5 biggest winners & losers...

AR182

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this is from the cbs sportsline web site....

Five biggest winners

1. Moss: He trades the worst team for one of the best. Now let's see if he changes his attitude.

2. Brady Quinn: He wanted to play for the Browns, and he will ? but not before an unforgettable afternoon that had him waiting by the phone for hours.

3. Matt Millen: He did the right thing. He chose another wide receiver. I don't care that two of the last three didn't work out. This isn't about the past. This is about the future. In Calvin Johnson, the Lions have the best player in this draft.

4. Carolina: The Panthers started the draft by choosing, in order, Jon Beason, Dwayne Jarrett, Ryan Kalil and Charles Johnson. I can't remember anyone with a better opening since Boston's Bill Rohr came within one out of no-hitting the Yanks in his major league debut.

5. Jacksonville: The Jags pulled off the niftiest deal of Saturday, trading down four places to take the player they would have drafted all along. That was safety Reggie Nelson, whom the Jaguars picked up at the 21st position after Denver threw in third- and sixth-round draft choices to move up to the 17th spot. Think about it: the Jaguars chose the player they would have taken, anyway, but did it only after the Broncos gave them two more draft choices. Nice.
 

AR182

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Five biggest losers

1. Andrew Walter: A year ago he was the quarterback of the future. Now, he's the quarterback of the past. Not only did the Raiders draft Russell, they spent a fourth-round draft pick on acquiring Josh McCown (along with Mike Williams). In one afternoon, Walter went from first to third on the depth chart.

2. Trent Green: He wants to go to Miami, and coach Cam Cameron wants him with the Dolphins. So what's the problem? Compensation. The Chiefs wanted a fourth-round draft pick for the QB, and Miami offered nothing higher than a sixth. That's a no-can-do.

3. Tony Romo: Where are all those wide receivers Dallas was supposed to draft?

4. Gene Washington: The league's director of football operations opened the second day by announcing that the Raiders were on the clock. Only he called them "the Los Angeles Raiders." Uh, not since 1995, Gene. Washington later corrected himself, but too late. The damage was done.

5. Troy Smith: The Heisman Trophy winner goes in Round 5, the ninth quarterback chosen.
 

The Sponge

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This Moss situation is nothing but a media fabrication. He gets a bad rap because of silly stuff. Warren Sapp said he was one of the best teammates he ever played with. I do think talent wise he has slipped a little but with Brady throwing the ball to you, you can slip a lot.
 

AR182

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This Moss situation is nothing but a media fabrication. He gets a bad rap because of silly stuff. Warren Sapp said he was one of the best teammates he ever played with. I do think talent wise he has slipped a little but with Brady throwing the ball to you, you can slip a lot.

i don't think it's a fabrication at all. last year i saw him drop easy balls & loaf on his pass routes. he gets discouraged when his team is losing.
 

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this is from the cbs sportsline web site....

Five biggest winners

1. Moss: He trades the worst team for one of the best. Now let's see if he changes his attitude.

2. Brady Quinn: He wanted to play for the Browns, and he will ? but not before an unforgettable afternoon that had him waiting by the phone for hours.

3. Matt Millen: He did the right thing. He chose another wide receiver. I don't care that two of the last three didn't work out. This isn't about the past. This is about the future. In Calvin Johnson, the Lions have the best player in this draft.

4. Carolina: The Panthers started the draft by choosing, in order, Jon Beason, Dwayne Jarrett, Ryan Kalil and Charles Johnson. I can't remember anyone with a better opening since Boston's Bill Rohr came within one out of no-hitting the Yanks in his major league debut.

5. Jacksonville: The Jags pulled off the niftiest deal of Saturday, trading down four places to take the player they would have drafted all along. That was safety Reggie Nelson, whom the Jaguars picked up at the 21st position after Denver threw in third- and sixth-round draft choices to move up to the 17th spot. Think about it: the Jaguars chose the player they would have taken, anyway, but did it only after the Broncos gave them two more draft choices. Nice.


