2021 NFL mock draft: An LSU reunion in Cincinnati?

Could the Bengals reunite Joe Burrow with his top target from LSU in the 2021 NFL Draft?

The Cincinnati Bengals have their franchise quarterback in Joe Burrow, but could they go back to Baton Rouge in next year’s draft to land him a blue-chip wide receiver prospect?

That’s what happens in the latest 2021 NFL mock draft from The Draft Network, which has the Bengals spending next year’s No. 3 overall pick on one of Burrow’s favorite targets from his legendary senior season at LSU.

Here’s what TDN’s Jordan Reid had to say about projecting Ja’Marr Chase to Cincinnati:

Despite a lackluster 2-14 season in 2019, there’s a lot of excitement surrounding the Bengals offense. With Joe Burrow firmly entrenched as the new face of the franchise, it’d be wise for the team to continue to build around him. Needing protection, the franchise is disappointed that the Washington Football Team selected Sewell. Tyler Boyd pieced together another 1,000-yard receiving season, but with A.J. Green on the franchise tag at 32 years old and John Ross remaining inconsistent, the team pivots to selecting a familiar weapon as they reignite the Burrow-to-Chase connection.

Although it was a record-setting connection on their way to a perfect 15-0 record and national title victory, it went much deeper than that. Chase averaged a monstrous 21.2 yards per reception. His after the catch dynamics were also impressive as 699 of his 1,780 receiving yards came after the catch, which also included a team-high 23 broken tackles.

The Bengals certainly have bigger needs elsewhere on both sides of the ball, and they just spent a high second-round pick on Clemson wide receiver Tee Higgins. That said, with Oregon offensive tackle Penei Sewell already off the board, Cincy would have a tough time opting for the likes of Penn State linebacker Micah Parsons or Miami edge defender Greg Rousseau over an elite pass-catcher like Chase.

When a team invests the No. 1 overall pick in a new quarterback, they must do everything they can do give him the help he needs to be successful. If the Bengals can’t land a franchise left tackle at the top of next year’s draft, giving him a dominant receiver would be the next best thing, especially if he’s already got a proven rapport with that quarterback.

Speaking of quarterbacks, this mock has three of them in the first round, including a pair in the top five. Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence takes the No. 1 overall spot with the Jacksonville Jaguars, while the Carolina Panthers grab Ohio State’s Justin Fields at No. 4 overall. North Dakota State’s Trey Lance lands with the Chicago Bears at No. 16 overall.

Chase is one of five wide receivers in this top-32 projection, including a pair of Alabama stars in the top 10. Jaylen Waddle goes to the Miami Dolphins at No. 9 overall, reuniting with his college quarterback in Tua Tagovailoa, while his Crimson Tide teammate DeVonta Smith heads to the Detroit Lions with the very next selection. The New York Jets spend the No. 22 pick (acquired from the Seattle Seahawks in the Jamal Adams trade) on Minnesota’s Rashod Bateman, while the Green Bay Packers grab Purdue’s Rondale Moore at No. 26 overall.

To check out the full first-round mock draft at The Draft Network, click here.

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Multiple SEC coaches, athletic directors speak out in support of 2020 college football season

This week, college football players across the country took to Twitter in support of the 2020 college football season.

Just last week, it looked like college football was going to proceed with caution in 2020. However, over the weekend, reports suggested an ‘inevitable’ cancellation of the upcoming season.

On Sunday, players all across the country led by Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence began an online movement about wanting to move forward with the 2020 season.

On Monday, the #WeWantToPlay movement began gaining some steam as players, coaches, athletic directors and politicians were unified in their support of a 2020 season.

LSU athletic director Scott Woodward released a statement in support of a 2020 season.

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Alabama coach Nick Saban weighed in with his support, per Chris Low of ESPN.

I want to play, but I want to play for the players’ sake, the value they can create for themselves. I know I’ll be criticized no matter what I say, that I don’t care about player safety. Look, players are a lot safer with us than they are running around at home. We have around a 2% positive ratio on our team since the Fourth of July. It’s a lot higher than that in society. We act like these guys can’t get this unless they play football. They can get it anywhere, whether they’re in a bar or just hanging out.

Saban wasn’t the only SEC coach to speak up. Florida coach Dan Mullen took to his Twitter account to voice his support for a 2020 season.

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Mississippi State coach Mike Leach also chimed in.

I think I’m not supposed to say anything, but I’m not a big fan. I think we need to make sure that we’re right and we’re following the science on (COVID-19). People want to live their lives (in the) sand we need to aggressively pursue that as much as we can. Right now college football hasn’t decided whether they’re the dog or the vehicle. They don’t know if they’re going to stay.

It’s clear the voices of the players, coaches and athletic directors are being heard, but will it be enough to save football this fall?

