Ranking the Chicago Bears’ 2021 NFL draft needs

A look at the Chicago Bears’ 2021 NFL draft needs prior to the start of NFL free agency.

The Chicago Bears were a playoff team in 2020, which is still hard to comprehend considering how bizarre their regular season was.

Their 5-1 start was followed by a six-game losing streak, Mitch Trubisky was benched for Nick Foles, who was benched for Mitch Trubisky, and their wild-card berth was thanks in part to the newly added seventh seed in 2020.

Weird year. No doubt about it.

But the offseason brings hope for a brighter future. It’s especially true for the Bears this year: they finally have a first-round pick again!

It’s the first NFL Draft that they’ll pick in Round 1 since 2018; they hold the 20th overall selection.

Here are the Bears’ top draft needs before the roster gets upgraded (or downgraded) in free agency. Note: this post assumes Allen Robinson leaves for greener pastures. Let’s hope that doesn’t happen.

(Photo by Joe Scarnici/Getty Images)

Quarterback

-Life as a Bears fans is one big circle that keeps coming back to quarterback as the biggest offseason need every few offseasons. From the days of Rex Grossman being picked 22nd overall in the 2003 NFL draft, to the trade for Jay Cutler in 2009, to the decision to draft Trubisky second overall in 2017, Chicago always finds itself back in this awful, awful place.

The Bears need a quarterback in the worst way. If one slides to No. 20 overall — and they don’t address it via trade or in free agency — GM Ryan Pace will have no choice but to think long and hard about pulling the trigger.

Way-too-early 2021 draft needs prediction for Broncos

Here’s an early look at what positions the Broncos might target in the 2021 NFL Draft.

The Denver Broncos just wrapped up the 2020 NFL Draft but it’s not too early to look ahead to next year’s draft (we’ll, maybe it is, but we’re going to look ahead anyway).

Here’s a way-too-early prediction for the team’s draft needs in 2021.

1. Offensive Tackle 

Garett Bolles might end up starting in 2020 but he’s not the long-term answer at left tackle. Ja’Wuan James will only be 28 this season but he hasn’t proved he can stay healthy. Denver needs more reliable starters at both tackle spots.

2. Inside Linebacker

Todd Davis isn’t good enough in coverage to remain one of the team’s top inside linebackers beyond this season. Justin Strnad might emerge as a starting-caliber linebacker but if he doesn’t, the Broncos will need to address the position sooner than later.

3. Safety 

Justin Simmons will hopefully sign a long-term contract extension with Denver but the Broncos will need to give him a long-term partner in the secondary. Kareem Jackson is an excellent strong safety but he’s 32 years old.

4. Nose Tackle 

Mike Purcell stepped up for Denver last season but he’ll turn 30 years old next spring. Most of the other defensive linemen on the roster appear to be better suited to play as defensive ends than as nose tackles.

5. Outside Linebacker 

Von Miller is a legend and we’re certainly not trying to run him out of town. Miller is 31, though, and at some point within the next few years, he will probably transition to being a rotational pass rusher. The Broncos need to start thinking about the future.

6. Cornerback 

A.J. Bouye should be a good No. 1 cornerback for the next few years but we are yet to find out if Bryce Callahan will return to his pre-injury form. Callahan might also be best-suited to play in the slot so Denver might end up needing a true No. 2 cornerback.

7. Running Back 

Melvin Gordon will have just one year remaining on his contract after this season and he will be turning 29 when he becomes a free agent. If the Broncos don’t re-sign Gordon, they will need more depth at running back.

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What needs remain for 49ers on Day 3 of NFL draft?

The 49ers addressed their biggest needs, but they still have work to do in the later rounds.

The 49ers on Thursday filled two of their top needs in the first round of the NFL draft. They aren’t slated to pick again until Round 5, and they hold one pick in each of the final three rounds.

Going into the draft San Francisco had two sizable holes to fill on the defensive line and wide receiver. They addressed their defensive line when they took Javon Kinlaw No. 14 overall. They added a receiver by trading up to No. 25 and selecting Brandon Aiyuk.

With those two holes filled and most of their Super Bowl roster returning, there aren’t many major needs left for the 49ers to address, which is probably why they were comfortable unloading three picks to move up to take Aiyuk.

Here are the positions they could aim for with their final three picks:

Cornerback

Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

With Richard Sherman, Ahkello Witherspoon and Emmanuel Moseley all due to hit free agency next season, the 49ers could opt to add a cornerback later in the draft to see if they can snag a late-round gem. Any draft pick this year wouldn’t need to start right away, so a late-round flier on a corner with good physical traits would make a lot of sense.

2020 NFL Draft: Lions remaining needs after round 1

With Day 1 of the 2020 NFL draft in the books, the Detroit Lions still have a few needs they need to address on Day 2.

