2022 NFL draft: Chargers pick DB Deane Leonard with No. 236 overall selection

The Chargers continued the shore-up of their secondary with the No. 236 overall selection.

The Chargers have taken former Ole Miss defensive back Deane Leonard with the No. 236 overall selection in the 2022 NFL draft.

Leonard’s college career began at the University of Calgary, where he appeared in 23 games, recording 47 tackles, 13 passes defended, and six interceptions.

After transferring, in two seasons with the Rebels, Leonard appeared in 18 games, posting 63 tackles, 14 passes defended, and one fumble recovery.

Leonard ran a blazing 4.37 40-yard dash at his Pro Day, as well as a 33-inch vertical jump and 9-11 broad jump.

At 6-foot and 195 pounds, Leonard has the size and length coupled with the speed and athleticism to make plays on the football, projecting as a developmental corner.

Broncos’ updated 2022 NFL draft pick total after Von Miller trade

After trading Von Miller, the Broncos now have five picks to use in the first three rounds of the 2022 NFL draft.

The Denver Broncos made a blockbuster move on Tuesday, agreeing to trade star outside linebacker Von Miller to the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for a pair of 2022 NFL draft picks.

After completing that trade, Broncos general manager George Paton currently has 10 picks for the upcoming NFL draft, including five selections in the first three rounds. Here’s a look at the team’s unofficial pick order:

Round 1: Own pick
Round 2: Own pick
Round 2: From Los Angeles Rams
Round 3: Own pick
Round 3: From Los Angeles Rams
Round 4: Own pick
Round 5: Own pick
Round 5: From Detroit Lions
Round 7: From San Francisco 49ers*
Round 7: From Detroit Lions*

Denver acquired a seventh-round pick from the San Francisco 49ers when they traded a sixth-round pick to acquire linebacker Jonas Griffith in August. The Broncos also acquired fifth- and seventh-round picks from the Detroit Lions in exchange for wide receiver Trinity Benson.

Denver later traded a seventh-round pick to the Minnesota Vikings for linebacker Stephen Weatherly, and it’s unclear if they used their own pick, the Lions’ pick or the 49ers’ pick in that trade. Regardless, the Broncos currently have two seventh-round picks to use next spring.

The 2022 NFL draft will be held in Las Vegas from April 28-30.

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The NFL’s cornerbacks trade carousel keeps skipping the Saints

No team has broadcast their interest in trading for a cornerback more loudly than the Saints. So why haven’t they done it yet?

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Few teams have broadcast their intentions more loudly and more broadly than the New Orleans Saints have this year: they want to trade for another cornerback. Ever since the NFL’s unprecedented salary cap plunge forced them to cut Janoris Jenkins as a cap casualty, the Saints have searched high and low for more help in the secondary. Sean Payton has repeatedly described the position as his top priority for months.

Their efforts go back to the draft in April, when the Saints called anyone picking in the top 10 who would pick up their phone, targeting top prospects Jaycee Horn and Patrick Surtain II. More recent reports in early August linked the Saints to the Jacksonville Jaguars and mercurial starter C.J. Henderson. But more trades continue to be completed across the NFL, and none of them have involved the Saints. What gives?

On Friday, Sept. 3, the Steelers traded a 2023 fifth rounder for benched Seahawks starter Akhello Weatherspoon. On Oct. 30, the Seahawks traded a sixth round pick for Jaguars corner Sidney Jones IV. Days earlier, the Patriots acquired Ravens rookie Shaun Wade for a 2022 seventh rounder and 2023 fifth round choice. Back on Aug. 23, the Texans swapped a 2022 seventh rounder for Packers backup Ka’dar Hollman, who was later cut and landed with the Saints practice squad. Other options like Isaac Yiadom (Giants to Packers) and Josh Jackson (Packers to Giants), and John Reid (from Texans to Seahawks, for a conditional seventh rounder in 2023) have all been dealt.

For the folks keeping score at home, that’s seven different cornerbacks changing teams in less than three weeks. And the Saints, for all the chatter surrounding their interest in the trade market and the clear need on the roster, have stayed out of it.

Have they been unable to seal the deal? Were they unwilling to put future draft picks on the table? The salary cap for once wasn’t an obstacle (the team currently boasts cap space in the double digits). The team has a ton of picks to use next year between their own selections and multiple compensatory choices in the forecast. To make sense of their inaction, we’ve got to consider the context of the players being moved.

So far, no cornerback has been traded over the last month for much better than a fifth rounder two years from now. The players being offloaded aren’t likely to be ready to start, at least not over the Saints’ own in-house options of Ken Crawley and Paulson Adebo. A rookie fifth rounder like Wade wouldn’t get the nod over Adebo, a third round pick this year, for example. Maybe Jones would have made sense but his up-and-down play in the NFL and significant injury history are a tough sell.

