RE: NFL Draft 2020 (Full Version)

All Forums >> [The Minnesota Vikings] >> Vikes Talk



Message


kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/2/2020 10:04:13 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Pager

quote:

ORIGINAL: kgdabom

Would the Patriots possibly trade their 1st to Washington for Haskins and Washington then drafts Tua? What you all think?



Rosen got trade for what a second to MIA? I highly doubt Haskins would get a 1st for Washington. Especially NE when they supposedly like Stidham so much.

I liked Stidham as a potential someday starter during last years draft. He is not of the quality that they want to go with yet. Haskins didn't have a good first year, but I still think he has pretty good potential. However, Washington could draft Tua. They have to take a hard look at that.




kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/2/2020 10:39:06 PM)

I'm starting to watch Video, but highlights are near worthless because everybody can look good in highlights. That said comparing Fulton to Gladney, Gladney looks better. Fulton has 2 inches on Gladney though. AJ Terrell looks great in coverage plus is excellent in Run Support. Given my choice of the three as of now I'm going Terrell and he's the tallest and fastest based on combine times.




Bruce Johnson -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 12:02:00 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kgdabom

I'm starting to watch Video, but highlights are near worthless because everybody can look good in highlights. That said comparing Fulton to Gladney, Gladney looks better. Fulton has 2 inches on Gladney though. AJ Terrell looks great in coverage plus is excellent in Run Support. Given my choice of the three as of now I'm going Terrell and he's the tallest and fastest based on combine times.


Interesting. Another player I'll have to check out.




Bruce Johnson -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 12:08:01 AM)

Will there be 5 OT's taken before #22? I think Jones will still be there.




kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 12:23:44 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

Will there be 5 OT's taken before #22? I think Jones will still be there.

50/50 On that.




Bruce Johnson -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 12:24:02 AM)

You want a mock? How about a bunch of mocks, or at least how they see the Vikings going.

https://www.si.com/nfl/vikings/news/vikings-first-round-mock-draft-roundup-six




kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 12:40:33 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

You want a mock? How about a bunch of mocks, or at least how they see the Vikings going.

https://www.si.com/nfl/vikings/news/vikings-first-round-mock-draft-roundup-six

Good Link.




Bruce Johnson -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 7:05:21 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kgdabom

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

You want a mock? How about a bunch of mocks, or at least how they see the Vikings going.

https://www.si.com/nfl/vikings/news/vikings-first-round-mock-draft-roundup-six

Good Link.


You can see none of the mocks have 5 OT's gone before #22. That's not to say it couldn't happen. The first four go very quickly in each mock. One has us passing on Jones and taking the USC tackle. Of course if we have a plan for Udoh to play LG and Samia to play RG and Reiff to play LT, then we would probably root for the tackles to go off the board before us. I mean, many people I saying we go WR and CB. If that is our plan, then we will have options, no doubt.




Phil Riewer -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 7:21:51 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hats4Bats

My draft--I am bored

1-Krisitian Fulton CB LSU
1-Denzel Mims WR Baylor
2-Cesar Ruiz C Michigan
3-Darl Williams OG Miss St
3-Marlon Davidson DE Auburn
4-Matt Peart OT UConn
5-K'Von Wallace S Clemson
6-Davion Daniels DT Nebraska
6-Isaiah Coulter WR Rhode Island
7-Carter Coughlin OLB Minnesota
7-Trajan Bandy CB Miami
7-Myles Dorn S UNC


Does this draft assume we get Williams from Wash? No OT until the 4th.




kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 8:26:26 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

quote:

ORIGINAL: kgdabom

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

You want a mock? How about a bunch of mocks, or at least how they see the Vikings going.

https://www.si.com/nfl/vikings/news/vikings-first-round-mock-draft-roundup-six

Good Link.


