Ravens select Ohio State LB Malik Harrison with pick No. 98 in 3rd round

The Baltimore Ravens double-dipped at inside linebacker, getting Ohio State’s Malik Harrison late in the third round of the 2020 NFL Draft.

The Baltimore Ravens added Ohio State linebacker Malik Harrison with pick No. 98 in the third round of the 2020 NFL Draft.

The Baltimore Ravens already took a linebacker in the first round, grabbing LSU’s Patrick Queen at No. 28. But with such a massive hole at the position and very little depth, finding Harrison dropping into their laps at the end of the third round makes him a no-brainer.

While Queen is a rangy linebacker that is more of a finesse option, Harrison is his opposite. While Harrison has some speed to him and can get upfield in a hurry on blitzes, he’s an absolute thumper inside on run defense. He’s got the size to shed blockers and get into the mess in short-yardage and does a great job reading and seeing where the ballcarrier is at to make a play.

Even though Harrison was taken late in the third round, he should enter into a competition for the starting job opposite Queen for Week 1. Harrison will rejoin his Ohio State teammate, running back J.K. Dobbins, who the Ravens took in the second round of the 2020 NFL Draft

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Ohio State players in the 2020 NFL Draft: Baltimore Ravens select LB Malik Harrison in 3rd round

Ohio State linebacker Malik Harrison has been selected by the XX as the XX overall pick in the 3rd round of the 2020 NFL Draft.

Things started slow on day two for Ohio State, but it ended with a bang. The last of the picks with a scarlet and gray hue belonged to linebacker Malik Harrison. He was taken very late in the third round by the Baltimore Ravens with the 98th overall pick.

It took a bit for Harrison to really hit his stride in Columbus, but once he did, he blossomed. Towards the tail-end of his junior season, we started to see the game slow down for the 6-foot, 3-inch, 240-pounder. He’s a fast-twitch guy that can run and shed blockers in traffic.

Harrison Led Ohio State in tackles as a junior (81) and senior (75) and finished career with 205 total tackles. He had an outstanding senior season  that included 16.5 tackles-for-loss, 4.5 sacks and four pass break-ups.

He is the 20th Ohio State linebacker selected in the NFL Draft since 2000, which is tied with Georgia for the most of any program in the country. He has a huge upside, and that’s likely what John Harbaugh and Baltimore are banking on.

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Broncos mock for Day 2 of the 2020 NFL Draft 

Who will the Broncos select on Day 2 of the NFL Draft? Check out this new mock draft!

In his two-round mock for Day 2 of the 2020 NFL Draft, Draft Wire’s Luke Easterling has the Denver Broncos selecting another Alabama prospect.

After selecting wide receiver Jerry Jeudy in the first round, the Broncos select Crimson Tide defensive lineman Raekwon Davis (No. 46) in the second round of Easterling’s mock.

After that, Denver adds some help on the offensive line by drafting UConn offensive tackle Matt Peart (No. 77) in the third round. The Broncos then address the secondary, selecting La. Tech cornerback Amik Robertson (No. 83).

With their final pick in the third round, Denver lands Ohio State linebacker Malik Harrison (No. 95). It wouldn’t be surprising to see the Broncos target linebackers today after missing out on the top LBs on Thursday.

Denver will have a lot of draft capital to work with so GM John Elway will likely make a trade or two. We put together lists of seven cornerbacks and eight offensive linemen the Broncos should target today.

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7 top LBs the Ravens could target in the 2020 NFL Draft

If the Ravens want to upgrade their linebacker corps in the NFL Draft, these are some of the top prospects they could have their eye on.

The Baltimore Ravens enter the 2020 NFL Draft with inside linebacker being one of their top needs. With no clearcut starters on the roster and a lack of overall depth at the position, Baltimore is surely going to look to the draft as the remedy. But in a draft that is sneaky deep and at a position that isn’t as valuable as a decade ago, the Ravens could find quality starters all over the place.

In the modern NFL, there are some positions that seem to have been devalued. Think about running back on offense and how what used to be one of the most valuable positions has turned into a weight around the salary cap for several teams. On defense, the same could be said for the linebacker.

