Minkah Fitzpatrick voted the No. 1 Safety in the NFL

Minkah Fitzpatrick viewed as the clear best safety in the NFL according to league personnel

This past week, ESPN conducted a number of surveys with NFL executives, coaches and scouts to gather the league’s opinion on various topics. One of the opinions they love to grasp is how people in the league view certain players and position groups. Yesterday, the survey discussed the top corners in the NFL, including three former Alabama players and Patrick Surtain II, who was ranked No. 1 on the list.

Recently, ESPN discussed the safety position (subscription required) and who is at the top of the league right now. The Crimson Tide add another to their claim as Defensive Back University, or “DBU,” Pittsburgh Steelers DB, Minkah Fitzpatrick, was ranked as the No. 1 safety in the league. Xavier McKinney qualified on the list as well as an honorable mention, but it is impressive when you think about all of the top corner and safety talent Alabama has sent to the NFL.

One executive in the NFL said of the Giants‘ McKinney, “Young, consistent big starting-level safety. One of the leaders on the Giants defense, versatile – not a lot of flash or high-ed athletic ability compared to some of the other top safeties.”

The reviews for Fitzpatrick were glowing coming off of a 2022 First-team All-Pro performance. Fitzpatrick has arguably the best ball-hawking skills in the NFL and he displayed that last season with 11 pass breakups and six interceptions.

An NFL personnel director said of Fitzpatrick, “Best in the game, and it’s not close. You have to keep him moving because if he’s stationary, coordinators can plan for him, but every single play, there’s that feeling of, where is he going to be? Post, slot, nickel, box. He’s capable, willing and able to handle all of that. He’s brilliant, works, studies, loves the game.”

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LSU football’s Greg Brooks Jr. plans to uphold ‘DBU’ tradition in 2023

Can LSU maintain its DBU claim in 2023?

LSU is one of several college football programs that considers itself the premier producer of defensive back talent in the country and has adopted the moniker “DBU” to reflect that.

Though that is a point of contention with several other schools, given that the Tigers have produced players like [autotag]Patrick Peterson[/autotag], [autotag]Tyrann Mathieu[/autotag] and [autotag]Jamal Adams[/autotag], just to name a few, they certainly have a case.

This year’s group of defensive backs will feature a lot of new faces after a number of players departed and were subsequently replaced in the transfer portal with players like [autotag]Duce Chestnut[/autotag], [autotag]Denver Harris[/autotag] and [autotag]Zy Alexander[/autotag].

[autotag]Greg Brooks Jr.[/autotag], one of the few returning veterans in the defensive backfield, said this year’s group has what it takes to keep that DBU tradition alive, according to On3.

“It’s great, you know what I’m saying. We gotta keep the tradition going. It’s gonna be a fun year,” said Brooks. “We have a lot of new guys. And I feel like a lot of us are gonna step up to keep that name, upholding this tradition.”

After a portal-heavy rebuild in the secondary last offseason, Kelly had to do so once again. Sustaining success that way may not be easy, but there’s no denying the talent on the roster at the position.

LSU fans will hope Brooks is right and the defensive backs can continue to be a strength.

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Follow Tyler to continue the conversation on Twitter: @TylerNettuno

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Trevon Diggs uses facts to defend ‘Alabama is DBU’

Though many other programs try to claim it, there can only be one DBU.

Former Alabama cornerback Trevon Diggs is known for interceptions and making headlines for his play on the field. Now, he’s in the news for supporting the Crimson Tide.

Diggs, who played at Alabama from 2016-2020, was selected in the second round of the 2020 NFL draft by the Dallas Cowboys. He joined a handful of other standout Crimson Tide defensive backs in the NFL, and has welcomed in several others since then.

Though other programs like LSU or Georgia may try to claim the title of ‘DBU,’ Diggs argues that Alabama is the premier program in developing NFL-ready defensive backs.

Diggs responded to a Tweet by Pro Football Focus, which asked fans which cornerback listed was CB1 in the NFL. Three of the seven on the list are former members of the Crimson Tide.

Roll Tide Wire will continue to follow Alabama football and former players now in the NFL.

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Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow AJ Spurr on Twitter @SpurrFM.

Top 101 LSU football players of all time: No. 70-61

The top 101 countdown continues with a few wide receivers and some of DBU’s best

LSU football has been around for a long time. Since 1893, to be exact.

In that span, plenty of great football players have come through the program. Before we begin the journey of the 2022 season, I thought I’d take a stab at ranking the 101 best players in LSU history.

