Mitch
Crawled Through 5 FB Fields
1. The major stumbling block, IMO, on the Q trade front, is whether teams are willing to pay Q the $9M a year he wants. This puts Q in a pickle...because if no team makes a serious offer for him, the Cardinals can feel exonerated by not being able or willing to offer Q the money he wants.
What Q may have to do if he is so determined to leave Arizona is have Drew Rosenhaus say to teams that Q is willing to revisit his contract demands after next season. If Q does that, the offers might come his and the Cardinals' way in droves.
Too bad that, because of his indignance toward the Cardinals' front office, Q doesn't seem to get the bigger picture here. In Arizona he is playing in what is the perfect offense for him with a QB who probably better than any QB in the NFL knows how to get him the ball. In this system, Q is likely headed toward Canton and pro football immortality. And now that the Cardinals are legitimate Super Bowl contenders for the next two years and possibly beyond, Q might even further his pro football legend by winning a ring. Let's face it, Hall of Fame football players are set financially for the rest of their lives...they are icons who can land sinecures as TV commentators...can land advertising gigs...and can collect royalties on memorabilia. The point is, if Q would just focus on his football goals and not get so wrapped up in the money end of the business, everything would likely take care of itself. And, seeing as Tory Holt, at his age, just signed a 3 year contract worth a potential $20M, Q must be encouraged to think that he would likely do better than that in two years when his contract is up.
In the novel Siddhartha, by Herman Hesse, the protagonist goes on a life journey to find his "ohm." He endures all kinds of travels and life lessons along the way including a costly bout with greed and materialism, only to find that his "ohm" was right in his own backyard the whole time. Q, if you ever read this board, please do yourself a favor and read this book. The stars are aligned for you in Arizona and have been from the start.
2. The person who might have the biggest impact on the Cardinals' draft could well be the new WR Coach John McNulty. McNulty was the OC at Rutgers the past few years and would have first hand knowledge of some of the key players the Cardinals may be studying in this draft.
First of all, if the Cardinals do trade Q and would have the opportunity to draft WR Kenny Britt, McNulty's influence could be pivotal. McNulty helpe to turn Britt into the Big East's all time leading WR in yards in just three seasons.
You might ask why the Cardinals would take a WR at #31 when they already have the quartet of Fitzgerald, Breaston, Doucet and Urban and they have other more glaring needs? The answer to me is two-fold: (1) Britt is a special talent and as Ron Wolfley said recently in the Cardinals Underground Podcast "the Cardinals' identity is passing the football"; (2) psychologically by adding Britt the team can still boast an awesome WR unit and worry less about injuries affecting the group.
Now all this might be a moot point if the Giants take Britt at #29 as I expect them to...unless the Cardinals add an earlier first in a Boldin trade.
However...how about McNulty's thoughts on the following Big East players he saw and in some cases prepped against?
OLB Connor Barwin, Cincinnati
RB Donald Brown, Connecticut
LB Scott McKillop, Pittsburgh
LB Tyrone McKenzie, South Florida
RB LeSean McCoy, Pittsburgh
OLB Cody Brown, Connecticut
C Eric Wood, Louisville
OLB Corey Smith, Cincinnati
QB Pat White, West Virginia
WR Tiquan Underwood, TE Mike Brock, QB Mike Teel, Rutgers
DBs Mike Mickens, Deangelo Smith and Brandon Underwood, Cincinnati
OL Ryan Stanchek, Greg Isander, Mike Dent, West Virginia
G Trevor Canfield, Cincinnati
CB Ellis Lankster, West Virginia
DBs Courtney Greene, Jason McCourty, DL Jamaal Westerman Rutgers
CB Darius Butler, Connecticut
P Kevin Huber, Cincinnati
DE Jon Monga, TE Bear Pascoe, Fresno St. (played versus in first game)
RB Andre Brown, TE Anthony Hill, North Carolina St. (played in Bowl game)
The questions I wonder about with McNulty:
A. Has he campaigned for WR Kenny Britt at #31?
B. Which RB does he like best: Donald Brown, LeSean McCoy or Andre Brown?
C. Would he be lobbying for RB Ray Rice as a player in a trade for Q?
D. What does he think of QB Pat White?
E. What does he think of OLB/TE Connor Barwin?
I think that of any offensive coach on the staff, McNulty may have the best chance to become the next OC, especially in light of the success Rutgers had passing the football in his tenure there.
3. The Steelers' LB mold...strong and sturdy on the outside, quick, tough and rangy on the inside...what draft prospects fit those molds?
OLB34:
Robert Ayers, Tennessee
Brian Orakpo, Texas
Connor Barwin, Cincinnati
Larry English, Northern Illinois
David Veikune, Hawaii
Paul Kruger, Utah
Phillip Hunt, Houston
Maurice Evans, Penn. St.