You can see none of the mocks have 5 OT's gone before #22. That's not to say it couldn't happen. The first four go very quickly in each mock. One has us passing on Jones and taking the USC tackle. Of course if we have a plan for Udoh to play LG and Samia to play RG and Reiff to play LT, then we would probably root for the tackles to go off the board before us. I mean, many people I saying we go WR and CB. If that is our plan, then we will have options, no doubt.

I've seen many that have Jones gone before 25 and even 22. I wonder if the boards will change much in the next couple weeks.




kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 8:29:26 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Phil Riewer

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hats4Bats

My draft--I am bored

1-Krisitian Fulton CB LSU
1-Denzel Mims WR Baylor
2-Cesar Ruiz C Michigan
3-Darl Williams OG Miss St
3-Marlon Davidson DE Auburn
4-Matt Peart OT UConn
5-K'Von Wallace S Clemson
6-Davion Daniels DT Nebraska
6-Isaiah Coulter WR Rhode Island
7-Carter Coughlin OLB Minnesota
7-Trajan Bandy CB Miami
7-Myles Dorn S UNC


Does this draft assume we get Williams from Wash? No OT until the 4th.

OG needed more than OT, but OT higher premium. Peart would not be a bad choice for our first OT. He's good from all I hear. I'm not going to watch film on him. Watching OT film isn't very exciting unless the player is all world and crushing people. I wouldn't mind that draft coming true.




Hats4Bats -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 8:31:17 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

My tentative top ten 2020 iOL:

1. Cezar Ruiz (late 1)
2. Lloyd Cushenburry III (2)
3. Jonah Jackson (2)
4. Damien Lewis (early 3)
5. Matt Hennessy (early 3)
6. Robert Hunt (3)
7. Tyler Biadasz (3)
8. Logan Stern (late 3)
9. Shane Lemieux (late 3)
10. Solomon Kindley (4)

(Optimistic Vikings fan on Twitter)

Nice list Bruce....Would want at least one of the top seven. hoping for at least 2 out of our 12 picks.




kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 8:37:19 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hats4Bats

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

My tentative top ten 2020 iOL:

1. Cezar Ruiz (late 1)
2. Lloyd Cushenburry III (2)
3. Jonah Jackson (2)
4. Damien Lewis (early 3)
5. Matt Hennessy (early 3)
6. Robert Hunt (3)
7. Tyler Biadasz (3)
8. Logan Stern (late 3)
9. Shane Lemieux (late 3)
10. Solomon Kindley (4)

(Optimistic Vikings fan on Twitter)

Nice list Bruce....Would want at least one of the top seven. hoping for at least 2 out of our 12 picks.

Of the top OGs remember the Zone Blocking scheme. From all I hear Lewis can't play that. Everyone else is pretty good for it except the last three that I know nothing about.




Hats4Bats -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 8:43:55 AM)

SI Inside the Vikings LATEST 7 rd mock

Vikings needs, in rough order: CB, WR, OT, IOL, DT, DE, S, QB, LB

Round 1, Pick 22: Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU

The Vikings currently have seven cornerbacks on their roster, and just two of them have started an NFL game. Those two are Mike Hughes and Holton Hill, who have a combined nine career starts between them. The cupboard needs to be restocked at Mike Zimmer's favorite position. The Vikings are almost certainly going to take a cornerback within the first two rounds, and if the value is there, I think they pull the trigger with one of their two firsts. Unless CJ Henderson falls, the two players who would likely warrant a late first-round pick are Fulton and TCU's Jeff Gladney. With Gladney off the board here, I think Zimmer and Spielman will happily scoop up Fulton, who is one of the best man-coverage corners in the draft. His athleticism, ball skills, and football IQ could help him contribute right away.

Round 1, Pick 25: Josh Jones, OT, Houston

Jones was the pick at 25 when I did my first seven-round mock back in mid-February, and he's still the pick at 25 six weeks later. This would change if the Vikings found a way to land a trade for Trent Williams, but for now, he's the clear choice. Jones has great size and is a perfect fit for the Vikings' zone-blocking scheme because of his mobility. He needs some technical refinement as a pass protector, but that's something the Vikings coaching staff can work with him on. Jones was a top performer at the Senior Bowl against great competition, and has all of the tools to be a longtime starter and potential future Pro Bowler in Minnesota.