Once the captain of the defense, the transition to a more pass-happy league has seen the value of the position take quite a knock. But that doesn’t mean the position is unimportant. Linebacker has long been proudly associated with the Ravens, after the deeds of Ray Lewis and C.J. Mosley. The Ravens recently added Jake Ryan to their linebacking corps but his signing is not likely to affect the team’s draft plans.

If Baltimore chooses to make linebacker a top priority, here are the seven top prospects they could be looking at.

Photo by Grant Halverson/Getty Images

Isaiah Simmons, Clemson

It’s probably something of a misnomer to class Simmons as solely a linebacker. The former Clemson Tiger is one of the more versatile defensive players in the entire draft class after a career in a hybrid safety-linebacker-cornerback role.

Simmons was incredible in 2019, with 107 tackles, 16 tackles for loss, and eight sacks. This was in addition to 13 passes defended and three interceptions. Frankly, the guy was an absolute menace and made offensive coordinators’ lives miserable.

There is a slight issue that his versatility may affect his draft stock, with teams not sure where exactly he should be used in the NFL. But a creative defensive coordinator, and one who values versatility, will hope to get their hands on Simmons and turn him into a dominant playmaker. If that team is the Ravens, they’ll probably have to make a move up in the draft to get him as he’s unlikely to be there at No. 28.

2020 NFL draft: The best LB for the Ravens in each round

The Baltimore Ravens need serious help at inside linebacker but they have a ton of options available to them in the 2020 NFL Draft.

One of the Baltimore Ravens’ biggest needs entering the 2020 NFL Draft is at inside linebacker. After decades of having great play at linebacker with guys like Ray Lewis and C.J. Mosley, Baltimore has been trying to find their next star at the position with no luck. After revamping their defensive line this offseason and having a stacked secondary, inside linebacker remains one of the only positions keeping the Ravens from having a truly legendary unit.

Though all the attention will go to prospects in the first round of the 2020 NFL Draft, Baltimore could find key contributors throughout the entire draft. While typical three-down linebackers will go in the first round, the Ravens can find players for niche roles (playing the run or dropping into coverage) all the way to the seventh round if they wish.

With that in mind, I wanted to identify who would be the top target at linebacker in each round of the 2020 NFL Draft. Some of these players might fall into Baltimore’s lap when they pick and others will require the Ravens to trade up to go get them. But these are the best of the best of each round in the 2020 NFL Draft.

Photo by Grant Halverson/Getty Images

1st round: LB Isaiah Simmons, Clemson

You don’t get any better than Simmons in this draft, which is why he’s widely considered the top linebacker prospect and expected to go in the top 10. However, there is a little contention over where Simmons ends up playing in the NFL. As a more athletic player with insane speed (4.39-second 40-yard dash at the NFL Scouting Combine), Simmons might be better suited to playing safety than a traditional three-down linebacker role.

The Ravens love that type of versatility and would be able to do so many things with a player of Simmons’ caliber. Just imagining defensive coordinator Don Martindale moving Simmons all over the field likely has Baltimore drooling. With a ton of upside, Simmons could be a star in the right scheme and it’s easy to see how the Ravens would be the exact right fit for him.

The problem here is that Baltimore is going to have to absolutely love Simmons for him to be even considered an option. In order to have a shot at drafting Simmons, the Ravens will have to move up pretty far. Even if Simmons falls a little bit, the amount Baltimore would have to give up in a trade to go get him makes it extremely unlikely it happens. Still, for an article pointing to the best in each round, Simmons is that guy in the 2020 NFL Draft.

Five Ohio State players ranked in ESPN’s top 100 prospects for 2020 NFL draft

ESPN listed the top 100 players of the 2020 NFL draft, and Ohio State has five players appearing. Where are they ranked?

We’re only a few days away from some real, live sports folks. It’s not a competition of the field, but this year’s version of the NFL draft that’s been must-see television for years now.

We’ll continue to see mock draft after mock draft speculating and projecting where players will go in 2020, and you know we’ll be on top of it. But ESPN’s Jeff Legwold isn’t doing things a little differently and just ranking prospects by the best available regardless of position or need.

In his top ranking of the top 100 prospects, Legwold has Ohio State well represented. Just for context, anyone in the top 100 would basically grade out through the first three rounds of the draft plus four picks. And in this case, the Buckeyes have five total players ranked by Legwold.

Here is what he says about each, including their overall ranking. Unlike most, he doesn’t have Chase Young as the best overall player, but at No. 2 behind Clemson’s Isaiah Simmons.

First up … Defensive end Chase Young

Scouting breakdown: The 11 best linebackers in the 2020 NFL Draft

We know Isaiah Simmons is at the top, but what about the rest? How do the linebackers stack for a modern NFL as we look to the NFL Draft?

To paraphrase an idea from the world of politics, do not tell me what you value at a position. Show me your top prospects at a position and I’ll tell you what you value at the position.

We can apply that idea to this list of top linebacker prospects. Look through these names and you will see what I value at the position: Athleticism, the ability to play in space, the fit in the modern NFL, the potential to defend the pass, and the likelihood of being a three-down player.

The players we grew up immortalizing, such as the Mike Singletarys of the world, are a throwback to a different time. An era when “three yards and a cloud of dust” was the rule, not the exception. To be a complete linebacker in today’s NFL you have to be able to stop  the run on first down, and run with a seam route on third down. If you cannot do both, you are not going early in the draft. As such, the players with that ability – or at least potential – are getting the nod on lists like this.

So how do these players shake out?

1. Isaiah Simmons, Clemson

(Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports)

Height: 6’4″ Weight: 238
40-Yard Dash: 4.39 seconds
Bench Press: N/A
Vertical Jump: 39 inches
Broad Jump: 11 feet
3-Cone Drill: N/A
20-Yard Shuttle: N/A
60-Yard Shuttle: N/A

Bio: Isaiah Simmons was a two-sport athlete for Olathe North High School in Olathe, Kansas. Simmons was a wide receiver and a defensive back on the football team, and a long jumper for the track-and-field team. Simmons was the state champion in the long jump in both 2014 and 2015, and his career-bests jump was 23’8″. But as a three-star prospect on the gridiron, he committed to Clemson over Michigan, Nebraska and Missouri. He started his career for the Tigers in 2017, playing primarily as a safety. In 2018 Simmons spent most of his time in the slot, and according to Pro Football Focus he fared well, as they graded him with an overall grade of 88.9 playing as a slot cornerback.

Last year, Simmons did it all. He played 100 or more snaps at edge defender, linebacker, strong safety, free safety and slot cornerback. On film, he excelled at every single position.

Stat to Know: Simmons is extremely disruptive at the catch point. He forced eight incompletions, tying him for the top number among linebackers last season.

Strengths: Where to begin? Simmons has the athleticism to cover wide receivers both out of the slot and on the outside. He has the awareness to make plays in space at all levels of the field. He has the size and length to erase tight ends in the passing game. Simmons was built to play defense in the modern NFL. It does not take long to see how he can impact a game. Take the National Championship Game against LSU. Right at the outset, he blitzes off edge on the first play of the game, chases Joe Burrow all over the field and keeps him (as best as he can) in the pocket. Second play of the game, covers Thaddeus Moss on a stick route, plays off him, breaks perfectly on the route for a pass breakup, and he reads the route concept perfectly. He plays sideline-to-sideline against the pass and the run. If you are running a route near him and he can get to you, he is going to put you on your backside with a jam (ask Moss about that). He can play as a half-field safety and break downhill on plays in front of him. He can run stride-for-stride with Justin Jefferson on a crossing route in the red zone.

Simmons can do everything asked of him on the football field.

Some might wonder about his ability to defend the run as a more traditional linebacker. The film shows a player who handles his responsibilities and assignments the right way. For example against Wofford he was tasked with handling the pitch man on speed option plays, and he did that assignment perfectly. So if you ask him to align at middle linebacker and fit into a gap against the run, he will do that too.

Where he does truly stand out is what he can do against the passing game. Given his experience at both safety and slot cornerback, everything feels natural for him. He can play off coverage over receivers, tight ends and running backs and click-and-close to the catch point like a cornerback. When in zone coverage he knows just how long to stick on a route before passing it off to the next defender. While he can play a single- or two-deep safety role, he can also play in the middle of a Tampa 2 in that underneath hole spot and erase tight ends.

Perhaps my favorite play of his is this one from the National Championship Game:

Simmons aligns along the boundary across from running back Clyde Edward-Helarie. He backpedals off the snap and recognizes the route concept, a smash-fade design with the running back running a hitch route and the slot receiver releasing vertically on a fade route. Simmons, despite the rub element to this concept, does not panic. Instead he slides down over the hitch while keeping an eye on Burrow, and when the QB throws the hitch route the defender is in perfect position to break up the throw at the catch point.

Weaknesses: For a player like this, we need to handle the weaknesses section a little differently.

The fear with Simmons is that an NFL team tries to pigeon-hole into a specific role. Whether as a “linebacker” or a “safety,” and by doing so eliminates the versatility and athleticism that Simmons offers on the defensive side of the football. If he is artifically hamstrung by old school minds on his NFL coaching staff, that will reduce much of what he offers. So the hope is that Simmons lands with a forward-thinking defensive mind who employs him more as a matchup weapon than anything else.

Now yes, there are parts of what he has done over the past few years that require a bit of projection. He played in a defense that was predominantly a 3-1-7 defense, and it is unlikely his NFL home is going to copy what Brent Venables put together for Clemson. So projecting him as an off-ball player fitting gaps against the run is a bit of an unknown. But again, asking him to be that kind of player is just overthinking what he can be in the NFL.

So the weakness is really just a lack of imagination from his NFL coaching staff.

Conclusion: The bottom line is that Isaiah Simmons is a defensive specialist that you can employ virtually anywhere on the field. You can see him rush the passer off the edge on first down, lock down a tight end on second down, and run with a slot receiver on third down. He can play a single-high safety look, or as a half-field safety, or even at boundary corner if necessary. His best “traditional” NFL role might be as a middle linebacker in a heavy Tampa-2 defense. He could be the modern version of Derrick Brooks in that role, running with tight ends and slot receivers, but in today’s game there is so much more that he can do. Draft him and just start dreaming of different ways to employ him.

Comparision: Captain America. Iron Man. Superman. Black Panther. Thor. Basically pick a superhero and that is Isaiah Simmons. Except Batman. He was a rich guy who bought a ton of toys. That is my hot take for the day.

2020 NFL Draft player comps that matter: Silver screen edition

Hollywood gets football right. From “The Program” to “Rudy” football movies inspire. What comparisons be found in the 2020 NFL Draft?

Player comparisons are an inevitability in every draft evaluation process. Some find them useful, others think they’re useless. But they give people a good general thumbnail of a prospect’s traits and attributes.

That said, we’re going a bit outside the box with these comparisons. Here, we align 2020 draft prospects with their fictional football doppelgangers.

Joe Burrow: Jonathan Moxon, Varsity Blues

(Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports)

Joe Burrow is regarded by most as the complete quarterback in this draft class, and almost a lock to be the first player drafted when the NFL Draft begins.

Jonathan Moxon, however, was a backup. The caddy to Lance Harbor, the All-State quarterback with a scholarship waiting for him at Florida State. While Harbor was throwing touchdown passes all over the field for the West Canaan Coyotes and making the student body swoon with interesting pep rally speeches, Moxon was waiting on the sidelines, reading “Slaughterhouse-Five” instead of his playbook on Friday nights.

But when Harbor goes down due to a brutal knee injury, Moxon gets his chance. One of the things he installs in the new Coyotes offense in the movie’s critical final game – an offense he tried to install earlier, much to the chagrin of old school coach Bud Kilmer – is Mississippi Valley State’s “Oop-de-oop” offense. A five-receiver system that as Moxon points out, has MVS averaging over 44 points per game. Of course, it leads to Kilmer delivering a rather amazing comparison in this clip (which, by the way, is not exactly safe for work, but since you are likely working from home, just make sure the kids are in another room):

Now, it is important to remember for this comparison not that Burrow was an afterthought in the Ohio State quarterback room, which led to his transfer to LSU, but rather the offense that Burrow ran last season. Under Joe Brady, the LSU Tigers were predominantly a five-man protection scheme. Very similar, in that regard, to that vaunted Mississippi Valley State offense. That made Burrow responsible for the sixth man in any potential defensive pressure scheme. What does that look like on film?

That is going to have Burrow ready for whatever he will face in the pros.