Highest rated wide receivers in the transfer portal right now

It’s no secret that Texas needs a running mate for Xavier Worthy.

It’s no secret that Texas is looking for a running mate for Xavier Worthy. Continue reading “Highest rated wide receivers in the transfer portal right now”

The Morning After: What is next for LSU football?

Plenty left to do for Brian Kelly ahead of spring football in a few months.

While many were mocking LSU head coach Brian Kelly over his comments over his accent, the Tigers football team was looking to end the season on a high note. It didn’t happen for them as Kansas State built up a 42-7 lead in the fourth quarter.

During the broadcast, Kelly joined the announcers in the booth for a mid-game interview where he made a comment about his accent. More importantly, he discussed the plans for this team moving forward. The next head coach understands there is ample work to be done. The roster of players that took the field at NRG Stadium will likely look completely different.

Kelly understands that there is more than one way to skin a cat. While recruiting is essential, other teams proved that you can go into the transfer portal to help supplement your team. We look at each area of concern for the LSU Tigers heading into 2022.

Oklahoma Sooners Wide Receiver Michael Woods II declares for the 2022 NFL draft

Oklahoma’s Michael Woods II became the 11th Sooners player to declare for the 2022 NFL draft.

Roster turnover is a reality for every school, every January. The best college football teams are the ones that find a way to mitigate losses either with developing players or through the transfer portal. The Oklahoma Sooners will need to do both as the roster takes on a whole new look under new head coach Brent Venables.

Joining a growing list of NFL draft declarations is wide receiver Michael Woods II who announced via his Twitter account that he’ll be heading to the NFL draft this April.

In the statement he released via social media, Woods stated, “I want to start off by saying thank you to every person that has had a hand in my development as a person as well as a football player. Thank you to everyone who has ever coached or supported me. Thank you to my alma mater, Arkansas for taking a chance on a 17-year old kid from Magnolia, Texas and turning him into a man. Thank you to the University of Oklahoma for gifting and blessing me with a chance to put on the Crimson and Cream. Thank you to my family and friends for their endless support. Lastly, I would like to thank God, for blessing me with my talents and allowing me to play this game. With that being said, I am declaring for the 2022 NFL draft.”

Michael Woods II becomes the 11th Oklahoma Sooners player to declare for the NFL draft since the end of the regular season. He joins Jeremiah Hall, Tyrese Robinson, Marquis Hayes, and Kennedy Brooks as members of the offense to declare.

Michael Woods had a nice season for the Sooners, catching 35 passes for 400 yards and two touchdowns. His season was much like the rest of the Oklahoma Sooners wide receiver group. Up and down. Woods most productive game of the year came against the West Virginia Mountaineers where he had eight receptions for 86 yards.

Underutilized in the offense, Woods only had three games with more than four receptions on the season.

Heading to the NFL, Woods has the size, speed, athleticism, and tackle breaking ability that will make him an asset for NFL teams. Without elite production in college it’s likely he falls to the middle or later rounds of the NFL draft despite the fact that he’ll test well at the NFL Draft Combine and Oklahoma’s Pro Day.

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UTEP WR Jacob Cowing has entered the transfer portal

Could Texas be a good fit for the talented UTEP transfer?

One of the most productive wide receivers in the country has entered the transfer portal.

UTEP wide receiver Jacob Cowing entered the transfer portal on Tuesday. There is no doubt Cowing will receive interest from many Power Five teams this offseason.

The former two-star recruit from Arizona turned into a star at UTEP. Cowing compiled over 2,500 yards and 14 touchdowns in his career and finished first-team all C-USA in 2021.

The former UTEP Miner is a proven big-play threat. Cowing averages almost 20 yards per catch and had six touchdowns of 50-plus yards this season.

Texas could show interest in the in-state wideout. The Horns only took one wide receiver in the 2022 class and would benefit from the addition of Cowing. But first, Steve Sarkisian needs to hire a new wide receivers coach.

Cowing would be a great running mate for Xavier Worthy at Texas, the two wideouts could make up one of the more dynamic duos in the nation.