I have tried to avoid recency bias as much as possible. It can be hard to get enough information about older players, but I did my best to get them about in the ballpark of where they should be.

Anytime there’s a list this big, people will disagree. There’s so little that separates the 50th player from the 70th, and so on.

I tried to balance consistency over multiple seasons with some players that had one great year. Both have been rewarded here. With that in mind, let’s continue the countdown.

Tigers in the NFL year in review: Cleveland’s Greedy Williams

His stock is rising after a productive 2021 campaign.

Greedy Williams’ 2018 season at LSU was about as good a season as any LSU cornerback has had. Playing opposite of Kristian Fulton, he played a large role in LSU having one of the best defenses in the country.

The Browns selected him in the second round with the 46th overall pick. Unfortunately, he did not pan out his first couple years in the NFL. He struggled in 2019 and was hurt in 2020, not seeing a single snap.

2021 was a different story for Williams as he finally started to look closer to the player he was at LSU. Williams saw limited action the first few weeks of the season but finally got an opportunity in week four when the Browns faced the Vikings.

Williams picked off his first career pass. According to Pro Football Reference, he was targeted five times and allowed just a 34.2 quarterback rating on those targets. Williams played in 100% of the defensive snaps. A big step for a player coming off an injury.

Williams then struggled in his next couple of games. A pair of games that saw the Browns defense give up a combined 84 points.

He bounced back from that slump though, allowing just five catches on 13 targets in his next four games, breaking up three passes in that stretch.

Over the last few weeks of the year, Williams was somewhat inconsistent, but still good. Against the Raiders, he broke up two passes while picking off another, helping a depleted Browns team win a defensive battle.

He didn’t play a ton against Pittsburgh in week 17’s Monday night game, but he was good when he did, allowing just three yards on two targets.

All things considered; Williams had a pretty good year. Coming into week 18, he was in the top 20% of cornerbacks when it came to passer rating when targeted.

Williams 2021 was a pleasant surprise for some who thought he may have been a bust. It didn’t look promising after his first couple years in the league. If Williams builds on his 2021 in 2022, he has a chance to be seen in the same light as some other LSU cornerbacks who have gone on to be really good NFL players.

Looking back on Cordale Flott’s LSU career

It appears that Cordale Flott will head to the pro level.

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Earlier this week, it was reported that junior cornerback Cordale Flott would forgo his senior year and enter the LSU draft.

It was not unexpected after the year Flott had, but he’s not the level of prospect that declares no matter what, so there was still some intrigue into whether or not he’d be back. One has to think LSU’s total turnover on the defensive staff didn’t help when it came to recruiting Flott back.

Flott came in as a three-star from Alabama in the 2019 class. At the time, Flott didn’t make a ton of headlines. The 2019 class included Derek Stingley and a few other corners ranked higher than Flott.

Flott made quite the impression on the LSU coaching staff when he got to campus. By November of 2019, Flott was drawing rave reviews from then LSU defensive coordinator Dave Aranda. Flott also played a factor in LSU’s monumental win in Tuscaloosa that fall.

Despite not getting a ton of playing time in 2019, Flott still broke up five passes on 25 targets. He proved to be versatile, lining up on the outside and in the slot. He even took a few snaps at free safety.

2020 was a different story. Much like the entire LSU team, Flott took a step back. 2020 featured one of the worst LSU pass defenses in school history.

Flott allowed a ton of yards and according to Pro Football Focus, he allowed close to a perfect passer rating when targeted. It wasn’t pretty. The Alabama game in 2020 was by far the worst game of Flott’s career.

In 2020, the whole defense was mismanaged and a lot of the faults should fall on the coaches. Flott, as well as every other defensive back on the team, was put in difficult positions week after week. It was a group that allowed blown coverage after blown coverage.

If 2020 was a sophomore slump for Flott, 2021 was anything but. He had his best year yet. Stingley and Eli Ricks were seen as one of the best cornerback duos in college football entering 2021. They both dealt with injuries which meant Flott had to lead the group.

AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

Against Mississippi State, Flott had one of the best games of his career. He had a pick and made some big tackles as well.

Flott’s tackling ability was always underrated. Even in 2020 when he struggled in pass coverage, he was a good tackler, eventually for someone his size. That tackling ability shined more in 2021.

