Mitch
Crawled Through 5 FB Fields
1. The team must add speed. The offense is slow...painfully slow at times. The Cards need a couple of burners, which is why adding two players like RB Felix Jones (Arkansas) and/or WR Donny Avery (Houston) with one or both of their first two picks would be a boon.
The rationale against taking RB Felix Jones at #16 is that he isn't what scouts would call an "every down back." My rebuttal to that is that (a) today every team needs a two back rotation; (b) Whiz could be creative in how he uses Jones to put maximum pressure on the opposing defense, by lining him up in a variety of spots (backfield, slot, wideout); (c) what he would provide on special teams would likey be uniquely special.
The rationale against tabbing a WR in round two is that the team has greater needs...and to an extent I agree with this. However, what a speed WR could do for the Cards' offense is beyong anyone's comprehension right now because we haven't seen what the difference would be. The Cards' speed option the past 5 years has been Bryant Johnson. But, as Harry so aptly noted in his WR article, Johnson didn't play fast and when he did manage to slip behind coverage, he had significant difficulty locating and catching the ball.
In my opinion, if the Cardinals had a bona fide deep threat to occupy on of the safeties, this offense would be just about unstoppable because of what Boldin, Fitz, Pope, Patrick, etc. could do underneath the safeties.
2. Adding both an offensive and a defensive tackle. Assuming that Mike Gandy will remain the starting left tackle this year, the Cards need to groom a replacement for 2009. Currently, the only other young tackle on the roster, other than last year's 1st Round pick, Levi Brown, is Elliot Vallejo. Now, Vallejo is a very interesting prospect because of his bounce, good feet and athleticism. However, he's not a mauler, nor does it look like he's the type of player who ever will be. Therefore, in Whiz's smashmouth schemes, Vallejo doesn't look like a fit. Thus, in the third or fourth round, it's quite possible the Cards will tab a tackle such as Kirk Barton (Ohio St.), Barry Richardson (Clemson), John Greco (Toledo) or one of the draft's small school sleepers Heath Benedict (Newberry).
The defensive tackle (called 3-4 DE in our system) situation is currently precarious, as there are no players signed to back up starters Darnell Dockett and Antonio Smith (headed into a contract year, to boot). While it would not be surprising, once the Cardinals somehow manage to find a way to get out of salary cap jail, that the Cards re-sign Rodney Bailey and possibly Chris Cooper, drafting a 3-4 type DE would be advisable. The guy to keep an eye on is Jason Jones (Eastern Michigan)...who, at 6-5, 270, could give the Cards interesting inside/outside versatility.
3. A #3 CB...nickel back. As I have stated in other posts, I am hoping the Cards sign UFA CB William James (Eagles)...but drafting a DB is a necessity whether the team as a free agent DB or not. The question is: with such a deep DB class, will the Cardinals act fast and grab one of the top CBs (Cason, Talin, McKelvin, Rodgers-Cromartie) at #16, thus bypassing the good RBs? Or will the Cards decide on a CB (Tribble, Lowery, King, Castille, Flowers) at #50?
The tantalizing choice at #50 may be between one of the aforementioned CBs...or a 3-4 DE type like Trevor Laws...or a WR like Donny Avery.
If the Cardinals choose to wait on a CB...a couple of players come to mind: Charles Godfrey (Iowa), Terrence Wheatley (Colorado) Chevis Jackson (LSU), and Trae Williams (South Florida).
If they choose to wait and draft a safety...look for Jamie Silva (Boston College), Marcus Watts (Kansas St.), Quintin Demps (UTEP), Marty Tadman (Boise St.), Jamar Adams (Michigan) or Darien Williams (Oklahoma).