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Report: Texas WR coach Andre Coleman will not be retained for the 2022 season

Steve Sarkisian is making a change to his offensive staff.

Steve Sarkisian will be shaking up his staff a bit after his first season at Texas.

After hiring Tashard Choice as the running backs coach to replace new Temple head coach Stan Drayton, Sark has decided to move on from wide receivers coach Andre Coleman. The news was first reported by TFB on Sunday evening.

Coleman has served as the wide receiver coach for two seasons as one of the few holdovers from Tom Herman’s staff.

Texas saw wide receiver Xavier Worthy breakout as a freshman All-American this season but failed to get much production outside of him.

Coleman also really struggled on the recruiting trail. Texas signed four-star wideout Brenen Thompson but missed out on priority target Evan Stewart and multiple others. There is no doubt that Sark wants to see recruiting improvement at the position.

The next wide receivers coach will not have to worry about a lack of talent. Xavier Worthy, Jordan Whittington, Marcus Washington and Brenen Thompson make up a solid core to work with.

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Top offensive players in the transfer portal that Alabama should add

With Alabama’s recent success in the portal, who will be the next transfer to have an impact on the Tide?

The NCAA Transfer Portal sounds scary, and for some programs, it is. Players may be unhappy with coaches, a lack of playing time or simply not enjoying the program. Nick Saban has seen players leave Tuscaloosa by way of the portal, but the Crimson Tide have found plenty of success from it.

Whether it be Landon Dickerson, who transferred from Florida State and played two season on the Alabama offensive line; Jameson Williams, the first-year transfer wide receiver from Ohio State or even Henry To’oTo’o, the in-conference transfer linebacker from Tennessee, these are immediate-impact players.

With the 2021 college football season over, and the chaotic coaching carousel is beginning to settle, players from all across the country are entering their names in the portal for various reasons. Here are five offensive players that the Crimson Tide may want to pursue.

Two Oklahoma wide receivers enter the transfer portal

Would either of these Sooners in the transfer portal be a good fit for Texas?

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Lincoln Riley leaving for USC has left a lot of uncertainty in the Oklahoma program.

Among several decommits, the Sooners have seen multiple key contributors enter the transfer portal. Wide receivers Theo Wease and Jadon Haselwood are back on the open market.

Both players are former five-star recruits who have battled their share of injuries.

Wease missed the 2021 season due to injury, but accounted for over 660 yards and six touchdowns during his first two years at Oklahoma. He was one of the main pass catchers on Oklahoma’s 2020 Big 12 championship team.

Haselwood dealt with the injury bug in 2020 but has proved himself as a playmaker in 2021. The junior led all Sooner wideouts in both receptions and touchdowns on the season.

Steve Sarkisian’s interest in the two Oklahoma transfers remains to be seen, but with the lack of quality talent and depth Texas currently has at wide receiver, both Wease and Haselwood may end up becoming a good fit.

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Oklahoma Sooners need a big game from talented Wide Receiver group vs. Iowa State

With a tough matchup in the ground game against Iowa State, the Sooners need their wide receiver group to have a big game this week.

It’s arguably the deepest position group on the Oklahoma Sooners 2021 roster. They are a group that has had at least six different wide receivers make big plays for them throughout the 2021 season. Unfortunately, that didn’t show in the Sooners’ loss to the Bears.

In games against Kansas and Baylor, the Sooners didn’t have a wide receiver with more than 53 yards. They looked to course-correct against the Texas Tech Red Raiders when Marvin Mims and Mario Williams went for more than 100 yards but fell back to earth against the Bears.

The group was solid, but it didn’t have its best day. They seemed to have a hard time getting open even when Caleb Williams had time to throw. They struggled with the Bears’ physicality in their routes and at the catch point. According to Pro Football Focus, the Sooners lost all three of their contested catch opportunities. When Caleb Williams was off his game, the Sooners wide receivers needed to step up.

That said, a new week brings a new opportunity. And the wide receiver corps needs to cash in.

