Vikings trade up to select QB J.J. McCarthy in NFL draft

The Vikings picked QB J.J. McCarthy in the first round of the NFL draft on Thursday night.

The Minnesota Vikings traded up one spot with the New York Jets to select Michigan quarterback J.J. McCarthy with the 10th overall pick in the first round of the 2024 NFL draft in Detroit on Thursday evening.

McCarthy (6-2, 219 pounds) enters the NFL after helping the Wolverines win a national championship last fall. Most draft pundits had him ranked as the fourth-best quarterback in this year’s class behind Caleb Williams, Jayden Daniels and Drake Maye.

McCarthy was a two-year starter at Michigan, completing 67.6% of his passes for 6,226 yards and 49 touchdowns against 11 interceptions in 40 career games (he got late appearances in 11 games as a freshman in 2021).

In addition to making plays through the air, McCarthy also rushed 161 times for 632 yards and 10 touchdowns in college, showing off his mobility. He earned first-team All-Big Ten recognition in 2023 and was named the conference’s Quarterback of the Year after passing for 2,991 yards and 22 touchdowns.

After spending three years in college, McCarthy now begins his NFL career as a 21-year-old rookie. He’s younger than fellow rookie quarterbacks Williams (22), Daniels (23), Michael Penix (23) and Bo Nix (24).

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Falcons select QB Michael Penix with 8th pick in NFL draft

In a surprise, the Vikings picked quarterback Michael Penix in the first round of the 2024 NFL draft.

The Atlanta Falcons selected Washington quarterback Michael Penix with the eighth overall pick in the first round of the 2024 NFL draft in Detroit on Thursday evening.

Penix (6-2, 216 pounds) started his college career at Indiana, where he was beset by various injuries. He was limited to 21 games in four games with the Hoosiers, suffering ACL injuries in 2018 and 2020 and shoulder injuries in 2019 and 2021.

Penix completed 59.4% of his passes for 4,197 yards with 29 touchdowns against 15 interceptions at Indiana. After four injury-riddled seasons, Penix transferred to Washington and had a breakout season in 2022.

Penix stayed healthy for all 25 games with the Huskies from 2022-23, completing 65.4% of his passes for 9,544 yards with 67 touchdown passes against 19 interceptions. He also rushed for seven touchdowns.

Penix won the AP Comeback Player of the Year award in 2022 and then won the Maxwell Award in 2023, given to the NCAA’s best all-around player.

NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein has compared Penix to Tua Tagovailoa, who was a first-round pick in 2020.

If his injury woes are behind him, Penix could end up being a steal. Following five years in college, Penix will enter the NFL as a 24-year-old rookie.

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Raiders Round 6 LB Amari Burney boasts hands, coverage abilities

Amari Burney boasts hands, coverage abilities Raiders covet

Josh McDaniels and Patrick Graham have talked before about the value of a linebacker who can drop into coverage. In that vein, you can see what they saw in Amari Burney who they selected with the 203rd pick in the sixth round.

“I feel like when I’m in coverage you don’t have to double the man that I’m guarding, so you can use the safety to be a rat or something like that,” Burney said of his coverage abilities. “I had the best hands on Florida last year, which I keep saying – my hands are great. I used to play receiver, so I don’t drop too many interceptions.”

Along with his team-leading two interceptions, Burney knocked down six passes. He is a former safety, much like current Raiders linebacker Divine Deablo, who was a full time starter for the Raiders last season at the outside linebacker spot.

That’s exactly the role they envision for Burney.

“Yeah, we think he’s a linebacker,” said Raiders GM Dave Ziegler said when I asked him what role Burney will play on the defense.

“He does also have that coverage ability that you kind of see that safety background. I think in college sometimes they line those guys up to make them play a little bit more man coverage. You don’t see a lot of linebackers in the pros play man coverage anymore. Obviously, you do it a little bit in cover one.

“One of the things we look at when we’re watching linebackers at the pro level or college level is their ability to close space and zone because that’s really what they’re asked to do more than anything else is drop into zone and close space, and he could do that. Also had a couple good plays playing tight ends and things like that down the seam.”

Ziegler and Assistant GM Champ Kelly attended the Florida pro day where they watched the 6-2, 230-pounder run a 4.5 40, showing plenty of speed to stay with tight ends and running back out of the backfield.

And until he’s ready to have a significant role on defense, he is an ideal special teams player.

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NFL Draft results: Raiders select Florida LB Amari Burney at 203 in 6th round

Raiders pick at 203 in the 6th round is Florida LB Amari Burney

As the draft goes into the home stretch, the Raiders turned in another pick. This time they addressed the linebacker spot and special teams, taking linebacker Amari Burney out of Florida at pick 203 in round six.