With Day 1 of the 2020 NFL draft in the books, the Lions addressed their biggest weakness by landing shutdown corner Jeff Okudah, but they are still quite a few more holes that need to be filled.

With Day 2 just mere hours away, let’s examine the remaining needs the Lions need to focus on.

Even though cornerback was the glaring weakness on this defense, the defensive line wasn’t too far behind it. Likely for the Lions, there are quite a few players available either be at EDGE or the interior on Day 2.

EDGE rusher

The one player that sticks out like a sore thumb, but in the right way, would be A.J. Epenesa (EDGE, Iowa). Heading into the draft, the idea of landing both Okudah and Epenesa without trading back in the first was a complete pipe dream, but now the dream may come true. Other EDGE players to keep an eye on is Yetur Gross-Matos (Penn State) and Josh Uche (Michigan).

Interior defensive line

The Lions could inject more blood into the interior defensive line even though they signed multiple players this offseason. A few players that could interest in the Lions are Ross Blacklock (TCU), Jordan Elliot (Missouri), or Justin Madubuike (TAMU). The Lions covet tackles who can pass rush and run-stop, and each of them offers those particular skill sets.

Keep an eye on Melvin Agim (Arkansas) as a potential sleeper option for the Lions in the third round.

Offensive line

On the other side of the ball, the Lions could look to fill in the holes on the offensive line. With Hal Vaitai’s positional flexibility, the Lions can keep their options open at both tackle and guard. Tackles Josh Jones (Houston) and Ezra Cleveland (Boise State) could be selected and allow the Lions to push Vaitai inside if needed. If the Lions targets a center/guard Matt Hennessy (Temple) and Robert Hunt (Louisiana) would create a formidable one-two punch with Vaitai at tackle.

One sleeper name the Lions could look at is Jonah Jackson from Ohio State who they coached at the Senior Bowl and have been in contact with.

Wide receiver

With no receivers currently under contract after this season, the Lions could look to select a receiver on Day 2. The top available players the Lions could have their eyes on are Denzel Mims (Baylor), Michael Pittman Jr. (USC), and K.J Hamler (Penn State).

A sleeper option that could interest the Lions is Tyler Johnson (Minnesota) as he offers the same versatile skill sets as the aforementioned receivers.

Running back

One of the most debated questions this offseason has been: When should the Lions take a running back? With several top running backs still on the board — DeAndre Swift (Georgia), Jonathon Taylor (Wisconsin), and J.K. Dobbins (Ohio State) — the Lions could look in that direction early Day 2.

Day 2 for the Lions will be a busy one with three selections, but this will be the best time for them to shore some of the holes that may be plaguing this team.

Denver Broncos 2020 NFL Draft needs

The Broncos have six positions of need going into the 2020 NFL Draft.

Welcome to Day 1 of the 2020 NFL Draft!

The Denver Broncos are scheduled to have 10 picks in the draft this year, including the 15th overall pick in the first round. What positions will the Broncos be targeting with those picks? Here’s a quick recap of the team’s six biggest positions of need:

WR: Courtland Sutton made the Pro Bowl as an alternate last season but Denver will want to give young QB Drew Lock more weapons.

CB: After allowing Chris Harris to leave in free agency, the Broncos are thin at cornerback. They’ll probably add several CBs in the draft.

OT: Garett Bolles has just one year remaining on his contract and he’s not the long-term answer at left tackle.

IOL: After losing Connor McGovern during free agency, Denver needs to add a new starting-caliber guard or center to the offensive line.

ILB: The Broncos have one excellent inside linebacker in Alexander Johnson but the team needs a coverage linebacker who can eventually replace Todd Davis as a starter.

DL: Denver has a good front three in Shelby Harris, Mike Purcell and Jurrell Casey but none of those defenders are long-term solutions. The Broncos need to add depth at defensive end and nose tackle.

To view the Broncos’ complete order of draft picks, click here.

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ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. addresses the Saints’ biggest need

The New Orleans Saints were matched with Oklahoma prospect Kenneth Murray in the latest 2020 NFL mock draft from ESPN analyst Mel Kiper Jr.

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What are the most-important positions for the New Orleans Saints to address in the 2020 NFL Draft? Before free agency, replies would have included wide receiver, offensive guard, linebacker, safety, and cornerback. And likely quarterback.

With the first week-and-a-half of free agency in the books, the Saints have plugged many of those holes on their roster. They’ve added help at wide receiver (Emmanuel Sanders) and safety (Malcolm Jenkins) while retaining their own starters at guard (Andrus Peat) and cornerback (Janoris Jenkins), among others. They still have work to do in reinforcing the depth chart — younger options at corner would be nice, and they should add another passer — but the biggest hole remains at linebacker.

