Chris Simms still thinks highly of Browns QB Deshaun Watson

As Chris Simms counts down to number one of his quarterback rankings he has the #Browns passer in the top 10 of his list.

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NBC Sports NFL analyst Chris Simms has begun his annual top 40 quarterback rankings as training camp draws closer. Some are unsure where to rank Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson after the struggles he had in the final six games returning from suspension last season. Simms believes that his struggles were from rust and not diminished skills and that he will bounce back.

The Browns should be inclined to believe that Simms is correct, and after a full offseason without a looming suspension, Cleveland is hopeful that Watson will make them legitimate contenders. He has already shown off some impressive throws in OTAs, and with a mandatory minicamp coming up soon in Berea, it seems that the talented signal-caller is on the rise.

If the Browns want to compete seriously for a title in 2023, they will need Watson to prove Simms correct and play at a superstar-caliber level over the course of Cleveland’s grueling 17-game schedule.

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Frank Ragnow leads the way for Lions players in latest Madden 22 ratings

The Madden ratings were not kind for the Detroit Lions, but there are notable ratings that are quite interesting among the team

In the midst of the opening of training camp, EA Sports released their latest Madden 22 ratings for every player and team. With the new regime in place, not many people have high hopes for the Detroit Lions this coming season, and it showed with the ratings that were given to the team and players.

With only five players managing to receive an 80 overall rating or higher, the team came at a 74 overall rating, coming in at third-worst in the league behind the Carolina Panthers (73 overall) and the New York Jets (72 overall).

Frank Ragnow comes in as the highest-rated Lion with an 88 overall rating, which was good enough to (barely) crack Madden’s Top-100 players — coming in right at 100. To no surprise, he is the lone Lions representative. Ragnow is easily the best player on the Lions and will be looked upon as a cornerstone for the organization going through a rebuild.

T.J. Hockenson follows with an 85 overall rating, landing him as the 8th-best tight end in the league. That seems disrespectful considering who is ahead of him: Hunter Henry, Rob Gronkowski, and Austin Hooper. None of those three tight ends came near what Hockenson produced last year and it leaves you scratching your head.

Next comes Michael Brockers (82 overall), who will be looked upon providing a veteran presence, especially for the two rookies, Levi Onwuzurike and Alim McNeill, while providing a force up the middle. Trey Flowers comes in with an 81 overall rating as a right outside linebacker, following suit to his position change from end. He will be a player to keep your eye on with the new coaching and see how he responds.

Finishing out the top five lands us in the special teams category with Pro Bowl sensation punter Jack Fox with an 80 overall rating. Fox lit the NFL on fire leading, averaging 49.1 yards per punt, ranking third in the league, and was easily was one of the better players for the Lions last season.

To round out the top ten Lions, Jamie Collins (79 overall), Tyrell Williams (79 overall), Romeo Okwara (79 overall), D’Andre Swift (78 overall), and Taylor Decker (78 overall). Jamaal Williams finishes outside the top ten with a 77 overall rating, but interesting how close the two running backs are rated.

For the rookies, Penei Sewell comes at a respectable 75 overall, landing him eighth among rookies. McNeill and Onwuzurike each earn a 71 overall rating, Ifeatu Melifonwu and Amon-Ra St. Brown receive a 67 overall rating, Derrick Barnes gets a 66 rating, and Jemar Jefferson lands with a 64 rating.

Since these two are tied at the hip with comparisons, Jared Goff comes in with a 77 overall rating, while ex-Lion Matthew Stafford receives an 83 overall rating.

Other interesting rating nuggets for the Lions:

  • Brockers comes in with the highest tackle rating with a 96, ahead of Aaron Donald with a 95.
  • Williams ranks as the third-best back in the carrying attribute with a 97 rating. Also, rates at the 20th-best back in stiff-arm with an 85 rating.
  • Melifonwu ranks as the 18th-best player (95 rating) in the jumping rating, the best among rookies
  • Goff ranks as the 11th best (86 rating) in medium throw accuracy, 12th best quarterback (88 rating) in the play-action category, and short-throw accuracy (90 rating). But comes at 29th overall with an 89 throw power rating.
  • Kalif Raymond rates as the fastest Lion with a 94 rating in the speed section.
  • Ragnow comes in as the 13th-toughest player rating with a 98 overall, but it should be a 99 considering he played with a broken throat.

