Touchdown Wire’s 2020 NFL Draft rankings: Top 25 defensive players

Jeff Okudah of Ohio State leads a deep draft class of defensive backs. Xavier McKinney, Antoine Winfield and Trevon Diggs aren’t far behind.

Touchdown Wire’s 2020 NFL Draft rankings: Top 25 defensive players

Jeff Okudah of Ohio State leads a deep draft class of defensive backs. Xavier McKinney, Antoine Winfield and Trevon Diggs aren’t far behind.

With the 2020 NFL Draft fast approaching, it is time to start finalizing draft boards. Not just for NFL teams, but for the team here at Touchdown Wire. Here is Touchdown Wire’s list of the top 25 defensive prospects in the 2020 draft class.

1. Jeff Okudah, CB, Ohio State

(AP Photo/Jay LaPrete, File)

If there’s one thing NFL teams need more than anything else on defense right now, it’s the prototypical lockdown cornerback who can take an opponent’s No. 1 receiver through any route in any coverage. Of the cornerbacks in this draft class, Okudah is the one who raises no questions regarding his ability to do so. After playing 70% of his snaps in man coverage in 2018, per Sports Info Solutions, Okudah dipped down to 54% man coverage last season, upped his zone percentage and still allowed just 21 catches on 54 targets for 280 yards, three interceptions, one touchdown, and an opponent passer rating of 46.8. There may be more physically talented players in this class, but outside of the top quarterbacks, none are more positionally important.

2. Isaiah Simmons, Defense, Clemson

(John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports)

In his 2019 season, per Pro Football Focus, Simmons played 299 snaps in the box, 262 snaps at slot cornerback, 132 snaps at free safety and 116 snaps at defensive line. The 6-foot-4, 225-pound Simmons also played 13 snaps at outside corner, to make his versatility even more impressive. Asked at the scouting combing what his position was, Simmons simply responded, “Defense.” In the modern NFL, a player who can do everything from blitzing, to taking on the run game as a linebacker, to coverage as a slot defender and safety, is of prime value as defenses move to nickel and dime defenses as their base.

3. Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State

(Brian Spurlock-USA TODAY Sports)

Young has often been compared to fellow Ohio State alums Joey and Nick Bosa, and from a traits perspective, those are pretty good matches. In 2019, Young put up 16.5 sacks, 21 tackles for loss, seven quarterback hits and 31 quarterback hurries. And if you’re concerned about his getting shut out in sacks through his last three college games, a cursory look at the tape will tell you that he still had a massive effect on opposing offenses.

4. Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina

(AP Photo/Sean Rayford)

At 6 feet 6 and 302 pounds, Kinlaw fits the physical profile of the ideal multi-gap defensive lineman who can get nasty everywhere from over the center to outside the offensive tackles. In 2019, he raised his sack total from four in 2018 to six in his final college season, adding seven quarterback hits and 28 quarterback hurries. Perhaps the most impressive thing about Kinlaw’s potential is that he’s turned himself into a wrecking machine without the benefit of advanced hand technique. Once he reaps the benefits of NFL-level coaching, he projects well as an All-Pro-level disruptor.

5. Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn

(John Reed-USA TODAY Sports)

Brown’s relatively weak combine performance might debit him in the eyes of those who haven’t studied his tape. Similarly, his total of 12.5 sacks over four seasons at Auburn could push him under other defenders in your mind if you’re just box-score scouting. But when you watch Brown do his thing on the field, the perspective is entirely different. At 6-5 and 326 pounds, Brown had 10 quarterback hits and 20 quarterback hurries in 2019, adding four batted passes and two forced fumbles to his statistical arsenal. Brown is an ideal three-down defender who can stop the run as well as he can blast through double teams.

6. Xavier McKinney, DB, Alabama

(Steve Mitchell-USA TODAY Sports)

Multi-positional defensive backs are all the rage in today’s NFL, and Nick Saban has been grooming them at Alabama for a while. Minkah Fitzpatrick of the Steelers was an early part of paradigm, and McKinney is ready to follow in Fitzpatrick’s footsteps. Last season, per Pro Football Focus, McKinney played 285 snaps in the box, 271 snaps at free safety and 227 snaps in the slot. The 6-1, 200-pound McKinney also played 38 snaps on the defensive line and five snaps at outside corner. Playing all those positions, he allowed an opponent passer rating of 73.6 and came away with three interceptions, as well as 21 total pressures in just 71 pass-rushing snaps. If you can’t get Isaiah Simmons in your 2020 draft because he goes too early, McKinney is more than an acceptable substitute.