And that’s where ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. projects the Saints to make a move in the first round. He picked the Saints to select Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray, one of the top prospects in this year’s class at his position along with Patrick Queen (LSU) and Zack Baun (Wisconsin). Here’s what he wrote about the Saints’ situation:

This is a roster that should compete for a Super Bowl in 2020. Off-ball linebacker, though, is a position where New Orleans could get some help, and neither of my top inside linebackers have come off the board yet. Murray, a stellar athlete and tackling machine, is a good value pick here.

Murray has made 100-plus combined tackles in each of his last two seasons with the Sooners (including a bonkers 155-tackle effort in 2018), racking up 29.5 tackles for loss and 9.5 sacks in that time. He’s also deflected six passes and forced two fumbles (recovering one) in his career. The 21-year-old rookie has the range to rove around the field from one sideline to the other with ease, having timed the 40-yard dash in 4.52 seconds at 6-foot-2, 241 pounds. He also notched impressive jumps of 38 inches vertical and 129 inches broad. It’s easy to imagine him slotting in next to Demario Davis as the starting linebacker duo, backed up by injury-prone playmakers in Kiko Alonso and Alex Anzalone.

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Saints execs talk draft pick strategy: ‘there’s nothing to say that five (picks) can’t be six’

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton discussed the depth at wide receiver in the 2020 NFL Draft and acknowledged a trade down is possible.

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What are the New Orleans Saints going to do in the 2020 NFL Draft? While it’s too early to say which positions (much less specific prospects) they’ll be targeting, Saints coach Sean Payton offered his take on the areas he’s been most impressed with so far during an interview with NewOrleansSaints.com’s John DeShazier.

“After doing the front-board meeting, certainly it’s a deep draft at receiver,” Payton said, referencing a conference with college scouting director Jeff Ireland and his staff. “We think at defensive back as well, and defensive line. Any time I say that, there’s certainly a lot of talent at the other positions. But if you said what stood out in our meetings in the last month, it would have been those positions.”

While receiver is easily the pick for New Orleans’ biggest roster need — Michael Thomas, the reigning Offensive Player of the Year, was targeted 129 more times than the next-best wideout — Saints general manager Mickey Loomis was quick to emphasize that the team isn’t zeroing in on the options at the top of the draft.

“There’s players every year at every position and I think when you look at it, it’s like, ‘OK, how deep does it go?'” Loomis explained. “Are you getting into the middle rounds where you can feel really good about getting a guy that can be a significant contributor, not just early but down the road? My sense of it is, so far, it’s pretty deep.”

While every team and evaluator will have their own opinions on the depth of this year’s draft class at wide receiver, ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr. offered a bold take, speculating that as many as 25 to 30 wideouts could be selected in the first three rounds. If that’s the case, the Saints would be wise to consider trading down.

The problem with that is their draft trade history; Loomis laughed at the notion that the Saints never trade down in last year’s pre-draft press conference, admitting, “There’s a notion because there’s history . . . We’d be open to trading back if the timing is right and if the value is right.”

An aggressive approach has been the preference in the modern era of New Orleans football. The Saints have traded up in every draft Payton has overseen except for his first year on the job, back in 2006 (the Saints also stood pat in the 2012 draft, when Payton was suspended). They’ve traded down just twice in the last 14 years, in 2006 and 2007 — when Payton was building his roster from the ground up, looking to acquire veterans and extra draft capital.

Still, trading down isn’t a maneuver Payton is ready to rule out altogether: “And there’s nothing to say that five (picks) can’t be six as you get closer, relative to where you’re picking and whether you want to make any trades. But last year, we were all real pleased with what we were able to do with some of the ammo we had a year ago, and really bring in a number of players that helped us”

Working with just five picks again in 2020 (the Saints were shorthanded last year after previously trading for Marcus Davenport and Teddy Bridgewater), Payton was encouraged by his team’s ability to supplement a draft class that was short on numbers with high-impact undrafted rookies like Deonte Harris and Shy Tuttle, adding, “We felt like we had a real good draft without maybe the full allotment of picks. This year, I think we’ll have plenty of those opportunities again.”

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Ranking the Saints defensive position groups going into 2020 offseason

Which position group reigns supreme for the New Orleans Saints defense, and where must they add upgrades? Cornerback, linebacker stand out.

The New Orleans Saints have a number of questions to ask themselves this offseason, many of them surrounding starters headed for free agency either this March or next year. Most of those starters play defense, including names like cornerback Eli Apple, safety Vonn Bell, defensive tackle David Onyemata, and linebacker A.J. Klein.

While the defense came up short in the playoffs, it’s arguably been a more consistent unit than the lauded Saints offense the last few years, especially in the postseason. But should the Saints look to maintain consistency on that side of the ball or instead pursue upgrades?

