Updating the Browns defensive depth chart after the 2021 NFL draft

Here’s an early look at the Browns defensive depth chart after the draft

With the 2021 NFL draft in the books and the first offseason activities for the new rookie class and free agents coming very soon, it’s time to take a gander at the Cleveland Browns updated depth chart.

The offense hasn’t changed a lot, certainly not at the top of each position. Cleveland could have all 11 offensive starters returning and brings back the top reserves at several spots, too.

Defensively, it’s a different story. Only two surefire starters return, and the depth chart across the secondary has been almost completely overhauled.

Here’s an early look at the Browns defensive depth chart entering the rookie minicamp and post-draft OTA period.

Anthony Walker: What the Browns are getting in their new LB

Anthony Walker: What the Browns are getting in their new LB

The Cleveland Browns have an impressive new linebacker in free agent Anthony Walker. He signed a one-year deal with the Browns worth $3.5 million recently. Walker projects to start in the role B.J. Goodson — Cleveland’s leading tackler in 2020 — played for the Browns last season.

What are the Browns getting in Walker?

Walker comes to the Browns after spending his first four seasons with the Indianapolis Colts. The 2017 fifth-round pick out of Northwestern was a full-time starter for the last three years in the middle of the Colts defense.

Paired with All-Pro Darius Leonard at LB, Walker averaged over 100 tackles in the last three years. His career-highs of 124 tackles and 2.5 sacks came in 2019. Walker also has 19 TFLs during that time while playing 47 of 48 games.

I went back and watched several Colts games from the last two seasons to get a better idea of the man behind the gaudy tackle stats. I also looked back at his draft profile coming out of Northwestern from several resources, including my own evaluation at the time.

His relative athletic score (RAS), which factors athletic metrics scaled for size and position, shows Walker as a shorter backer but one with speed and great short-area burst.

RAS courtesy Kent Lee Platte

Those are evident in Walker’s play with the Colts. He’s excellent at quickly closing on the play and using his compact build to stack blockers and stun runners. He’s an excellent run-and-chase tackler against the run, with range to either sideline from the middle of the field. Few backers close on their RB prey on off-tackle runs with better speed or body control.

He also uses the quick acceleration and closing speed effectively in coverage. In the games I reviewed, he’s not a linebacker who blankets in coverage but it rather one who quickly terminates the play immediately after the catch.

He has some opportunism to his coverage but don’t expect Walker to make a lot of plays on the ball. He’s rarely out of position in zone and comfortable–most of the time–in the transition areas between zones. The Colts defense did a good job using him where he excels in coverage, flowing to the shallow outside or picking up tight ends and backs after they release out.

One thing that consistently stands out: tackling. Walker hits, wraps and drops with power. If he gets a shoulder into the target, the play ends. He’s balanced and smart as a tackler.

Reading blocks and shedding off them, especially when flowing laterally, is probably Walker’s biggest area for improvement. He gets hung up on guards and tight ends out in the second level and will stay engaged to soak up the block more than he tries to shed and make the play.

Interestingly, that’s an area where the man he’s ostensibly replacing in Cleveland, B.J. Goodson, also struggled with. Walker is faster once he’s free but my sense is Goodson anticipated the blocking angles a little better.

Walker is a high-character man, something that has followed him from Northwestern to Indianapolis. He fits in with the type of off-field culture the Browns desire.

Overall, the Browns found a smart, tough replacement for Goodson. And on a one-year deal, it’s a positive addition that should help in the run defense and short-range coverage.

Watch: Browns Free Agent profile: LB Anthony Walker

Watch: Browns Free Agent profile: LB Anthony Walker

The Cleveland Browns signed linebacker Anthony Walker to a one-year-deal for $3.5M after he visited with the Browns last Tuesday. Walker is known as a good player, but many were surprised by the effect he had on his teammates, especially Colts star LB Darius Leonard, who released a “Thank You” video where he credited Walker with helping him become the player and man he is today.

On Tuesday night, Brad Ward got a chance to catch up with Lawrence Owen, Host of ‘The Colts Law’ podcast, to find out more about the Browns’ new linebacker. It’s available on the All Eyez On Cleveland podcast as well.

https://youtu.be/Pe10Etp_3Y4

 

Anthony Walker: ‘I want to win and that is why Cleveland is the place I chose’ in free agency

Walker averaged over 100 tackles per season as a 3-year starter for the Colts

New Cleveland Browns linebacker Anthony Walker made no bones about it. He wants to win a Super Bowl, and he believes joining the Browns as a free agent was the easy and obvious best path to making that happen.

Walker made that clear in his introductory press conference, conducted via Zoom on Monday.

“We play this game to win the biggest trophy in it and that is winning the Super Bowl,” Walker said. “That is my No. 1 goal. It will always be my No. 1 goal.”

He continued,

“The next part of that would be to help us become the No. 1 defense in the NFL and whatever that takes. Whatever happens after that, it is all gravy. I want to win and that is why Cleveland is the place I chose.”

Walker started for three seasons in Indianapolis, averaging well over 100 tackles in each of those three years. He’s just 25, consistent and productive as a run defender and short-range zone defender. On a one-year deal, Walker has a chance to help a talented young Browns roster advance beyond last season’s trip to the AFC divisional round.

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Mock draft Monday: 7 full rounds of Browns choices

Mock draft Monday: 7 full rounds of Browns choices

The 2021 Cleveland Browns roster, after several days of free agency, is finally starting to come into focus. The team’s probable draft options are becoming more apparent.

Here is a quick look at their free-agency haul through the first few days of the signing period:

Additions

SS John Johnson

CB Troy Hill

DE Takkarist McKinley

ILB Anthony Walker Jr.