The Dallas Cowboys got a 1st round draft pick from the Browns in next years draft to move down 4 slots. I'd say big winner for them.
 

Chadman

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This Moss situation is nothing but a media fabrication. He gets a bad rap because of silly stuff. Warren Sapp said he was one of the best teammates he ever played with. I do think talent wise he has slipped a little but with Brady throwing the ball to you, you can slip a lot.

Moss gets a bad rap because it is deserved. It was in MN, and it certainly was in Oakland. New England is the only place he can go without being a disruption, IMO...they can simply cut him if he is more trouble than he's worth, or if he gives up on too many plays not designed for him.

I can cite countless instances where he was a bad seed, both off and ON the field. Except for the end of his last season in MN, where he walked off the field before the end of the game, quitting on teammates, fans, and the people paying his salary.

It's worth the Pats gamble, and worth it to the Raiders to get rid of him. His effect on the Pats will make them some better, IMO. But nothing extraordinary, and it won't change much they do on offense, IMO.
 

AR182

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Moss gets a bad rap because it is deserved. It was in MN, and it certainly was in Oakland. New England is the only place he can go without being a disruption, IMO...they can simply cut him if he is more trouble than he's worth, or if he gives up on too many plays not designed for him.

I can cite countless instances where he was a bad seed, both off and ON the field. Except for the end of his last season in MN, where he walked off the field before the end of the game, quitting on teammates, fans, and the people paying his salary.

It's worth the Pats gamble, and worth it to the Raiders to get rid of him. His effect on the Pats will make them some better, IMO. But nothing extraordinary, and it won't change much they do on offense, IMO.


as i posted above moss certainly eraned his bad rep....but i disagree with you chad about moss not changing much of what the ne offense will do....moss was clocked doing a 40 in 4.29 in a private workout for the pats.....which means he will be able to stretch the ne offense...that's something that they haven't had in a few years. but imo they will miss dillon more than some might think because he was a pounder which maroney is not...& it doesn't seem like they have replaced him with a similiar back...
 

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you know being a huge bills fan, i never had a problem with the success n.eng and belichek had over the years and why not, i always said he is the best hc in the nfl over the years bar-none!

but after indy beat them in the afc championship game i seen what took place at the end ,where belichek couldnt even give peyton the time of day by congratulating after the colts beat them and went on to win the superbowl. i thought it was a very classless act by belichek who has had peytons # over the years especially in the big games.

i lost all respect for him and the pats, so i hope they get what they deserve in picking up moss, who i feel is nothing better than another terrell owens

so screw you belichek you piece of shit, i will be sitting right behind your bench giving to you all day
 

The Sponge

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Moss gets a bad rap because it is deserved. It was in MN, and it certainly was in Oakland. New England is the only place he can go without being a disruption, IMO...they can simply cut him if he is more trouble than he's worth, or if he gives up on too many plays not designed for him.

I can cite countless instances where he was a bad seed, both off and ON the field. Except for the end of his last season in MN, where he walked off the field before the end of the game, quitting on teammates, fans, and the people paying his salary.

It's worth the Pats gamble, and worth it to the Raiders to get rid of him. His effect on the Pats will make them some better, IMO. But nothing extraordinary, and it won't change much they do on offense, IMO.

Chad what has he done off the field that was so bad? Okay i agree when he said he takes some downs off that was bad but in all honesty everyone does that they just don't admit it. I didn't see him do anything in Oakland that would be considered bad. Maybe a few alligator arms on occasions but he always did that. That team was horrible and nobody could have been happy over there. When you run five steps and your quarterback is already sacked its not the most pleasant of times. When he is involved in a killing let me know. To me he gets a very bad rap for some petty things. I was all over SD winning this thing but that is over. The best coach in the world has what i think, his best team. For the first time the best quarterback in the world has a world class receiver and Stallworth if healthy isn't a bad addition. This could get scary. I will say this again everyone that has ever played with him said he is a great teammate. When he did the ass thing in Greenbay it was so blown out of proportion because it was Randy. Where was he a disruptiion in Oakland? Porter was, not Randy. In Minny he was a bit young. T.O. is a disruption not Moss.
 