At this point, there haven’t been any corners available for trade that would be worth the Saints’ while. None of those players are upgrading Crawley and Adebo. There’s an argument for improving the depth chart behind those top three corners but you shouldn’t burn a future draft pick for that when there are still free agents available.

Still, it feels inevitable that the Saints are going to add another corner soon — one way or another. The 53-man roster currently has three and a half corners between Marshon Lattimore, Crawley, Adebo, and part-time free safety P.J. Williams, with three others held in reserve on the practice squad (KeiVarae Russell, Bryan Mills, and Ka’dar Hollman). How many of those players are you ready to throw into a game against Calvin Ridley, Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, Robby Anderson, DJ Moore, or Terrace Marshall?

If they can’t make a splash through a trade, maybe the Saints convince someone like Desmond Trufant or Josh Norman to sign for near-veteran’s minimum to warm up and wait on the sidelines on game days. But given the team’s need for greater help and the resources burning a hole in their wallet, you’ve got to think the clock is already ticking on some sort of move.

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2021 NFL Draft: Justin Fields Will Be Fine, and 3 Other Massive Draft Day Predictions

2021 NFL Draft: It’s going to be all about the quarterbacks in the first round. Here are four big draft day predictions.

2021 NFL Draft: It’s going to be all about the quarterbacks in the first round. Here are four big draft day predictions and how the passers will dominate Round 1


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Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews | @PeteFiutak

It’s finally here.

It’s the 2021 NFL Draft, and we do love it so – and even more this year with all the big things happening at the most important position in all of sports. Here are your four big draft day predictions, and it’s all about the quarterbacks.

CFN 2021 NFL Draft Prospect Rankings
from the college perspective …
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG & C
DE & Edge | DT | LB | CB | Safeties
Top 105 2021 NFL Draft Prospects
2 Round NFL Mock Draft
Greatest Draft Picks For Each College
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
32 Greatest Draft Picks of All-Time
2022 Top 32 Pro Prospects | By Position

2021 NFL Draft Wacky Call No. 4: The quarterback panic is real, and it’ll cause some teams to lose their minds

Last year at this time we knew Trevor Lawrence would be the No. 1 pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, and we knew Justin Fields would be close, and Trey Lance would be in the early mix somewhere.

We didn’t know Zach Wilson would be the No. 2 pick and that a team would sell out to move up to the three to take – most likely – Mac Jones.

But that’s every year. Whether it’s Daniel Jones, or Mitchell Trubisky, or even Joe Burrow, there are always going to be quarterbacks who rise up and become first round must-haves.

Next year, though, is looking very, very thin.

There isn’t a Trevor Lawrence in the 2022 draft. In fact, as we project out way too soon, North Carolina’s Sam Howell, Oklahoma’s Spencer Rattler and Texas Tech’s Tyler Shough are all fine, but … meh.

DJ Uiagalelei to be eligible for the 2023 NFL Draft. That’s the guy, but not yet.

So get ready for the panic.

Teams – especially ones with old quarterbacks – are going to look ahead and assume that there isn’t the sure-thing franchise guy out there. The 2021 draft will go QB-QB-QB with Lawrence, Wilson and Jones going as expected, someone will take Lance a wee bit early, and then all hell will break loose as teams look to move up and grab Fields. OR, Fields goes somewhere in the top seven and someone makes a run at Lance.

CFN 2021 NFL Pre-Draft Team Thoughts
AFC East Buffalo | Miami | NY Jets | New England
AFC North Baltimore | Cincinnati | Cleveland | Pitt
AFC South Houston | Indy | Jacksonville | Tenn
AFC West Denver | KC | Las Vegas | LA Chargers
NFC East Dallas | NY Giants | Phil | Washington
NFC North Chicago | Detroit | Green BayMinn
NFC South Atlanta | Carolina | New Orleans | TB
NFC West Arizona | LA Rams | San Fran | Seattle

No matter what, the run on quarterbacks is going to be massive with teams wanting the cheap contract instead of looking ahead to the hamstrung free agent idea.

As you’re reading this, some team is trying to figure out just how much it’s willing to give up to get a guy to get the fan base excited.

Wacky 2021 NFL Draft prediction that just might be right: There will be a whole lot of jockeying for position for six, not five, quarterbacks in the first round. More on that in a moment.

And that begs the question …

NEXT: What’s the 2021 NFL Draft version of Jordan Love-to-Green Bay going to be?

49ers add pair of 3rd-round picks after Robert Saleh joins Jets as head coach

The 49ers earned a pair of third-round compensatory picks since Robert Saleh was hired as a head coach.

The 49ers lost defensive coordinator Robert Saleh to the New York Jets, but they gained a couple of draft picks in the process.