Round 2, Pick 58: Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State

Plenty of analysts have the Vikings taking a receiver in the first round after losing Diggs, and that wouldn't shock me at all. But unless one of the big three – CeeDee Lamb, Jerry Jeudy, and Henry Ruggs – falls (which is highly unlikely), the best value at WR might be in the second round. I considered going with a tall, physical wideout like Donovan Peoples-Jones or Michael Pittman Jr., but ultimately couldn't pass on Aiyuk's big-play ability. The 6-foot-0, 200-pound ASU product is a phenomenal athlete who runs crisp routes, is dangerous in the open field, and has some impressive contested catch ability for his size. Aiyuk put up nearly 1,200 yards on 18.3 yards per catch as a senior. In real life, Spielman will probably have to trade back from 25 or up from 58 if he wants Aiyuk.

Round 3, Pick 89: Amik Robertson, CB, Louisiana Tech

The Vikings double-dip at corner in their first four picks, this time grabbing a very exciting nickelback prospect to replace Mackensie Alexander. Here's what I wrote about him the other day:

Robertson has a very strong case as the best slot corner prospect in the 2020 draft. His combination of ball skills in coverage and competitive toughness as a tackler could allow him to become one of the best nickel DBs in the NFL at his peak. The 5'8" Robertson had 14 interceptions and 34 passes defended in his three-year college career, and has drawn comparisons to Tyrann Mathieu because of his playmaking ability. Robertson has good fluid mobility in man coverage, but his most exciting traits are his physicality and his feel for the game.

A cornerback group with Hughes, Fulton, Hill, and Robertson has plenty of upside.

Round 3, Pick 105: Nick Harris, IOL, Washington

Harris played mostly center for the Huskies, but he has experience at guard as well. The Vikings can't expect to rely on two of Pat Elflein, Dru Samia, Brett Jones, and Dakota Dozier becoming capable starters at the guard spots, which is why the release of Kline was a confusing one. Harris is an extremely mobile player who fits the Vikings' scheme and should be able to contribute early in his career.

Round 4, Pick 132: Alton Robinson, EDGE, Syracuse

After losing Griffen and Weatherly this offseason, the Vikings will be looking to draft a pass-rusher. Some national analysts have them taking a player like Yetur Gross-Matos or AJ Epenesa in the first round, but that's presumably because they're unfamiliar with Ifeadi Odenigbo. The former seventh-rounder broke out with seven sacks last year and looks ready to step into a starting role. Also, the last two pass-rushers the Vikings took in the first round were Erasmus James (2005) and Kenechi Udeze (2004), both of whom were colossal busts. My bet is Spielman takes the Griffen/Danielle Hunter approach and waits until the middle rounds to find a player with high athletic upside. Robinson fits that mold, as he has a quick first step and put up great numbers for explosiveness and agility at the combine. He's very raw, but Andre Patterson has a long track record of helping projects reach their upside.

Round 5, Pick 155: Gabriel Davis, WR, UCF

The Vikings should be looking to take a receiver in the first couple rounds and at least one more towards the middle or back-end of the draft. Remember, WR was a need even before the Diggs trade. Davis has good height and length at 6-foot-3, and possesses excellent hands and ball-tracking ability that helped him be very productive in college. His lack of refinement as a route-runner, 4.54 speed, and a very deep receiver class are three factors that could push Davis into the fifth round.
Round 6, Pick 201: James Lynch, IDL, Baylor

The Vikings have enough needs that there's bound to be at least one that goes unaddressed for longer than ideal. In this mock, that happened to be the defensive tackle position, where they need an interior pressure creator to put next to Pierce. My last mock had the Vikings taking a DT in the first round, but here, it doesn't happen until the sixth. Lynch is Baylor's all-time sack leader with 22 over the past three years – including 13.5 in 2019 – but he's somewhat limited athletically. The hope will be that one of Armon Watts, Jaleel Johnson, and Lynch emerges as an interior pass-rush threat.