7. Patrick Queen, LB, LSU

(Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports)

In 2019, Queen established himself as one of the linchpins of the Tigers’ championship defense after lining up for just 255 total snaps in his first two collegiate seasons. The 6-foot, 229-pound first-year starter proved to be the model of the modern linebacker when he finally got his shot, playing 780 snaps in 2019 and showing the ability to excel everywhere from the box to the slot to the occasional go at outside cornerback. More impressively for Queen’s NFL future is his ability to face up against top running backs and make stops when stops are needed. Not every light linebacker can do that, and once Queen gets the hang of the intricacies of coverage (especially zone coverage), he could be one of the NFL’s best three-down linebackers.

8. Antoine Winfield Jr., S, Minnesota

(Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports)

Winfield missed all but a total of eight games in his 2017 and 2018 seasons due to injuries, but he came back with a full head of steam in 2019, picking off seven passes and giving up just 11 catches on 22 targets and an opponent passer rating of 45.5. A healthy Winfield has all the athleticism and range you’d want in a deep-third safety, but what really makes him the best in this class at that particular designation is his ability to read offenses and coverages on the fly — as he detailed to me in a recent film session, he learned a lot from his father, who played cornerback for the Bills and Vikings from 1999 through 2012.

Lions mock draft roundup: 5 main scenarios present themselves

With the 2020 NFL Combine behind us, Mock Drafts have placed the Detroit Lions into five common scenarios, all of them with positive outcomes.

With the 2020 NFL Combine behind us, local and national Mock Drafts have settled in on five common scenarios for the Detroit Lions, all of them with positive outcomes.

One big change of note: after being routinely mocked to the Lions leading up to the Combine, a sub-par performance from Derrick Brown (DT, Auburn) has all but eliminated him from being mocked to the Lions, even in trade back situations.

With Brown more-or-less off the board in the top-5 and the consistent positive medical reports on Tua Tagovailoa (QB, Alabama), Chase Young (EDGE, Ohio State) has been connected to the Lions more and more.

Chase Young at pick No. 3

Currently being mocked by Kyle Meinke (MLive), Chad Reuter (NFL.com), Mike Renner (PFF), Josh Norris (Rotoworld), and Jeff Risdon (RealGM)

Meinke: “Todd McShay gives it a 10-15% percent chance of happening. I think that’s ridiculous. Assuming Burrow goes first overall, which everyone assumes, all it takes is for one team to need a quarterback badly enough for it to happen. The Dolphins, Chargers and Panthers are all picking in the top 10 and need a quarterback. Washington could use Tua too. There is nothing more valuable than a good quarterback on a rookie contract, and I think the odds are good someone makes it happen before Detroit is on the clock. In which case, the Lions stumble into the best pass-rushing prospect in years. What a coup that would be for the Lions and their embattled defense, which had maybe the least effective pass rush in the league last year.”

Risdon: “If he’s still on the board, and he is in this scenario, Chase Young will be the pick. If he’s not, I expect Jeff Okudah and that’s independent of what happens with Darius Slay.”

Jeffrey Okudah at pick No. 3

Currently being mocked by Daniel Jeremiah (NFL.com), Tom McShay (ESPN, $), Kyle Crabbs (The Draft Network), and Trevor Sikkema (The Draft Network)

Sikkema: “Jeff Okudah was impressive during Combine week, even if his workout didn’t live up to the unrealistic hype some placed on him before the day began. His weigh-in measurements looked like God built him specifically to play shutdown corner; his interview session was prepared, confident and personable, and the numbers he did put up during the athletic testing was more than fine.”

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Jeffrey Okudah after a trade down

Currently being mocked by Mike O’Hara (DetroitLions.com), Luke Easterling (Draft Wire), and Carter Donnick (The Draft Network)

Easterling: “No matter what happens with Darius Slay, Okudah is the best blend of need and value here, as easily the top corner in this year’s class. He has all the physical and mental tools to be an immediate impact player for a defense that desperately needs more of them.”

Isaiah Simmons at pick No. 3

Currently being mocked by Dane Brugler (The Athletic, $), Chris Burke (The Athletic, $), Nick Baumgardner (The Athletic, $), and Bucky Brooks (NFL.com)

Burke: “I keep going back and forth on this, and I don’t have anything at stake so I empathize with what Bob Quinn will be facing, but I’m going to go with Isaiah Simmons here. And the simplest way I can explain why is that I’m looking at a free-agent cornerback class that could include guys like Byron Jones, Chris Harris, James Bradberry and Logan Ryan — all potential No. 1 cornerbacks (maybe No. 2 for Ryan, in an ideal setup). There are ways to find starting cornerbacks, via free agency or a trade.”