Thanks to the Rooney Rule revision aimed at incentivizing teams to develop minority head coach and front office candidates, San Francisco will get compensatory third-round picks in the 2021 and 2022 drafts with Saleh taking the Jets head coaching position.

The 49ers traded their own third-round pick on Day 3 of the 2020 draft in the deal that landed them left tackle Trent Williams. Now they’ll recoup that third-round selection to give them at least one in every round.

Exactly when that pick will come is yet to be revealed. There are other coaching hires to be made and teams will receive compensatory picks for last offseason’s free agency as well. Six teams are slated to get third-round comp picks according to Over the Cap.

Here’s an updated look at San Francisco’s selections:

Round 1, Pick 12
Round 2, Pick 44
Round 3, Compensatory
Round 4, Pick 114
Round 5, Pick 153
Round 5, Pick 170 (via NO)
Round 6, Pick 191
Round 7, Pick 225 (via NYJ)
Round 7, Pick 235 

Former Alabama DB Shyheim Carter signing with Jets

Former Alabama defensive back Shyheim Carter will be signing with the New York Jets as an undrafted free agent according to his agent.

It looks like Shyheim Carter will be signing with the New York Jets as an undrafted free agent, according to his trainer Yo Murphy.

The news was released via Instagram late on Saturday night.

After being projected to be a Day 3 pick, the former Alabama defensive back ended up going undrafted before ultimately deciding to join the Jets.

He will be joining fellow Alabama alum C.J. Mosley, as well as former Tide teammate Quinnen Williams in New York.

Carter manned the STAR position for the Crimson Tide’s defense over the last two seasons, and head coach Nick Saban has been quoted saying that Carter was one of the most intelligent players he’s ever coached.

Over the course of the last two seasons, Carter has recorded 86 tackles, 6.0 tackles for loss, three interceptions (two of which he returned for touchdowns) and 18 pass deflections.

At 5-foot-10, 194 pounds, Carter is slightly undersized, but he possesses a good, solid build that should fit in nicely as a potential depth option on New York’s defense.

Stay tuned for more NFL draft coverage from Roll Tide Wire, part of USA TODAY Sports!

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NFL Draft: Bears Kmet Tweets Excitement to “Stay Home”

Cole Kmet is the newest member of the Chicago Bears. The hometown kid gets his chance to live out a dream playing for his hometown team.

I wonder how long it’ll be before former Chicago Bears and Notre Dame players Tom Thayer or Chris Zorich reach out to Cole Kmet.  Kmet became the latest player to go from playing high school football in Chicagoland, attend and play at Notre Dame then ultimately get drafted by the Bears.

Kmet tweeted his excitement moments after getting the call that forever changed his life.

I guess you could say Kmet took Lori Lightfoot’s order to stay home literally.

Watch: Newest Chicago Bears Tight End, Cole Kmet’s Highlights

Cole Kmet didn’t star at Notre Dame for long but he did make plenty of memorable plays. Watch them right here!

The Chicago Bears selected Notre Dame tight end Cole Kmet 43rd overall Friday night.  Kmet had been thought by some to be a potential first round pick but was still available when the Bears were picking in the middle of round two.

Kmet missed the first two games of 2019 for Notre Dame with a broken collarbone but splashed on the scene in his season debut at Georgia, pulling down nine receptions for 108 yards and a touchdown.

Kmet isn’t a finished product by any means.  Some knocks include inconsistent in run blocking, although willing to engage.  I’ve also thought at times that he uses his body a bit too much when making a catch, something that will get you in trouble at the next level.  That said, Bears fans should be excited to get what is easily the best tight end in this draft as they look to fill what has been a black hole at the position in recent years.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51fNVJDj-ZE] Kmet’s career stat line at Notre Dame:
35 games, 60 receptions, 691 yards, six touchdowns.

Kmet’s final season at Notre Dame:
11 games, 43 515 yards, six touchdowns

 

2020 NFL Draft: How to watch, listen to Day 2

The first day of the 2020 NFL Draft has come and gone, but Day 2 should still be filled with plenty of storylines.

The first day of the 2020 NFL Draft has come and gone, but Day 2 should still be filled with plenty of storylines and top college football prospects coming off the board.

Alabama tied the school record for most first-round picks in a single draft with four on Thursday night, and the SEC as a whole broke the record for most first-round picks from a single conference (15).

Below is how you can watch and/or listen to the second and third round as other former Crimson Tide standouts wait to hear their names called.

Date: Friday, April 24

Time: 7 p.m. ET (6 p.m. CT)

Channel: ESPN, ABC and NFL Network

Stream: WatchESPN and NFL Mobile app

Where: After being scheduled to take place in Las Vegas, the coronavirus has forced the location to change. Instead, it will take place remotely with NFL teams working separately from home.

Alabama players still available: S Xavier McKinney, EDGE Terrell Lewis, CB Trevon Diggs, IDL Raekwon Davis, EDGE Anfernee Jennings, DB Shyheim Carter and DB Jared Mayden

NFL draft order for second round:

33. Cincinnati
34. Indianapolis (via WSH)
35. Detroit
36. N.Y. Giants
37. L.A. Chargers
38. Carolina
39. Miami
40. Houston (via ARI)
41. Cleveland
42. Jacksonville
43. Chicago (via LVR)
44. Indianapolis
45. Tampa Bay
46. Denver
47. Atlanta
48. N.Y. Jets
49. Pittsburgh
50. Chicago
51. Dallas
52. L.A. Rams
53. Philadelphia
54. Buffalo
55. Baltimore (via NE through ATL)
56. Miami (via NO)
57. L.A. Rams (via HOU)
58. Minnesota
59. Seattle
60. Baltimore
61. Tennessee
62. Green Bay
63. Kansas City (via SF)
64. Seattle (via KC)

Third round:

65. Cincinnati
66. Washington
67. Detroit
68. N.Y. Jets (via NYG)
69. Carolina
70. Miami
71. L.A. Chargers
72. Arizona
73. Jacksonville
74. Cleveland
75. Indianapolis
76. Tampa Bay
77. Denver
78. Atlanta
79. N.Y. Jets
80. Las Vegas
81. Las Vegas (via CHI)
82. Dallas
83. Denver (via PIT)
84. L.A. Rams
85. Detroit (via PHI)
86. Buffalo
87. New England
88. New Orleans
89. Minnesota
90. Houston
91. Las Vegas (via SEA)
92. Baltimore
93. Tennessee
94. Green Bay
95. Denver (via SF)
96. Kansas City

Compensatory picks for third round:

97. Cleveland (via HOU)*
98. New England*
99. N.Y. Giants*
100. New England*
101. Seattle*
102. Pittsburgh*
103. Philadelphia*
104. L.A. Rams*
105. Minnesota*
106. Baltimore*

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Scouting report, film notes of Chargers first-round pick LB Kenneth Murray

The Los Angeles Chargers had to make a sacrifice by giving up some picks, but they struck gold with linebacker Kenneth Murray.

The Los Angeles Chargers traded back up into the first-round to select former Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray with the No. 23 overall pick.

To get familiar with the physical linebacker, here is my scouting report on Murray followed with film notes from a few of his games:

Kenneth Murray | Oklahoma | #9 | Junior | Missouri City, TX | 6024 | 241

40-Yard Dash: 4.52 seconds
Bench Press: 21 reps
Vertical Jump: 38 inches
Broad Jump: 129 inches
3-Cone Drill: N/A
20-Yard Shuttle: N/A

Career: Semifinalist for the Butkus and Bednarik awards. Racked up 325 tackles, 36.5 tackles for loss and 9.5 sacks in 42 games.

Red Flags: N/A

Strengths: Outstanding speed, acceleration and range. Fast in all directions, and is able to drive extremely well to the ball carrier. Able to anticipate and get to the spot faster than blockers to make the play. Covers significant ground when dropping back in coverage. Terrific blitzer, who attacks with a purpose and does a great job of shrinking space between him and the quarterback. An explosive tackler, runs through the ball-carrier and brings heat with him.

Weaknesses: Average instincts and route recognition in zone coverage. Can rely on speed to get him to the ball in space and could stand to take cleaner angles with straighter lines to the ball-carrier. Makes wrong reads between the tackles at times. Struggles to disengage from climbing blockers. Can come in too high when attempting to tackle.

Final Word: Murray is a quick-twitch athlete who possesses the speed against the run and pass, physicality and blitz ability, but he needs to improve his play recognition and play under control on a more consistent basis, projecting as three-down starting Mike or Will linebacker.

Fit Likelihood: High

Grade: 1st-2nd Round

Film Study – vs Baylor (Big-12 Championship Game)

In this game, Murray finished with 10 tackles, three tackles for loss, one sack and a pass deflected. This game exemplified how his closing speed quickness and his ability to cover a lot of ground even when dropping back in coverage, making it look effortless. Along with that, we saw his explosiveness to acquire a sack in this contest. But we saw on a couple of plays him coming in too high when tackling, which was an issue.

Film Study – vs LSU (College Football Playoffs)

In arguably the biggest stage of his collegiate career against the 2020 National Champions, Murray amassed seven tackles and one tackle for loss. Murray, again, showed his elite speed and range when coming downhill, but his overaggressive tendencies got the best of him and he was late to diagnose on a couple of instances.

Highlights