The Sponge

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Got to love what the Eagles did. How this team keeps its scouting staff is comical.
 

IE

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Grading the NFL draft

By Bob LeGere
Daily Herald Sports Writer



NFC North

Bears: TE Greg Olson (31) looks like the physically gifted pass catcher they?ve been seeking for decades. He should make the passing game better in a hurry. DE wasn?t a need, although it was impossible to ignore the big-play production of Dan Bazuin (62). RB Garrett Wolfe was a reach at 93, but he has rare speed and quickness and is a home run threat. LB Michael Okwo (94) should contribute right away on special teams, but he?s probably not the next Lance Briggs. OG Josh Beekman (130) is a tough, limited-area athlete. Kevin Payne (167) is a hard-hitting, in-the-box S.

Grade: C-plus

Lions: Went back to WR in the first round for the fourth time in five years, but this one (Calvin Johnson, No. 2) was the consensus top player in the draft. QB Drew Stanton (43) could soon replace starter Jon Kitna. Athletic DE Ikaika Alama-Francis (58) has great size-speed combo and addressed a need; he is a project, although one with great potential. DB Gerald Alexander (61) played S last season after three years at CB and could be a perfect fit. CB A.J. Davis (105) is undersized but has cover ability to challenge for a nickel spot soon.

Grade: B

Packers: Needed big-time RB right now, but with Marshawn Lynch gone reached for DT Justin Harrell (16), who has some injury concerns but should start soon. Got their RB at 63 in Brandon Jackson, who wasn?t very productive as a one-year starter at Nebraska and doesn?t have great speed, but he showed run skills and pass-catching ability. Gave Brett Favre another potential weapon with possession WR James Jones (78), who has good size but mediocre speed. They needed a S and got a huge one in 6-4, 223-pound Aaron Rouse at 89, who can be a factor in the box vs. the run.

Grade: C

Vikings: RB Adrian Peterson at 7 is a huge steal if he stays healthy. He could have the greatest impact of any offensive rookie. Desperate for a No. 1 WR, but it?ll be awhile before raw sophomore Sidney Rice (44) develops into that role, if ever. CB Marcus McCauley was graded higher than 72 on many boards and could be a steal because of his tremendous size-speed combo and potential, and they needed someone to replace released Fred Smoot. Recent first-round DE?s Erasmus James and Kenechi Udeze haven?t worked out, so they added Brian Robison (102), an undersized edge rusher.

Grade: A-minus

NFC East

Cowboys: Traded down four spots and might have reached for Purdue?s DE Anthony Spencer at 26, but he could be the ideal rush-linebacker in their 3-4 scheme. OT James Marten at No. 67 could be a great bargain if he can play OLT, but ORT is more likely. QB Isaiah Stanback (103) is an elite athlete who could play any of several positions but is a project at all of them. NIU OT Doug Free was a steal at 122.

Grade: B-minus

Giants: CB Aaron Ross (20) addressed an area of need and brings added value as a standout PR. WR Steve Smith (51) gives QB Eli Manning another needed target and could be a better pro than more highly touted USC teammate Dwayne Jarrett. DT Jay Alford (81) provides much-needed help. Big, athletic LB Zak DeOssie (116) is a legacy ? they had to take him ? but he could be a steal at an area of need. Ignored OL need.

Grade: C

Eagles: Traded out of the first round and then made the worst pick of the first day, taking Houston QB Kevin Kolb (36), a product of the system. DE doesn?t appear to be a need, but they selected Victor Abiamiri (57), who has tools but didn?t use them effectively. Big, physical LB Stewart Bradley (87) will help shore up run defense if he stays healthy. Looking for a big RB, they got one with Tony Hunt (90), a bruiser and a workhorse.