To help find out, we’ve ranked each defensive position group, taking stock of where they stand going into the offseason:

Cornerbacks

Credit: John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports

The Saints have just three corners under contract right now: Marshon Lattimore, Janoris Jenkins, and Patrick Robinson. Lattimore is one of the best (if somewhat high-variance) young cover corners in the league, and the decision to pick up his fifth-year option for 2021 is a no-brainer. But it’s less clear whether the Saints should keep veterans like Jenkins and Robinson around on their bloated salaries. And the lack of depth behind them doesn’t add any clarity. This is a position the Saints must invest in, whether it means retaining mainstays like Apple and P.J. Williams or bringing in new faces.

Mickey Loomis likes his receivers, doesn’t see big need with Michael Thomas on hand

New Orleans Saints general manager Mickey Loomis likes his receiving corps ahead of the draft, at least as long as Michael Thomas is around.

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What is the biggest draft need for the New Orleans Saints? Objectively speaking, probably wide receiver. Michael Thomas led the group with 149 receptions; Ted Ginn Jr. placed second-best, with just 30 catches. After those two, second-year pro Tre’Quan Smith was the only receiver to catch at least 18 passes. Thomas put the team on his back and made NFL history, but he can’t be expected to do it his entire career. The Saints must get him some help.

But for now, Saints general manager Mickey Loomis is focused on talking up the players still in the room: behind Thomas, that means names such as Smith, Keith Kirkwood, and Deonte Harris. Backups like Lil’Jordan Humphrey, Emmanuel Butler, Krishawn Hogan, Tim White, and Maurice Harris are also around. Ginn and slot specialist Austin Carr are each pending free agents.

“I like the group of receivers that we have,” Loomis said after Senior Bowl practice in Mobile, Ala. However, much as he may like those prospects, Thomas was the only one he could specifically point to as a reason for optimism. “Obviously, Mike is an elite receiver, maybe the best in the league. Certainly, production was the best in the league and we’re excited about him, continue to be excited about him. But we’ve got a lot of guys that we like in the room.”

In other words: the Saints aren’t going to move heaven and earth to bolster the receiving corps as long as Thomas has two good hands. His NFL-best performance explains some of their confidence in his abilities, but the best Saints teams have had a bevy of weapons to work with. They can’t count on schemed touches for Taysom Hill and occasional targets to Jared Cook and Alvin Kamara to be good enough forever.

It’s likely Loomis’s attitude will change in the months ahead, as the NFL’s calendar shifts to free agency and then the hectic weeks before the 2020 NFL Draft. He admitted that he and Saints coach Sean Payton were getting their first brush with the upcoming draft class at the Senior Bowl, and that the team hasn’t really hammered out a list of offseason priorities just yet. Hopefully scouting director Jeff Ireland and his staff will find the players who can help the Saints get over last year’s postseason stall-out.

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Sean Payton keeping cards close to his vest on Saints draft needs

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton says it’s too early to discuss any firm strategy for the 2020 NFL Draft, but he likes what he’s hearing

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Ready or not, the New Orleans Saints are transitioning into the offseason. It’s not where they wanted to be right now, but it’s their reality. It means exit interviews, in-house evaluations, and strategizing for the future.

And for head coach Sean Payton, it means meeting with his scouts and front office staff to see how the team can improve. He was short on details in his end-of-year press conference on Tuesday, but did give some ideas about where the franchise is headed.

“There’s some ‘musts,’ right now that are, at least in my mind, positions that we’ve gotta solidify to be better,” Payton said. “And I think we’ll try do that in any way, shape, or form.”

Payton said that he’s only had cursory conversations about this year’s draft class, though he likes what he’s heard early on about the prospects at wide receiver when asked about it specifically. He explained that most of New Orleans’ internal discussions have surrounded the team’s restricted and unrestricted free agents, many of whom will test the open market in March.

It’s easy to point to wideout as the Saints’ biggest roster need in 2020; Michael Thomas put on a one-man show in 2019, outpacing the next-best wide receiver by 119 receptions and 1,304 yards through the air. This year’s draft class is being talked about as one of the best in recent memory at the position, which should be music to Saints fans’ ears.

Traditionally, the Saints like to load up on veteran free agents and go into the draft without one significant position still to draft. That’s what Payton referred to by ‘musts’ — his in-house ranking of roster needs designates different groupings as ‘musts,’ ‘needs,’ and ‘wants,’ in order of priority. So if wide receiver is a ‘must-add’ position, linebacker could be a ‘need,’ and so on.

Tight against the salary cap and with so many of their own free agents to consider, it’s possible the Saints flip the script and try to limit their investing to players who have already succeeded in their system. But it’s a long road until March, when free agency opens up, and even further to get to April’s draft. It’ll be fascinating to see how Payton and the Saints get there and what they choose to do when they’re on the clock.

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