Twitter reacts to Xavier Worthy’s historic 40-yard dash

Users on Twitter were stunned by Xavier Worthy’s record-setting 40-yard dash at the 2024 NFL Scouting Combine.

Xavier Worthy is a wide receiver prospect that the Kansas City Chiefs may want to keep their eyes on in the upcoming draft.

He set the record for the fastest 40-yard dash time at the 2024 NFL Scouting Combine on Saturday, making a mark for himself in the history books in front of scouts in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Check out this clip of his historic run:

Worthy was a star at the University of Texas, playing alongside Adonai Mitchell in a Longhorns offense that ended the 2023 season with a 12-2 record.

His fantastic showing at the combine is likely to make his draft stock rise before the annual player selection meeting in April and may draw the attention of receiver-needy teams like the Chiefs.

Social media exploded after his official 40-yard dash time was announced, and some users thought that Kansas City could be a logical destination for Worthy:

Check out what users on Twitter thought about Worthy’s record-setting run below:

Cowboys 2024 scouting combine interview tracker

From @ToddBrock24f7: Here’s a look at who the Cowboys are spending their 45 formal interviews on, and who is getting the informal interview treatment in Indy.

Wednesday kicked off the busiest stretch of the NFL scouting combine, the first of three straight days when every position group is represented in Indianapolis.

The focus thus far has been on defensive linemen and linebackers, who began arriving on Sunday. They’ll hit the field for measurements and workouts on Thursday before leaving town on Friday.

That cycle will continue for defensive backs and tight ends; then running backs, quarterbacks, and wideouts; and finally offensive linemen and specialists.

In between are the all-important team interviews. Teams are allowed just 45 formal interviews with prospects over the course of the week; those interviews are carefully tracked and timed not to exceed 18 minutes. They’re not the only chance a club has to speak with a player, though. Pro days, 30 visits, and private visits can also be used later in the pre-draft process.

Informal interviews are exactly that. They can happen just about anywhere, anytime, and may not amount to much more than a handshake and a quick hello. Teams can meet informally with as many players as they want at the combine.

Here’s a quick rundown of the players who have reportedly met with the Cowboys in Indianapolis. This list will be updated throughout the 2024 combine.

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

Cowboys’ McCarthy, Zimmer skipping NFL scouting combine

From @ToddBrock24f7: The Cowboys head coach and new defensive coordinator will participate virtually so they can stay in Dallas and prep for the 2024 season.

The NFL world is preparing to descend upon Indianapolis for the 2024 Scouting Combine. But Mike McCarthy and Mike Zimmer will be staying at home in Frisco.

The Cowboys head coach revealed on Friday that he and his newly-hired defensive coordinator will not attend the combine, instead using the week to work on installing their new defensive scheme and finalizing the coaching staff.

“Zim and I will have a full week together here and cover a lot of ground with things we’re working on,” McCarthy told ESPN. “At the same time, we can still participate in the combine process and have direct contact through video calls and meetings, while having our coaches on the ground there as well.”

McCarthy did not attend last year’s combine, either, save for a brief in-person appearance that consisted of a single press conference with reporters. (It was at that presser that McCarthy made his infamous “I want to run the damn ball” remark.) After the Q&A session, the coach flew back to Dallas in preparation of his new role as the offensive play-caller, leaving the tasks of evaluating and meeting with college prospects to other staffers.

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

Whether that strategy actually paid off may depend on perspective. The Cowboys offense put up monster numbers in 2023, with Dak Prescott enjoying an MVP-caliber season and CeeDee Lamb setting franchise records. On the other hand, though, the class of rookies the Cowboys eventually plucked from the 2023 combine was thoroughly underwhelming.

McCarthy appears content to once again leave the groundwork in Indy to Will McClay and others within the Cowboys organization.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01hq3e9d50mdry5qttj9 playlist_id=01eqbwens7sctqdrqg player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01hq3e9d50mdry5qttj9/01hq3e9d50mdry5qttj9-8aff485435e1390a8dd6c30a8744c4ce.jpg]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Cowboys beef up O-line, find fresh RB legs in NFL.com’s 3-round mock

From @ToddBrock24f7: The network has Dallas looking to Washington and Georgia for O-line help, while a Tennessee Volunteer becomes the next Cowboys running back.

One fanbase is gearing up for a championship parade. The other 31 are ready to turn the page to the 2024 season. And that means mock draft season is now in full effect.

The Cowboys have quite a few high-profile players set to hit free agency in March and several big-money contract decisions to make before the draft gets underway in Detroit on April 25.

And once they get there- even if they’re unusually aggressive themselves in free agency- they’ll no doubt have several more thin areas on the roster that will need to be addressed.

As it stands currently, Dallas has just five selections this year, after previous moves to get backup quarterback Trey Lance, wide receiver Brandin Cooks, and the 2023 draft pick that they used on cornerback Eric Scott Jr. The team is projected to gain two additional compensatory selections, but they won’t be announced until closer to the draft.

In the meantime, here’s how NFL.com draft analyst Chad Reuter sees Dallas’s first three rounds going in his latest mock.

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

 

Of interest to Packers, 11 OL in Daniel Jeremiah’s top 50 prospect rankings for 2024 draft

The Packers will likely need to draft at least one offensive linemen in the 2024 draft. Daniel Jeremiah’s first top 50 has 11 offensive linemen.

In the first edition of his top 50 prospect rankings, NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah has 11 offensive linemen listed. This is a position group, both at tackle and along the interior, that the Green Bay Packers will have to add to this offseason.

We heard throughout the college season that this upcoming draft class was going to be really strong along the offensive line. And these initial rankings from Jeremiah reflect that.

Below are the offensive linemen who are inside his top 50:

9. Joe Alt, OT, Notre Dame
11. Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon State
12. Olumuyiwa Fashanu, OT, Penn State
13. JC Latham, OT, Alabama
16. Troy Fautanu, OT, Washington
17. Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma
18. Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia
31. Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona
33. Graham Barton, IOL, Duke
35. Jackson Powers-Johnson, IOL, Oregon
37. Zach Frazier, IOL, West Virginia

The play of the Packers’ offensive line during that second half of the season was a huge contributor to the overall success the offense had. By the end of the year, this group was operating as one of the best units in football.

With Rasheed Walker, Elgton Jenkins, Josh Myers, Sean Rhyan, and Zach Tom all returning for the 2024 season, it’s possible that the Packers’ starting five is already on the roster.

However, what sparked that midseason turnaround up front was a rotation at the left tackle and right guard positions. Matt LaFleur, Adam Stenavich, and Luke Butkus all credited that rotation for increasing the level of competition, which then elevated the play of the entire unit.

But looking ahead to training camp and even the 2024 regular season, if the Packers want to go down that rotation path again, there is very little depth, and therefore competition, at this position group.

Jon Runyan and Yosh Nijman are both unrestricted free agents. That leaves, in addition to the five players previously mentioned, Royce Newman as the only other interior lineman on the roster at the moment, along with Caleb Jones, Luke Tenuta, and Kadeem Telfort at tackle.

The Packers obviously think highly of Jones and Tenuta. Jones has had essentially two red-shirt seasons on the active roster to develop, while Tenuta did so in 2022 and was on IR for all of 2023 after initially being placed on the 53-man roster. Telfort was an undrafted rookie last spring who spent the year on the practice squad.

Perhaps the Packers are confident that either Jones or Tenuta can step in at a moment’s notice if injury strikes or provide competition at tackle if needed. But there is also some risk in relying on players with little to no experience, especially for a team with Super Bowl aspirations.

Inside, Rhyan isn’t going to be handed the starting job. He may be the front-runner for that right guard spot, but he will have to earn it this summer.

Rhyan’s play earned him more playing time in that rotation as the season went on, and where he really stands out is in the run game. But as Stenavich would mention, he has to improve in pass protection if he is going to be a long-term starter at the position.

“He’s still got a ways to go,” said Stenavich of Rhyan. “I like what I’ve seen from him from a physicality standpoint. He does a good job in the run game at the point of attack. But he still has a ways to go in pass protection would be his biggest thing moving forward.

“If he wants to be a staple guard of this league, you obviously have to excel in this realm. So that’s one thing we are going to focus on with as we move forward just to elevate that part of his game.”

How to address the offensive line this offseason is a bit of a tricky situation for the Packers, especially at tackle. Zach Tom was playing at a very high level at right tackle, while Rasheed Walker steadily improved as the season went on.

Although depth is needed, if the Packers view those two as their long-term answers at the position, then spending a first or even second-round pick on a tackle may not make sense.