Burney graduated after the 2021 season, earning his degree in educational sciences. Last season, in his fifth year of eligibility, he became a full time starter for the first time for the Gators.

The 6-2, 230-pounder put up 79 tackles with nine for a loss and four sacks over 13 starts.

It’s his six pass breakups and two interceptions that could intrigue the Raiders as coverage linebackers are a valuable commodity in today’s increasingly nickel defense NFL.

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2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings, All 32 From The College Perspective

Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2021 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective.

Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2021 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective.


2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings, All 32 From The College Perspective

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Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews | @PeteFiutak

No NFL team has ever said it didn’t like its draft class.

It might be awful, it might have been disappointing, and it might have been full of random guesses, but they get who they get and they don’t get upset.

And now everyone makes the attempt to grade draft classes and project how good they’ll be. Here’s how we do it.

1. Assume that every pick after the fourth round was a waste of time, because historically and statistically, it almost certainly was. More credit is given to teams who had a ton of picks – more picks, more spins of the wheel to possibly get a contributor.

2. How many great college football players were selected who also have the freakish NFL tools? If that sounds totally obvious it’s because it is, but after all the hoo-ha you’ve probably heard over the last few days and months, the simplicity of that gets swarmed over by the paralyzing overload of analytical bull-muffins.

3. Value. That’s all relative – your worth is what the NFL draft says it is – but this weird little world of draft analysts all have the same 150ish guys in the same general pecking order. Whether or not the pick actually works is almost all random luck – believe me, it truly is – but what’s skill and art is the ability to draft a player you need before where everyone else thinks he should go.

And finally …

4. Were the needs and holes filled? Did the teams get the position guys they needed with top prospects at the right value? Duh, that’s what drafting is, but again, a lot of teams make it way harder than that.

So from the college football perspective, the 2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings are …

32. Seattle Seahawks

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 28, 2019: 14, 2018: 19

Three picks. Western Michigan WR D’Wayne Eskridge in the second, Oklahoma CB Tre Brown in the fourth, and Florida OT Stone Forsythe in the sixth. They’re all decent prospects – the Brown pick wasn’t great, but it’s Seattle. It drafts guys it wants no matter what – let everyone else be about value.
Seattle Seahawks 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

31. New Orleans Saints

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 31, 2019: 31, 2018: 28

This franchise does just fine for itself despite being really, really mediocre at this whole drafting thing when it comes to value. The first three selections aren’t bad – Stanford CB Paulson Adebo was a steal in the third – but the Saints once again wasted a pick on a quarterback who won’t work. Last year it was Tommy Stevens in the seventh, and this time around it’s Ian Book – and it was in the fourth round.
New Orleans Saints 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

30. Indianapolis Colts

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 5, 2019: 6, 2018: 7

To be kind, the Colts needed pass rushers, and they got them with Kwity Paye out of Michigan at the 21 and Vanderbilt’s Dayo Odeyingbo with a massive reach at the 54. There were some nice ideas after that, but … blah. They needed offensive tackles, and in a draft rich with them, they failed to get one who’ll stick.
Indianapolis Colts 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

29. Los Angeles Rams

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 17, 2019: 11, 2018: 15

To be fair, the Rams did what they could with what they had to work with. They didn’t pick until the 57, and smallish-speedy Louisville WR Tutu Atwell fits the system. Even with nine picks, considering they’re all late, maybe three of them will do anything meaningful – at best.
Los Angeles Rams 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

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28. Houston Texans

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 26, 2019: 25, 2018: 11

Let’s give the Texans a break here by grading on a curve. They had absolutely nothing to work with, and yet they got a guy in Davis Mills in the third round who might just be one of the best quarterbacks in this draft if he can stay healthy. Of course, that pick screamed how the franchise feels about Deshaun Watson, but they kept on going with some nice targets for whoever plays quarterback for them this year.
Houston 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

27. Washington Football Team

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 15, 2019: 5, 2018: 9

Washington took a long snapper in the sixth round. Washington isn’t good enough to be taking a long snapper in the sixth round. It was an okay draft full of random guys – there are a whole lot of big projections. The Football Team 1) didn’t take a quarterback, 2) no, really, it didn’t take a quarterback and it desperately needs one to develop, and 3) … they took a long snapper in the sixth round.
Washington Football Team 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

26. Philadelphia Eagles

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 27, 2019: 7, 2018: 32

Wide receivers taken in the top ten rarely play up to their draft status, but DeVonta Smith at the ten absolutely had to be done. It would’ve been nice, though, to get Jalen Hurts some more weapons, and it would’ve been even nicer if the second pick – OG/C Landon Dickerson out of Alabama – wasn’t coming off a torn ACL. Basically, the Eagles drafted the The Slim Reaper, and a bunch of guys who likely won’t do much in 2021.
Philadelphia Eagles 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

NEXT: 2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings Top 25

2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings, All 32 From The College Perspective

Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2020 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective.