The interception against Mississippi State was Flott’s only interception of the year, but he was really good in pass coverage throughout and was a top-three player on the defense. He was a significant factor in LSU not repeating the horrors of 2020.

WATCH: Texas commit Jaylon Guilbeau clamps a receiver at Pylon 7on7 nationals

Jaylon Guilbeau’s side of the field is a no fly zone.

While Texas is in the middle of a huge weekend and hoping to obtain more commits after getting pledges on the offensive line from Cole Hutson and Connor Robertson, one of their longtime commits is terrorizing receivers.

Defensive back Jaylon Guilbeau committed to the former staff in September of 2020 and was the first player of the 2022 class. He is a very athletic and savvy corner, who also doubles at as a track star at Memorial High School in Port Arthur, Texas.

Guilbeau and fellow commit Jaydon Blue’s 7-on-7 team, Fast7V7, is playing at the Pylon7on7 Nationals this weekend and both are making huge plays for the team.

Take a look at Guilbeau absolutely shutting down this receiver.

The Longhorns have often referred to themselves as Defensive Back University and Guilbeau certainly seems like he is a player who will be able to carry that tradition, or in the case of last season’s team…resurrect it.

The Longhorns’ defensive backs struggled at times last season as they gave up over 10 yards per pass and gave up on average 266 yards per game through the air.

With the new defensive staff making corrections this season, and players like Guilbeau incoming, the Longhorns should actually be playing like the real DBU soon enough.

Dallas Baptist women end a magical season with a breathless national title run in medal match play

Dallas Baptist authored a gutsy run through medal match play at the NCAA Division II National Championship to win a program-first title.

Hanna Harrison is a planner, one who says big change on short notice – like the kind last spring’s COVID pandemic brought – “kind of freaks me out.” It seemed like every few hours last April, something was changing.

Harrison and senior classmate Evelyn Arguelles huddled.

“It wasn’t even a question,” Harrison said of deciding to play a fifth year at Dallas Baptist, an NCAA Division II school in Dallas. “I just felt like – we all felt like –  last year was our year. When it got cut short for me and (fellow senior) Evelyn (Arguelles) it wasn’t the end of our story at DBU. We wanted it to more be on our terms than COVID.”

Fast forward a year, to TPC of Michigan. Harrison has just won a point in the title match at the NCAA Division II Women’s Championship. When she made that par putt on No. 18 it to earn a point over Lynn’s Camila Madariaga (Division II decides its national champion in a medal match-play format), Arguelles rushed the green.

“The whole week, we just kinda knew it was our time,” Harrison said of the feeling that surrounded DBU’s first national-title run. “… Evelyn came down – she got a flight and landed at 2 a.m. the day of our final round and surprised us all on the green. Even she knew.”

Unfinished business, indeed.

DBU won eight times this season, including at the 41-team Kiawah Island Classic, where the Patriots were the only Division II team in a Division I field. There were setbacks, though. DBU finished second by 16 shots at the West Regional despite being a heavy favorite. The team came in fifth in national-championship stroke play – 25 shots behind Limestone University, which then garnered the No. 1 seed in match play.

DBU has been knocking at the door for years when it comes to winning a national title. In 2017, when Harrison was a freshman, the Patriots finished one shot behind Barry when the national champion was still decided by 72 holes of stroke play. The next year, they finished third.

In 2019, the first year medal match play was implemented, DBU fell in the first round of match play after a 10-win season.

National-championship stroke play matters most because of the seeding. As the No. 5 seed, DBU drew a quarterfinal pairing against two-time national champion Indy.

DBU freshman Olivia Mitchell’s seven-shot victory over five-time All-American Pilar Echeverria in the final match was key in DBU advancing, 3-1-1.

In the semifinals, DBU made it past Grand Valley State by a 3-2 margin. The Patriots faced Lynn for the title the next day.

Halfway through the championship match, DBU was squarely behind the eight ball.

“We were down in every match at the turn, which is kind of fitting – we always, for 16 years, our whole motto has been every shot always matters, all five girls no matter the situation,” Trapp said.

Lynn put the first two points on the board before Faith DeLaGarza increased her advantage on Honor Keilty from one shot on the 13th tee to seven shots on the 18th green. It was a big point to put DBU back in the game.

In the match behind DeLaGarza, Harrison had spent the back nine clawing her way back. Medal match play is a format ripe for big swings – Harrison’s chip-in on No. 5 for double bogey (after watching her ball sail over her head and out of bounds after hitting a tree) – is a prime example of that. It kept her from losing insurmountable ground.

Harrison and Madariaga were tied entering the final hole but Harrison edged her, making a three-and-a-half footer for a match-winning par.

“She was 3 down after 11 and I knew we needed that match,” Trapp said. “I just knew being a senior, just not going to give in, she battled and battled and got all of it back and won on 18 to win by one, which we had to have that point.”

At that point, Trapp ran back to Mitchell in the anchor match for a conversation that secured the championship. Mitchell was trailing Lynn’s Helen Kreuzer, who had won the individual title earlier in the week, by two shots on the 17th tee. She cut that deficit to one shot, but likely needed a birdie on 18 to win it.

Facing a 148-yard approach into the green, Mitchell reached for her 7-iron. Trapp stopped her after a practice swing.

“I think he said, ‘How amped are you right now?’” Mitchell remembered. “… My heartbeat was racing, I was shaking over the ball.

“We switched clubs to the 8 and I was feeling pretty confident. Coach thinks this is the right club, I think this is the right club, just hit the shot, and I hit it. As soon as it left the face, I was like, that’s going to be pretty good. It was on the pin the whole time.”

Trapp’s “Be good, baby!” rang out as Mitchell’s shot landed 5 feet from the hole.

“It started rolling a little bit, it ends up like three and a half feet,” she said. “As soon as it hit the green, everybody just started cheering, like roars. I’ve never really been in that position before, to win something that important.”

Kreuzer took her time reading the birdie putt from 20 feet, which gave Mitchell time to control her breathing. Trapp told her she’d already made the putt, and her nerves subsided.

It’s true: Every team practice at DBU ends with a team pressure putt, whether that be from 12 feet or 3 feet.

This time, Mitchell thinks her eyes were closed when it went in.

“That moment after, I wish everyone could experience what I felt, what Coach felt, what all our parents felt,” Mitchell said days later, admitting that she still couldn’t stop smiling at the memory. “It was probably the best moment of my whole life. It was so cool.”

For years, it has felt like a matter of time for DBU to be in this moment. The Patriots are the fourth team to win its first NCAA Division II championship team in the past seven years.

“Everything we do at practice and who I recruit is for moments like that,” Trapp said of the pressure his players faced and conquered. “…They want those moments or they don’t come here.”

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Texas head coach Bill O’Brien explains cancelling Earl Thomas’ workout

Houston Texans head coach Bill O’Brien met with the media and explained their reasoning for cancelling Earl Thomas’ workout.

On Tuesday, former Texas Longhorns defensive back Earl Thomas was expected to meet with the Houston Texans. However, prior to his workout John McClain stated that the team decided better of it due to the history of the talented safety. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that it was more COVID-19 related as to why they cancelled the workout. Thomas was expected to sign with the Texans before it all changed at the last moment.

During a meeting with the media head coach Bill O’Brien cleared the air on the exact reasoning. Mark Lane of the Texans Wire reports that it was more COVID related than his history with Baltimore. At least that is what BOB said on Wednesday.

“Earl Thomas is a hell of a player,” O’Brien said via Aaron Wilson of the Houston Chronicle. “He’s had a great career. Again, we had a bunch of guys in and we decided to cancel. We’ll see how it goes moving forward. That’s really what it was. It’s not anything other than that and we’ve got a lot of respect for Earl.”

O’Brien went on to mention that the problems that Thomas had in Baltimore were not on their mind when they asked him to visit. Despite the fact that the Texans cancelled his workout as they did state, they still hosted other players including Shea Patterson. So while he claims that it was COVID-19 related and not off the field issues, not sure one can buy that. Especially based on the actions of the team.

For now Earl Thomas will sit and wait for another opportunity to play in the NFL.

Re-visiting ESPN’s Position U rankings. Where is Ohio State with each?

ESPN is re-visiting its Position U rankings and we’re following right along. Where is Ohio State ranked among all the position groups?

There aren’t too many college football programs that have has as much talent that’s come through the tunnel at almost every position group quite like Ohio State. Alabama comes to mind, but it’s hard to find another program that can keep up.

Last year, ESPN went through an exercise of identifying a Position U for every position on the football field and Ohio State was well represented. It was named Defensive Back U by the Worldwide Leader in Sports Programming and was in the top ten in numerous others.

Now, ESPN is re-visiting that list and we’re onboard the train. Here’s a look at every position group and where Ohio State lands according to ESPN staff writer David. M. Hale.

Next … Quarterback U