Fantasy Football: 2020 Top 10 WR Rankings

Our Derek Okrie looks at the 2020 Fantasy Football market and ranks his Top 10 wide receivers for the upcoming season.

The NFL is a passing league and having a good set of wide receivers on your fantasy football team is vital to success.

The Detroit Lions have subscribed to this idea the past few years too as they have had their best success in the passing game when having three effective wide receivers in the lineup. This is the same strategy that leads to success for your fantasy team. You want two top, dynamic wide receivers and one solid player in most league formats to be very competitive.

Here is what I look for when I’m drafting a top wide receiver in fantasy football:

  • Is his quarterback an elite player?
  • What is the style of offense? Run first or pass-heavy?
  • You want your receivers on a team that throws the ball
  • You want a wide receiver on a team full of other weapons alongside him, as it helps reduce double teams.

Top receivers can put up huge numbers and are key to winning your fantasy league, especially when in most leagues, you have to start three receivers and only two running backs. If you can land an elite receiver — or even better, two — it will enhance your chances to be at the top of the standings in your fantasy league.

Here is my Top 10 list for this season.

Top 10 WR’s for 2020:

1. Michael Thomas, Saints – He has been so amazing the past few seasons, averaging 126 receiving yards per season over the last three years, I couldn’t put anyone else at the top.

2. Chris Godwin, Buccaneers – Having him ranked here may surprise most people, but I see him in the perfect situation to fly up charts coming off a tremendous season last year.

3. Odell Beckham Jr., Browns– He says he healthy now, the blonde hair is back, and I expect him to return to his electrifying form where he puts up big numbers each week.

4. Tyreek Hill, Chiefs – Speed kills and Tyreek Hill is pure speed. He also has Patrick Mahomes throwing him the ball. Enough said.

5. DeAndre Hopkins, Cardinals – The offense in Arizona is projected to be high powered, but I would think Hopkins takes a bit of step back in his first year with the Cardinals.

6. JuJu Smith-Schuster, Steelers – Another player that I have higher than most. He’s young, has the skill set needed to dominate in the slot, and is getting his Hall of Fame quarterback back again this year. I think he will have a huge season on the gridiron to quiet all the doubters.

7. Julio Jones, Falcons – He probably is still the most physically gifted receiver in football, but he’s getting older and he doesn’t score many touchdowns. That bumped him down my list a bit, which could come back to bite me, as I expect Atlanta to have a good offense this year.

8. Mike Evans, Buccaneers – Tom Brady is now his quarterback, and Evans has always been one of the most consistent wide receivers in the NFL. He flies a bit under the radar despite his six straight 1,000 plus yard seasons. He’s only played six seasons in total and has nearly 50 touchdowns in his career during that time.

9. Amari Cooper, Cowboys – One of the top route runners in the sport. He’s also that receiver that can win a week all by himself by putting up 200 plus yards and multiple touchdowns any given game.

10. Davante Adams – Most of the time you will see Adams in the top five on most lists. I’m not a huge fan. He will get heavy volume in the passing game though, so I still had to put him in top pass catchers based on that. He’s only had 1,000 yards once in his entire career.

Lions Players:

Kenny Golladay – I know most Lions fans may be wondering why he isn’t in my Top 10. I just couldn’t fit him in there. He had very good seasons the past two years, but I expect a bit of dip in his production while Matthew Stafford spreads the ball around more again this year in a potentially explosive Lions offense.

Marvin Jones Jr. – Now this is a player that most are forgetting about, but I don’t think the Lions coaching staff has forgotten. Expect Jones Jr. to have plenty of chances to produce if he can stay healthy this year. Try to get him in the later rounds before someone else does, and he will be great depth for you at the position as you can start him as a bye week replacement and feel very good about it.