Tim Jamieson, Michigan
Kyle Moore, USC
ILB34:
Clint Sintim, Virginia
Clay Matthews, USC
Dannell Ellerbe, Georgia
Scott McKillop, Pittsburgh
Jason Phillips, TCU
Kaluka Maiava, USC
Tyrone McKenzie, South Florida
Marcus Freeman, Ohio St.
Marty Ivy, West Virginia
Gerald McRath, Sothern Mississippi
Nic Harris, Oklahoma
Antonio Appleby, Virginia
Franz Joseph, Florida International
Kevin Akins, Boston College
Jonathan Casillas, Wisconsin
DeAndre Levy, Wisconsin
Corey Smith, Cincinnati
Ashlee Palmer, Mississippi
Let me put in a plug for Kevin Akins of Boston College. This kid played all over the defense at BC...played LB, CB, rush end...he's a fast and tough athlete...and with some added strength could be a good WILB for the Cardinals down the road, because he has the range, blitzing ability and cover skills. This is a kid who was always around the ball wherever he lined up.
The Cardinals can really bolster their defensive depth deep into this draft, which may allow for a couple of early picks on offense.
4. Which leads me into today's mock...with the trade of Q for RB Felix Jones and the #69 and #117 picks (which makes the most sense to me for both sides):
#31: Kenny Britt, WR, Rutgers. Too good to pass up. Keeps the Cardinals' WR unit the best in the NFL. If the Giants take him at #29, we go with Connor Barwin, OLB34, Cincinnati or Larry English, OLB34, Northern Illinois.
#63: David Veikune, OLB34, Hawaii. The perfect player, IMO, to take over for Chike. Bench presses 455 pounds and has a non-stop motor.
#69: James Casey, TE, Rice. Whiz gets his TE here, and what a gifted receiver this kid is.
#95: Scott McKillop, ILB34, Pittsburgh. Maybe the surest tackler in the draft.
#117: Darcel McBath, FS, Texas Tech. Rangy playmaker to fill the FS need in the nickel and dime packages.
#131: Tyronne Green, G, Auburn. Pounder who needs technique work.
#167: Phillip Hunt, OLB34, Houston. Same size as James Harrison, Strong lower body and has a very quick forst step on the edge.
#204: Captain Munnerlyn, CB, South Carolina. A diminutive CB with 4.39 speed who should have stayed in school. Adds ST value as a returner.
#240: Kevin Akins, WILB34, Boston College. Good project with very good athletic ability and a nose for the football.
#254: Camerson Goldberg, T, Duke. Brings aggressiveness, needs to fill out and polish his techniques.
What Q may have to do if he is so determined to leave Arizona is have Drew Rosenhaus say to teams that Q is willing to revisit his contract demands after next season. If Q does that, the offers might come his and the Cardinals' way in droves.
Too bad that, because of his indignance toward the Cardinals' front office, Q doesn't seem to get the bigger picture here. In Arizona he is playing in what is the perfect offense for him with a QB who probably better than any QB in the NFL knows how to get him the ball. In this system, Q is likely headed toward Canton and pro football immortality. And now that the Cardinals are legitimate Super Bowl contenders for the next two years and possibly beyond, Q might even further his pro football legend by winning a ring. Let's face it, Hall of Fame football players are set financially for the rest of their lives...they are icons who can land sinecures as TV commentators...can land advertising gigs...and can collect royalties on memorabilia. The point is, if Q would just focus on his football goals and not get so wrapped up in the money end of the business, everything would likely take care of itself. And, seeing as Tory Holt, at his age, just signed a 3 year contract worth a potential $20M, Q must be encouraged to think that he would likely do better than that in two years when his contract is up.
In the novel Siddhartha, by Herman Hesse, the protagonist goes on a life journey to find his "ohm." He endures all kinds of travels and life lessons along the way including a costly bout with greed and materialism, only to find that his "ohm" was right in his own backyard the whole time. Q, if you ever read this board, please do yourself a favor and read this book. The stars are aligned for you in Arizona and have been from the start.
2. The person who might have the biggest impact on the Cardinals' draft could well be the new WR Coach John McNulty. McNulty was the OC at Rutgers the past few years and would have first hand knowledge of some of the key players the Cardinals may be studying in this draft.
First of all, if the Cardinals do trade Q and would have the opportunity to draft WR Kenny Britt, McNulty's influence could be pivotal. McNulty helpe to turn Britt into the Big East's all time leading WR in yards in just three seasons.
You might ask why the Cardinals would take a WR at #31 when they already have the quartet of Fitzgerald, Breaston, Doucet and Urban and they have other more glaring needs? The answer to me is two-fold: (1) Britt is a special talent and as Ron Wolfley said recently in the Cardinals Underground Podcast "the Cardinals' identity is passing the football"; (2) psychologically by adding Britt the team can still boast an awesome WR unit and worry less about injuries affecting the group.