Texas administrators ‘feel good’ about playing football this season

University of Texas administrators feel they’re in a good shape to attempt to play college football this fall.

It feels like a month’s worth of news all seemed to surface in one day. Continue reading “Texas administrators ‘feel good’ about playing football this season”

Players react as potential college football cancellation looms

With the college football season appearing to be in jeopardy, players across the country took to social media to voice their desire to play.

On Sunday night, reports began to surface that the Big 10 university presidents were close to moving to cancel the 2020 fall sports season, including college football. The news came after the Group of Five’s Mid-American Conference announced that it was canceling all fall competition earlier in the day.

With the college football season appearing to be in jeopardy, players across the country took to social media to voice their concerns and desire for a season to be held. It started with Clemson quarterback and projected first-overall pick in the 2021 NFL draft Trevor Lawrence, who posted a series of tweets pointing out that players may be safer at school with the program than some would be at home, if university policy dictated they could no longer be on campus.

Players nationwide followed Lawrence’s lead, posting their support for the “We Want to Play” movement. That list included Florida running back Lorenzo Lingard, who is eligible this season after transferring from Miami, and defensive lineman Kyree Campbell.

Campbell, a senior in 2020, is expected to see a bigger role on the team than he has in the past. If the season were to be canceled, its unclear what the course of action would be in terms of eligibility relief. Though the NCAA is currently allowing players to opt-out of the season and retain their eligibility, its unlikely such a provision could be guaranteed to all players should all competition this year be nixed.

Tight end Kyle Pitts also joined his teammates in voicing his support for a season in the fall on Monday morning.

After news broke late Sunday night that the Big 10 administrators would be having an impromptu meeting to discuss the season, Lawrence posted once again, this time sharing a graphic of joint demands between the “We Are United” movement (started by Pac-12 players to ensure safety standards, compensation and other improvements for student-athletes) and the “We Want to Play” movement. Among the list of demands Lawrence posted was improved open communication between athletes and officials, with the ultimate goal of forming a college football players association.

Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields, currently the projected No. 2 pick in next year’s draft, also tweeted his support for these demands.

On Monday morning, it was reported that at the meeting Sunday night, Big 10 presidents voted 12-2 to cancel the season, with Iowa and Nebraska reportedly being the dissenting votes. Dan Patrick reported Monday that the Pac-12 will follow the Big 10’s lead shortly.

Though the SEC, ACC and Big 12 are currently holding firm and hoping to see how the return of students to campus in the coming weeks, ESPN reported Sunday night that those leagues could be forced into action by decisions from the Big 10 and Pac-12.

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President Donald Trump shows supports to #WeWantToPlay

Players have tweeted out ‘#WeWantToPlay’, in response to season cancelations. President Trump showed his support for the movement on Monday.

College football has been a circus in the past 24 hours, with rumors of the Power Five conferences canceling their seasons. In response, players from across the country have tweeted out ‘#WeWantToPlay’, showing their desire to have a 2020 college football season.

It began with Clemson’s quarterback Trevor Lawrence and has spread throughout the entire country. Texas players such as Caden Sterns and D’Shawn Jamison have show support for the movement.

The biggest endorsement of all came on Monday afternoon when President Trump quote tweeted Lawrence’s original tweet. Support from such a figure such as the president will massively help the players, coaches, and administration who are in favor of having a football season of sorts.

The student-athletes have been working too hard for their season to be canceled. #WeWantToPlay,” said President Trump. 

There is still a long way to go for college football to happen this season. The players involved with #WeWantToPlay are giving it their best shot, outlining guidelines for how it can be done.

Even if it takes Texas joining another conference for one season, the Longhorns seem committed to playing their 2020 season for now. However, things can always change at the snap of a finger.

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President Trump weighs in on college football

If you’ve paid any attention to college football players on social media the last day you’ve seen “#WeWantToPlay” take off. Stars from colleges and universities all over the nation have let their thoughts be known that they in fact want to play …

If you’ve paid any attention to college football players on social media the last day you’ve seen “#WeWantToPlay” take off.

Stars from colleges and universities all over the nation have let their thoughts be known that they in fact want to play college football this fall. The biggest name in college football this season and the likely next first overall pick in the NFL Draft was among them.

But it wasn’t Trevor Lawrence who drew the most attention Monday for his cause, but instead the President of the United States of America who jumped aboard the cause.

Donald Trump is on board with college sports returning this fall and athletes not having to miss seasons they’ve worked so hard for.

There’s two sides of this and like society anymore, anyone with a strong belief doesn’t seem to want to hear the other side.

It’s not even 1:00 p.m. where I’m at as I type this and it feels like the day is only going to get crazier for the college football world.

Stay tuned.

Satterfield: ACC plans to move forward regardless of others

With reports of the Big Ten cancelling the 2020 fall football season, it seems as if one ACC coach is confident his conference will play.

On a day where we have seen legit rumors of the Big Ten cancelling their fall football season, there was some potential good news in regards to the Irish and the ACC’s.

Satterfield is Scott Satterfield, the head coach of the Louisville Cardinals. Yes, he might think that the ACC will continue to charge on to a season in 2020, but the reality is that it is looking more and more like a full on cancellation of the season.

The face of the ACC players, Clemson’s quarterback Trevor Lawrence, along with Ohio State’s Justin Fields expressed their willingness to get on the field this year and compete. Both of them tweeted out the #Weareunited #Wewanttoplay last evening.

This all may end up being a moot point, as we all continue a wait-and-see approach to what will ultimately happen this fall. We hope there will be football, but continue to be prepared to be very lonely on Saturday’s in the coming months.

College football players react, express fear of a cancelled season

College football players, coaches and athletic directors began a ‘We Want To Play’ movement on Twitter.

Where do we begin?

With every minute that passes, a new opportunity seems to present itself with college athletics. This particular offseason has been unlike any other and has brought on a significant amount of anxiety and uncertainty to all those involved.

The past few months have been centered around an ongoing fluid situation with the COVID-19 pandemic, but it’s getting down to crunch time to make a final decision on the upcoming college football season this fall.

It appeared things were trending in the right direction when Power Five conferences agreed to a shortened, conference-only schedule. However, over the past two days the rumors have become more rampant that there may not be a college football season at all.

The Big Ten and Pac-12 are pushing towards not playing, while the SEC, ACC, and Big 12 are doing their best to salvage what they can.

A common denominator among all major conferences is that the athlete’s want to play. On Sunday night, Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence took the lead for all players when he began a ‘We Want To Play’ movement on Twitter.

While Lawrence was the first high-profile athlete to speak out in that sense, several began to follow suit. Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields, Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh, Baylor quarterback Charlie Brewer, Texas safety Caden Sterns and many other coaches, athletic directors, and players express their views on the next page.

Will their voices be heard?

How COVID-19 will change college football forever

Though they don’t know when they’ll play next, the most prominent NCAA football players have made it clear: Their voices are to be heard.

At some point this week, you’re likely to hear that college football will not be played in the fall of 2020 at all. The season will either be postponed to the spring of 2021 or canceled altogether,. The Mid-American Conference has already canceled its 2020 season, in part because of player safety concerns in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, and in part because of the financial hit brought about by the Power 5 conferences deciding not to play against teams outside of their own universe.

Phase One was the MAC. Now, Oklahoma has paused its training camp for a week due to changes in the Sooners’ schedule. Meetings between college football team doctors are revealing the true horror potential of playing football in a relatively unregulated fashion in the middle of a seemingly ever-escalating pandemic — everything from contagion clusters to lifelong heart damage. It’s no longer about logistical issues; now it’s about everything from liability to mortality.

Liability and mortality are complex issues in the best of times and under the best of circumstances; they’re certainly more so in a time when the United States government has completely failed the American people in fighting this pandemic, and they’re even more so for “student-athletes” who have no real representation and are essentially at the mercy of their coaches and athletic directors. Those coaches and athletic directors are now stuck in an impossible fix — they can’t treat their players like employees, which would protect them in a more comprehensive fashion, and they can’t have a season under the current circumstances.

Thus, the coming storm.

Not that the players don’t want to play — several have made intelligent and impassioned statements about the desire to play in a (relatively) safe space. And despite the insistence of various… uh, voices that sports media is somehow rooting for the coronavirus pandemic to take the season down (no season, no jobs for most of us, so it doesn’t really track — not to mention that we in the media also have lives to protect), media support for these players has been fairly universal.

Some of those other voices have supported the players saying that they wanted to play. We’ll see how the support tracks when #WeWantToPlay becomes the slogan for a larger movement. One guess is that a lot of people went to bed on Sunday night thinking that they understood the initiative, only to wake up Monday morning to an awfully large surprise.

Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence, the most prominent player in what was to be a 2020 season, tweeted this out on Sunday night.

Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields did the same.

Game on.

Using the #WEAREUNITED and #WEWANTTOPLAY hashtags, it would appear that players from the ACC, Big Ten, Pac-12, SEC, and Big 12 conference have aligned to reiterate their desire to play, and to ask for the following:

  • Establish universal mandated health and safety procedures and protocols to protect college-athletes against COVID-19 among all conferences throughout the NCAA;
  • Give players the opportunity to opt out and respect their decision;
  • Guarantee eligibility whether a player chooses to play the season or not;
  • (To) use our voices to establish open communication and trust between players and officials ; ultimately create a college football players association representative of all the players and conferences.