Danny Amendola – The tenured, crafty veteran had a great season last year in Detroit. I’ve seen him sneak on people’s fantasy rosters in the last round in a few leagues, but I’d stay away. I hope Amendola has another solid statistical season for the Lions, but it’s what he does off the field and in practice that is most valuable to the team. I don’t expect his gameday production to be enough to justify a roster spot on your fantasy team.

ESPN poll slots Kenny Golladay just outside the Top-10 WRs in NFL

ESPN polled NFL executives, coaches, scouts, and players to name the top wide receivers for the 2020 season and Detroit Lions Kenny Golladay landed just outside the Top-10.

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler polled more than 50 NFL executives, coaches, scouts, and players to name the top wide receivers for the 2020 season ($) and Detroit Lions’ Kenny Golladay landed just outside of the Top-10.

Fowler noted that each voter submitted their top 10-15 wide receivers and then ESPN “compiled the results and ranked candidates based on (the) number of top-10 votes, composite average, interviews, and research”. The goal of this exercise was to “identify the best players right now for 2020”.

Here’s how it played out. No surprises at the top, as Julio Jones, Michael Thomas, DeAndre Hopkins, and Odell Beckham Jr. have all earned Top-4 spots. Tyreek Hill road the Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory to the fifth spot, while more established receivers Mike Evans, Davante Adams, and Keenan Allen rounded out the Top-8. Chris Godwin — who was selected 12 spots ahead of Golladay in the 2017 draft — grabbed the nine spot, and Amari Cooper closed out the group.

Five players received honorable mentions, and while it’s unclear if those players were ranked in order, Golladay was the third receiver listed among them.

“He’s central to the game plan, scares you more than some of those other younger guys,” an unnamed NFL passing game coordinator told ESPN. “Big dude who can go over you.”

Golladay is coming off a career year where he led the NFL in receiving touchdowns, earned his first Pro Bowl nod, and because he is still under his rookie contract, he received a well-earned performance escalator bumping his contract from $750,500 to $2.15 million. Even with the significant contract increase, he is still massively underpaid and is in line for a contract extension in the ensuing months.

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ESPN names Matthew Stafford a Top-10 QB heading into 2020

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler polled NFL executives, coaches, scouts, and players to name the top quarterbacks for the 2020 season and Detroit Lions’ Matthew Stafford landed in the Top-10.

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler polled more than 50 NFL executives, coaches, scouts, and players to name the top quarterbacks for the 2020 season ($) and Detroit Lions’ Matthew Stafford landed in the Top-10.

Fowler noted that each voter submitted their top 10-15 quarterbacks and then ESPN “compiled the results and ranked candidates based on (the) number of top-10 votes, composite average, interviews, and research”. The goal of this exercise was to “identify the best players right now for 2020”.

Here’s how the results played out. The half-billion-dollar man Patrick Mahomes led the way, followed by Russell Wilson in the two spot. Three through five featured three quarterbacks the Lions will face in 2020, Aaron Rodgers, Deshaun Watson, and Drew Brees. Reigning MVP Lamar Jackson landed sixth, followed by three-time MVP Tom Brady. Carson Wentz and Dak Prescott land eighth and ninth, with Matthew Stafford edging out Matt Ryan for the final spot in the Top-10.

Per the section on Stafford, the highest-ranking he received was fourth and the lowest was 14th, and while “Ryan had slightly more top-10 votes”, Fowler noted, “Stafford’s average overall was higher”.

“Most everyone agrees Stafford’s arm is top-five level,” Fowler said. “He was on pace for nearly 5,000 yards and 38 touchdowns before a back injury cut his 2019 season short. He was phenomenal from inside the pocket, with a league-leading 82.7 QBR, 66.2 completion percentage, 8.8 yards per attempt, 17 touchdowns and three interceptions.”

One NFC executive took an opportunity to take a shot at Detroit and their inability to put a winning team around Stafford during his career, but also noted that Stafford is “a major talent who’d probably be a top-five quarterback with an established franchise. He can score from anywhere on the field.”

10 players the Lions should consider on Day 2 of the draft

Identifying 10 players the Detroit Lions should consider selecting on Day 2 of the 2020 NFL Draft.