WR Rashard Higgins

K Cody Parkey

OLB Malcolm Smith

DT Malik Jackson

OT Greg Senat

OLB Elijah Lee

WR Jojo Natson

Now for the picks!

My Draft (without trades)

Using PFF’s mock draft simulator, I feel like this draft makes a lot of sense for the Cleveland Browns as Andrew Berry and Kevin Stefanski continue to mold the roster with impact players.

Breaking down the draft, Kwity Paye immediately enters the Browns starting lineup opposite Myles Garrett. His addition is important for the long-term and in the short-term, the Browns can give him time to develop behind Tak McKinley. Ifeatu Melifonwu brings a different dimension to the secondary with his length and athleticism. While Denzel Ward and Greedy Williams aren’t slouching athletically, neither player has the size to match-up with bigger wide receivers.

Jamin Davis could be considered outside the norm for the Browns, who don’t invest heavily in the linebacker position, but his range and overall athleticism can be used to better cover tight ends in and out of the division. While Davis was a reach, Amari Rodgers can be considered a steal. Rodgers has good explosiveness, great hands, and could be a replacement for Jarvis Jandry after the 2021 season. According to most boards, Milton Williams would be considered a reach, but his most recent athletic testing might change that viewpoint,

Wrapping up the draft, both Chubba Hubbard and JaCoby Stevens offer the Browns improvements to their depth and team athleticism. Hubbard is an Olympic-level sprinter who has an amazing production profile at Oklahoma State. Stevens was a former five-star recruit from high school and will give Joe Woods an athletic ball of clay he can mold. With the final pick, the Browns selected Drew Dalman. While he isn’t a massive athlete, Dalman is technically sound and shows the ability to thrive in an interior zone-blocker.

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Colts free agent LB Anthony Walker signs with Browns

Anthony Walker Jr. is heading to Cleveland.

Indianapolis Colts free agent linebacker Anthony Walker Jr. has signed a one-year deal with the Cleveland Browns.

Walker was originally drafted by the Colts in the fifth round of the 2017 NFL draft, and was a starter the last three seasons alongside All-Pro Darius Leonard. The duo really helped set the tone for a defense built around speed, and an angry aggressive hustle to the ball that was awesome to watch every week.

Walker was a leader on the Colts defense and it’s easy to see how much he is loved and respected by his now former teammates, but with 2019 third-round pick Bobby Okereke really impressing in limited snaps, a bigger role in a talented linebacker room was inevitable.

Walker Jr. has been a three-year starter for the Colts since 2018 and now will be leading the Browns defense.

In 57 career games played for the Colts, Walker recorded 303 total tackles, 3.5 sacks, a forced fumble, 2 fumbles recovered, 11 pass deflections and 3 interceptions.

The Cleveland Browns are getting a great value on a talented linebacker who has great experience as a field general running the defense and he will be missed by Indianapolis inside and outside of the locker room.

Browns sign LB Anthony Walker to a one-year deal

Walker has been a starter for the Colts for the last three years

The Cleveland Browns have added another veteran linebacker to the defense. Former Indianapolis Colts starter Anthony Walker has signed with the Browns.

Walker visited with the Browns on Thursday morning and the team never let him consider another team. It’s a one-year, $3.5 million deal for the 25-year-old Walker, per ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The Browns are adding a proven starter here. Walker started 46 of 48 games in the last three seasons at inside backer for the Colts. He averaged over 100 tackles per season for a defense that was designed to have LBs make plays.

Despite the high tackling production, Walker has not graded out well with Pro Football Focus in run defense or coverage. His overall 45.5 grade on defense in 2020 is barely above what Andrew Sendejo earned in Cleveland last season.

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12 low-cost free agents who can help the Lions in 2021

Some budget free agency options for the Lions and GM Brad Holmes

Free agency begins on March 17th, the first time the new Detroit Lions management regime, headed by GM Brad Holmes, will have a chance to add significant pieces to the roster (outside of the Goff-Stafford trade, which also becomes official that day). We don’t yet know how Holmes, assistant GM Ray Agnew and senior executive John Dorsey will handle free agency acquisitions, but one way they can help the team is to find value without overpaying.

The theme here is to find lower-budget free agents who have a chance to contribute right away, but also with an eye toward perhaps being part of the longer-term success of the Lions.

None of the 12 players listed here should command more than $5 million per year on average. If that threshold isn’t met, the Lions probably need to pass on the players here. Also, none will be more than 31 years old at the start of the 2021 regular season.

8 free agents the Eagles should target regardless of position

Tyrod Taylor is among 8 free agents the Philadelphia Eagles should target

With the Eagles projected to be almost $50 million over the salary cap at the start of the new league year, there will need to be several notables restructures, releases, and possible trades involving some big names.

Howie Roseman is a cap specialist and he’ll likely have no problem clear the necessary cap space in order for the Eagles to begin their rebuild.

The Eagles will need to acquire free agents in 2021 regardless of their cap outlook and we’ve presented 8 players regardless of position who could help the Birds on the cheap.

Stock up, stock down from Colts’ 41-21 win over the Lions

Stock report in Week 8.

The Indianapolis Colts (5-2) will be moving on to the most difficult part of their schedule now following the 41-21 win over the Detroit Lions (3-4) on Sunday, which was an encouraging victory on the road.

We saw a bit of a change in the backfield as the Colts rode the hot hand of Jordan Wilkins in the second half, benching rookie Jonathan Taylor. We also saw another strong performance from quarterback Philip Rivers.

As is the case every week, the stock report can fluctuate on a weekly basis. Sometimes it’s a bit reactionary from just the previous week. Other times it can be taking notice of a trend taking place.

Here’s a look at the stock report for the Colts following the Week 8 win: