How the Cowboys-Texans trade for WR Brandin Cooks impacts the draft

The Houston Texans traded WR Brandin Cook to the Dallas Cowboys, a deal that shakes up the draft needs for both teams

Sunday morning kicked off with the Houston Texans dominating the NFL news. The Texans agreed to a big contract extension with standout left tackle Laremy Tunsil and then dealt top wide receiver Brandin Cooks to the Dallas Cowboys.

It’s a deal that sends a fifth-round pick in 2023 and a sixth-rounder in 2024 from Dallas to Houston for Cooks, who led the Texans in receiving in each of his three seasons with the team. The trade impacts the draft needs for both franchises.

Cowboys impact

Dallas lands the receiver they sorely needed to pair with CeeDee Lamb. He steps into the hole the Cowboys created by trading Amari Cooper to the Browns in 2022.

Cooks is 29 and coming off a down (for him) season, albeit one with inferior QB play and supporting talent in Houston to what he’ll have in Dallas. Houston used him more in a shorter passing game, but Cooks was a very adept deep threat during his Rams and Saints days. He can work all levels of the field.

Adding Cooks means the Cowboys no longer need a wide receiver as desperately as they did. Dallas can still use more help at wide receiver, but can wait until later in the draft to tap into a middle-heavy draft class at wideout.

Texans impact

Houston already added wideouts Robert Woods and Noah Brown (the Cowboys’ No. 2 WR in 2022) this offseason to roll out with promising young Nico Collins. John Metchie could provide a boost with a healthy return. In short, wide receiver is still a need but not a pressing one.

Adding a fifth-round pick gives Houston the replacement for the fifth-rounder they forfeited for illegally compensating Deshaun Watson during the pandemic. That range of the draft is where the Texans could look to add another wideout. It would be surprising if GM Nick Caserio addressed it before that point.

Stop projecting first-round tight ends for the Lions in 2023

There seems to be a reflexive “replace Hockenson” mindset by the national media. Here’s why that couldn’t be more wrong for Detroit.

Sitting in the Hancock Whitney Stadium stands for a Senior Bowl practice last week, MLive Lions reporter Ben Raven, Nolan Bianchi of the Detroit News and myself were approached by a well-known national media member about the Lions possibly selecting a tight end high in the 2023 NFL draft.

“I don’t think they’re taking one at all, to be honest,” Raven responded to a dumbfounded inquisitor. Bianchi and I quickly nodded our heads in agreement.

Herein lies one of the primary disconnects between those who closely follow the Detroit Lions and those who view the team from more distance.

Tight end is generally listed by national media as one of the Lions’ biggest needs. In fact, it’s the No. 1 or No. 2 offensive need listed for Detroit at CBS Sports, NFL.com, The Draft Network, Pro Football Focus and ESPN, all within the last month.

Never mind that the team doesn’t currently have a right guard, not with Evan Brown a free agent and Halapoulivaati Vaitai and Tommy Kraemer both coming off back surgeries that caused them to miss the entire 2022 season. Or that Jared Goff is literally the only quarterback on the entire roster, including reserve/future contracts. Or that running backs No. 1 (Jamaal Williams) and No. 3 (Justin Jackson) are free agents, as is wide receiver No. 2 (DJ Chark).

Nope. None of that matters because national pundits have to conclude that the Lions desperately need a new tight end to replace the one they traded away, Pro Bowler T.J. Hockenson.

It seems nobody asks the question of why the Lions traded away Hockenson in the first place.

Hockenson is in Minnesota instead of Detroit for a couple of reasons. Foremost is that the Lions knew they were never going to pay the market rate to keep Hockenson, who is entering the final year of his rookie contract and had already been making noise about a lucrative extension. Most projections for Hockenson’s next contract start in the $15 million-a-year range, and that’s simply not something the Lions were not going to consider.

It wasn’t discontent with Hockenson. Far from it. Hockenson had just posted one of the best games by a tight end in NFL history. This current Detroit offense, led by rising star OC Ben Johnson and head coach Dan Campbell, a longtime NFL tight end himself, simply doesn’t require a premium tight end to operate effectively.

