Ad
Sports Youth Sports Professional Sports More Sports College Sports High School Sports

It’s a ‘meat and potatoes’ NFL draft

Without a true No. 1, the top 4 selections could be linemen

NEW YORK

Bring on the behemoths.

The guys who throw the football usually dominate the spotlight heading into the NFL draft. This year, it’s the big bodies who protect those prized quarterbacks who are front and center.

As are the players whose main purpose is to find the quarterback and get him on the ground.

What the 2013 draft might lack in glamour – no Andrew Luck, Robert Griffin III or Trent Richardson – and, other than the fate of Manti Te’o’s mystique, it balances out with beef. Don’t be shocked if the first four names called Thursday night by Commissioner Roger Goodell come from the trenches: tackles Luke Joeckel of Texas A&M and Eric Fisher of Central Michigan, defensive end Dion Jordan of Oregon and defensive tackle Sharrif Floyd of Florida.

Kansas City will begin the selections, and new coach Andy Reid believes there’s so much focus on offensive tackles because there’s no other clear-cut No. 1 prospect.

“This is what I think: They’ve been fairly safe picks over the years,” Reid said. “So if it comes down to equal here or there, and you have to choose, it might be a fairly safe pick. The percentages, with that position – you evaluate the success rate with all the positions, you’ll come back to the offensive line and say, ‘Yeah, that’s a fairly safe pick, offensive tackle.”

It has become even more critical to have strong pass protectors as the NFL has developed into a throw-it-all-over-the-place league. Now that the Chiefs acquired Alex Smith as their starting quarterback, they want to ensure his health. Having the highest-rated 2013 draft prospect as an insurance policy is a good fit.

Reid’s former boss, Eagles general manager Howie Roseman, owns the fourth spot Thursday. Philadelphia isn’t exactly loaded on either line.

“There are some really talented offensive linemen in this draft, defensive linemen,” Roseman said. “This is really a meat and potatoes draft, certainly early in the first couple of rounds with linemen, which is exciting. It may not be the flashiest thing, but it’s exciting. It’s hard to find big guys who can move, play with power, and there are a lot of guys in this draft.”

Such as tackles Lane Johnson of Oklahoma, D.J. Fluker of Alabama and Menelik Watson of Florida State; guards Chance Warmack of Alabama, Jonathan Cooper of North Carolina and Larry Warford of Kentucky; centers Barrett Jones of Alabama and Travis Frederick of Wisconsin, both of whom can play guard; defensive ends Bjoern Werner of Florida State, Damontre Moore of Texas A&M, Ziggy Ansah of BYU and Barkevious Mingo of LSU; and defensive tackles Jesse Williams of Alabama, Star Lotulelei of Utah and Sheldon Richardson of Missouri.

To Roseman, the blockers especially are prized this year.

“When you’re in the college game and you’re an offensive lineman, you’re doing all the same things you’re going to have to do in the NFL game,” he said. “So maybe the projection’s a little easier and, again, it’s hard to find guys who are this size, this weight, this athletic ability, this length.”

Ansah (Ghana), Williams (Australia), Werner (Germany), SMU’s Margus Hunt (Estonia) and Watson (England) all bring an unprecedented international flavor to the early rounds.

For those who want a little skill-position spice with their meat and potatoes, don’t count on too much pizzaz from the QBs, RBs or DBs. They could be MIA through most of the opening 32 selections.

West Virginia’s Geno Smith almost certainly will go in the first round, with the strong-armed but erratic quarterback projected by some to be taken as high as No. 2 by Jacksonville. Oakland, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Arizona, Buffalo and the New York Jets, each with a top 10 pick, have assorted issues at the position and could opt for Smith.

More likely, most of those teams will go quarterback hunting in the second round or lower, which isn’t great news for Matt Barkley, E.J. Manuel, Landry Jones, Ryan Nassib and the other passer prospects.

That’s doesn’t mean this is a weak crop of QBs.

“Some of that, you’re not going to know until you get these guys on campus and you start developing them,” said new Jets general manager John Idzik, who was with Seattle before coming to New York. “I experienced that firsthand last year (with Russell Wilson), where the draftniks may project a certain class of certain individual a little bit lower, but you look at him a little bit differently.”

Wilson went in the third round, yet beat out high-priced free agent Matt Flynn, then led the Seahawks to the playoffs.

If only one quarterback goes in the opening round, it would be the first time since 2001, when Michael Vick was the top pick and only first-round pick from the marquee position.

It’s even more possible just one running back, Alabama’s Eddie Lacy, is chosen in the first round.

Then there’s Te’o.

Although the hard-hitting middle linebacker swept through college football last season and helped revitalize Notre Dame, his stock took a severe hit, too. Not from the online girlfriend hoax he fell for but from an awful performance in the BCS championship game rout at the hands of Alabama.

Te’o also had some mediocre postseason workouts, but he recently has improved on those and apparently impressed many teams with his forthrightness about the hoax.

Teams love the passion and aggressiveness he brings to the field. They also worry about his lack of speed and weak coverage skills.

“The vast majority of player personnel people saw him as a good player but not as a great player,” said Phil Savage, a former NFL general manager who now is the executive director of the Senior Bowl.

Good but not great could be the theme of this year’s draft – except in the trenches, where many of the likely top picks lurk.

AP Pro Football Writer Rob Maaddi, College Football Writer Ralph Russo, and Sports Writers Dennis Waszak Jr. and Dave Skretta contributed to this report.

With the 28th pick in the draft ...

28. Denver Broncos (13-3)

Last Season: The Broncos rolled into the playoffs with a 13-3 record, an 11-game winning streak and the No. 1 seed in the AFC, then promptly lost at home to the Ravens. After adding WR Wes Welker from New England and RG Louis Vasquez from San Diego in free agency, filling needs and creating some holes in their rivals’ rosters, they again lost to the Ravens when Pro Bowl pass rusher Elvis Dumervil signed with Baltimore after the deadline-fueled fax faux pas that made him an accidental free agent.

They Need: DE, CB, LB, RB.

They Don’t Need: WR, K, P, PR, QB.

Possible First Pick: DE Tank Carradine, DE Datone Jones.

Outlook: Peyton Manning says boss John Elway is fostering an angry attitude at Broncos headquarters these days because “last year was good, but it wasn’t great; and we’re looking for a great season.” It’s the same attitude Elway upheld after losing at home in the playoffs to Jacksonville in late ’90s before bouncing back and leading the Broncos to consecutive Super Bowl titles during his Hall of Fame playing career.

Associated Press

NFL

nfl Calendar

April 25-27 – NFL draft, at New York. (ESPN)

May 20-22 – NFL spring meeting, at Boston.

Aug. 8-11 – preseason begins.

Sept. 5, 8-9 – regular season begins.

nfl Draft Order

April 25-27

Radio City Music Hall

New York

1. Kansas City

2. Jacksonville

3. Oakland

4. Philadelphia

5. Detroit

6. Cleveland

7. Arizona

8. Buffalo

9. N.Y. Jets

10. Tennessee

11. San Diego

12. Miami

13. Tampa Bay

14. Carolina

15. New Orleans

16. St. Louis

17. Pittsburgh

18. Dallas

19. N.Y. Giants

20. Chicago

21. Cincinnati

22. St. Louis (from Washington)

23. Minnesota

24. Indianapolis

25. Minnesota (from Seattle)

26. Green Bay

27. Houston

28. Denver

29. New England

30. Atlanta

31. San Francisco

32. Baltimore

Denver Schedule

Preseason

August 8-11: Denver at San Francisco, TBA

August 15-19: Denver at Seattle, TBA

Saturday, Aug. 24: St. Louis at Denver, 6 p.m. (KCNC, KREZ)

August 29-30: Arizona at Denver, TBA

Regular Season

Sept. 5 – Baltimore, 6:30 p.m.

Sept. 15 – at N.Y. Giants, 2:25 p.m.

Sept. 23 – Oakland, 6:40 p.m.

Sept. 29 – Philadelphia, 2:25 p.m.

Oct. 6 – at Dallas, 2:25 p.m.

Oct. 13 – Jacksonville, 2:05 p.m.

Oct. 20 – at Indianapolis, 6:30 p.m.

Oct. 27 – Washington, 2:25 p.m.

Nov. 3 – BYE

Nov. 10 – at San Diego, 2:25 p.m.

Nov. 17 – Kansas City, 2:05 p.m.

Nov. 24 – at New England, 4:30 p.m.

Dec. 1 – at Kansas City, 1 p.m.

Dec. 8 – Tennessee, 2:05 p.m.

Dec. 12 – San Diego, 6:25 p.m.

Dec. 22 – at Houston, 1 p.m.

Dec. 29 – at Oakland, 2:25 p.m.

Associated Press

Apr 20, 2013
No flash, but plenty of international flavor


Reader Comments