In the time it takes Lawrence to hit one of his receivers on a Bang-8 route, the discussion went from willingness to unionization and representation. How it came about was quite interesting. Per ESPN.com’s Dan Murphy, Stanford defensive lineman Dylan Boles received a direct message on Sunday evening from Clemson running back Darien Rencher. Rencher didn’t know Boles, but he wanted to talk about the Pac-12’s own unity movement.

“We got down to talking and agreed that both of our goals are aligned with each other,” Boles said. “We all want to play this year. We just want to make sure players have a say in this thing.”

An hour after that, several of the NCAA’s most prominent players, including Lawrence, Fields, Boles, Rencher, Alabama running back Najee Harris, Oklahoma State running back Chuba Hubbard, Oregon’s Penei Sewell, Johnny Johnson III, Jevon Holland and Kayvon Thibodeaux, Utah’s Nick Ford, Washington State’s Dallas Hobbs and Michigan’s Hunter Reynolds, had set a Zoom conference call to discuss further action.

On the call, the players agreed on their courses of action. Hobbs, a defensive lineman with graphic design experience, quickly put the message together.

“Social media is so prevalent right now that unifying the players is easier than it’s ever been,” Michigan’s Reynolds told ESPN’s Murphy. “You can connect with people in a matter of seconds, which makes it a lot easier to bounce ideas off each other and gauge how people are feeling in different parts of the country and really put a plan in place.”

“It was a long time coming,” Boles concluded. “It was inevitable. It was just a matter of how quick we could pull it off. We were racing against the clock. We all want to play; we just want to do it the right way.”

It is unknown what these requests will create in the long term; the postponement of a season punts some of these issues down the road for coaches and ADs. Some will become more pressing than ever. But the days of college football players performing without unity and a voice at the table are effectively over. There is no putting the genie back in the bottle for those in charge who want things to be the way they’ve always been for “student-athletes.” Dabo Swinney, Lawrence’s coach and the man who once said he’d rather quit the game than ever see his players get paid (a hypocritical stance to say the least when one is enjoying a 10-year, $93 million contract) will have to deal with it.

We imagine it’ll look something like this.

Does this mean that college players will have union representation in the ways professional athletes do? Hard to say. Complications run rampant when you’re dealing with a landscape this size. Does this mean that the players will insist in having their voices heard as never before? Now that they’ve realized their collective power, it’s inevitable. This will not be the last direct message from players who had never met before, or the last Zoom meeting between players, or the last time a player who knows how to use Photoshop puts together an inspired graphic that his colleagues can share with the world in instantaneous fashion.

The 2020 college football season may be a thing of the past, but so is the vice grip coaches and administrators had on the players. Change is coming, and it’ll be here long after every player listed in this article has gone to live NFL dreams.

Trevor Lawrence, Justin Fields lead college football players calling for a union

Several high-profile college football players said they want to play this season, but they want protections too.

With about five million COVID-19 cases and more than 160,000 deaths from it in the United States, it’s becoming increasingly unlikely that the college football season, even a truncated version, will take place.

Multiple reports Sunday suggested that at a minimum, college football officials in Power 5 conferences are considering postponing the season to the spring or canceling it altogether. And without a clear plan for trying to keep the players — who are unpaid and would continue taking all the health risks — as safe as possible, their hand might be forced.

But many high-profile players, including Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence, have been vocal on social media about wanting to play this season. But they want to be protected and clearly don’t feel that’s the case currently.

So representatives of the SEC, Big Ten, Pac-12, ACC and Big 12 united to issue a set of demands, ranging from universal coronavirus protocols to eligibility guarantees for players who opt out to, most significantly, taking the first steps toward ultimately creating a players association.

They used the hashtags #WeWantToPlay and #WeAreUnited and noted that this was “Representative of the players of all Power 5 conferences”, but it’s reasonable to wonder if each person on every Power 5 roster was consulted.

The players’ demands read:

“Establish universal mandated health & safety procedures and protocols to help college-athletes against COVID-19 among all conferences throughout the NCAA

“Give players the opportunity to opt out and respect their decision

“Guarantee eligibility whether a player chooses to play the season or not

“Use our voices to establish open communication & trust between players and officials; ultimately create a college football players association”

This list and suggestion to form what is essentially a union for college football players came just days after representatives of Pac-12 and Big Ten players separately issued a set of demands before agreeing to play this season.

Both lists, published in The Players’ Tribune, are related to the COVID-19 pandemic, and players want specifics about testing protocols and guarantees that their scholarships and eligibility are safe, should they choose to opt out of the season. They want transparency, protections and to ban the use of coronavirus-related liability waivers.

The Pac-12’s demands, however, also want racism in the sport addressed and outlined several starting points for how to make that happen. The conference’s players also want a 50-50 revenue share for athletes.

Also last week, UConn became the first FBS program to cancel its season, and the MAC became the first FBS conference to cancel college football.

Here’s a sample of some of the other players who joined the #WeWantToPlay movement on social media:

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