Thaddeus Moss, son of Randy Moss, declares for 2020 NFL Draft

In 2019 at LSU, Moss had 47 catches for 570 yards and four touchdowns.

Fresh off of a national championship victory in which he caught two touchdowns, LSU tight end Thaddeus Moss has declared for the 2020 NFL Draft.

Thaddeus is the son of former Vikings great Randy Moss.

In 2019, Moss had 47 catches for 570 yards and four touchdowns.

The younger Moss, who is just 21, will likely be taken somewhere in the middle rounds of the draft.

A recent history of the NFL’s 21st pick, where the Eagles are currently slotted to draft

A recent history of the NFL’s 21st pick, which the Eagles currently have

The Philadelphia Have 10 picks in the 2020 NFL and their first-round selection will come at pick No. 21 as it currently stands.

NFL teams have had enormous success with mid to late first-round picks and with the Eagles slotted to pick later in the round, Howie Roseman and company have a chance to land a bonafide star.

The recent history of players selected at No. 21 overall bolds well for the Eagles who’ll need to land a dynamic playmaker with their first-round pick.

Here are the players selected with the 21st overall pick since the 1998 NFL Draft.

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21st Overall

2019 Darnell Savage DB Maryland (Packers)
2018 Billy Price C Ohio State (Bengals)
2017 Jarrad Davis LB Florida (Lions)
2016 Will Fuller WR Notre Dame (Texans)
2015 Cedric Ogbuehi LT Texas A&M (Bengals)
2014 Ha Ha Clinton Dix S Alabama (Packers)
2013 Tyler Eifert TE Notre Dame (Bengals)
2012 Chandler Jones DE Syracuse (Patriots)
2011 Phil Taylor DT Baylor (Browns)
2010 Jermaine Gresham TE Oklahoma (Bengals)
2009 Alex Mack C California (Browns)
2008 Sam Baker OT USC (Falcons)
2007 Reggie Nelson S Florida (Jaguars)
2006 Laurence Maroney RB Minnesota (Patriots)
2005 Matt Jones WR Arkansas (Jaguars)
2004 Vince Wilfork DT Miami New England
2003 Jeff Faine C Notre Dame (Browns)
2002 Daniel Graham TE Colorado (Patriots)
2001 Nate Clements CB Ohio State (Bills)
2000 Sylvester Morris WR Jackson State (Chiefs)
1999 L.J. Shelton T Eastern Michigan Cardinals
1998 Randy Moss WR Marshall (Vikings)

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Randy Moss is the only player on the list to have a Hall of Fame career, but there have been some quality players selected at pick No. 21.

Chandler Jones had an All-Pro season for the Cardinals this season, while Alex Mack was one of the NFL’s top centers for years in Cleveland.

The Eagles second-round pick this season will be pick No. 53, the same pick that landed them Miles Sanders in 2019. LeSean McCoy was also the 53rd pick when he was selected, so it’ll be imperative for the Eagles to select a skilled player with this one.

WATCH: Randy Moss’ son Thaddeus makes neat TD catch for LSU

Randy Moss’ son Thaddeus caught a Joe Burrow pass for a TD in the second quarter of the CFP championship.

Randy Moss had good reason to be proud of his son, Thaddeus, in the second quarter of LSU’s battle with Clemson in the College Football Playoff championship Monday at the Superdome in New Orleans. The 6-3, 249-pound junior grabbed a TD pass from Heisman winner Joe Burrow to put LSU up by double digits before halftime.

Thaddeus Moss showed everyone he knows how to celebrate like his Hall-of-Fame dad.

Randy Moss left no doubt as to who he was backing, arriving at the Superdome in LSU colors.

 

 

Joe Burrow and 23 other college stars who transferred

Joe Burrow transferred from Ohio State to LSU. He joins many other great players who switched colleges.

The coaching carousel may get busy but the transfer portal is like Grand Central Station it seems with players shifting schools more and more. A look at some of the best to switch schools during their college years, including LSU’s Joe Burrow, who became the third straight transfer to win the Heisman Trophy

Troy Aikman

Allsport

In 1985, Troy Aikman was named starting quarterback for Barry Switzer’s new passing attack and led the Oklahoma to a 3-0 start. In the fourth game, Aikman broke his ankle when he was sacked by Miami’s Jerome Brown. With Aikman out for the season, Switzer went back to the wishbone with Jamelle Holieway and the Sooners went on to win the national championship that season. Aikman transferred to UCLA. And after sitting out in 1986, he led the Bruins to back-to-back 10-win seasons.

Favre among 10 QBs on NFL’s all-time team

Favre played two seasons with the Vikings in 2009 and 2010

The NFL announced the 10 quarterbacks that will be on its all-time team to celebrate 100 seasons.

The only quarterback with ties to the Vikings to make the team was Brett Favre, which means Fran Tarkenton, who was a finalist, did not make the team.

But Favre played two seasons with the Vikings and gosh darnit, we will claim him!

The other quarterbacks to make the team were Sammy Baugh, Tom Brady, John Elway, Otto Graham, Peyton Manning, Dan Marino, Joe Montana, Roger Staubach and Johnny Unitas.

Favre played two seasons with the Vikings in 2009 and 2010. His 2009 season was magical as he threw for 4,202 yards and 33 touchdowns while leading the Vikings to the NFC Championship.

Favre led the NFL in passing yards twice and touchdowns four times. With that, Favre also led the NFL in interceptions three seasons and his 336 career interceptions are first in NFL history by a wide margin (69).