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Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2020 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective. 


Contact @PeteFiutak

Full 2020 NFL Draft
2021 NFL Draft Top 32 Prospects
1st Round Pick-by-Pick Analysis
2020 NFL Draft Rankings By College: 1-130
2020 NFL Draft Rankings By Conference

Everyone loves their own kids, TikToks, and NFL draft classes – even if they’re awful. And with all three, it takes a while to know if they’re any good.

So how do you rank an NFL Draft class right after the draft weekend?

Some sure-thing stars flame out, some no-names rise up, and all the research and knowledge in the world doesn’t mean a thing if a guy gets hurt.

The goal is to find decent starters – anything other than that is blind luck. Seriously, there’s less than a 15% chance that a pick taken after the top 100 will be a starter for a least three years for your team.

The NFL Draft Team Rankings are based on value – at least the generally acknowledged perceived value of the draft slot – the tools, and the upside of each pick. Also, throw into the equation whether or not the holes and team needs were filled.

With all that in mind, from the college football perspective, the 2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings are …

CFN 2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings, Thoughts
AFC East Buffalo | Miami | NY Jets | New England
AFC North Baltimore | Cincinnati | Cleveland | Pittsburgh
AFC South Houston | Indianapolis | Jacksonville | Tennessee
AFC West Denver | Kansas City | Las Vegas | LA Chargers
NFC East Dallas | NY Giants | Philadelphia | Washington
NFC North Chicago | Detroit | Green Bay | Minnesota
NFC South Atlanta | Carolina | New Orleans | Tennessee
NFC West Arizona | LA Rams | San Francisco | Seattle

32. New England Patriots 2020 NFL Draft

– The New England draft was freaking weird. At times, it was as if Bill Belichick and the Patriots were just picking random names of various college football players. There was little to no value with most of their selections in their respective spots, led by taking PK Justin Rohrwasser from Marshall – controversial tattoo and all – in the fifth. However …


2020 New England Patriots Draft Video
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– There was certainly a plan when it came to the tight ends. Even with UCLA’s Devin Asiasi and Virginia Tech’s Dalton Keene in the third round – two decent prospects – there wasn’t a whole lot of value. There’s also a plan to get to the quarterback with Michigan’s Josh Uche and Alabama’s Anfernee Jennings.

– Kyle Dugger in the second round was a terrific pick. He’s an elite tools talent who should quickly help out an aging secondary, but he needs to be fantastic for this draft to end up working.

There were a whole lot of draft picks to play around with, and there wasn’t any maneuvering to take a shot at one of the sliding quarterbacks – signing Michigan State’s Brian Lewerke as an undrafted free agent. It appears to be Jarrett Stidham or bust.

Best Value Pick: TE Devin Asiasi, UCLA (3rd)
Biggest Reach: PK Justin Rohrwasser, Marshall (5th)
Late Flier That Could Work: OG Michael Onwenu, Michigan (6th)
2019 NFL Draft Ranking: 1
2018 NFL Draft Ranking: 27

2020 New England Patriots Draft Class
2 S Kyle Dugger, Lenoir-Rhyne
2 DE Josh Uche, Michigan
3 LB Anfernee Jennings, Alabama
3 TE Devin Asiasi, UCLA
3 TE Dalton Keene, Virginia Tech
5 PK Justin Rohrwasser, Marshall
6 OG Michael Onwenu, Michigan
6 LB Cassh Maluia, Wyoming
7 C Dustin Woodard, Memphis

NEXT: 2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings, No. 31

Denver Broncos draft tracker: View the team’s picks from each round

We’re tracking all of the Broncos’ draft picks here.

Before making any trades, the Denver Broncos were scheduled to make 10 picks in the 2020 NFL Draft. We are going to be tracking all of the team’s draft picks here:

Round and Pick Player
Round 1, pick 15th overall
Round 2, pick 46th overall
Round 3, pick 77th overall
Round 3, pick 83th overall
Round 3, pick 95th overall
Round 4, pick 118th overall
Round 5, pick 178th overall
Round 6, pick 181th overall
Roud 7, pick 252th overall
Round 7, pick 254th overall

To view information about how to watch and stream the draft, click here.

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