching the national championship game under first-year coach Sonny Dykes, TCU led the Big 12 with eight players drafted, including selections in each of the first three rounds. TCU’s draft class marked its biggest since the seven-round format was instituted (the team also had eight selections in 1958, when the draft spanned 30 rounds).

 

The Frogs produced the second wide receiver drafted in Quentin Johnston (Chargers) and the first interior offensive lineman off the board in Steve Avila (Rams). Five offensive players heard their names called, including quarterback Max Duggan (Chargers), the Heisman Trophy runner-up, who went midway through the seventh round. TCU also had three defenders drafted.

 

“I guess there was a reason they ended up going to the playoff,” a Big 12 defensive coordinator said. “They looked different than they normally did. They had guys who played a lot of ball. I knew the receiver and the running back [Kendre Miller] are really good players. Duggan is a gutty competitor. Avila is a really good player.”

 

Miller (Saints) was the fourth running back drafted after a breakout season in which he had 1,399 rushing yards, becoming TCU’s first 1,000-yard rusher since 2016.

 

“He was a real guy,” a Big 12 defensive coordinator said. “Had he not gotten hurt and been a little more significant part of that [College Football Playoff] run they were on, that could have helped him.”

 

TCU cornerback Tre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson, who won the Jim Thorpe Award as the nation’s top defensive back in 2022, went early in the sixth round to the Los Angeles Rams. Hodges-Tomlinson was one of the most accomplished defenders in team history, earning All-Big 12 honors three times and All-America honors twice.

 

But at 5-foot-8 and 178 pounds, Hodges-Tomlinson doesn’t fit the NFL’s preference for taller cornerbacks.

 

“He’ll be fine,” a Big 12 coordinator said. “He makes up for his physical deficiency.”

 

Coaches make sleeper picks

College coaches are often proudest of their developmental players — unheralded recruits who evolve into stars. They recognize the same process takes place with the NFL draft, as teams use the final four rounds to identify players who are lacking in some areas but could turn into capable pros and even stars.

 

Here are some their sleeper picks from Rounds 3-7:

 

Arkansas linebacker Drew Sanders (third round, Denver): Sanders, who transferred from Alabama, had a blistering start to the 2022 season and finished with noteworthy numbers. He tied for the SEC lead in sacks (9.5) while leading Arkansas in tackles for loss (13.5), forced fumbles (3) and total tackles (103).

 

Sanders showed his effectiveness against both the run and the pass but likely slipped below several linebackers because he primarily plays on the inside.

 

“Maybe people were confused. Is [Sanders] a jack of all trades and a king of nothing? Are you an inside guy? Are you a stack ‘backer? Are you a D-end?” a Power 5 coordinator asked. “I think he’s a really good player.”

 

Houston wide receiver Nathaniel Dell (third round, Houston): Dell is far from an unknown in the city of Houston, where he shined for the Cougars the past three seasons. He led Houston in receiving in all three years he played, and last fall led the FBS in receiving yards (1,398), receiving touchdowns (17) and games with multiple touchdown catches (6).

 

Dell is just 5-foot-8 and 165 pounds, though, and his size likely turned off several teams with receiving needs.

 

“If he can get off press [coverage] in the league, that will be his big deal,” an AAC defensive coordinator said. “If [opponents] can get their hands on him within that 5 yards, he’ll have problems, but if he can handle that, he’ll be fine.”

 

Tennessee wide receiver Cedric Tillman (third round, Cleveland): Although coaches noted the potential challenges for Tennessee players transitioning to NFL offenses, they liked Tillman, even more so than the player drafted right before him, fellow Vols wideout Jalin Hyatt. Although Hyatt won the Biletnikoff Award and finished fifth nationally in receiving yards, Tillman made his mark when healthy last season and through 2021, when he became Tennessee’s first 1,000-yard receiver since Justin Hunter in 2012.

 

“Tillman’s got better hands,” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “Hyatt, when he was wide open, they could use his speed. They did a great job of creating open receivers. When he had to make contested catches, he struggled. Tillman will do a good job. Those big, physical guys do well.”

 

Another Power 5 coordinator added: “His route tree’s bigger. He’s just got more to offer.”