Folks outside of Detroit might not know the names Brock Wright or James Mitchell. Inside Allen Park, those guys are viewed as great fits for exactly what this Lions team wants from its tight ends. They can chip-and-release, they can execute the run-blocking assignments, and they can motion or flex out depending on the set.

Wright caught four touchdown passes after Hockenson was traded. No. 3 tight end Shane Zylstra caught three in one game. Like Wright and Mitchell, he’s under contractual control through at least 2024.

The key player here is Mitchell. Detroit’s fifth-round pick in 2022, Mitchell started slowly as he recovered from a knee injury suffered near the end of his collegiate career at Virginia Tech. A well-built 6-foot-4 and 250-pound athlete, Mitchell proceeded to catch every single pass thrown his way in 2022 and improved as a blocker along the way.

The Lions love Mitchell. Love him, in a way that’s difficult to explain to someone on the outside who only sees 11 receptions for a fifth-round rookie they probably spent 10 minutes scouting over a year ago.

Back to the offense. After sputtering in the first week without Hockenson, a game the Lions also played without Chark or No. 3 WR Josh Reynolds and with top WR Amon-Ra St. Brown and explosive RB D’Andre Swift severely limited with injuries, the Jared Goff-led offense (no, I can’t call it the Goffense, sorry) soared without having a high-end tight end.

Instead of using Hockenson as one of the primary targets, Campbell and Johnson opened up the field more without their alpha tight end. It worked beautifully. Goff didn’t throw an interception the rest of the season and the Lions offense efficiently hummed along as one of the NFL’s best and most diverse. Wright, Mitchell and Zylstra provided enough firepower at TE on their own, notably in the red zone.

In short, the Lions didn’t miss Hockenson the player.

Should the Lions consider adding a tight end this offseason? Absolutely. Zylstra, for his red-zone heroics, is a low-end blocker and eminently replaceable. Depth is always welcomed. But it’s absolutely not a priority need for the Lions. Be very surprised if you see Detroit drafting a tight end before about the fifth round. I know I would be.

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Jaguars back to No. 5 in the 2023 NFL Draft order

The Jaguars are back in the top five again.

Earlier in November, the Jacksonville Jaguars were fifth in the 2023 NFL Draft order after finishing the month of October with a five-game losing streak. While that changed when the Jaguars won in Week 9, a loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday put Jacksonville back in the top five.

With eight weeks left in the 2022 regular season, the Jaguars are back in fifth again.

Through the first 10 weeks, this is the current top 10 of the 2023 NFL Draft currently (strength of schedule tiebreaker in parenthesis):

  1. Houston Texans: 1-7-1 (.522)
  2. Las Vegas Raiders: 2-7 (.471)
  3. Carolina Panthers: 3-7 (.444)
  4. Philadelphia Eagles (via New Orleans Saints): 3-7 (.478)
  5. Jacksonville Jaguars: 3-7 (.529)
  6. Chicago Bears: 3-7 (.571)
  7. Detroit Lions (via Los Angeles Rams): 3-6 (.478)
  8. Seattle Seahawks (via Denver Broncos): 3-6 (.484)
  9. Houston Texans (via Cleveland Browns): 3-6 (.494)
  10. Pittsburgh Steelers: 3-6 (.516)

The three teams currently at the top of the order — the Texans, Raiders, and Panthers — may all be in the market for a new quarterback in the offseason. That undoubtedly won’t be the case for the Eagles, who own the Saints’ pick and have an MVP candidate at quarterback in Jalen Hurts.

Among the Jaguars’ top needs is a cornerback to play opposite Tyson Campbell, an upgrade along the defensive line, and interior offensive line help.

Ranking the Lions needs for 2022 NFL draft weekend

What do the Detroit Lions need the most, and which positions can they afford to let slide during the 2022 NFL draft weekend?

What do the Detroit Lions need the most, and which positions can they afford to let slide during the 2022 NFL draft weekend?

Ranking the needs for Lions GM Brad Holmes and his collaborators takes into account the current roster, contract situations for the starters and positional emphasis for the team and schemes.

This doesn’t mean the Lions see the same needs with the same priorities or will address them all this weekend. Teams use the draft for different purposes or prioritize divergent things from how they look from the outside.

