Chiefs UDFA Spotlight: Louisville CB Marlon Character

How does UDFA rookie CB Marlon Character fit with the #Chiefs?

A former three-star recruit at safety with offers from over 20 schools, Character originally signed with Auburn. After taking a redshirt year as a freshman with the Tigers, Character announced his intention to transfer to South Carolina, spending a season at Northwest Mississippi Community College in the interim before transferring. He eventually flipped his commitment to Louisville after the school hosted him on a visit as the No. 1 JUCO transfer safety in the country.

Arriving at Louisville, Character worked his way up from a depth and special teams role, but he didn’t play safety. He’d start a total of 10 games, mostly playing outside and slot cornerback.

Chiefs UDFA CB Marlon Character Jr. excited to learn from Tyrann Mathieu

One of the biggest draws for UDFA defenders is the opportunity to work with Chiefs DB Tyrann Mathieu.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTFqoMGCVio

There are plenty of reasons that players choose the Kansas City Chiefs in undrafted free agency.

On the offensive side of the ball, Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes tend to be a common reason. One of the biggest draws on the defensive side of the ball, especially in the secondary, is the opportunity to learn from Tyrann Mathieu. He’s someone that players look to and try and emulate, not just from his NFL success, but from his college days back at LSU.

One Chiefs undrafted free agent from the 2021 crop recently revealed his excitement to work with Mathieu. Former Louisville CB Marlon Character Jr. was recently interviewed for the team’s annual “Meet the UDFAs” series. He revealed his reasons for joining the Chiefs and gave a glimpse into the type of player he is. He also spoke about having the opportunity to work with and learn from Mathieu.

“I’m definitely excited to learn from Tyrann Mathieu,” Character Jr. said. “I’ve been watching him since I was in high school and even before then while he was at LSU. He has given me a lot of knowledge about the game and things just to know going into camp. And just how to prepare for certain plays and certain things to look forward to. So, (he’s) a great leader.”

Character Jr. also seems to have a fan in Mathieu, who shares a similar excitement in having the opportunity to help him grow as a player.

Not that the Chiefs needed any extra motivation to extend Mathieu’s contract, but this is a perfect example of the leadership component that he brings to this team. He’s helped reshape the culture on the defensive side of the ball and has made this team a destination for young and talented defensive backs.

Be sure to learn more about Character Jr. by watching the rest of his interview at the top of the page.

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The best draft prospect cornerbacks in every type of coverage

In the interest of preventing schematic mismatches from the NCAA to the NFL, here are the best draft cornerbacks in every type of coverage.

When you’re looking to add a cornerback to your roster via free agency, trade, or the draft, you had better consider scheme fit and skill sets, or you’re basically hurling free agent money, the players and/or picks you gave up in a trade,  and/or draft capital, right out the window.

Negative examples abound, but let’s go with former Chargers and Titans cornerback Desmond King, an impending free agent in the 2021 league year.

Before the November trade that sent him from Los Angeles to Tennessee, King had allowed 10 receptions on 15 targets for 60 yards, 47 yards after the catch, no touchdowns, no interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 74.3. With the Titans, King allowed 27 catches on 39 targets for 312 yards, 192 yards after the catch, two touchdowns, no interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 119.8.

The Titans, who allowed a league-high 23 touchdowns and grabbed just one interception when playing man coverage per Sports Info Solutions, found themselves getting splattered all season on defense due to a negligible pass rush and very little idea of how to best use their defensive backs.

The Chargers, who allowed 20 touchdowns and had eight interceptions in zone coverage, obviously had a better bead on the marriage of personnel and scheme.

When playing zone last season, King allowed 13 catches on 16 targets for 85 yards, no touchdowns, and no interceptions. When playing man last season, King allowed 12 catches on 21 targets for 169 yards, two touchdowns, and no interceptions.

Sometimes, this isn’t hard.

“He’s a player that we felt like could help us, come in and play DB. He’s been disruptive. He’s an effective blitzer and has done some things,” Titans head coach Mike Vrabel said of King after the Titans acquired him. “From everything that we’ve heard, he’s a player that loves football and is competitive that has played in a number of spots and in the kicking game.”

So… you trade for a guy, you make him play the primary coverages he can’t handle, and now, he’s a free agent. That’s one way to waste a 2021 sixth-round pick.

On the whole, King is an above-average primary slot cornerback who can stay sticky with receivers on short and intermediate routes, and he did cause a lot of incompletions on extended plays. Zone-heavy teams like the Seahawks, Buccaneers, Browns, Panthers, or Giants should definitely give King’s agents a call. Man-heavy teams like the Titans (who should be banned from acquiring zone cornerbacks for at least the next three seasons as penance for what they did to this guy), Saints, Cardinals, Lions, and Dolphins should probably stay away.

Moving to the draft, let’s look at two examples of weird fits from the 2020 season.  Alabama’s Trevon Diggs and Louisiana Tech’s Amik Robertson were two of the NCAA’s most dominant man-coverage cornerbacks in the 2019 season, but each player was selected by zone-heavy teams whose overall defenses resembled car crashes more often than not.

In 2019 for Nick Saban, Diggs allowed seven completions on 23 targets in man coverage for 73 yards, no touchdowns, two interceptions, and a preposterous opponent quarterback rating of 5.03. But Stefon Diggs’ younger brother was unfortunately selected with the 51st overall pick in the second round by the Cowboys, who had just hired defensive coordinator Mike Nolan, and Nolan was preparing to do a heavy waste job on a defense that had resided in the middle of the pack before his arrival.

Why is the Cowboys’ defense so bad? It’s complicated.

When Diggs operated in coverages that allowed him to use his instincts, aggressiveness, and athleticism, he was great. When he was presented with Nolan’s overcomplicated muck… not so much. Dallas played 364 of their 512 pass defense snaps in zone coverage, and Diggs allowed 45 catches on 76 targets for 650 yards, 198 yards after the catch, six touchdowns, three interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 96.9. Perhaps Dan Quinn, Dallas’ new defensive coordinator, will give Diggs the right schematic tools to work with, and bring out the best in the player.

Robertson, who tied for the NCAA lead with four picks in man coverage, was selected by the Raiders in the fourth round of the 2020 draft. The Raiders played just 175 of their 579 pass coverage snaps in any iteration of man coverage, and Robertson had just 35 cornerback snaps all season.

In pass coverage, on 28 snaps, Robertson allowed five catches on six targets for 76 yards, 27 yards after the catch, one touchdown, no interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 158.3 — the highest passer rating any NFL quarterback can achieve. Perhaps Gus Bradley, Las Vegas’ new defensive coordinator, will give Robertson the right schematic tools to work with, and bring out the best in the player.

You get the idea.

In any event, this need for the player and the playbook to match — and the repeated examples of teams valuing traits over specific skill sets at one of the NFL’s most crucial positions — had me wondering which draft-eligible cornerbacks were the best in which kinds of coverage. A bit of pre-draft homework NFL teams should be doing as well. Thanks to the Sports Info Solutions database, we can all do just that.