The Iowa State Cyclones bring a tough defense with them to Norman. In particular, they boast one of the nation’s best run defenses. While Oklahoma will work to get their ground game going against the Cyclones, the Sooners need their wide receivers to step up and make plays in the passing game.

This is a talented group that can make plays at every level of the defense. As much as finding some effectiveness in the running game would help the Sooners offense, getting a better performance from the wide receiver group would be huge.

It doesn’t matter who. The Sooners just need someone to step up and make plays to help their quarterback. The Sooners can’t afford to lose every contested-catch battle against the Cyclones because Caleb Williams will throw contested balls. He’s trying to allow his receivers an opportunity to make a catch. The receivers need to take advantage of those opportunities and win some for their quarterback.

Like with Caleb Williams, Lincoln Riley can help get his receivers in a groove early by getting the ball in their hands in space and letting them make a play.

With the 18th ranked run defense in the country coming to town, the Sooners’ rushing attack will likely face some tough sledding. Oklahoma will need to be better on the outside to move the football effectively.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions.

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Sean Payton preaches faith in Saints WR’s: ‘I’m not interested in your PFF grades’

Sean Payton preaches faith in Saints WR’s: ‘I’m not interested in your PFF grades’

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Let’s start with the facts. The New Orleans Saints won’t have Michael Thomas leading their receiving corps this season.

Sean Payton acknowledged the Saints could need another receiver, admitting that the team looked into a couple different players before the NFL trade deadline. But ultimately they weren’t able to agree on trade compensation, so now they’re stuck with who they have.

And Payton offered maybe the tersest vote of confidence you’ll get out of a coach who knows he’s backed himself into a corner, saying: “I’m not interested in your PFF grades or any of that other stuff.” For anyone curious, the Saints have three receivers ranked inside the top-100 from Pro Football Focus: Deonte Harris (4th), Marquez Callaway (53rd), and the retired Chris Hogan (66th).

That’s a familiar refrain from Payton and Saints general manager Mickey Loomis, who have repeatedly said that they like their receiving corps better than the media or the team’s own fans do. Maybe they like the pastries Tre’Quan Smith and Kevin White bring to Monday meetings. Maybe Lil’Jordan Humphrey or Easop Winston Jr. make great small talk in the elevator. Whatever Payton and the team’s shot-callers like about the receivers, it can’t be what they’ve done on the field.

The Saints don’t have a single receiver who has averaged better than 50 yards per game. Harris comes closest, leading the team with 45.2 receiving yards per game, and he’s already missed one game this season with an injury. Harris has yet to play a full season (14 games in 2019, just 9 in 2020). He can’t be counted on to lead the passing game, and he shouldn’t be. That’s just not what he’s built for.

“I thought they had a good game last week,” Payton added, referring to the Saints’ win over the Buccaneers in which White led the team with 38 receiving yards. Harris, Smith, and Callaway tied for the team lead with 3 receptions each. Instead of anything meaningful or visible, he turned to coaching tropes: “Those guys are tough, they’re competitive, and I like them.”

Maybe Trevor Siemian and Taysom Hill can get more out of the receiving corps than Jameis Winston was able to. But we shouldn’t expect the Saints to change their run-heavy approach any time soon.

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Prescott, Lamb spotlight Cedrick Wilson’s clutch 4th-down grab as reason for Cowboys win

Cedrick Wilson missed out on 2 TDs in Sunday’s win, but his clutch grab allowed the Cowboys to tie the score and force overtime. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The box score shows that Cedrick Wilson was targeted seven times and caught four balls for 42 yards on Sunday. The replays show that, of the three passes he didn’t reel in, two could have been touchdowns.

But when the game was on the line, Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott trusted Wilson enough to come back to him. And while Prescott, Trevon Diggs, and CeeDee Lamb are being held up as the heroes of the 35-29 overtime victory by Dallas, none of it happens without Cedrick Wilson.

“Huge,” Prescott told reporters of the clutch fourth-down reception Wilson made with under two minutes to play. “Great play call. Great play call that I’m very comfortable in, very comfortable with. The moment [Wilson] came in, obviously, I started with my reads and, knowing that he was coming open right there, great catch by him. Great job to get his feet down. Without that, we’re not up here talking about the win.”