Round 6, Pick 205: Myles Dorn, S, North Carolina

Safety is another position that I would've liked to address earlier, but so it goes. The Vikings lost Kearse and Sendejo this offseason, so they need to replenish their depth at the position. Anthony Harris could still be traded, in which case this would become a much more pressing need. Dorn is an experienced player who had six interceptions over the past three years and can make plays downhill at line of scrimmage.

Round 7, Pick 219: Francis Bernard, LB, Utah

Bernard signed with BYU as a running back all the way back in 2013. After going on his mission trip, Bernard converted to linebacker and ended up transferring to Utah. He was first team all-conference in 2019, and has solid skills in play recognition and zone coverage. He'd likely have to carve out a role on special teams to make the roster.

Round 7, Pick 249: Levonta Taylor, CB, Florida State

Taylor was a top-ten recruit in the entire country in 2016, but a lack of production in college and some injury concerns have rendered him an afterthought. The Vikings take a flier based on his former potential.

Round 7, Pick 253: Jake Luton, QB, Oregon State

I'm not sure if the Vikings will do it, but they could look to spend a late-round pick on a developmental QB. Luton stands 6-foot-7 and threw for 28 touchdowns with just three interceptions as a senior. He could compete with Jake Browning for the QB3 spot.




kgdabom -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 8:56:19 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hats4Bats

SI Inside the Vikings LATEST 7 rd mock

Vikings needs, in rough order: CB, WR, OT, IOL, DT, DE, S, QB, LB

Round 1, Pick 22: Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU

The Vikings currently have seven cornerbacks on their roster, and just two of them have started an NFL game. Those two are Mike Hughes and Holton Hill, who have a combined nine career starts between them. The cupboard needs to be restocked at Mike Zimmer's favorite position. The Vikings are almost certainly going to take a cornerback within the first two rounds, and if the value is there, I think they pull the trigger with one of their two firsts. Unless CJ Henderson falls, the two players who would likely warrant a late first-round pick are Fulton and TCU's Jeff Gladney. With Gladney off the board here, I think Zimmer and Spielman will happily scoop up Fulton, who is one of the best man-coverage corners in the draft. His athleticism, ball skills, and football IQ could help him contribute right away.

Round 1, Pick 25: Josh Jones, OT, Houston

Jones was the pick at 25 when I did my first seven-round mock back in mid-February, and he's still the pick at 25 six weeks later. This would change if the Vikings found a way to land a trade for Trent Williams, but for now, he's the clear choice. Jones has great size and is a perfect fit for the Vikings' zone-blocking scheme because of his mobility. He needs some technical refinement as a pass protector, but that's something the Vikings coaching staff can work with him on. Jones was a top performer at the Senior Bowl against great competition, and has all of the tools to be a longtime starter and potential future Pro Bowler in Minnesota.

Round 2, Pick 58: Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State

Plenty of analysts have the Vikings taking a receiver in the first round after losing Diggs, and that wouldn't shock me at all. But unless one of the big three – CeeDee Lamb, Jerry Jeudy, and Henry Ruggs – falls (which is highly unlikely), the best value at WR might be in the second round. I considered going with a tall, physical wideout like Donovan Peoples-Jones or Michael Pittman Jr., but ultimately couldn't pass on Aiyuk's big-play ability. The 6-foot-0, 200-pound ASU product is a phenomenal athlete who runs crisp routes, is dangerous in the open field, and has some impressive contested catch ability for his size. Aiyuk put up nearly 1,200 yards on 18.3 yards per catch as a senior. In real life, Spielman will probably have to trade back from 25 or up from 58 if he wants Aiyuk.