Grade: D

Redskins: LaRon Landry (6), brings exceptional range and hitting ability and will team with Sean Taylor to give them awesome safety tandem. Having traded away picks without getting much in return (a No. 3 for T.J. Duckett), they didn?t select again until LB Dallas Sartz (143), a project with potential. LB H.B. Blades lacks size and speed but could make it on toughness, instincts and intangibles. Didn?t get any help on OL or DL, which they needed.

Grade: D

NFC South

Falcons: At No. 8 they got DE Jamaal Anderson, a bigger version of pass-rushing Patrick Kerney, who departed via free agency. New coach Bobby Petrino wanted more powerful OLs, and he got one in Justin Blalock (39). Moved up to 41 and added speedy CB Chris Houston, who might only be a nickel guy but helps a horrid pass defense. ISU?s big, fast Laurent Robinson (75) provides needed WR help but must improve inconsistent hands.

Grade: B

Panthers: Needing MLB help, they were able to get Jon Beason 25th, an undersized big hitter, even after trading down 11 spots and adding picks. WR wasn?t a need, but they may have gotten a bargain with USC?s Dwayne Jarrett at 45. C Ryan Kalil was a tremendous bargain at 59; he should be an immediate starter and a longtime fixture. DE Charles Johnson (83) is a high-motor, effort guy but lacks size and isn?t a great pass rusher.

Grade: A

Saints: Got value at No. 27 with big, fast WR Robert Meacham, a nice addition to last year?s seventh-round steal, WR Marques Colston. Needing playmakers on defense, went for DB Usama Young at 66, a four-year starter who could play CB and S and contribute immediately on special teams. Akron OG Andy Alleman at 88 provides depth for a solid but not spectacular unit. Why take RB Antonio Pittman at 107 when you?ve got Reggie Bush and Deuce McAllister?

Grade: C-minus

Buccaneers: With Calvin Johnson gone, they got best pass rusher in DE Gaines Adams (4). Took OG Arron Sears (35) to shore up mediocre o-line. SS Sabby Piscitelli (64) fills a need and has excellent size and is solid in coverage and as a ball athlete. LB Quincy Black (68) is an ideal fit for their scheme because of his speed, range and athleticism. Waited until 106 to add CB help with Tanard Jackson, whose skills fit the Cover 2.

Grade: B

NFC West

Cardinals: With Joe Thomas gone two picks earlier, took next-best OT in Levi Brown (5), although he might not be athletic enough to replace departed Leonard Davis on left side. Wanting to get bigger on the DL, they took 324-pound DT Alan Branch (33), who fell out of the first round but could be a steal if motivated. LB Buster Davis (69) lacks height (5-feet-9) but is productive and a tremendous competitor. Failed to get CB help or DE depth.

Grade: C-minus.

Rams: DT is weak and DE isn?t a lot better, so they took Adam Carriker (13), who has enough size and athleticism to upgrade either position. Rutgers RB Brian Leonard (52) probably projects to FB, although he could be an effective change-of-pace runner to standout Steven Jackson. CB Jonathan Wade (84) has tremendous speed and athleticism but still looks like a track guy playing football, although he could develop. C Dustin Fry (139) addressed a need.

Grade: C

49ers: Needed more LBs for new 3-4 scheme and got most talented one in draft at No. 11 with Patrick Willis, who has the speed to go sideline to sideline. With an OL situation that is shaky at best, traded up to 29 to get super-athletic OT Joe Staley. WR Jason Hill (76) has tremendous speed and could be big-play threat immediately. Florida DE Ray McDonald could be a steal at 97.

Grade: B-plus

Seahawks: Without a pick until 55 and in need of a play-making S, they tabbed CB Josh Wilson, whose speed and lack of height might translate to a nickel CB role. Needing DTs with bulk to stop the run, used 85th pick for stout Brandon Mebane, who could be an excellent run stuffer but not much else. DE Baraka Atkins (120) shows much better talent than effort. OG Mansfield Wrotto (124) is a project who played DL until senior season.