Favre made it over players like Drew Brees and Aaron Rodgers. Personally, I think Brees probably has more of a case than Rodgers, but it really doesn’t matter, does it?

Players to spend time with the Vikings to make the all-time team include Favre, Jan Stenerud, Alan Page, John Randle, Randall McDaniel and Randy Moss.

LeBron James, Twitter react to Michael Thomas’s record-breaking performance

New Orleans Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas earned praise from LeBron James, James Harden, and Keyshawn Johnson after breaking records.

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New Orleans Saints wide Michael Thomas passed a historic milestone on Sunday against the Tennessee Titans by logging a dozen receptions for 136 yards and a touchdown. Those numbers, added to his season and career totals, passed two records established by NFL legends Marvin Harrison and Randy Moss.

Harrison set the NFL record for receptions in a single season back in 2002, when he caught 143 passes in 16 games. Thomas needed 15 games to beat that, catching 145 passes. Additionally, Moss gained an NFL-record 5,396 receiving yards through his first four seasons — and Thomas passed him, too, ending his day with 5,475 receiving yards. And he still has a game to play.

Those sort of big-time numbers draw big-time attention. These feats earned praise from Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James, who reached out to Thomas on Twitter. James lauded Thomas for the way he broke the single-season receptions record with an electrifying route, which beat Titans cornerback Logan Ryan off the snap and had the defender sprawling to try to recover.

But James wasn’t the only celebrity-athlete to congratulate Thomas for what he’s accomplished. James’s NBA rival (and a friend of Thomas’s), Houston Rockets centerpiece James Harden, also reached out. As did Thomas’s uncle, former NFL wide receivers Keyshawn Johnson, and Hall of Fame wideout Cris Carter. Former teammates with the Saints (like Chris Banjo) and the Ohio State Buckeyes (such as Braxton Miller) each sent their well-wishes:

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Michael Thomas goes the distance, breaks Marvin Harrison’s record

New Orleans Saints WR Michael Thomas broke Indianapolis Colts WR Marvin Harrison’s NFL record for the most receptions in a single season.

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He’s done it: New Orleans Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas broke the record Marvin Harrison set with the Indianapolis Colts back in 2002, when Thomas was 9 years old. What Harrison accomplished that year was legendary — he caught 143 receptions in 16 games, the most in a single season in NFL history.

Thomas only needed 15 games to catch 144 receptions, with the record-breaker coming late in the second half during Sunday’s game with the Tennessee Titans. He also shattered the mark Randy Moss established for the most receiving yards in a player’s first four years (5,396), having increased his total to 5,473 yards after his performance against the Titans.

It speaks to his skill and durability that he’s able to handle whatever coverage assignments teams try to guard him with each week, and overcome them anyway. There’s a lot to be said for someone who can beat the defense when they all know that the ball is coming his way before it’s even thrown.

It’s why he has quickly become a favorite target of Drew Brees. He’s a three-time Pro Bowler (having been named to the all-star game in 2017, 2018, and 2019) and a favorite to repeat as a first-team All-Pro again this year, having done so in 2018. Thomas isn’t the biggest or fastest receiver on the field, but his work ethic in practice has translated into historic production. Now he needs to go get a Super Bowl ring.

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Larry Fitzgerald borrowed Randy Moss’ new car for prom

Moss’ 1999 BMW 740LI “was the coldest car out.”

Just when you think you have heard everything about legendary Arizona Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald, you learn something more. He was named as one of the receivers on the NFL All-time team, but that isn’t what the great revelation was.

It is well-documented how he was a ball boy for the Minnesota Vikings when he was a teenager and that Vikings receivers Cris Carter and Randy Moss played an important role in his youth and his development.

It wasn’t just as a football player. Moss also lended a hand socially.

Fitzgerald borrowed Moss’ new car to go to prom.

He explained the story on NFL Network.

Moss would attend Fitzgerald’s high school football games. He supported him in many ways.

Moss had a brand-new, 1999 BMW 740 LI. “It was the coldest car out, and I had the courage to go ask him,” he recalled.

Fitzgerald said that Moss looked at him and asked him why is was asking him. “In his way, he told me yes,” he said, and continued to talk about Moss’ off-the-field work.

“The kind of stuff that this man did behind the scenes for people with no notoriety, no fanfare, was so inspirational to me,” he said. “I’m one of the many charity cases Randy looked out for.”

Moss clearly had a huge impact on Fitz on and off the field. He is one of the greatest players of all time and is incredible off the field, just like Moss was.

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Stitcher Radio.

Ep. 252:

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Ep. 251:

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Bill Belichick says Randy Moss taught him more about the passing game than anyone

“He taught me more about receiving and the passing game than by far anybody else.”

Bill Belichick has surrounded himself with no shortage of brilliant coaching minds. Nick Saban, for example, is a disciple of Belichick. The New England Patriots coach has also worked with Charlie Weis, Josh McDaniels, Bill O’Brien and Kliff Kingsbury, among others.

But a player — not a coach — taught Belichick more about the passing game than anyone else. And, no, it’s not quarterback Tom Brady. Belichick said receiver Randy Moss proved the ultimate tutor.

“One of the smartest players I’ve ever coached. Certainly the smartest receiver,” Belichick said of Moss during an NFL Network segment on “NFL 100” in a video released this weekend. “He taught me more about receiving and the passing game than by far anybody else.”

With Moss making the NFL 100 list — organized in large part by Belichick — the two spent time reflecting upon their stint together on NFL Network.

Even with what we saw from the Patriots in 2007, Belichick’s statement is a stunning one.

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