Round 3, Pick 89: Amik Robertson, CB, Louisiana Tech

The Vikings double-dip at corner in their first four picks, this time grabbing a very exciting nickelback prospect to replace Mackensie Alexander. Here's what I wrote about him the other day:

Robertson has a very strong case as the best slot corner prospect in the 2020 draft. His combination of ball skills in coverage and competitive toughness as a tackler could allow him to become one of the best nickel DBs in the NFL at his peak. The 5'8" Robertson had 14 interceptions and 34 passes defended in his three-year college career, and has drawn comparisons to Tyrann Mathieu because of his playmaking ability. Robertson has good fluid mobility in man coverage, but his most exciting traits are his physicality and his feel for the game.

A cornerback group with Hughes, Fulton, Hill, and Robertson has plenty of upside.

Round 3, Pick 105: Nick Harris, IOL, Washington

Harris played mostly center for the Huskies, but he has experience at guard as well. The Vikings can't expect to rely on two of Pat Elflein, Dru Samia, Brett Jones, and Dakota Dozier becoming capable starters at the guard spots, which is why the release of Kline was a confusing one. Harris is an extremely mobile player who fits the Vikings' scheme and should be able to contribute early in his career.

Round 4, Pick 132: Alton Robinson, EDGE, Syracuse

After losing Griffen and Weatherly this offseason, the Vikings will be looking to draft a pass-rusher. Some national analysts have them taking a player like Yetur Gross-Matos or AJ Epenesa in the first round, but that's presumably because they're unfamiliar with Ifeadi Odenigbo. The former seventh-rounder broke out with seven sacks last year and looks ready to step into a starting role. Also, the last two pass-rushers the Vikings took in the first round were Erasmus James (2005) and Kenechi Udeze (2004), both of whom were colossal busts. My bet is Spielman takes the Griffen/Danielle Hunter approach and waits until the middle rounds to find a player with high athletic upside. Robinson fits that mold, as he has a quick first step and put up great numbers for explosiveness and agility at the combine. He's very raw, but Andre Patterson has a long track record of helping projects reach their upside.

Round 5, Pick 155: Gabriel Davis, WR, UCF

The Vikings should be looking to take a receiver in the first couple rounds and at least one more towards the middle or back-end of the draft. Remember, WR was a need even before the Diggs trade. Davis has good height and length at 6-foot-3, and possesses excellent hands and ball-tracking ability that helped him be very productive in college. His lack of refinement as a route-runner, 4.54 speed, and a very deep receiver class are three factors that could push Davis into the fifth round.
Round 6, Pick 201: James Lynch, IDL, Baylor

The Vikings have enough needs that there's bound to be at least one that goes unaddressed for longer than ideal. In this mock, that happened to be the defensive tackle position, where they need an interior pressure creator to put next to Pierce. My last mock had the Vikings taking a DT in the first round, but here, it doesn't happen until the sixth. Lynch is Baylor's all-time sack leader with 22 over the past three years – including 13.5 in 2019 – but he's somewhat limited athletically. The hope will be that one of Armon Watts, Jaleel Johnson, and Lynch emerges as an interior pass-rush threat.

Round 6, Pick 205: Myles Dorn, S, North Carolina

Safety is another position that I would've liked to address earlier, but so it goes. The Vikings lost Kearse and Sendejo this offseason, so they need to replenish their depth at the position. Anthony Harris could still be traded, in which case this would become a much more pressing need. Dorn is an experienced player who had six interceptions over the past three years and can make plays downhill at line of scrimmage.

Round 7, Pick 219: Francis Bernard, LB, Utah

Bernard signed with BYU as a running back all the way back in 2013. After going on his mission trip, Bernard converted to linebacker and ended up transferring to Utah. He was first team all-conference in 2019, and has solid skills in play recognition and zone coverage. He'd likely have to carve out a role on special teams to make the roster.

Round 7, Pick 249: Levonta Taylor, CB, Florida State

Taylor was a top-ten recruit in the entire country in 2016, but a lack of production in college and some injury concerns have rendered him an afterthought. The Vikings take a flier based on his former potential.

