7 run-stuffing 1-techs Cowboys should be eyeing in 2022 NFL draft

A look at a handful of big-boy prospects for the defensive line, for every day of the 2022 draft. @TimLettiero sees what the collection has to offer.

After a season where new defensive coordinator Dan Quinn turned around the direction of the Dallas Cowboys’ defense, there is still potential more improvement. The hybrid defensive front he runs sees a major focus put on interior defensive line play. The three-tech and five tech roles have already been covered, but Quinn also utilizes the zero-tech and one-tech positions. These positions line up right on the nose of the center or on his shoulder and their purpose is to plug gaps, allowing more talented rushers to attack the pocket. They are also tasked with winning at the line of scrimmage in the run game.

On the current roster, second-year DT Quinton Bohanna is Dallas’ only player who truly fits this mold. Veteran DT Brent Urban, who missed a majority of last year with an injury, was not re-signed. Neville Gallimore and Carlos Watkins have played this role some, but are out of position. Will the Cowboys be interested in grabbing help during the draft? Here are some names Dallas might prioritize.

7-round NFL mock draft for the Denver Broncos

Our first seven-round NFL mock draft for the Broncos has the team going LB, OT, RB with their first three picks.

The 2022 NFL draft will be held next week, which means mock draft season is heating up! Here is Broncos Wire’s first attempt at mocking Denver’s plans for this year’s draft.

Full 7-round Saints mock draft: The pre-scouting combine edition

Full 7-round Saints mock draft: The pre-scouting combine edition, with trades

This year’s NFL scouting combine kicks off on Tuesday, so it’s a great time to get out in front of it and project what the New Orleans Saints may do in the 2022 NFL draft. So here’s my first seven-round mock draft of the offseason, where I’m going in a round-by-round simulation (The Draft Network’s tool is my preference) to see which opportunities the Saints could find on draft day. Let’s get to it.

Unpacking Future Packers: No. 63 John Ridgeway

Arkansas DL John Ridgeway is up next in Unpacking Future Packers, a draft countdown previewing teh 2022 NFL draft.

The Unpacking Future Packers Countdown is a countdown of 100 prospects that could be selected by the Green Bay Packers in the 2022 NFL Draft.

Since the 2012 NFL Draft, the Green Bay Packers have drafted 12 defensive linemen. There have been home run selections like Mike Daniels and Kenny Clark. Then there have been opposite-field base hits like Dean Lowry. Outside of those three names, there have been a lot of three-pitch strikeouts.

Daniels played seven seasons in Green Bay after being a fourth-round pick out of Iowa in 2012. The former Iowa Hawkeye recorded 29 sacks and 41 tackles for loss during his time in Green Bay.

Clark has developed into one of the best interior defensive linemen in the NFL after being drafted in the first round in 2016. 

What Daniels and Clark had in common was their wrestling background. A defensive lineman that has a wrestling background that Brian Gutekunst could target in the upcoming draft is John Ridgeway. The Arkansas defensive tackle checks in at No. 63 in the Unpacking Future Packers countdown.

In 2017, Ridgeway was an Illinois state champion in wrestling. Ridgeway spent four seasons at Illinois State before transferring to Arkansas this fall. 

During his lone season at Arkansas, Ridgeway recorded 39 tackles, four tackles for loss, and two sacks.

Ridgeway is a classic nose tackle type,” Shane Hallam, the managing partner for Draft Countdown, said. “The production numbers don’t quite match the talent he has. Similarly at Illinois State, he wasn’t a stat monster but a 2-gap run stuffer who diverted running backs to other areas. At Arkansas, he was fairly consistent in getting good leverage and moving into interior gaps to stop inside runs. That was generally his job, and he did it well. As he got a bit more comfortable in the defense, we saw his skill set expand.”

At 6-4, 327 pounds, Ridgeway has the size of a prototypical nose tackle. Ridgeway is able to anchor down and eat up double teams. He’s strong at the point of attack and rarely moved off his spot. He’s able to keep linebackers clean, a big reason why his teammates Bumper Pool, Grant Morgan, and Hayden Henry all finished in the Top 10 in the SEC in tackles. 

“His ability to shed laterally is pretty special,” Hallam said. “He quickly can get away from a lineman to fill his gap and either make a play or divert the running back to the outside. With pretty long arms, he can also keep linemen off of him and use his range to slow down or tackle the runner.”

Ridgeway has good quickness off the snap. He has the short-area quickness to make plays up and down the line of scrimmage. He has a high motor and shows good range for a man his size.

His wrestling background shows up against the run, where he’s able to get lower than the man across from him. Ridgeway has powerful shoulders and upper body strength to punch and stack blocks. 

“He generally does play with good leverage, especially on early downs,” Hallam said. “When he is playing the run, he gets good leverage to be able to disengage well. On passing downs, Ridgeway can get high though since he is trying to get a full head of steam and bull rush in most cases. There were improvements made as the season progressed, but it is generally a strength.”

Ridgeway’s strength is his ability to stuff the run. With his power and quickness off the snap, he’s able to blow up plays in the backfield. He has the potential to be an interior disruptor at the next level. 

“It’s his strength to two-gap and stop the run,” Hallam said. “There may be an adjustment in the NFL to shed blocks, but he has shown some great ability against top SEC linemen this year. He has a strong upper body to even bring down bigger runners when off-balance.”

Anything Ridgeway offers as a pass-rusher is gravy. A team will be drafting him to stuff the run and come off the field on passing downs. With his strength, he does have a pretty good bull rush and has the ability to collapse the pocket. 

“With only two sacks this season, Ridgeway didn’t show much rushing up the gut,” Hallam said. “One sack was a great play where he was able to rip past an interior offensive lineman, and the other was one the quarterback just held the ball way too long. Ultimately, he won’t rush the passer in the NFL. He isn’t an incredible athlete so there is not much upside to actually getting sacks or hurries. Expect him to be a two-down player.”

Fit with the Packers

The Packers need to get Kenny Clark some help upfront. A player like Ridgeway could provide the Packers with a Greg Gaines-like impact upfront.

Ridgeway could be a plug-and-play starter at nose tackle and allow the Packers to kick Clark outside to the five-tech permanently. 

The Packers have cornerstone pieces on defense in place with Jaire Alexander, Rashan Gary, Clark, and Eric Stokes. Now, Gutekunst needs to continue to add pieces around those players. Ridgway could carve out a role as a run-stuffing nose tackle. His presence could help open things up for other players in the front seven.

If I wanted a run-stuffing specialist, I would consider Ridgeway on day three,” Hallam said. “He could be developed into a two-down starter which would be well worth the pick.”

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John Ridgeway Turning Heads at Senior Bowl Practices

Ridgeway is representing the Razorbacks at the Senior Bowl that will be played Saturday, and is catching the eyes of several NFL scouts. 

Arkansas defensive lineman John Ridgeway is making a name for himself in Mobile.

Ridgeway, along with long snapper Jordan Silver, is representing the Razorbacks at the Senior Bowl that will be played Saturday in Mobile, Ala. Ridgeway has caught the attention of several NFL scouts in just a few short days of practice.

Frankly, it is easy to see why:

John Schmeelk of Giants.com mentioned Ridgeway in his post titled “Notebook: Observations from Day 1 at Senior Bowl”

“Arkansas’ John Ridgeway (6’4, 327) is a massive defensive tackle who was a constant presence in the middle of the defense and had a tackle for loss during 9-on-7 rushing drills. The American offensive line had trouble blocking him most of the afternoon.”

Watch Ridgeway compete in the Reese’s Senior Bowl on Saturday from Hancock Whitney Stadium in Mobile, Ala. Kickoff is scheduled for 1:30 p.m.

John Ridgeway declares for NFL Draft

Arkansas defensive lineman John Ridgeway is forgoing a potential final season of college football.

Arkansas defensive tackle John Ridgeway played just one season with the Razorbacks, but it was enough to lift his professional stock.

The Hogs senior declared Thursday that he will forgo a potential final season with Arkansas to prepare for the NFL draft.

“This football season as a Razorback has been one of the best experiences of my life,” Ridgeway wrote on Twitter. “To be part of this team has allowed me to grow as a football player and as a man. I will be forever grateful for the memories and relationships I have built through this program.”

Ridgeway provided an anchor in the middle of the Arkansas defensive line after transferring from Illinois State in the offseason. At 6-foot-6 and 320 pounds, he was a natural defensive tackle who was equally adept at clogging lanes and collapsing the pocket. He led all Arkansas linemen in tackles with 39, including four for-loss. He also had two sacks.

The declaration was not unexpected. Ridgeway accepted an invitation to the Senior Bowl in November and nothing was ever suggested that he would back out of that commitment.

Ridgway became the third defensive starter in three days to leave the program after safety Joe Foucha entered the transfer portal on Wednesday and nickel back Greg Brooks Jr. did the same on Thursday.

As many as six Arkansas football starters have decision to make about 2022 season

Jalen Catalon, Bumper Pool, John Ridgeway, Montaric Brown and others could all return for Arkansas in 2022 or they could leave the program.

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Arkansas football in 2022 is going to look different. The question is just how much.

National signing day is Wednesday, so an influx of high-schoolers will be on the team come the fall. Seniors like linebacker Grant Morgan are out of eligibility and need replacing. Wide receiver Treylon Burks, too, won’t return after declaring for the NFL draft as a junior.

But a number of players waiting to make a determination.

Linebacker Bumper Pool, safeties Joe Foucha and Jalen Catalon, defensive tackle John Ridgeway, cornerback Montaric Brown, long snapper Jordan Silver, running back Trelon Smith, wide receiver Kendall Catalon and offensive lineman Shane Clenin could return because of the NCAA’s COVID-19 stipulation that allows player who played through that season an extra year of eligibility.

As for when a decision will be made about any of them, the timetable is in the air. Each player will have to decide individually. They could announce on their own or the program could announce en masse.

Pool, Foucha, Catalon, Ridgeway and Brown were all defensive starters during the 2021 regular season. Catalon was lost for the year in the front half of the season, however, and is the likeliest NFL pick among the bunch. Smith started for the first three-quarters of the regular season, too.

Center Ricky Stromberg, a likely NFL pick, albeit in a lower round, announced his return for the 2022 season on Friday.

“I think it’s a no-brainer to come back and go up from there,” Stromberg said.

If the others join him, Arkansas would almost certainly be in line to repeat this season’s success, if not expand on it. But if the losses stack up, the depth chart may be an unfamiliar one when spring practice rolls around.

Predicting Arkansas’ All-SEC players: Nine Hogs should make cut

Arkansas should land nine players on the All-SEC teams this year. And KJ Jefferson better be one of them.

Arkansas’ best regular season in a decade has come to a close. And while the rest of the SEC finishes Saturday and then Alabama and Georgia conclude the fall in the SEC Championship, we figured it was time to start preparing to fill our All-SEC lists.

The Razorbacks should have no shortage of players represented on the all-conference teams. A couple of guys are locks. Another would be – Jalen Catalon – if not for a season-ending injury.

But we know, too, that the big dogs of the league tend to land a majority of the players. Alabama alone had eight first-team selections by the league’s media during SEC Media Days. Arkansas had a total of five players across the four teams voted on during that week.

Both things should change after the season. Here are our projections of Arkansas’ All-SEC players this year.

Tennessee offers Illinois State nose guard transfer

Tennessee offers Illinois State nose guard transfer.

The University of Tennessee has offered Illinois State nose guard transfer John Ridgeway.

The 6-foot-6, 325-pound junior started 15 games at nose guard for Illinois State in 2019. He played in 11 contests with 10 starts at nose guard in 2018.

“Extremely grateful to receive an offer from the University of Tennessee,” Ridgeway said on Twitter.

Illinois State played four games during the 2021 FCS spring season.

Ridgeway has appeared in 30 games since 2018 for the Redbirds, totaling 102 tackles, eight tackles for a loss, one sack, one interception, four pass deflections, one forced fumble and recovered one fumble.

He redshirted during the 2017 season and is from Bloomington High School in Bloomington, Illinois.

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Texas extends an offer to Illinois State transfer John Ridgeway

Steve Sarkisian’s coaching staff is dipping into the NCAA transfer portal again, this time for a big-bodied defensive tackle.

Steve Sarkisian’s coaching staff is dipping into the NCAA transfer portal again. Continue reading “Texas extends an offer to Illinois State transfer John Ridgeway”