Now all this might be a moot point if the Giants take Britt at #29 as I expect them to...unless the Cardinals add an earlier first in a Boldin trade.
However...how about McNulty's thoughts on the following Big East players he saw and in some cases prepped against?
OLB Connor Barwin, Cincinnati
RB Donald Brown, Connecticut
LB Scott McKillop, Pittsburgh
LB Tyrone McKenzie, South Florida
RB LeSean McCoy, Pittsburgh
OLB Cody Brown, Connecticut
C Eric Wood, Louisville
OLB Corey Smith, Cincinnati
QB Pat White, West Virginia
WR Tiquan Underwood, TE Mike Brock, QB Mike Teel, Rutgers
DBs Mike Mickens, Deangelo Smith and Brandon Underwood, Cincinnati
OL Ryan Stanchek, Greg Isander, Mike Dent, West Virginia
G Trevor Canfield, Cincinnati
CB Ellis Lankster, West Virginia
DBs Courtney Greene, Jason McCourty, DL Jamaal Westerman Rutgers
CB Darius Butler, Connecticut
P Kevin Huber, Cincinnati
DE Jon Monga, TE Bear Pascoe, Fresno St. (played versus in first game)
RB Andre Brown, TE Anthony Hill, North Carolina St. (played in Bowl game)
The questions I wonder about with McNulty:
A. Has he campaigned for WR Kenny Britt at #31?
B. Which RB does he like best: Donald Brown, LeSean McCoy or Andre Brown?
C. Would he be lobbying for RB Ray Rice as a player in a trade for Q?
D. What does he think of QB Pat White?
E. What does he think of OLB/TE Connor Barwin?
I think that of any offensive coach on the staff, McNulty may have the best chance to become the next OC, especially in light of the success Rutgers had passing the football in his tenure there.
3. The Steelers' LB mold...strong and sturdy on the outside, quick, tough and rangy on the inside...what draft prospects fit those molds?
OLB34:
Robert Ayers, Tennessee
Brian Orakpo, Texas
Connor Barwin, Cincinnati
Larry English, Northern Illinois
David Veikune, Hawaii
Paul Kruger, Utah
Phillip Hunt, Houston
Maurice Evans, Penn. St.
Tim Jamieson, Michigan
Kyle Moore, USC
ILB34:
Clint Sintim, Virginia
Clay Matthews, USC
Dannell Ellerbe, Georgia
Scott McKillop, Pittsburgh
Jason Phillips, TCU
Kaluka Maiava, USC
Tyrone McKenzie, South Florida
Marcus Freeman, Ohio St.
Marty Ivy, West Virginia
Gerald McRath, Sothern Mississippi
Nic Harris, Oklahoma
Antonio Appleby, Virginia
Franz Joseph, Florida International
Kevin Akins, Boston College
Jonathan Casillas, Wisconsin
DeAndre Levy, Wisconsin
Corey Smith, Cincinnati
Ashlee Palmer, Mississippi
Let me put in a plug for Kevin Akins of Boston College. This kid played all over the defense at BC...played LB, CB, rush end...he's a fast and tough athlete...and with some added strength could be a good WILB for the Cardinals down the road, because he has the range, blitzing ability and cover skills. This is a kid who was always around the ball wherever he lined up.
The Cardinals can really bolster their defensive depth deep into this draft, which may allow for a couple of early picks on offense.
4. Which leads me into today's mock...with the trade of Q for RB Felix Jones and the #69 and #117 picks (which makes the most sense to me for both sides):
#31: Kenny Britt, WR, Rutgers. Too good to pass up. Keeps the Cardinals' WR unit the best in the NFL. If the Giants take him at #29, we go with Connor Barwin, OLB34, Cincinnati or Larry English, OLB34, Northern Illinois.
#63: David Veikune, OLB34, Hawaii. The perfect player, IMO, to take over for Chike. Bench presses 455 pounds and has a non-stop motor.
#69: James Casey, TE, Rice. Whiz gets his TE here, and what a gifted receiver this kid is.
#95: Scott McKillop, ILB34, Pittsburgh. Maybe the surest tackler in the draft.
#117: Darcel McBath, FS, Texas Tech. Rangy playmaker to fill the FS need in the nickel and dime packages.
#131: Tyronne Green, G, Auburn. Pounder who needs technique work.
#167: Phillip Hunt, OLB34, Houston. Same size as James Harrison, Strong lower body and has a very quick forst step on the edge.
#204: Captain Munnerlyn, CB, South Carolina. A diminutive CB with 4.39 speed who should have stayed in school. Adds ST value as a returner.
#240: Kevin Akins, WILB34, Boston College. Good project with very good athletic ability and a nose for the football.
#254: Camerson Goldberg, T, Duke. Brings aggressiveness, needs to fill out and polish his techniques.
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