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Isaiah Simmons after a trade down

Currently being mocked by Ben Raven (MLive)

Raven: “Throw the questions about Simmons’ position and size out the window. The do-it-all defender feels and has the looks of a perfect prospect for Matt Patricia’s defense. Not just looking at the scheme, but examining the holes that Simmons could fill on the roster as currently projected.”

Mock draft watch: Bizarre twist for Lions in PFF’s ‘analytics’ projection

Jeffrey Okudah over Chase Young is an interesting thought process

The Detroit Lions selecting Ohio State cornerback Jeffrey Okudah is a fairly common projection in contemporary mock drafts. Okudah is universally regarded as the top CB in the 2020 NFL Draft class, and he’s got star potential.

But the Lions taking Okudah at No. 3 over his Buckeyes teammate, EDGE Chase Young? That’s an unprecedented stunner delivered in an unusual mock draft from Pro Football Focus.

In the PFF Analytics mock draft, analysts Eric Eager and George Chahrouri aren’t attempting to forecast what teams will do in April’s draft. Their goal is to analyze what they believe the teams should do, based on PFF analytics and positional value to a team. And for the Detroit Lions, that leads them to conclude Okudah is more valuable in the win column than Young.

Or in their own words,

A lot of Lions fans want to see Chase Young here. However, Matt Patricia (and Bill Belichick) simply don’t value edge as much as they do secondary players, and with Darius Slay wanting a trade, Justin Coleman struggling during the second half of 2019 and Quandre Diggs already out the door via trade to Seattle, it’s high time for the Lions to rebuild on the back end. Okudah is an excellent prospect as a press-man corner, which should allow the Lions to rush more players than they did in 2019.

It’s an interesting and unexpected twist. With QBs Joe Burrow and Tua Tagovailoa going 1-2, having the Lions select Okudah over Young is a provocative idea. It doesn’t seem likely to happen, but that’s not the point of this interesting PFF mock.

Touchdown Wire’s post-combine mock draft: How Indianapolis changed the game

With the Combine in the rear view mirror, whose stock is rising, whose is falling and how has the board potentially changed?

Ah, mock draft season. With Indianapolis behind us, we can now start to imagine how the draft could play out given what we saw from the prospects at the 2020 Scouting Combine. Whose stock is rising, whose is falling, and how could — I repeat, how could — that impact the draft?

Here’s just one man’s shot at putting it together.

Picks 1-8 | 9-16 | 17-24 | 25-32

1. Cincinnati Bengals: Joe Burrow, QB, LSU

(Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

We can work our way into this mock with a selection that makes the most sense. The Bengals are moving on from Andy Dalton, and Joe Burrow’s magical season has rocketed him to the top of many draft boards. His decision-making, pocket presence and leadership abilities are perfect for what Cincinnati needs right now. Plus, the storyline of “local boy comes home” is sure to get fans excited. 

Schematically, Burrow is a fit for what Bengals head coach Zac Taylor is looking to do offensively. With some weapons around him and some additions to the offensive line, Burrow could be in position to contribute early in his career.

2. Washington Redskins: Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State

Chase Young Ohio State
(Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sport)

There does seem to be some smoke building around the idea of Washington doing this year what the Arizona Cardinals did a season ago: Let a new regime pick their quarterback. Last year the Cardinals hired Kliff Kingsbury and let him pick the quarterback he wanted to build around. The result? Arizona moved on from Josh Rosen after a single season and drafted Kyler Murray. 

Could the same thing happen to Dwayne Haskins? Rumors around Indianapolis last week seemed to indicate that it was at least a possibility. Washington reportedly met with Tua Tagovailoa and the South Florida Sun Sentinel reported that new head coach Ron Rivera told the Alabama passer that, according to a source, “[t]hey want to bring in Tua, just get it going and compete.”

My thinking here is this: This is lying season. Most people believe the draft begins at the second pick, and Washington holds a lot of cards. They could stay pat and select the best overall player in the draft, the Ohio State edge rusher. But if a team is dying to move up to draft a quarterback, they’ll entertain offers. One way to drive up the price? Float the idea that you are in the quarterback market as well.

For now, I think these are all smoke screens. Washington stays pat and takes the pass rusher.

3. Detroit Lions: Jeff Okudah, CB, Ohio State

(Joe Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports)

Here is where things could really get sporty.

There are concerns in Detroit regarding the status of quarterback Matthew Stafford. Back injuries the past few seasons have some wondering if it is time to prepare for a world without Stafford in Detroit. The issue is, Stafford’s contract is such that it makes much more sense from a salary cap perspective to move on from Stafford in 2021, rather than 2020. 