Grade: C-minus

AFC East

Bills: Needed a CB to replace Nate Clements. However, with their pick of CBs, they reached for RB Marshawn Lynch at 12 to replace Willis McGahee. Went for overkill with RB Dwayne Wright, who could be a FB, at 111. Another big need was at LB, and they got a bargain with Paul Posluszny at 34. Stanford?s Trent Edwards was a great value at 92, but the Bills already have three QBs, including young starter J.P. Losman. Pass-catching TE, DT or MLB would have helped more.

Grade: C

Dolphins: Had more urgent needs than WR but still reached for game-breaking Ted Ginn Jr. at 9, who still is rehabbing a foot injury, although he does fill a glaring need for a RS. After passing on Brady Quinn in Round 1, they came back to get their QB in BYU?s John Beck at 40. Powerful OG Samson Satele (60) could immediately replace released Jeno James. With Ronnie Brown at RB, they didn?t need Lorenzo Booker at 71, although he could be an effective change of pace and third-down complement.

Grade: C-minus

Patriots: Secondary needed upgrade, and they tabbed S Brandon Meriweather at 24, a sure-fire, first-round talent who dropped on some draft boards because of character concerns. Traded out of the No. 28 spot and didn?t get another pick until the fourth round, when they took DT Kareem Brown at 127. He?s a talented but underachieving player who came on as a senior. Gave up a fourth-rounder for Raiders WR Randy Moss a former Pro Bowler who could regain that form with Tom Brady delivering the ball.

Grade: B, including Moss

Jets: Cover CB was the biggest need, so they traded up 11 spots to take Darrelle Revis (14), who shot up some charts late as the top corner because he?s big and physical enough to support vs. the run. Big, physical LB David Harris at 47 looks like a good value, and his size fits coach Eric Mangini?s scheme and complements a unit that needed more bulk. Didn?t pick again until No. 177, when they got OT Jacob Bender, a project from Nicholls State.

Grade: C-plus

AFC North

Ravens: OL was a concern even with aging OLT Jon Ogden returning, so they grabbed the consensus top OG in Ben Grubbs at 29. Went back to O-line at 86 for Marshall Yanda, a limited-area mauler who projects to OG. They had bigger needs but spent their second pick (No. 74) on skinny, inexperienced, overage WR Yamon Figurs, who is a project but one of the fastest players in the draft and could be a special-teams stud if he avoids injury. Added LB reinforcement with Antwan Barnes at 134 and got their new FB at 137 with Le?Ron McClain.

Grade: B-minus

Bengals: CB and especially OLB were biggest needs, and at 18 they got Leon Hall, whom many considered the best CB in the draft. With workhorse RB Rudi Johnson and backup Chris Perry already on board, RB Kenny Irons (49) didn?t make much sense, when they needed TE, DT and S help more. But Irons may have been the third-best player at his position. Finally got S help with TCU?s Marvin White at 114, an athletic, physical in-the-box hitter who will punish ballcarriers. QB Jeff Rowe (151) is a developmental project.

Grade: C

Browns: OL shaky despite addition of UFA OG Eric Steinbach, so they took OT Joe Thomas (3), who should be a fixture for 10 years. QB also was a major question mark, so traded up to No. 22 for potential franchise QB in Brady Quinn but gave up 36th overall pick and next year?s No. 1. Needing CB help, gambled on character concern Eric Wright (53), who is raw but has tremendous talent and could be a steal if he stays clean. Without drug questions, Wright was a first-round talent despite limited experience. DL also shaky.

Grade: A

Steelers: LB Lawrence Timmons (15) is replacement for departed OLB Joey Porter, and he has versatility to excel in a 3-4 or 4-3 defense. DE-LB LaMarr Woodley (46) is a productive player but a bit of a ?tweener, although he could fit as a 3-4 OLB or a 4-3 DE. Got good value with TE Matt Speath (77), a reliable possession catcher with size to function as a third OT. But they already have Heath Miller, one of the better TEs in NFL. Failed to get WR depth or shut-down CB.