If Green Bay does take a tackle early, at a minimum, you’ll want that player to at least push for playing time. But with how well Tom played at right tackle, ranking 14th in PFF’s pass-blocking efficiency metric and doing so against many of the best edge rushers in the game, moving him to center, even with some of the ups and downs Josh Myers had, may no longer be on the table.

As Walker gained more experience, we really saw his development take off. From Week 15 through the playoffs, he allowed just one sack, nine pressures, and ranked 10th in pass-blocking efficiency. There is, however, still room for growth, which perhaps leads to competition being added.

“He’s getting all this experience under his belt,” said Stenavich prior to Week 18. “He’s doing a good job. I’m really impressed with how he goes about his business. How he competes. He’s still got a ways to go. He’s got a lot of room for improvement, but I’m impressed with how he works.”

Myers will be entering the final year of his rookie deal in 2024. While his play has been scrutinized on the outside, Myers’ ability pre-snap to get protection responsibilities identified, and his connection with Jordan Love can’t go unnoticed either. Regardless of whether the Packers want to plan ahead at center, provide some competition, or simply look for depth, they need to add to that specific position group this offseason.

The Packers will absolutely add to the offensive line in the draft. It’s a position that Brian Gutekunst adds to often and one in need of depth, especially inside. The big question is when they will make those picks. The Packers have five selections in the top 100 and 11 draft picks overall.

Along with having 11 offensive linemen in his top 50, Jeremiah also had 11 wide receivers. Given the youth and depth that the Packers already have in that position group, unless a top prospect falls their way, they probably won’t be spending an early-round pick on that position.

Other positions of need include linebacker, which had three players in Jeremiah’s top 50. Cornerback had seven players listed and no safeties.

Dane Brugler Mock 1.0: Cowboys draft offensive lineman in early exercise

From @ToddBrock24f7: In this early mock, the Cowboys get a versatile lineman who solidifies the protection for Dak Prescott’s blind side for the next decade.

From Aaron Rodgers to Joe Burrow, Kirk Cousins to Deshaun Watson, Anthony Richardson to Daniel Jones, 2023 may be remembered by many as the year of the injured quarterback, with numerous teams around the league losing their starting passer and, in many cases, their season’s hopes right along with him.

2024, then, could shape up to be a big year for the big man, with clubs looking to protect those under-center investments with young offensive line help via early-round draft choices. All indications are that the Class of ’24 will be exceptionally deep in O-line talent, making it a great year for a team like the Cowboys to address an area of need.

Through 11 games this season, Dallas has allowed just 23 sacks, placing their line in the NFL’s top 10 for keeping their quarterback upright. But there are questions looming on the horizon for next season: center Tyler Biadasz is set to become a free agent, left tackle Tyron Smith and his lengthy injury history will be 33, and even Zack Martin has suddenly looked somewhat mortal in his 10th season.

And that’s the lens through which The Athletic‘s Dane Brugler was looking when he approached the Cowboys’ initial pick in his first 2024 mock draft.

While Brugler has top playmakers like Caleb Williams, Marvin Harrison Jr., Jayden Daniels, Brock Bowers, and Drake Maye going early to some of the weakest teams, he likes the Cowboys to stay in the trenches and add foundational youth to play alongside two-year veteran Tyler Smith, who won’t even turn 23 until April.

With the 26th pick of the 2024 NFL Draft, Brugler has the Cowboys selecting Graham Barton, the multi-positional lineman from Duke.

“A college left tackle, Barton is going to move inside in the NFL and projects well at either guard or center,” Brugler notes.  “This pick assumes Tyler Smith would replace Tyron Smith at left tackle, thus creating a need at left guard.”

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

The 6-foot-5-inch, 314-pound Barton certainly seems capable of filling that need. The Tennessee native was a three-star recruit when he committed to the Blue Devils and took the field in his freshman year due to injuries to the squad’s first- and second-string centers. By the end of the 2020 season, Barton was named a second team Freshman All-American by The Athletic.

His sophomore year saw him named the starter at left tackle. As a junior, he was an All-ACC first-teamer. He repeated that feat as a senior and was rated the fifth-best tackle by PFF for the 2023 season.