Round 7, Pick 253: Jake Luton, QB, Oregon State

I'm not sure if the Vikings will do it, but they could look to spend a late-round pick on a developmental QB. Luton stands 6-foot-7 and threw for 28 touchdowns with just three interceptions as a senior. He could compete with Jake Browning for the QB3 spot.

This SI mock gives me confidence they know what they are doing as the writer is spot on with all the Vikings needs and mentions OdinBigo as our starter. I would love for this mock to come true.




beo -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 9:15:23 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kgdabom

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hats4Bats

SI Inside the Vikings LATEST 7 rd mock

Vikings needs, in rough order: CB, WR, OT, IOL, DT, DE, S, QB, LB

Round 1, Pick 22: Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU

The Vikings currently have seven cornerbacks on their roster, and just two of them have started an NFL game. Those two are Mike Hughes and Holton Hill, who have a combined nine career starts between them. The cupboard needs to be restocked at Mike Zimmer's favorite position. The Vikings are almost certainly going to take a cornerback within the first two rounds, and if the value is there, I think they pull the trigger with one of their two firsts. Unless CJ Henderson falls, the two players who would likely warrant a late first-round pick are Fulton and TCU's Jeff Gladney. With Gladney off the board here, I think Zimmer and Spielman will happily scoop up Fulton, who is one of the best man-coverage corners in the draft. His athleticism, ball skills, and football IQ could help him contribute right away.

Round 1, Pick 25: Josh Jones, OT, Houston

Jones was the pick at 25 when I did my first seven-round mock back in mid-February, and he's still the pick at 25 six weeks later. This would change if the Vikings found a way to land a trade for Trent Williams, but for now, he's the clear choice. Jones has great size and is a perfect fit for the Vikings' zone-blocking scheme because of his mobility. He needs some technical refinement as a pass protector, but that's something the Vikings coaching staff can work with him on. Jones was a top performer at the Senior Bowl against great competition, and has all of the tools to be a longtime starter and potential future Pro Bowler in Minnesota.

Round 2, Pick 58: Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State

Plenty of analysts have the Vikings taking a receiver in the first round after losing Diggs, and that wouldn't shock me at all. But unless one of the big three – CeeDee Lamb, Jerry Jeudy, and Henry Ruggs – falls (which is highly unlikely), the best value at WR might be in the second round. I considered going with a tall, physical wideout like Donovan Peoples-Jones or Michael Pittman Jr., but ultimately couldn't pass on Aiyuk's big-play ability. The 6-foot-0, 200-pound ASU product is a phenomenal athlete who runs crisp routes, is dangerous in the open field, and has some impressive contested catch ability for his size. Aiyuk put up nearly 1,200 yards on 18.3 yards per catch as a senior. In real life, Spielman will probably have to trade back from 25 or up from 58 if he wants Aiyuk.

Round 3, Pick 89: Amik Robertson, CB, Louisiana Tech

The Vikings double-dip at corner in their first four picks, this time grabbing a very exciting nickelback prospect to replace Mackensie Alexander. Here's what I wrote about him the other day:

Robertson has a very strong case as the best slot corner prospect in the 2020 draft. His combination of ball skills in coverage and competitive toughness as a tackler could allow him to become one of the best nickel DBs in the NFL at his peak. The 5'8" Robertson had 14 interceptions and 34 passes defended in his three-year college career, and has drawn comparisons to Tyrann Mathieu because of his playmaking ability. Robertson has good fluid mobility in man coverage, but his most exciting traits are his physicality and his feel for the game.

A cornerback group with Hughes, Fulton, Hill, and Robertson has plenty of upside.

Round 3, Pick 105: Nick Harris, IOL, Washington

Harris played mostly center for the Huskies, but he has experience at guard as well. The Vikings can't expect to rely on two of Pat Elflein, Dru Samia, Brett Jones, and Dakota Dozier becoming capable starters at the guard spots, which is why the release of Kline was a confusing one. Harris is an extremely mobile player who fits the Vikings' scheme and should be able to contribute early in his career.

