The weirdest Pro Bowl selections and snubs for the 2024 team

The 2024 Pro Bowl teams have been announced, and here are the oddest selections and snubs.

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The Pro Bowl is not a serious endeavor. We know that because at the actual Pro Bowl as it’s played now, there isn’t any actual football — it’s more like Field Day in elementary school. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but when it comes to the voting process — 1-3 from the fans, 1/3 from the coaches, and 1/3 from the players — it’s pretty frivolous. There are lifetime achievement awards which have little to do with the present, regionally-stacked oddities, and face-value selections which, again, have nothing to do with present performance.

Still, players get hefty contract incentives from Pro Bowl selections, so you know that players, agents, and teams take this seriously to a point. Now that the rosters for the 2024 Pro Bowl have been announced, here are the weirdest and worst selections.

The NFL’s 11 best cornerbacks

Touchdown Wire’s positional lists continue with Doug Farrar’s 11 best cornerbacks heading into the 2023 NFL season.

If you want to know how variable cornerback performance can be from year to year, consider the case of Atlanta Falcons cornerback A.J. Terrell. In 2021, Terrell was one of the NFL’s best cornerbacks, allowing 29 catches on 66 targets for 200 yards, 93 yards after the catch, three touchdowns, three interceptions, 13 pass breakups, and an opponent passer rating of 47.5. One season later, Terrell gave up 39 catches on 68 targets for 430 yards, 142 yards after the catch, a league-high nine touchdowns, no interceptions, eight pass breakups, and an opponent passer rating of 115.8.

Or consider the case of J.C. Jackson. The former Patriots star never allowed an opponent passer rating lower than 62.7 over four seasons in New England. Then, he signed a five-year, $82.5 million contract with the Chargers, and between schematic issues and injuries, Jackson allowed 198 catches on 27 targets for 370 yards, 72 yards after the catch, four touchdowns, no interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 152.4 — in just five games.

Why are CBs J.C. Jackson, William Jackson III, A.J. Terrell, and Amani Oruwariye struggling in 2022?

From year to year, cornerback performance can be as volatile as you can possibly imagine, for all kinds of reasons. The same cornerback on the same team in a system supposedly set up to help him succeed can see his performance fluctuate wildly from season to season.

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For those cornerbacks who made this year’s list — Patrick Surtain II, Marlon Humphrey, Darius Slay, Jaire Alexander, and Jalen Ramsey — it’s a case of beating the odds. This means that there are seven new players on this year’s list, which is about par for the course.

The criteria for inclusion on this year’s list were…

  • A majority of snaps at outside cornerback. If you’re primarily a slot defender, we have a separate list for you!
  • A good balance between man and zone coverage performance. If you’re off-balance to one side, it’ll affect things here, just as it does on the field.
  • Similarly, a good balance between the abilities in press and off coverage will serve you well here, as it does in the National Football League.
  • If you are prone to following top receivers across the formation, as opposed to playing one side of the field no matter what, that’ll help your case a bit.
  • Splash plays are great, but there are cornerbacks who get a lot of interceptions and give up even more big plays. Today’s NFL is about creating and preventing explosive plays, so how good are you at the latter?

This is the second in our positional rankings series, which concludes with our list of the 101 best players in the NFL today.

The NFL’s 11 best safeties

(All advanced metrics courtesy of Pro Football Focus and Sports Info Solutions unless otherwise indicated). 

Watch: Patrick Mahomes razes Tampa Bay’s defense with 75-yard TD to Tyreek Hill

Just when you think you have Patrick Mahomes where you want him, you don’t.

It’s always just a matter of time. You have the Chiefs’ offense down, you think things are going well, and then… things are not going well at all. Because all it takes is one slip, one busted coverage, one defender in the wrong place, and you are looking around at your defensive teammates, wondering what in the blue heck just happened.

Welcome to the jungle, Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bucs were down 3-0 halfway through the first quarter, but they’d held Patrick Mahomes to five completions in seven attempts for 68 yards. And then, what always happens… well, happened. Mahomes dropped back, unloaded a pass a good 60 yards in the air, cornerback Carlton Davis tried to cover Tyreek Hill one-on-one on the vertical route, Antoine Winfield Jr. came over with late safety help after running the middle of the deep third, and the 2020 NFL Most Valuable Player discussion just became that much more redundant with this 75-yard scoring bomb.

Mahomes now has 28 touchdowns and just two interceptions on the season, and odds are, he’s not done yet.

(Addendum: I couldn’t even finish this post before Mahomes beat Davis and Winfield with another touchdown throw to Hill — this time, a 44-yarder. Yikes). So, that’s 29 touchdowns and two picks this season for Mahomes. The first quarter isn’t done yet, and Hill has seven catches on seven targets for 203 yards and two touchdowns.