By bringing Barton to Dallas and coaching him up to play left guard (like they did with Tyler Smith), the Cowboys would theoretically have Dak Prescott’s blind side covered- with two first-round picks under the age of 23- for the better part of a decade.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=video id=01hgge8zaq43wsrytvxb playlist_id=01eqbwens7sctqdrqg player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01hgge8zaq43wsrytvxb/01hgge8zaq43wsrytvxb-9b7bb0c60b6d4103109987e2f413a6e5.jpg]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Week 11 Scouting Notebook: A look at potential Chargers prospects in 2024 NFL draft

Here are a few prospects the Chargers could’ve been watching in Week 11.

Another week of college football is here, which means we are back with another edition of the Scouting Notebook.

The Scouting Notebook will feature prospects to keep an eye on throughout the day. While some may think it’s too early to start talking about the 2024 NFL draft, there’s never a bad time to talk about the future of the Chargers.

With that being said, here are a handful of prospects to watch for in Week 11.

4 CFB DTs who Cowboys should be keeping an eye on

Dallas has a lengthy reputation for ignoring the importance of interior defensive line play, but that has come to a screeching halt with the selection of Mazi Smith. While he looks like a piece for the future, he will need time and it is key to …

Dallas has a lengthy reputation for ignoring the importance of interior defensive line play, but that has come to a screeching halt with the selection of Mazi Smith. While he looks like a piece for the future, he will need time and it is key to remember the amount of rotation DC Dan Quinn likes to utilize. This comes to mind when thinking about the rest of the IDL group.

Veteran Johnathan Hankins was a massive addition last season to help plug the holes in the run game and Osa Odighizuwa is emerging as one of the game’s best under tackles. Smith, Hankins, and Odighizuwa will be the key trio while Neville Gallimore is on the fringes of the roster after being benched late last season. Chauncey Golston and rookie Viliami Fehoko Jr. play the tweener positions well but have yet to cement their spots long-term. Hankins expiring in 2024 leaves the depth and firepower of this unit a bit depleted, so look out for some of these names when watching your college football on Saturdays as good value come next offseason.

4 CFB linebackers who Cowboys should be keeping an eye on

A look at four linebackers who could be options for Dallas in the later rounds of April’s draft. | From @TimLettiero

In a perfect world, every player drafted becomes a long-term starter and forever stays healthy. Of course, this is not the case, but Dallas has taken plenty of shots at the linebacker position hoping at least one of them pans out.

Leighton Vander Esch returned on a team-friendly two-year deal to be the QB of the defense but went down with a scary neck injury and his return is still TBD. Cowboys Nation got hit with a shockwave as electric rookie DeMarvion Overshown got his season cut short in just his second preseason game.

This leaves second-year men Damone Clark and Markquese Bell, Malik Jefferson, and recent signing Rashaan Evans as the last names on the depth chart, leaving a lot to be desired after the releases of Jabril Cox and Devin Harper.

Dallas has always replenished the coffers at the position in the draft, as it’s one of their most selected positions over the last decade-plus. With an eye on the upcoming draft class, here’s who should be on the radar as later-round possibilities with huge upside.

4 CFB cornerbacks who Cowboys should be keeping an eye on

All of a sudden, Dallas’ future at cornerback is murky. Here’s a look at several prospects who, while not necessarily first-round material, should be on their draft radar. | From @TimLettiero

Two weeks into the season, Dallas boasted arguably the best corner tandem in the league in the recently paid Trevon Diggs and former DPOY Stephon Gilmore. That all came crashing down in a hurry with Diggs sadly missing the remainder of the 2023 season. The current depth chart isn’t bare, with solid veteran Jourdan Lewis and second-year man DaRon Bland already having an interception to add to his team-leading five in 2022. After them, however, it gets questionable.

Nahshon Wright barely hung on to his roster spot while Kelvin Joseph has already been swapped out for another out-of-favor corner in Noah Igbinoghene. Late-round rookie Eric Scott Jr. has made the 53-man roster but will have to fight with numerous veterans for any playing time. Looking ahead, Gilmore and Lewis are free agents and Diggs’ recovery from ACL could take many directions. Suddenly, cornerback is a need for Dallas in 2024.

Depending on the development of the young guys and the regression and price tag of Gilmore, Dallas might not prioritize targeting the position early come next year’s draft, but it will certainly be a Day 2 or early Day 3 consideration. Here are some under-the-radar names to pay attention to who can help for the long term.