The Detroit Lions filled a very important role on Day 1 of the 2020 NFL Draft, selecting corner Jeff Okudah in the first round, but Day 2 brings a whole new crop of players and the Lions hold three picks in the next two rounds.

The Lions will begin the day with picks No. 35, 67, and 85, and while there could be some trade movement, they should still be able to land a few key players.

Here are 10 options — five who were with the Lions at the Senior Bowl — who should be considered on Day 2.

A.J. Epenesa, EDGE, Iowa

The Lions have a need at EDGE rusher and Epenesa is the perfect fit for the Lions scheme. In my final 7-round mock draft, Epenesa was my choice at pick No. 35 and a player I still believe to be a Top-10 player on the Lions draft board.

Denzel Mims, WR, Baylor

Senior Bowl

If it’s not Epenesa, Mims’ ability to drastically improve the Lions offense would make him incredibly tempting in the second round. At 6-3, 207, with 4.38 speed, Mims is an ideal vertical threat with starter upside as a rookie.

Zach Baun, LB, Wisconsin

Senior Bowl

A hybrid linebacker who fits the mold of what the Lions have recently targeted in their second-level defenders. He would play primarily off-the-ball but has the ability to situationally pass-rush from the JACK linebacker spot.

Josh Uche, JACK/LB, Michigan

Senior Bowl

Uche is also a hybrid linebacker but his insane speed off the edge would keep him pass-rushing often, while also offering the ability to drop into coverage. Both Uche and Baun would fit in like perfect puzzle pieces with the Lions linebackers and would allow them to disguise the defense’s intentions.

Josh Jones, OT, Houston

Senior Bowl

Jones is an athletic tackle who could line up on the right side as a rookie and his ability to be a left tackle would give the Lions insurance if they move on from Taylor Decker in 2021.

RBs J.K. Dobbins (OSU) and Jonathan Taylor (Wisc)

Pick your flavor here as both backs would fit in nicely in the Lions scheme. I have Dobbins slightly ahead of Taylor on my tiered Lions draft board, but if the Lions decide to upgrade their backfield, it’s hard to argue with either player.

Laviska Shenault, WR, Colorado

A first-round talent who likely dropped to Day 2 because of injuries. He has a versatile skill set and plays physical, creating yards after catch (YAC) with power and athleticism.

K.J. Hamler, WR, Penn State

Hamler is a YAC machine who fits the mold of a pure slot receiver, similar to what the Lions have in Danny Amendola. The Lions met with Hamler at the Combine and if they are looking for an explosive playmaker, he would be high on their list.

Terrell Lewis, EDGE, Alabama

Lewis is another first-round talent who has a lengthy injury history that is surely going to impact where he gets selected. At 6-5, 262 pounds and 33.88″ arms, Lewis is a prototype player in coach Matt Patricia’s defensive scheme.

Bradlee Anae, EDGE, Utah

Senior Bowl

Anae is likely more in play in the third round, but there is no doubt that Lions’ coaches loved what they saw from him at the Senior Bowl. Anae is a high effort pass rusher who lives off his first step as we saw in Mobile when he registered three sacks:

Bonus names to keep in mind for Round 3

In my final 7-round mock draft, my Lions picks in the third round were Robert Hunt (RT/G, Louisiana) and McTelvin Agim (DT, Arkansas), and are names Lions fans should keep in the back of their minds.

Projecting the Lions Top-10 draft board

Lions Wire’s Jeff Risdon, Erik Schlitt, and Scott Bischoff put their heads together and project the Detroit Lions Top-10 draft board.

Lions Wire’s Jeff Risdon, Erik Schlitt, and Scott Bischoff put their heads together in order to project the Detroit Lions Top-10 draft board.

It’s important to note that this is how Risdon, Schlitt, and Bischoff believe the Lions have set their draft board, not necessarily how the writers have their personal boards stacked.

1. Chase Young, EDGE, OSU

The best player in the draft regardless of position, Young was the unanimous choice by the Lions Wire team as the top player on the Lions board. If he falls to pick No. 3, expect the Lions to make the easy decision and draft him.

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2. Jeff Okudah, CB, OSU

Another unanimous choice from the Lions Wire team, Okudah has an incredibly high ceiling and floor, is the perfect fit for the Lions scheme, and would immediately fill one of two obvious starting spots on this roster (the other being right guard/tackle).