Round 4, Pick 132: Alton Robinson, EDGE, Syracuse

After losing Griffen and Weatherly this offseason, the Vikings will be looking to draft a pass-rusher. Some national analysts have them taking a player like Yetur Gross-Matos or AJ Epenesa in the first round, but that's presumably because they're unfamiliar with Ifeadi Odenigbo. The former seventh-rounder broke out with seven sacks last year and looks ready to step into a starting role. Also, the last two pass-rushers the Vikings took in the first round were Erasmus James (2005) and Kenechi Udeze (2004), both of whom were colossal busts. My bet is Spielman takes the Griffen/Danielle Hunter approach and waits until the middle rounds to find a player with high athletic upside. Robinson fits that mold, as he has a quick first step and put up great numbers for explosiveness and agility at the combine. He's very raw, but Andre Patterson has a long track record of helping projects reach their upside.

Round 5, Pick 155: Gabriel Davis, WR, UCF

The Vikings should be looking to take a receiver in the first couple rounds and at least one more towards the middle or back-end of the draft. Remember, WR was a need even before the Diggs trade. Davis has good height and length at 6-foot-3, and possesses excellent hands and ball-tracking ability that helped him be very productive in college. His lack of refinement as a route-runner, 4.54 speed, and a very deep receiver class are three factors that could push Davis into the fifth round.
Round 6, Pick 201: James Lynch, IDL, Baylor

The Vikings have enough needs that there's bound to be at least one that goes unaddressed for longer than ideal. In this mock, that happened to be the defensive tackle position, where they need an interior pressure creator to put next to Pierce. My last mock had the Vikings taking a DT in the first round, but here, it doesn't happen until the sixth. Lynch is Baylor's all-time sack leader with 22 over the past three years – including 13.5 in 2019 – but he's somewhat limited athletically. The hope will be that one of Armon Watts, Jaleel Johnson, and Lynch emerges as an interior pass-rush threat.

Round 6, Pick 205: Myles Dorn, S, North Carolina

Safety is another position that I would've liked to address earlier, but so it goes. The Vikings lost Kearse and Sendejo this offseason, so they need to replenish their depth at the position. Anthony Harris could still be traded, in which case this would become a much more pressing need. Dorn is an experienced player who had six interceptions over the past three years and can make plays downhill at line of scrimmage.

Round 7, Pick 219: Francis Bernard, LB, Utah

Bernard signed with BYU as a running back all the way back in 2013. After going on his mission trip, Bernard converted to linebacker and ended up transferring to Utah. He was first team all-conference in 2019, and has solid skills in play recognition and zone coverage. He'd likely have to carve out a role on special teams to make the roster.

Round 7, Pick 249: Levonta Taylor, CB, Florida State

Taylor was a top-ten recruit in the entire country in 2016, but a lack of production in college and some injury concerns have rendered him an afterthought. The Vikings take a flier based on his former potential.

Round 7, Pick 253: Jake Luton, QB, Oregon State

I'm not sure if the Vikings will do it, but they could look to spend a late-round pick on a developmental QB. Luton stands 6-foot-7 and threw for 28 touchdowns with just three interceptions as a senior. He could compete with Jake Browning for the QB3 spot.

This SI mock gives me confidence they know what they are doing as the writer is spot on with all the Vikings needs and mentions OdinBigo as our starter. I would love for this mock to come true.


Solid draft... I'd be pretty happy with it.




Bruce Johnson -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 9:28:33 AM)

Brandon Aiyuk is growing on me second time through his tape. He's not the most developed route runner, but I don't think he loses a smidge of speed when he breaks off a route. It's pretty wild. I thought the video jumped a few times, that's how fast he hit breaks

(Jon Ledyard on Twitter)




Bruce Johnson -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 9:39:41 AM)

Regarding to how the Vikings are seeing the wide receivers in the draft:

They've done homework on all of them! Hard to know what is true and what is a smokescreen. I can't claim to have how their board is stacked!