Every NFL team’s 3 biggest roster needs heading into the 2022 NFL draft

Do you agree with these roster needs for the Broncos?

The 2022 NFL draft is right around the corner as each team puts the finishing touches on its draft board before the picks are made next week in Las Vegas. The good teams have already filled most of their roster holes and can go into the draft without feeling forced to select a specific position early.

Other teams, however, aren’t so fortunate. For the Jets, Giants and Jaguars, there are a bunch of spots that need to be filled before the 2022 season, and the draft is a great opportunity to accomplish that.

The NFL Wire network has put together a list of every team’s three biggest roster needs heading into the draft, preparing you for what positions could be addressed next weekend.

Every team’s 3 biggest roster needs heading into the 2022 NFL draft

The NFL Wire network has put together a list of every team’s three biggest roster needs heading into the draft

The 2022 NFL draft is right around the corner as each team puts the finishing touches on its draft board before the picks are made next week in Las Vegas. The good teams have already filled most of their roster holes and can go into the draft without feeling forced to select a specific position early.

Other teams, however, aren’t so fortunate. For the Jets, Giants and Jaguars, there are a bunch of spots that need to be filled before the 2022 season, and the draft is a great opportunity to accomplish that.

The NFL Wire network has put together a list of every team’s three biggest roster needs heading into the draft, preparing you for what positions could be addressed next weekend.

Broncos’ biggest remaining draft needs after re-signing Kareem Jackson

Safety is less of a priority for the Broncos now, but the team still has a few positions of need ahead of the NFL draft.

After bringing back veteran Kareem Jackson on a one-year contract, the Denver Broncos no longer have a big need at safety going into the 2022 NFL draft. The Broncos might still opt to draft a safety, but the position doesn’t need to be among the team’s primary needs on their to-do list.

So what positions should Denver target in the draft later this month? Here’s a quick look at seven remaining positions of need for the Broncos.

Projecting the Lions current 53-man roster

Projecting the Lions current 53-man roster after the first couple of weeks of free agency and how it shapes draft needs

The Detroit Lions have been pretty busy in the first couple of weeks of free agency. Of course, much of the activity has been in the form of bringing back Detroit’s own players from the 2021 season.

In fact, the Lions currently have the most rostered players of any NFL team, at 80 (as of March 25th). That doesn’t leave much room for more additions with nine draft picks, including three of the first 34 in the 2022 NFL draft.

The team will eventually boil down to just 53. Based on who is on the roster right now, this is the projection for who makes the final 53 come September.

 

Lions 2022 offseason: Ranking the positional needs

Lions 2022 offseason: Ranking the positional needs for Detroit in the coming free agency period and 2022 NFL draft

Coming off a 3-13-1 season at the beginning of the franchise overhaul, the Detroit Lions definitely have some serious needs in the 2022 offseason. Sorting through those on-the-field needs requires a little bit of understanding of what coach Dan Campbell and the Lions are trying to accomplish.

Here are the top priorities of need for the Lions in the coming offseason, needs which can be filled via the 2022 NFL draft or during free agency.

Podcast: Ranking Lions offseason needs and some Stafford closure

Lions WRs are the ‘worst position group in football’ per Bleacher Report

Tyrell Williams, Breshad Perriman and Co. don’t impress on paper

The Detroit Lions have begun the overhaul at wide receiver. Losing the top four wideouts from the 2020 team, including Kenny Golladay and Marvin Jones, put a huge hit into the Lions offensive potential.

New GM Brad Holmes has brought in veterans Tyrell Williams, Breshad Perriman and Kalif Raymond to join Quintez Cephus and help stop the bleeding. But those bandages don’t stop the Lions from still needing a lot more help.

Bleacher Report’s Brent Sobleski rated the wide receiver position the team’s two biggest needs in his piece documenting the top three draft needs for each team. Sobleski lays it out bluntly,

“Yeah, it’s bad. Really bad. As in, the Lions’ wide receivers may be the worst position group in football entering the draft.”

When so starkly laid out, it’s easy to see why many Lions fans covet multiple wide receivers in this month’s NFL draft.