“I was like, it’s coming to me,” Wilson recalled after the game. “I just had to find the ball and catch it.”

The Boise State product has been thrust into a more active role in the Cowboys’ offensive attack with Michael Gallup shelved after Week 1. And he’s delivered: 14 receptions for 168 yards and a pair of scores so far in his fourth season with the club.

Those numbers trail the stats put up by CeeDee Lamb and Amari Cooper, but they’ve been just as vital to the overall- and, on Sunday, the situational- success of the Cowboys’ passing game.

“It’s a huge confidence booster for the room and for Dak, I’m sure, just to have the ability to throw it to anyone, as you saw,” Lamb told reporters. It was his 35-yard touchdown catch that ended the game, and his 24-yard reception that allowed the team to tie the score as time wound down in regulation. But Wilson had to move the chains first.

“[You] talk about my dig route that I caught,” Lamb continued, “but two or three plays before that, Ced caught an out route that was probably the most important catch of the drive. Having a group of guys in that room that I can trust, that can make a play for Dak- Dak can trust us- it plays a huge part. It speaks about the room, it speaks about the quarterback, it speaks about the team.”

Up until that fourth-down haul, though, Wilson’s game was more notable for a couple of bad breaks. It was Wilson that Prescott was aiming for in the end zone at the end of a 13-play, seven-minute drive early in the second quarter. Instead of a tying touchdown, the ball was intercepted, taking the wind out of the Cowboys’ sails.

On the next possession, Prescott came back to Wilson, again in the end zone. The former sixth-round draft pick looked for a moment like he had caught a perfectly-placed scoring throw, but he was unable to complete the catch as he went to the ground, leaving the Cowboys to settle for a field goal.

But Prescott and the Cowboys kept looking Wilson’s way, knowing it would take a complete team effort to beat New England at home. It finally paid off with Wilson’s clutch reception late to extend the drive that ultimately forced overtime.

“We talked all week,” head coach Mike McCarthy explained in his postgame remarks. “Just the few times I’ve had a chance to go against the Patriots, you have to have more than one or two perimeter players if you think you’re going to have a productive day. We went in here clearly with the mindset of: it didn’t matter who was at X, who was at F, who was at Z. It didn’t matter which back was in the game. It didn’t mater which tight end was in there. We were going to  challenge them schematically. Try to defeat their leverage and go play. Knowingly, to have success, your third, fourth, fifth- however you view them- your receivers, those guys needed to make plays today. That was a big part.”

Prescott also spoke of the team mentality of the Dallas pass-catchers.

“Just the brotherhood,” Prescott told reporters. “Just the way that we interact with each other throughout the building, off the field, and then it all just shows on the field. For CeeDee to say that [Wilson’s fourth-down reception was the key play of the game-tying drive], he’s right. That’s huge. Without Ced’s catch, we’re not talking CeeDee’s touchdown and we’re not even talking overtime, pretty much. Yeah, it’s huge. It’s a special group and a group that I’m so privileged to be a part of.”

When Gallup recovers from his calf injury, he’ll resume his spot in the starting lineup, and Wilson will likely see a drop in playing time. But Gallup is in a contract year, and likely to get high-dollar offers to play elsewhere in an offense where he’s not the third-best option. What Wilson is showing now, while filling in for his fellow 2018 draft-class-mate, may pay big dividends moving forward.

It certainly did as Sunday’s game in New England entered crunch time.

“It feels good that I trust in them just like they trust in me,” Wilson said after the game. “Obviously, in the red zone, a couple of those, I wish I could’ve pulled in. And I told [Dak], and he told me, ‘We’re going to get it when we need it.'”

Sure enough, when they did need it versus the Patriots, Prescott and Wilson made good on that prophecy.

“Supreme confidence,” Wilson said of his quarterback and the offense’s mindset in the huddle. “One, just knowing we can do anything we set our mind to. And then preparation. We do [a] two-minute [drill] every Thursday at practice. Either we win, or the defense wins. And that time, we won.”

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