Grade: C-plus

AFC South

Texans: Added another talented building block on D-line with 19-year-old DT Amobi Okoye at No. 10, to team with DE Mario Williams (last year?s No. 1 overall). Needed complementary WR to Andre Johnson and took Lane?s Jacoby Jones (73), who has been compared to Bears? Bernard Berrian and should help in return game immediately. At 123, got much-needed secondary help with Fred Bennett, a big cover CB who won?t help much in run support.

Grade: B

Colts: WR Tony Gonzalez (32), might be a better pro than teammate Ted Ginn Jr. and should be an upgrade over departed Brandon Stokley. Traded up to get Tony Ugoh, the best OT left on the board at 42. Needed help at CB, and Cal?s Daymeion Hughes (95) has great instincts and hands but marginal speed. Lack of DT depth was addressed with tough Quinn Pitcock at 98, who?s steady but unspectacular.

Grade: B-plus

Jaguars: Added extra picks by trading down four spots and took FS Reggie Nelson at 21 as insurance for injury-prone Donovin Darius. OLB Justin Durant (48) from Hampton seems like a reach considering the huge leap in level of competition he will be making. WR still a big need after high-round picks Matt Jones and Reggie Williams disappointed, so they used 79th pick on Mike Walker, who has great size and tremendous speed and emerged as a senior.

Grade: C-plus

Titans: Secondary was a huge need, especially at CB for suspended Pacman Jones. Used 19th pick for S Michael Griffin, who could convert to CB. Help at RB was a must, and they added Chris Henry (50), who has incredible size-speed ratio but had poor production at Arizona. WR was depleted, but Paul Williams (80) adds potential and tools, although he is raw and doesn?t appear to relish contact of any kind. Chris Davis (128) is a slot receiver with return ability.

Grade: B-minus

AFC West

Broncos: Pass-rushing DE was a need, so traded up four spots to 17th to take Jarvis Moss, a bit of a project with huge upside. Went back to DE at 56 for Texas? Tim Crowder, who has exceptional burst off the corner. Needed OL help, where Notre Dame?s Ryan Harris (70) might be the long-term answer at OLT if his intensity picks up. Needed DT help, too, and took talented Marcus Thomas (121), who runs hot and cold.

Grade: B

Chiefs: A No. 1 WR was key, and LSU?s Dwayne Bowe (23), is big and physical but won?t stretch the field. DT lacks talent, but undersized, scrappy Turk McBride (54) should help, although he may need to bulk up to play inside. Went back for more help there at No. 82 with boom-or-bust type Tank Tyler, who has the bulk and tremendous strength at 306 pounds to clog the middle but has the heart of the Tin Man.

Grade: C

Raiders: With first overall pick got JaMarcus Russell, the physically gifted QB of the future. Added second-best TE in draft with Zach Miler at 38. Underachieving DE Quentin Moses (65) could be an impact pass rusher or a bust. Terrible OL should get some help from Mario Henderson (91), a developmental talent with OLT potential. WR Johnnie Lee Higgins (99) was productive at UTEP and is an excellent return guy. RB Michael Bush (100) could be a bargain.

Grade: A-minus

Chargers: Needing one starter at WR, they passed on USC?s Dwayne Jarrett in favor of LSU?s Craig Davis, a blazer with very good size but some durability questions. Eric Weddle (37) could be the safety with speed they need, but they gave up a lot in trading up to get him. LB was a priority, and Anthony Waters (96) eventually could become a starter, although he missed the ?06 season with torn ACL.

Grade: C
 

AR182

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it's funny how varied team's grades are by different "experts"....which mean it's anybody's guess how these draft picks will do...
 

AR182

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here's the sporting news grades.....


A+

Oakland Raiders. They got their franchise QB in JaMarcus Russell, acquired the draft's best TE in Zach Miller and picked up RB Michael Bush, who could start in 2008 after a season of being a backup and getting healthy.