(Darren Wolfson on Twitter)




Hats4Bats -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 10:15:17 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Phil Riewer

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hats4Bats

My draft--I am bored

1-Krisitian Fulton CB LSU
1-Denzel Mims WR Baylor
2-Cesar Ruiz C Michigan
3-Darl Williams OG Miss St
3-Marlon Davidson DE Auburn
4-Matt Peart OT UConn
5-K'Von Wallace S Clemson
6-Davion Daniels DT Nebraska
6-Isaiah Coulter WR Rhode Island
7-Carter Coughlin OLB Minnesota
7-Trajan Bandy CB Miami
7-Myles Dorn S UNC


Does this draft assume we get Williams from Wash? No OT until the 4th.

Phil..I would love to get T Williams if Reiff is included which he would need to be. I do think that Peart could be a starter. Ideally, it would be T. Williams at LT, Ruiz LG, Bradbury C, Samia RG, and O'Neill RT. Is that good enough? I don't know; but it is better...




Guest -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 10:16:02 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

Regarding to how the Vikings are seeing the wide receivers in the draft:

They've done homework on all of them! Hard to know what is true and what is a smokescreen. I can't claim to have how their board is stacked!

(Darren Wolfson on Twitter)


My question would be did they simply not do their homework on Treadwell?

Let’s hope they’ve put somebody else on the wide receiver room this draft.




Hats4Bats -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 10:17:52 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

Brandon Aiyuk is growing on me second time through his tape. He's not the most developed route runner, but I don't think he loses a smidge of speed when he breaks off a route. It's pretty wild. I thought the video jumped a few times, that's how fast he hit breaks

(Jon Ledyard on Twitter)

I like him a ton. I knew literally NOTHING about him going into this offseason.




Bill Jandro -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 10:22:57 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kgdabom

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hats4Bats

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

My tentative top ten 2020 iOL:

1. Cezar Ruiz (late 1)
2. Lloyd Cushenburry III (2)
3. Jonah Jackson (2)
4. Damien Lewis (early 3)
5. Matt Hennessy (early 3)
6. Robert Hunt (3)
7. Tyler Biadasz (3)
8. Logan Stern (late 3)
9. Shane Lemieux (late 3)
10. Solomon Kindley (4)

(Optimistic Vikings fan on Twitter)

Nice list Bruce....Would want at least one of the top seven. hoping for at least 2 out of our 12 picks.

Of the top OGs remember the Zone Blocking scheme. From all I hear Lewis can't play that. Everyone else is pretty good for it except the last three that I know nothing about.

Biadasz either.




joejitsu -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 10:25:09 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

Brandon Aiyuk is growing on me second time through his tape. He's not the most developed route runner, but I don't think he loses a smidge of speed when he breaks off a route. It's pretty wild. I thought the video jumped a few times, that's how fast he hit breaks

(Jon Ledyard on Twitter)


I saw him play one game this year and he stood out. He seems to have good hands and he plays fast.




Hats4Bats -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 1:36:44 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: joejitsu

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson

Brandon Aiyuk is growing on me second time through his tape. He's not the most developed route runner, but I don't think he loses a smidge of speed when he breaks off a route. It's pretty wild. I thought the video jumped a few times, that's how fast he hit breaks

(Jon Ledyard on Twitter)


I saw him play one game this year and he stood out. He seems to have good hands and he plays fast.


And he returns punts too

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_Dh3J_9w6w




Pager -> RE: NFL Draft 2020 (4/3/2020 1:47:52 PM)

https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2884704-matt-millers-scouting-notebook-latest-2020-draft-rumors-for-every-nfl-team?utm_source=cnn.com&utm_campaign=editorial&utm_medium=referral

Interesting read.




Page: <<   < prev  18 19 [20] 21 22   next >   >>



Forum Software © ASPPlayground.NET Advanced Edition 2.5.5 Unicode