 

North Carolina wide receiver Josh Downs (third round, Indianapolis Colts): Several coaches both inside and outside the ACC mentioned Downs as a receiver they thought would go higher than 79th overall. Downs ranks in the top five on North Carolina’s career lists for receptions (202), receiving yards (2,483) and touchdowns (22). An ACC coach said the Air Raid/up-tempo offense Downs played in at UNC, while productive, might have impacted his draft placement.

 

“He’s really smooth and he’ll be a good pro,” another ACC coach said.

 

Added another Power 5 defensive coordinator: “He could be the steal of the draft.”

 

Tulane running back Tyjae Spears (third round, Tennessee Titans): Spears entered the national spotlight during Tulane’s incredible 2022 season, which culminated with a Cotton Bowl championship. He finished fifth nationally in rushing yards (1,581) and tied for third in rushing touchdowns (19).

 

Spears’ history of knee problems — he twice has suffered ACL tears — pushed him to midway through the third round. But he had “legit speed and shake,” a Power 5 coordinator said.

 

“He’s thicker than you give him credit for,” an AAC defensive coordinator said of the 5-foot-10, 201-pound Spears. “He’s put together. He’ll protect on pass downs. A tough, hard-nosed kid.”

 

Clemson linebacker Trenton Simpson (third round, Baltimore Ravens): Linemen Myles Murphy and Bryan Bresee were Clemson’s defensive headliners and became consecutive first-round selections at Nos. 28 and 29 to the Bengals and Saints, respectively. But Simpson impressed coaches in the ACC after recording 164 tackles, 22.5 for loss, and three forced fumbles in three seasons.

 

An ACC coach was surprised to see Simpson last until the third round.

 

“Strong, very athletic, I thought he could run,” another ACC coach said. “He seemed very instinctive.”

 

Cincinnati wide receivers Tre Tucker (third round, Las Vegas Raiders) and Tyler Scott (fourth round, Chicago): Cincinnati finished 54th nationally in pass offense last season, but Tucker and Scott both jumped out to opposing coaches. The Bearcats tandem combined for 104 receptions and 1,571 receiving yards.

 

An AAC coach noted Scott dealt with some injury issues at Cincinnati but “can really roll, he can fly.”

 

“They can just pull away,” an AAC defensive coordinator said. “They were both 4.4 at the combine, and it showed in games.”

 

Old Dominion offensive tackle Nick Saldiveri (fourth round, New Orleans Saints): Saldiveri came to Old Dominion under the previous coaching staff and would become an all-conference player in two leagues (Conference USA, Sun Belt). The Saints gave up a fifth-round pick to move up 11 spots in the fourth round to take Saldiveri.

 

“The Saints trading up to get Nick says a lot about what they thought,” Old Dominion coach Ricky Rahne said.

 

Georgia cornerback Kelee Ringo (fourth round, Philadelphia Eagles): Several coaches both within and outside the SEC took note of Ringo’s selection, especially for a former ESPN top-10 recruit who started for Georgia’s national championship-winning defenses. Ringo recorded two interceptions in each season and finished his college career with 19 passes defended.

 

He earned second-team All-SEC honors last fall. An SEC coordinator said Ringo lacked the fluidity of several defensive backs who went earlier, but that he still brought a lot to Georgia’s defense.

 

“I was surprised,” an SEC coach said. “He was a really good player. He dominated Ohio State [in the CFP semifinal].”

 

Wisconsin linebacker Nick Herbig (fourth round, Pittsburgh Steelers): The Steelers have a good history with Wisconsin players (hello, T.J. Watt) and added two Badger defenders in the first four rounds in nose tackle Keeanu Benton and Herbig, a third-team All-America selection and a consensus first-team All-Big Ten pick. Herbig had 20 sacks, 30 tackles for loss and four forced fumbles in his final two seasons with Wisconsin.

 

“I really liked Herbig,” a Big Ten coach said. “Everybody says, ‘What’s the best value?’ That guy’s a good one. He’s not real flashy, just gets stuff done and Pittsburgh, they know it.”