Miami Dolphins. The first three picks--WR Ted Ginn Jr., QB John Beck and C Samson Satele--should all become starters quickly. The smart, mature Beck could be ready by opening day. RB Lorenzo Booker will help immediately as a third-down back.

A

Atlanta Falcons. The Falcons did a very good job of addressing needs while adding top-level players. DE Jamaal Anderson fills Patrick Kerney's shoes, and G Justin Blalock and CB Chris Houston should start early in their careers.

Cleveland Browns. The Browns got an immediate starter in LT Joe Thomas and a franchise QB in Brady Quinn. Off-field issues make CB Eric Wright a gamble, but he has the talent to start as a rookie.

Minnesota Vikings. RB Adrian Peterson is an elite player, and WR Sidney Rice, WR Aundrae Allison and OLB Rufus Alexander should become very good starters eventually. The sleeper of the group is CB Marcus McCauley.

Philadelphia Eagles. After S Brandon Meriweather got snatched away by New England, the Eagles traded out of Round 1 and took QB Kevin Kolb, Donovan McNabb's heir apparent. They nailed their next two picks, DE Victor Abiamiri and OLB Stewart Bradley, who should start as rookies.

A-

Carolina Panthers. The Panthers had a strong draft by emphasizing college productivity over workout numbers. OLB Jon Beason should start as a rookie, and WR Dwayne Jarrett will get playing time and make big plays in the red zone.

New York Giants. The Giants didn't make trades, stuck with their board and did well. CB Aaron Ross should challenge for a starting job in 2007 and WR Steve Smith will make an impact as the slot receiver.

New York Jets. Darrelle Revis immediately becomes the Jets' best cornerback and David Harris gives them the big, physical inside linebacker they need for their 3-4 defense. OT Jacob Bender was a good late pick.

Denver Broncos. DE Jarvis Moss and OT Ryan Harris should challenge for starting jobs as rookies. Marcus Thomas was the most talented DT in the draft and will be a fourth-round steal if he can control his off-field issues.

B+

Chicago Bears. TE Greg Olsen will make an impact as a receiver this season. Then the Bears added a number of solid prospects who will contribute as rookies and become starters in a season or two.

Arizona Cardinals. OT Levi Brown and DT Alan Branch should start as rookies. ILB Buster Davis and TE Ben Patrick should start eventually. The Cardinals made good use of their five picks.

San Francisco 49ers. Patrick Willis, who can play any linebacker spot in the 3-4, was a great No. 1 pick but OT Joe Staley, a workout warrior, was a big-time reach later in Round 1. The 49ers picked up several potential starters after that.

Indianapolis Colts. The Colts reached a little for WR Anthony Gonzalez, but he fills the hole left by Brandon Stokley. OT Tony Ugoh and CB Daymeion Hughes should become starters within a season.

Jacksonville Jaguars. The Jags scored huge at the top of the draft with S Reggie Nelson and ILB Justin Durant, who should start as rookies and bring a playmaking flair to the team. Their other picks need work, but have talent.

Detroit Lions. The Lions hit a home run with WR Calvin Johnson, but they also added quality players around him--DE Ikaika Alama-Francis, S Gerald Alexander, G Manuel Ramirez and a toy for Mike Martz, QB Drew Stanton.

St. Louis Rams. Adam Carriker wasn't the flashiest of this year's defensive ends but probably is the safest bet to become a solid starter--perhaps at tackle. FB Brian Leonard was a great pick because of his versatility as a blocker, runner and receiver.

B

Buffalo Bills. Marshawn Lynch and Dwayne Wright make a nice rushing tandem. After missing out on Patrick Willis by one pick, the Bills got the best overall linebacker in Paul Posluszny at the top of Round 2.

Baltimore Ravens. G Ben Grubbs and OT Marshal Yanda will help improve the offensive line. QB Troy Smith was a steal in Round 5; with time to improve his mechanics, he could be the eventual replacement for Steve McNair.

Cincinnati Bengals. Leon Hall was the best CB in the draft. RB Kenny Irons will be a great complement to Rudi Johnson. Day 2 produced many players who will have a chance to start in time.

Pittsburgh Steelers. The Steelers did a good job of getting two versatile defenders in the first two rounds. Lawrence Timmons can play either outside linebacker position and LaMarr Woodley can play linebacker in the team's traditional 3-4 or end when it switches to a 4-3.

San Diego Chargers. The Chargers took some players higher than most people expected, but WR Craig Davis gives them an explosive deep threat and S Eric Weddle will bring the consistency and playmaking ability they have been desperate for in the secondary.

B-

Green Bay Packers. DT Justin Harrell was a bit of a reach, but the Packers hit big with RB Brandon Jackson, who should become Ahman Green's long-term replacement. They also grabbed some athletic, competitive players who could start eventually.

Dallas Cowboys. After two solid picks at the top of the draft in DE Anthony Spencer and OT James Marten, the Cowboys took a number of players who are better athletes than football players at this point.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The top two picks, DE Gaines Adams and G Arron Sears, should start as rookies. Adams is an explosive edge rusher who should be disruptive. The Bucs reached for S Sabby Piscitelli and OLB Quincy Black.

New Orleans Saints. The Saints gambled on talented athletes who are not polished players, including WR Robert Meachem, CB Usama Young and G Andy Alleman. The best value pick, RB Antonio Pittman, will be stuck behind Deuce McAllister and Reggie Bush.

C+

Kansas City Chiefs. WR Dwayne Bowe and DT Tank Tyler will make an impact as rookies, but DT Turk McBride was a reach. The Chiefs did get a good RB in Kolby Smith, but this group has many wait-and-see types.

Washington Redskins. The Redskins scored big in Round 1 by grabbing LaRon Landry, their only Day 1 pick. He and Sean Taylor should give them the best safety tandem in the league by 2008. They picked up some solid prospects late in the draft.

Houston Texans. The Texans nailed their first pick (DT Amobi Okoye) and got a raw threat with their second (WR Jacoby Jones). Most of their other picks will need to improve a lot to become NFL starters.

C

New England Patriots. S Brandon Meriweather will start as a rookie, and the ability to acquire WR Randy Moss must be taken into account as well. But many of the other picks have real question marks.

Seattle Seahawks. The Seahawks didn't get any immediate impact players, but some of their picks--including CB Josh Wilson, DT Brandon Mebane and DE Baraka Atkins--still should contribute as rookies and may start down the road.

Tennessee Titans. This Titans draft will go down as one that saved the team or blew it up, because nearly every one of its selections is a better athlete than football player right now.
 

The Sponge

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Aug 24, 2006
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A for the Eagles? This might be the worst draft i ever seen them have and they have had so pretty bad ones. They actually made Dallas better with one of their moves which is a cardinal sin when you are drafting and im sure they didn't even realize it. Could have gotten the quarterback in the 3rd or 4th round if they wanted him.
 

BigFatLooza

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Nov 1, 2006
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Five biggest losers

1. Andrew Walter: A year ago he was the quarterback of the future. Now, he's the quarterback of the past. Not only did the Raiders draft Russell, they spent a fourth-round draft pick on acquiring Josh McCown (along with Mike Williams). In one afternoon, Walter went from first to third on the depth chart.

2. Trent Green: He wants to go to Miami, and coach Cam Cameron wants him with the Dolphins. So what's the problem? Compensation. The Chiefs wanted a fourth-round draft pick for the QB, and Miami offered nothing higher than a sixth. That's a no-can-do.

3. Tony Romo: Where are all those wide receivers Dallas was supposed to draft?

4. Gene Washington: The league's director of football operations opened the second day by announcing that the Raiders were on the clock. Only he called them "the Los Angeles Raiders." Uh, not since 1995, Gene. Washington later corrected himself, but too late. The damage was done.

5. Troy Smith: The Heisman Trophy winner goes in Round 5, the ninth quarterback chosen.


6. Colt Brennan for staying in school :mj07:
 
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