Under Stafford’s contract, if he were to be traded or cut before June 1st, the Lions would be hit with $32 million in dead cap space for 2020, and would have a cap “savings” of minus $10.7 million for the 2020 league year. 

However, if they decide to move on from Stafford prior to 2021, they would actually free up around $14M of cap space.

So the thinking here could be: Draft Tagovailoa, redshirt him for a season while Stafford plays through 2020, and then move on when Tagovailoa is fully healthy and it makes more sense from a cap perspective.

So it is a possibility that the Lions could go with a quarterback here.

At the same time, Matt Patricia must be feeling the urge to win now, and the idea of drafting a quarterback to simply redshirt him while the flames are fanned under your seat cannot feel too pleasant. In the end Detroit entertains the idea of Tagovailoa, but goes with the potential shutdown corner in Okudah.

4. Los Angeles Chargers (via trade with New York Giants): Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama

(Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Now we have our first trade.

A running theme of this mock draft so far has been the Alabama quarterback. In the mix to Washington with the second pick. A potential option for Detroit with the third pick. Now this draft enters a stretch where quarterback is a possibility for a number of teams, including the Chargers at six and the Carolina Panthers at seven. 

Tagovailoa has been linked to the Dolphins for a long time now, and the Chargers can read the tea leaves as well as anyone else. If they decide that Tagovailoa is their quarterback of the future, they’ll need to get in front of Miami to ensure that he is wearing the powder blues next season. 

Conceptually, while there might be better fits for Tagovailoa’s skill-set, such as the Panthers as we argued yesterday, the Chargers will have the time to build around Tagovailoa and construct an offense around his strengths: His accuracy in the short area, his processing speed, and his familiarity with run/pass option designs.

5. Miami Dolphins: Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Interestingly enough, Miami might be just fine with the Chargers leap-frogging them, as they end up with the passer that some in the building have been targeting for over a year. It was just a year ago when reports out of Miami were that Dolphins’ owner Stephen Ross was interested in two quarterbacks: Tagovailoa and Herbert. 

Now, with both an option for the Dolphins in this year’s draft, many have linked Miami to Tagovailoa. But the decision to hire Chan Gailey as their offensive coordinator does give them a potential schematic fit with both quarterbacks. As we argued yesterday, the Dolphins are a great fit for Herbert’s skill-set, given his background in Oregon’s spread system. That would ease his transition to the pro game, and with both Rosen and Ryan Fitzpatrick in place, they could potentially move one of those players late in training camp, depending on Herbert’s progress as a rookie this summer.

6. New York Giants (via trade with Los Angeles Chargers): Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia

(AP Photo/Butch Dill)

New York Giants general manager Dave Gettleman said a number of things during his media session in Indianapolis that stuck with me. Two in particular. One I will take to heart, and the other I will ignore with this move to trade down and select the Georgia offensive tackle.

When addressing the media, Gettleman indicated that trading down does carry a bit of risk. What if you trade down, he theorized, from four to eight with four players that you like on your board? You might miss out on all of them is the fear he expressed. 

But given how Gettleman could play the board, and still select one of the four impressive offensive tackles in this draft, gives him an option to pick up some additional selections in this draft and continue to build around Daniel Jones. 

So while I dismissed the idea of Gettleman’s trade down fear, I will take to heart something else he said. He was asked about the most important position to help a young quarterback and he instantly delivered an incredible response: “Offensive line. I’ve found that it is hard to complete a pass when lying on your back.” And in, perhaps, a shot at all the discussion over Gettleman’s thoughts on analytics he added: “I’ve done that study.”

Here, the Giants trade back and get an NFL ready offensive tackle with experience on both the right and the left sides of the line. Given his SEC pedigree, Thomas has faced some imposing pass rushers during his time in Athens, and he’ll be ready to go up against some of what the NFL has to offer. The combine might have vaulted Tristan Wirfs and Mekhi Becton up many boards, but something tells me that Gettleman will value what Thomas put on tape.

7. Carolina Panthers: Isaiah Simmons, Defense, Clemson

(Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports)

The Panthers could go in a number of directions with this pick. Quarterback is in play, depending on what new head coach Matt Rhule decides to do with Cam Newton and how he handles Kyle Allen and last year’s draft pick Will Grier. Rhule has said all the right things about Newton, he likes Grier dating back to their games against each other in the Big 12, and Allen showed promise at times last year. So it is likely that Rhule keeps all three in Carolina and looks to address other needs.