 

Oregon linebacker Noah Sewell (fifth round, Chicago Bears): A year ago, Sewell was pegged to be one of the top inside linebackers off of the board. In 2021, he became the first Oregon player ever named a semifinalist for the Butkus Award (nation’s top linebacker).

 

“Shocked,” a coach familiar with Sewell said. “He was supposed to be a first-day guy.”

 

Sewell’s numbers regressed last season, but he still earned second-team All-Pac-12 honors and finished with 215 career tackles, including 19.5 for loss, and 7.5 sacks, two interceptions and three forced fumbles.

 

“Sewell’s a problem, he’ll stick somewhere,” a Pac-12 coordinator said. “Ideally, he needs to be in a 3-4 [alignment].”

 

Michigan center Olu Oluwatimi (fifth round, Seattle Seahawks): He won the Rimington Trophy as the nation’s top college center, and helped Michigan return to the CFP behind a run game that ranked fifth nationally in yards per game and second in rushing touchdowns. But Oluwatimi surprisingly was the sixth center drafted and the fourth from the Big Ten. One Big Ten coach thought Oluwatimi and Schmitz (second round) were comparable prospects.

 

A Big Ten defensive coordinator said Oluwatimi likely was hurt by some “stiffness” in his play, and solely playing center on the line.

 

“We had as much respect for Olu as we did anybody in the league,” the coach said. “But when it comes to the NFL, it’s a little bit different projection.”

 

Nebraska wide receiver Trey Palmer (sixth round, Tampa Bay Buccaneers): Nebraska struggled for much of last season, but Palmer, a transfer from LSU, made his mark with a team-record 1,043 receiving yards. The second-team All-Big Ten selection finished third in the Big Ten in receiving yards, receptions (71) and touchdown catches (9).

 

Although he finished fourth in the 40-yard dash at the NFL combine (4.33 seconds), Palmer waited until pick No. 191 to hear his name called.

 

“He can run,” a Big Ten defensive coordinator said. “That offense was up and down, especially with the quarterback situation, and there was a lot of turmoil there, but I thought he was one of the better players we saw all year.”

 

Kentucky running back Chris Rodriguez Jr. (sixth round, Washington Commanders): Much like his backfield mate Levis, Rodriguez had a rosier draft outlook after the 2021 season, when he earned first-team All-SEC honors while averaging 106.1 yards per game. He was suspended for the first four games this past season, and finished with 904 rushing yards and six touchdowns in eight contests (seven starts).

 

Coaches like Rodriguez’s 217-pound frame and think he can have a solid pro career in the right offense.

 

“Real good player,” a Power 5 defensive coordinator said. “He’s got some sturdiness to him that’s going to be required at the next level. He’s a good-sized kid.”

 

Added an SEC coordinator: “Not a superstar, but he can be productive.”

 

Kansas State running back Deuce Vaughn (sixth round, Dallas Cowboys): At 5-foot-5, he measured as the shortest player at the NFL combine since 2003. But the two-time consensus All-America selection had 5,029 career all-purpose yards and 29 career games with at least 100 yards from scrimmage.

 

He also shined in two career games at AT&T Stadium, the Cowboys’ home, recording 296 yards from scrimmage in wins over Stanford and TCU in the 2022 Big 12 title game.

 

“The story and watching that with his dad was awesome, but I was disappointed he went in the sixth round,” a Power 5 defensive coordinator said. “He’ll be productive. He’s really good.”

 

Said another Power 5 defensive coordinator: “Deuce Vaughn is size deficient, but he doesn’t seem to care, so I doubt he’ll start caring now! He is a scary matchup, specifically in pass game versus linebackers.”

 

Central Michigan running back Lew Nichols III (seventh round, Green Bay Packers): The 222-pound Nichols led the FBS in both rushing yards (1,848) and carries (341) in 2021 while tying for 10th in rushing touchdowns (16). Injuries limited him last season and his numbers dropped off, but he still finished with 3,061 career rushing yards at CMU, where he won MAC Freshman of the Year honors in 2020.

 

“He had the production and he has the build,” a MAC coach said. “He looks like an NFL back. He’s not as athletic, but he looks like Tony Pollard. They’re built the same way.”