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3. Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn

For some, this is going to seem a bit early as most national analysts boards have Brown landing in the four to 10 range, but don’t be surprised if this is exactly where he lands on the Lions Big Board. Brown (6-5, 326) is an ideal two-gapper, is strong enough to regularly reset the line-of-scrimmage, and has pass-rushing potential.

If the Lions trade back from the three spot, and both Young and Okudah are off-the-board, Brown is the likely target.

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4. Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina

If the Lions are looking for an interior presence with more pass-rushing prowess than Brown can provide, then Kinlaw (6-5, 324) is their guy. Equal to Brown in size and power, Kinlaw is significantly quicker but lacks Brown’s technical proficiency and 2-gapping experience.

While Brown is ready-made for the Lions scheme, Kinlaw would offer them more penetrating power, something they desperately lack.

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5. Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa

Fans may riot of the Lions go offense with their first-round pick, but with a hole on the right side of the line and Taylor Decker in a contract year, the Lions may seize the opportunity to grab one of the elite tackles in this class.

There is an argument to be made for several tackles at this spot, but Wirfs (6-5, 320) insane athleticism, ability to step in at right tackle in year one, the potential to play left tackle, and the fact that he comes from the Iowa program will be very appealing.

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6. Jedrick Wills, OT, Alabama

Like Wirfs, Wills (6-4, 312) has right tackle experience, could step in there on Day 1, projects as capable of playing left tackle, and comes from a well-respected school. The difference between Wirfs and Wills isn’t much and it’s possible the Lions like him more, but the Lions Wire team each independently had Wirfs ahead on their Top-10 lists.

7. Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama

If you’ve been following along with Risdon, Schlitt, and Bischoff’s coverage this offseason, this ranking shouldn’t be surprising. Jeudy has rare skills, can line up everywhere on the field, run every route, and should be in the Top-10 conversation regardless of how deep this receiver class is.

Every route Jeudy runs looks the same, which allows him to disguise his intentions, making it hard for defenders to anticipate if his route is short, intermediate or deep. Defenders are forced to respect his speed, while also struggling to stay with him during his breaks, as he doesn’t need to throttle down when making cuts — which he executes with pinpoint accuracy and elite quickness — making him an extraordinarily difficult player to match up with.

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8.  Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia

Thomas (6-5, 315) isn’t a name that is often connected to the Lions but if they find themselves picking outside the top-10 he’s a name to keep an eye on. Thomas has been the Bulldogs starting left tackle the last two seasons (26 starts) but he also started at right tackle as a freshman (15 starts) and could be a Day 1 starter on the right side for the Lions and potentially their starter at right or left tackle in 2021.

9. Isaiah Simmons, LB/S, Clemson

There is no doubting Simmons’ talent and some team is going to be very lucky to land him in the top half of the first round. But unless we hit a point where his talent far outweighs the pick value, we are not expecting the Lions to make a play for Simmons.

The Lions are targeting players who can step in with minimal offseason coaching and with Simmons positional flexibility being one of his main strengths, he would have an obscene amount of information to try to process. Even if he was able to digest the playbook, there is still the question of where he fits into the Lions scheme — something we at Lions Wire can’t even agree upon. But if the Lions did have a position in mind, where is it? At linebacker where they just signed Jamie Collins and drafted Jahlani Tavai in the second round? Or maybe at safety where they have a pair of third-round safeties in Tracy Walker and Will Harris, and just traded for Duron Harmon?

Based on how the Lions’ have constructed their roster, what we have heard from general manager Bob Quinn in press conferences and behind the scenes, we are expecting him to land with another team.

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10. A.J. Epenesa, EDGE. Iowa

There may not be a more perfect marriage between player and scheme in this draft than Epenesa and the Lions. A bigger version of Trey Flowers, Epenesa’s ability to play the EDGE and kick inside to the 3-technique will be very appealing to the Lions as he will make two positions that rely on rotating players stronger. If he slides to the back end of the first round — like many are projecting — he is the type of player the Lions could trade up for.

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