Offensive line is also an area they could address, and given what we saw from Tristan Wirfs, Mekhi Becton at the combine as well as what we saw on film all season from Jedrick Wills Jr., any one of those players could be in play if the board falls this way.

They also have needs on the defensive side of the football. They could use help up front, they could use some help at linebacker in the wake of Luke Kuechly’s retirement, and they could also use some help in the secondary. 

In Simmons, they could get help at all three levels of their defense. They would get a player who has lined up on the defensive line, in the slot, as a box safety and even as a boundary cornerback. They would also get an explosive athlete who posted a 4.39 40-yard dash at the combine, to go with a vertical leap of 39” and a broad jump of 11’. All while measuring in at 6’3 and ½” and weighing 238 pounds. He is an absolute freak of nature, and would revamp their defense in an instant.

8. Arizona Cardinals: Mekhi Becton, OL, Louisville

(AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)

In a draft that is talent-laden at the wide receiver position, we have yet to hear one WR called. That streak continues, as the Cardinals pass on every wide receiver on the board to address another glaring need: Offensive line. The Cardinals desperately need to protect Murray next season, and Becton can help in that effort.

Murray was sacked 48 times last season, tied with Russell Wilson and Matt Ryan for the most times sacked in the league. Now yes, sacks are not an offensive line statistic and the quarterback contributes to those sack totals, but the Cardinals do need to give him more time in the pocket. Murray was hurried 63 times last season, fifth-most in the league. With D.J. Humphries and Justin Murray as their starting tackles last season, this position could use a boost.

They get that in Becton. The massive left tackle showed some power and explosiveness both on film and during his combine workout. He has very fluid footwork for a man of his size, and his length will be an asset in Kingsbury’s offense. He could be the guy to protect Murray’s blindside for the next decade.

Picks 1-8 | 9-16 | 17-24 | 25-32

2020 NFL Combine winners: Cornerbacks

Examining and identifying the top on-field cornerbacks performances from the 2020 NFL Combine.

The 2020 NFL Combine concluded their on-field drills on Sunday, this time featuring cornerbacks and safeties. The cornerbacks were first up and didn’t disappoint.

The Lions have a need at corner immediately and potentially long-term depending on what their plans are for Darius Slay, so they were surely looking at this group with high hopes. Let’s take a look at those who earned positive marks.

Jeffrey Okudah, Ohio State

6-1, 205, 40 y/d: 4.48, vertical: 41″, broad: 11’3″

In a recent article, I broke down how Okudah’s performance in every Combine drill added to his already sterling resume that he built over his senior season. In a nutshell, my conclusion was that he is firmly in the mix for the Lions and would be worth the No. 3 overall pick.

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C.J. Henderson, Florida

6-0.5, 204, 40 y/d: 4.39, vertical 37.5, broad: 10’7″

Like Okudah, the Lions reportedly had a meeting with Henderson at the Combine, showing they are doing their homework on the draft’s top cornerbacks. When Henderson took the field in Indianapolis, he put his best foot forward and had a terrific day in timed drills, measurables, and in on-field drills.

On the NFL Network broadcast, Daniels Jeremiah mentioned that he believes Henderson could be “the second corner drafted” indicating that “he’s gonna end up going in the top 15.” If that is his true draft slot, he would be selected almost directly in between the Lions’ first and second-round picks, making the odds of landing him unlikely.

A.J. Terrell, Clemson

6-1, 195, 40y/d: 4.42, vertical: 34.5, broad: 10’9″

The last time most analysts and fans saw Terrell, he was on the wrong end of the National Championship game in what was a difficult night overall for the Tigers. If there were concerns about his performance that night, he helped right the ship at the Combine. Terrell looked smooth in his backpedal, showed off his body control and reliable hands in drills His combination of body type, comfort in press coverage, and athletic ability fits a lot of what the Lions look for in an outside corner.

Michael Ojemudia, Iowa

6-0.5, 200, 40y/d: 4.45, vertical: 36″, broad: 10’2″, 3-cone: 6.87

I don’t want to call Ojemudia a sleeper, as he has been someone the Lions have shown interest in previously, but if the Lions are more interested in a developmental Day 3 corner rather than one at the top of the draft, he’s the guy.

At the Combine, Ojemudia checked every measurable box the Lions look for, height, weight, speed, explosion, and of course the all-important 3-cone time. Add in his Iowa background and there’s a lot to like from the Lions perspective.

Examining Jeffrey Okudah’s Combine and identifying the numbers that matter to the Lions

Ohio State Jeffrey Okudah’s Combine was cut short but he did enough to allow a look at the numbers that will matter the most to the Detroit Lions.

After studying Ohio State cornerback Jeffrey Okudah’s 2019 season, it’s clear he is one of the top prospects in this draft class and because of his competitive nature, he planned on taking part in all aspects of the 2020 NFL Combine.

“He has everything in terms of the size, the fluidity,” NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah said on the broadcast. “You see the length and the ball skills. I went back in my Stephon Gilmore report when he was coming out of South Carolina and they read every similar, which is a heck of a compliment to Jeff Okudah coming out of Ohio State.”

Everything was set up for Okudah to solidify himself as a top-5 prospect in this class and despite a mid-workout injury, he did just that.

To get a better idea of Okudah’s Combine workout, let’s examine how he measures up against league history at his position with Pride of Detroit’s Kent Platte’s RAS card:

Let’s take a closer look at how the Lions prioritize measurables in a cornerback, identify which ones have value, and which ones are not as significant.

Height/weight: 6-1, 205

Priority: high

Nearly identical in height and weight to Lions 2019 cornerback selection Amani Oruwariye, Okudah possesses the ideal frame for what the Lions look for in an outside cornerback. His physique shows he’s dedicated to the weight room and understands how to put maximize his frame.

Arm length: 32 5/8″

Priority: medium

This is a plus, but not a must-have for the Lions. Only four current Lions defensive backs have an arm length over 32″, and only Tracy Walker (with a ridiculous 33.5″) has enough arm length to beat out Okudah in this measurable. This is a bonus.

40-yard dash: 4.48

Priority: medium

There was a surprising reaction from some Lions fans suggesting Okudah’s 40-yard dash time wasn’t elite enough to warrant a top selection — and quite frankly, I couldn’t disagree more.

Long speed is important for a cornerback for sure, but the 40-yard dash time isn’t an infallible number. There are several other factors that come into play with coverage, the most important being instincts and anticipation — which the 40-yard dash doesn’t measure.

If a player is able to play with intelligence — which Okudah is universally acknowledged as having in spades — he can maintain his speed in coverage, while others will slow when processing decisions. Checking in under 4.5 seconds is a win.

10-yard split: N/A

Priority: low

These numbers aren’t part of the initial Combine numbers release, but when they are uncovered, he is expected to check-in at 1.6 seconds or lower — Platte estimates Okudah’s number to be around 1.57 second, which would be above target.

Bench press: 11

Priority: low

This mark would be the lowest among the Lions cornerbacks, but Slay only had 14 at his Combine and is doing just fine. His arm length factors in here as well.

Vertical jump: 41″

Priority: high

Now we’re getting into the numbers the Lions value at a premium.

The vertical jump identifies lower body strength and explosive traits, and this number is often used as a barometer to determine how strong a defensive back is, as opposed to the bench press. In this drill, Okudah nearly jumped out of the building leading all cornerbacks in this measurement.

Broad jump: 11’3″

Priority: high

Another jump drill and another group leading score from Okudah. The broad jump measures explosiveness and short-area quickness, something that shows up time and time again in Okudah’s game film. For reference, NFL league average for a cornerback is 10’1″ and every Lions cornerback is above that mark, save Oruwariye, who jumped 10′ even last Combine.

3-cone: DNP

Priority: high

This has historically been the most important measurable for offensive skill players and defensive backs. League average for a cornerback is 6.96, but every current Lions corner who saw the field on defense last year are all under 6.92 — Slay (6.9), Oruwariye (6.82), Justin Coleman (6.61), Mike Ford (6.83), and Jamal Agnew (6.92).

If Okudah works out at his pro day in Columbus on March 25th, this is the most important number to look for.

Short shuttle: DNP

Priority: medium for Okudah’s role

This drill measures lateral quickness and is more important for slot corners than ones who play on the outside, like where Okudah is projected in the NFL.

Slay ran a 4.21-second shuttle and can often struggle when asked to cover players inside, while Coleman, whose primary task is inside coverage, ran a remarkable 3.98-second shuttle. If Okudah runs this drill at his pro day, the Lions would be looking for him to land somewhere in between.

Conclusion

When you combine the measurables available with his game film, you’re looking at one of the more complete players in this draft class and one worthy of being a top-5 selection.

If you eliminate quarterbacks from the conversation — as their value doesn’t always match talent — Okudah is the second-best player in this draft class behind only teammate EDGE rusher Chase Young.

It would be hard to fault the Lions for standing pat at pick No. 3 and selecting Okudah, as this is a perfect marriage of talent and need.

Cowboys-centric defensive winners, losers from 2020 scouting combine

The defense took their turn over the weekend, but not everyone rose to the occasion, including one of the Cowboys’ top targets at safety.

Mere mortals spent the weekend running errands, going out with friends, sleeping in, and maybe enjoying a little downtime from work. For those looking to make a living playing defense in the National Football League, though, the stakes this past Saturday and Sunday were exponentially higher.

Defensive linemen and linebackers competed in their drills in Indianapolis on Day Three of the NFL Scouting Combine, while safeties and cornerbacks had to wait until the final day to show teams what they can do on the field. Representatives from Dallas were undoubtedly paying close attention, as the Cowboys’ defense in 2019 exposed several glaring weaknesses that need to be addressed heading into next season.

Here’s a quick look at who overperformed and who underdelivered in Indy.

Day 3 Winners

Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson

Simmons is sure to be one of the defensive darlings from the 2020 Combine, and with good reason. The Clemson junior torched the competition with 4.39-second 40-yard dash, even beating the combine times of noted speedsters Derwin James (Chargers safety, 2018) and Jalen Ramsey (Rams cornerback, 2016). And remember, he’s a linebacker. LSU quarterback Joe Burrow said that Simmons was the single biggest thing he had to worry about in the national championship game. High praise, indeed. the 2019 Butkus Award winner didn’t even participate in drills in Indianapolis, but his freakish workouts will make him a blazing-hot commodity out of the Day 3 position group.

Willie Gay Jr., LB, Mississippi State

Gay may have been something of an under-the-radar secret before Indianapolis, but his weekend work at the combine assured that it’s not just the hardcore draftniks who know his name now. His bench press, broad jump, vertical jump, and 40 scores were all Top 5 for linebackers, and he demonstrated notably quick feet during drills. If there’s knock, it’s off-the-field issues; Gay has admitted to cheating on a chemistry exam in 2019 and getting an 8-game suspension because of it. He also reportedly got into a physical altercation with his team’s quarterback late in the season. But his combine numbers will help some team decide he’s worth taking a chance on.

Neville Gallimore, DT, Oklahoma

Gallimore doesn’t move like a big man, but the 304-pounder ran the fastest 40 for a three-bill D-lineman since 2000. He went on to show incredible change of direction skills, impressive power, and quick feet every time he was asked. Gallimore was the top high school prospect coming out of Canada in 2015, and ended up leading the Sooners to a Big 12 championship as a college senior with a season that earned him third-team AP All-American honors.

Jabari Zuniga, DE, Florida

Zuniga is known to evaluators as a player who’s shown flashes of greatness, but couldn’t do it consistently. Last year, he played just five games for the Gators due to an ankle injury. The redshirt senior needed a great combine. He had it. With good speed, a position-best broad jump, and a solid vertical score, Zuniga put himself in a much better light by the end of Day Three.

Day 3 Losers

Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn

“Loser” is a harsh label to slap on the 2019 unanimous All-American and SEC Defensive Player of the Year. But Brown has drawn early comparisons to NFL legends thus far, and his combine performance was just average at best. Some drills were legendarily poor; his 3-cone time was the fourth-worst in combine history. Of course, a subpar workout doesn’t make Brown a bust, but it could cause him to slip a bit in April’s draft and cost him some dollars on his rookie deal.

A.J. Epenesa, DE, Iowa

The junior had been a standout on the Hawkeyes defensive line since his freshman year, but his combine stood out in all the wrong ways. Once projected to be a first-round selection, the consensus now says his weekend’s lack of athleticism will drop Epenesa into the second round. There’s already talk of the 275-pounder needing to put on some weight in order to play at the pro level.

Day 4 Winners

C.J. Henderson, CB, Florida

The junior lit up the stopwatches in his 40-yard dash after impressing scouts with 20 reps in the bench press. He drilled well, too, showing off a nice catch radius. That will serve him well in the upcoming draft, since most of the concerns about Henderson are about his tacking abilities. They’re probably not serious enough to drop him out of the first round, though. And for some evaluators, it’s a nitpicky gripe about a true shutdown cover man who’ll be paid to do his best work to prevent catches, not clean up after them.

Jeremy Chinn, S, Southern Illinois

Chinn showed that the small-school guys can play, too. The safety’s broad jump was the second-best across all positions at the combine, and he wowed with most of his other drills, too. The Southern Illinois Saluki continued to attract big buzz following his invitation to the Senior Bowl. That could translate to a draft day leap for Chinn, of whom CBS Sports insider Jason La Confora says, “multiple teams… have a late-first/early-second grade on him.”

Jeffrey Okudah, CB, Ohio State

Okudah came in to the weekend as a near-lock to be one of the first players selected in April. His workouts did nothing to dampen that expectation, with excellent 40 times and vertical and broad jumps that were near the very top. The unanimous first-team All-American did go down awkwardly during a drill, though, and had to skip the rest of the Day Three events. The hit to his head/neck area isn’t expected to be much to worry about, but it cut short a superb combine performance.

Essang Bassey, CB, Wake Forest

The first thing most evaluators mention regarding Bassey is his lack of size. But during coverage drills, in Indianapolis, the Wake Forest product showed great hands and fluid movement that could well put the three-year college starter on track for a Day Two selection in April’s draft.

Day 4 Losers

Damon Arnette, CB, Ohio State

Sharing the Buckeye secondary with Jeffrey Okudah is tough duty, but Arnette didn’t do much to shine on his own in Indy. After a wrist injury in college, he had returned to Ohio State for one more season in hopes of catapulting his draft stock, but a relatively slow (for his position) 40 time didn’t move him out of being projected Day Two pick.

Cameron Dantzler, CB, Mississippi State

Speed kills in the NFL, but the lack of it can also kill a prospect’s chances of grabbing a first- or second-round look. Dantzler was once projected as a Top 5 corner in the 2020 Draft, but a 4.64 time in the 40 is going to make that tough to achieve. That comes after he skipped the team’s bowl game specifically to prepare for the draft. He’s tall and physical, but teams won’t like the fact that he couldn’t turn on he jets when he needed to. Dantzler may fall as far as the third round now.

Xavier McKinney, S, Alabama

One of the Cowboys’ supposed top targets did not have a good weekend. The Crimson Tide junior came up limping at the end of his first 40-yard dash and had to withdraw from on-field drills. Still projected to be a first-round pick, McKinney will now have to wait until Alabama’s pro day to solidify his draft status.

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Ohio State CB Jeffrey Okudah upbraids reporter after ‘sloppy’ comment about his game

One combine reporter discovered what NCAA receivers have known for a long time: Testing Jeffrey Okudah is a big mistake.

INDIANAPOLIS — Transitioning from covering the NFL to covering the draft isn’t always easy. If you’re in the pro football stratosphere non-stop from July to February, and you then have to whipsaw over to college players you may or may not have watched right away, you could show up at the scouting combine and get poleaxed by a high draft prospect as a result of your asking a woefully inaccurate question about that player’s overall game.

This happened to one poor reporter who was at the podium for Ohio State cornerback Jeffrey Okudah on Friday morning. Were it not for his teammate Chase Young, Okudah would be the consensus best defensive player in this draft class. Last season, per Pro Football Focus, Okudah allowed just 27 catches on 58 targets for 282 yards, one touchdown, three interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 45.3. Over the last two seasons, he has allowed just 45 of his 106 targets to be completed. Those targets have yielded opposing quarterbacks have managed a passer rating of 52.9.
Okudah hasn’t allowed more than 50 yards receiving in any of the 27 games played over those last two seasons. There’s no such thing as a lockdown cornerback on every snap, but Okudah is certainly the closest thing to it in this draft class.

But there was one guy at the podium who saw it a different way.

“Sometimes, you have a tendency to get kind of sloppy,” the reporter asked. “How are you looking to improve that?”

“Sloppy in what way?” Okudah responded.

“Sloppy in kinda… penalties and stuff like that,” the reporter said.

“I had zero pass interferences, zero holdings,” Okudah concluded. “Put the tape on again; you might see something else.”

Is Okudah a physical cornerback? Absolutely. It’s why he’s been compared to everyone from Jalen Ramsey to Aqib Talib to Richard Sherman as an ideal modern boundary cornerback. Like those guys, will he have to learn a different kind of physicality to get away with things other cornerbacks may not? That’s entirely possible. But to call a technician like Okudah “sloppy” just isn’t a good look in any way. Hopefully, this unfortunate gentleman will take this as a lesson, and at least learn to crib off the right scouting reports next time if he isn’t watching the tape.

Ohio State CB Jeff Okudah has no time for your unfounded criticism

Ohio State’s Jeff Okudah claps back at a question that wasn’t based in reality during his NFL Scouting Combine press conference

Ohio State’s Jeff Okudah is widely considered the clear-cut top corner prospect in the 2020 NFL draft class, and should be a top-10 lock when April rolls around.

As he prepares to show off his skill set at the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine, Okudah fielded questions Friday morning at a press conference in Indianapolis.

One question didn’t sit well with the shutdown artist:

Okudah is among the most flawless prospects in this year’s class, and could go as high as No. 3 overall to the Detroit Lions.

Looks like whoever asked that question has more to worry about when it comes to being sloppy than Okudah does.

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