So...using the preceding criteria, here are the picks:
1. RB Felix Jones, Arkansas.
2. WR Donny Avery, Houston
3. DE Jason Jones, Eastern Michigan
4. T Kirk Barton, Ohio St.
5. CB Terence Wheatley, Colorado
6. FS Marty Tadman, Boise St.
7. LB Ben Moffit, South Florida
The rationale against taking RB Felix Jones at #16 is that he isn't what scouts would call an "every down back." My rebuttal to that is that (a) today every team needs a two back rotation; (b) Whiz could be creative in how he uses Jones to put maximum pressure on the opposing defense, by lining him up in a variety of spots (backfield, slot, wideout); (c) what he would provide on special teams would likey be uniquely special.
The rationale against tabbing a WR in round two is that the team has greater needs...and to an extent I agree with this. However, what a speed WR could do for the Cards' offense is beyong anyone's comprehension right now because we haven't seen what the difference would be. The Cards' speed option the past 5 years has been Bryant Johnson. But, as Harry so aptly noted in his WR article, Johnson didn't play fast and when he did manage to slip behind coverage, he had significant difficulty locating and catching the ball.
In my opinion, if the Cardinals had a bona fide deep threat to occupy on of the safeties, this offense would be just about unstoppable because of what Boldin, Fitz, Pope, Patrick, etc. could do underneath the safeties.
2. Adding both an offensive and a defensive tackle. Assuming that Mike Gandy will remain the starting left tackle this year, the Cards need to groom a replacement for 2009. Currently, the only other young tackle on the roster, other than last year's 1st Round pick, Levi Brown, is Elliot Vallejo. Now, Vallejo is a very interesting prospect because of his bounce, good feet and athleticism. However, he's not a mauler, nor does it look like he's the type of player who ever will be. Therefore, in Whiz's smashmouth schemes, Vallejo doesn't look like a fit. Thus, in the third or fourth round, it's quite possible the Cards will tab a tackle such as Kirk Barton (Ohio St.), Barry Richardson (Clemson), John Greco (Toledo) or one of the draft's small school sleepers Heath Benedict (Newberry).
The defensive tackle (called 3-4 DE in our system) situation is currently precarious, as there are no players signed to back up starters Darnell Dockett and Antonio Smith (headed into a contract year, to boot). While it would not be surprising, once the Cardinals somehow manage to find a way to get out of salary cap jail, that the Cards re-sign Rodney Bailey and possibly Chris Cooper, drafting a 3-4 type DE would be advisable. The guy to keep an eye on is Jason Jones (Eastern Michigan)...who, at 6-5, 270, could give the Cards interesting inside/outside versatility.
3. A #3 CB...nickel back. As I have stated in other posts, I am hoping the Cards sign UFA CB William James (Eagles)...but drafting a DB is a necessity whether the team as a free agent DB or not. The question is: with such a deep DB class, will the Cardinals act fast and grab one of the top CBs (Cason, Talin, McKelvin, Rodgers-Cromartie) at #16, thus bypassing the good RBs? Or will the Cards decide on a CB (Tribble, Lowery, King, Castille, Flowers) at #50?
The tantalizing choice at #50 may be between one of the aforementioned CBs...or a 3-4 DE type like Trevor Laws...or a WR like Donny Avery.
If the Cardinals choose to wait on a CB...a couple of players come to mind: Charles Godfrey (Iowa), Terrence Wheatley (Colorado) Chevis Jackson (LSU), and Trae Williams (South Florida).
If they choose to wait and draft a safety...look for Jamie Silva (Boston College), Marcus Watts (Kansas St.), Quintin Demps (UTEP), Marty Tadman (Boise St.), Jamar Adams (Michigan) or Darien Williams (Oklahoma).
So...using the preceding criteria, here are the picks:
1. RB Felix Jones, Arkansas.
2. WR Donny Avery, Houston
3. DE Jason Jones, Eastern Michigan
4. T Kirk Barton, Ohio St.
5. CB Terence Wheatley, Colorado
6. FS Marty Tadman, Boise St.
7. LB Ben Moffit, South Florida
Last edited: