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Rank Stranger Ralph Stanley, The Clinch Mountain Boys
Lyrics
I wandered again to my home in the mountains
Where in youth's early dawn I was happy and free
I looked for my friends, but I never could find them
I found they were all rank strangers to me
Everybody I met (everybody I met)
Seemed to be a rank stranger (seemed to be a rank stranger)
No mother nor dad (no mother or dad)
Not a friend could I see (not a friend could I see)
They knew not my name (they knew not my name)
And I knew not their faces (and I knew not their faces)
I found they were all (I found they were all)
Rank strangers to me (rank strangers to me)
"They've all moved away, " said the voice of a stranger
"To a beautiful land by the bright crystal sea"
Some beautiful day I'll meet 'em in heaven
Where no one will be a stranger to me
Everybody I met (everybody I met)
Seemed to be a rank stranger (seemed to be a rank stranger)
No mother nor dad (no mother or dad)
Not a friend could I see (not a friend could I see)
They knew not my name (they knew not my name)
And I knew not their faces (and I knew not their faces)
I found they were all (I found they were all)
Rank strangers to me (rank strangers to me)
Kenny Britt signed with Cleveland and Brian Quick bolted for Washington. Free-agent signing Robert Woods and Tavon Austin have the potential to be effective complementary receivers, but neither is a true No. 1. The problem is the Rams aren't in a position to land one of the top three receivers without giving up a lot. Davis is an intriguing Day 3 option. There are concerns about the level of competition he faced at Georgia State and he's a raw route runner, but he has a high ceiling thanks to his size-speed combination (4.44 40 at 6-2 and 219). Davis' ability to stretch the field would create space for the Rams' other receivers underneath and make it tougher for defenses to key on talented third-year running back Todd Gurley.
I really like this kid Davis! I Drafted him in the ROD Mock for the Vikings, But I would love to see him in Horns!
Besides his Great size and 40 speed he showed off well at the Combine!
* Benched 19 times!!
* Had a Great 41.0 Vert.!!
* a Fantastic 136.0 Broad Jump!!
* a 4.28 short shuttle!
* a 11.48 Long Shuttle.
* And he has a WR Best SPARQ score of 141.5!!!!
This kid is going to make a name for himself in the NFL! Quote me!!
( And he was listed at the combine at 6ft 3 not 6ft 2 as stated above!)
Don't worry, he'll go back to his first and biggest love 49ers next week. I think this was his first column ever not mentioning dead Walsh or blow Montana.
Nice job JackDRam. You set the tone with the first two draftees. It's nice to see this report from our ROD mockers. Keeps us updated on teams. The Lions acted quickly after free agent losses on the O Line and you got good defensive talent. Now, I may think your drafted players are really on the Lions.
I think QBs get too much credit, personally, and not enough is given to the other 10 on the unit in particular the OL, not to mention the quality of the staff. All that said, yeah, that's a terrible list man. Turrible!
Deshaun Watson is a national champion and a projected Day 1 pick in the NFL draft. But when we talk about future development, scheme and coaching at the next level, where is the ideal landing spot for the former Clemson star? Along with Watson, let's break down the best pro fits for quarterback prospects Mitchell Trubisky, DeShone Kizer, Patrick Mahomes and Brad Kaaya as NFL teams begin to finalize their draft boards.
The Player: At 6-foot-2, 221 pounds, Watson can beat you through the air, slice up defensive fronts with QB-designed runs and attack in the red zone. Watson is an upper-tier athlete (4.66-second 40) who displays the soft touch to get the ball over the top of the secondary and the anticipation to diagnose inside throwing windows. He is a true dual-threat player at the position who plays his best football on the big stage. We all watched the Clemson quarterback wear down that loaded Alabama defense in the College Football Playoff National Championship. And scouts love his toughness.
Watson threw for 41 touchdowns last season at Clemson. That's a big number. He also threw 17 interceptions. His decision-making needs to improve. We can see that on the tapes against Pitt and Florida State. Watson doesn't always read the entire field and sometimes gets tricked into poor throws by pre-snap defensive looks. Plus, coming from a spread scheme that was heavy in run-pass options (RPOs), there should be an expected transition period for Watson in the pros. But as with every quarterback, we have to focus the majority of the evaluation on the skill set. Watson has the talent, along with the unique intangibles, that sell at the position. This is a player I would love to coach. So which team/coaching staff would highlight Watson's ability the best?
The Fit: Cleveland Browns.Browns head coach Hue Jackson is one of the best teachers in the game, and he will think outside the box from a playbook perspective. The full-field reads, the footwork, the vision? Yeah, those traits will be part of the learning curve with Watson. But while he works through the developmental process, Jackson has the ability to build a productive system that caters to Watson's skill set. Along with standard pro-style concepts, Jackson could use movement passes, two-level reads, boots and RPOs/QB-designed runs with Watson. Look at how he runs this textbook zone-read scheme against Ohio State in the national semifinals:
Read the end man, and pull the rock. That was an easy six for Watson and a smart call with the ball in scoring position. Plus, it shows how Watson can add more to a pro playbook inside the 10-yard line.
Watson carried the ball 165 times the past season. That number will have to be drastically reduced for him to survive an NFL season. However, similar to what Jackson did with Andy Dalton in Cincinnati, the threat of the quarterback running the ball (along with RPO schemes) is going to impact defenders' eye discipline. Watson needs a creative coach who will plan around his strengths while he works to rectify his weaknesses. That's Jackson.
The Player: Trubisky (6-foot-2, 222 pounds) started only one season in college, and he lived out of the shotgun in the Tar Heels' offense. However, Trubisky has the quick release, the movement skills/athleticism (4.67 40) and the arm strength to make the jump to the league. When he gets to the edge of the pocket, he can square his shoulders and rip the ball. Want some good tapes to check out? Go watch Trubisky versus Miami and Florida State. He made plays when the pocket broke down, showing the ability to anticipate throwing windows and a powerful arm when attacking two-deep coverage and throwing outside cuts.
In UNC's Sun Bowl loss to Stanford, Trubisky struggled with late safety rotation (two interceptions) and displayed a tendency to hang the ball up in the air on throws downfield. There's definitely some rawness to his game, and that should be expected with a quarterback lacking experience and coming from a spread system. However, given his ability to see the field and athletic upside, Trubisky has a high ceiling at the position and will fit multiple offenses in the pros.
The Fit: San Francisco 49ers. Head coach Kyle Shanahan is one of the top playcallers in the NFL. With a good mix of play-action, movement and the drop-back game, Shanahan's system creates open throwing windows and deep-ball opportunities. Shanahan could mold his system to play to Trubisky's athleticism and arm strength.
With Shanahan running the offense in Atlanta last season, the Falcons led the NFL in play-action snaps (186). Given Trubisky's ability to get to the edge of the pocket, he'd be an ideal quarterback for Shanahan to mold. Below is a good example of Trubisky running a boot scheme in the red zone versus NC State.
With the flat route covered by an underneath defender, Trubisky goes to his second read to hit wide receiver Ryan Switzer on the crossing route. Good ball for the score.
The fit is there with Shanahan, and so is the need in San Francisco. With veteran Brian Hoyer in the mix, Trubisky wouldn't have to be thrown on the field for opening day. That would buy him time to clean up some areas of his game and prep for a system that will highlight his talent as the future No. 1.
The Player: Kizer has the most upside of these five quarterbacks. Just look at the size (6-foot-4, 233 pounds), the NFL-caliber arm and the ability to move. Kizer ran a 4.83 40 at the combine, but he looks much quicker on tape when he pulls the ball on a designed run or breaks free from the pocket. Plus, he's a load for defensive backs to bring down in the open field, and he managed a pro route tree at Notre Dame. That shows up when he scans the field, targets the top of the secondary and moves quickly to find open targets.
The tape? It's up and down. At times, he looks like a top-five pick. Take the red zone throw versus Miami on the skinny post or the deep shots he tossed in the comeback attempt versus Michigan State. But other times, he looks a little lost, such as on the picks he threw against Stanford, the end-of-game decisions that show his inexperience and the unsettled footwork in the pocket. Scouts see the high ceiling with Kizer -- and rightfully so -- but they also know that he has a lot of room to grow at the position.
The Fit: Arizona Cardinals. Under head coach Bruce Arians, Arizona is going to attack opposing defenses vertically. In fact, the past two seasons, the Cardinals have thrown the third-most passes of 20 or more yards downfield (159). Put Kizer in this system, and let him rip it over the top. He has the size to stand in the pocket, take a shot and still deliver the ball. As Kizer shows in the example below, he flashes the ability to put the ball on the upfield shoulder when delivering a deep shot.
In Notre Dame's game versus Duke, Kizer read the safety rotation at the snap (red circle) with the Blue Devils sending a zone blitz. That opened a deep window to the post with the free safety playing to backside hash. There is room here for Kizer to set his feet and deliver a dime over the top for a touchdown.
With Carson Palmer, 37, in the final stage of his career, the Cardinals need to invest in the position. Kizer could sit for a year, clean up his footwork and begin to develop that massive upside under Arians. Along with the deep ball, he has the talent to hit intermediate routes, work the quick game and give Arians some creative options due to his athleticism.
The Player: Mahomes can make any throw, from any platform. He has amazing power in that arm. In the game against Oklahoma, Mahomes (6-foot-2, 225 pounds) tossed a 60-plus-yard pass for a touchdown ... off his back foot. Ridiculous stuff. Playing in a wide-open, pass-first offense at Tech, Mahomes (5,052 yards passing, 41 touchdowns) often saw soft zone coverage and three-man rushes. That makes him tough to grade. Think of seven-on-seven drills in which the quarterback can just float for a bit, find a target and then sling it.
Mahomes' technique and mechanics have to improve. His arm talent can get him into trouble. He threw a red zone interception against Texas when he tried to squeeze the ball in on a corner route. That was too much confidence and a poor decision. But if Mahomes gets coached up, watch out. There's no doubt that he has the raw talent to eventually be a starter in the league.
The Fit: Kansas City Chiefs. Andy Reid can coach quarterbacks, and I really like the idea of Mahomes playing in Kansas City's system. Yes, the Chiefs still run a West Coast-based offense, and they don't take an extreme amount of vertical shots down the field. But arm strength such as Mahomes' is valuable on intermediate throws between the hashes too (see the example below).
Look at the velocity on this throw and the anticipation from Mahomes to find the open window in the coverage. With Mahomes reading the linebacker, he quickly transitions off the run-action to throw the inside pop pass. He has to really sling this as the backside safety closes on the route. Because of Mahomes' arm strength, the safety can't get there in time, and the Red Raiders put six on the board.
It would be to Mahomes' benefit to land in a system such as Kansas City's, which requires the quarterback to play with consistent footwork, timing and technique. With Alex Smith holding down the No. 1 job in Kansas City for the foreseeable future, there would be plenty of time for Mahomes to improve his fundamentals while working with Reid, one of the game's best QB gurus.
The Player: Kaaya (6-foot-4, 214 pounds) is an interesting prospect because he played in a pro-style system in Miami, and he projects as a true drop-back quarterback at the next level. When he has a clean pocket, Kaaya can attack the defense at all three levels. The Pitt game is a good example of this. Kaaya was quick to read coverages, identify pressures and get rid of the ball. He looked like a first-rounder finding the matchups to exploit Pitt's coverage schemes.
But Kaaya's tape is inconsistent. He's really streaky. Pop in the Notre Dame game, and your overall grade on Kaaya is going to drop. Playing behind an offensive line that had issues this past season, Kaaya was exposed when he had to work from a muddy pocket, and he took too many hits. He doesn't have the speed or athleticism to consistently extend plays when pressure gets up the field. I see a player who has the tools to develop in the right system, but he needs pro coaching (and time) to get there.
The Fit: New York Giants. Even with the Giants signing Geno Smith this offseason, they have a need for a young, developmental player at the position behind Eli Manning. Head coach Ben McAdoo's system is similar to Kaaya's at Miami. This two-level concept should look familiar to Giants' fans:
Pitt is bringing pressure here, but with Miami using seven-man protection, Kaaya knows he has time to work through his route progression versus zero coverage (no safety help). This allows Kaaya to move from his underneath read (inside smash routes) to the dig route breaking back to the middle of the field. Set the feet, and deliver a great ball (away from the defender's leverage) for the score.
Even as a developmental prospect, Kaaya has the tools pro coaches want at the position. With Manning running the offense in New York, there is no immediate need to put Kaaya on the field, which gives him time to sit, learn and develop those tools within a scheme that is perfect for his skill set.
Outside of Lamp and potentially Feeney I don't think we are on the same page there on pro bowl caliber centers. My thing is if you consider guys like Dawkins, Siragusa, and Asiata potential centers then the Rams might as well save a pick and move Jamon Brown to center. Outside of Asiatta who had a few underwhelming games at center Brown has just as much experience playing center, is just as talented if not more so, has played against NFL talent for 2 years, and has almost 3 years in an NFL weights program.
That assumes that Jamon Brown can move to Center. If Jamon Brown has the football IQ to play Center, I'm fine with moving him there, but he may not.
But you're also not really saving a pick. We still will have to replace Saffold in the near future and will need to be prepared for a Saffold injury this year.
Anyone remember that guy who was obsessed with Watkins and Bradford? I don't recall his name at the moment, but he was banned from this site. This article reminded me of him.
There was actually two of them(went back cause was annoyed I couldn't remember eithers name), and you were close lockdnram2. One was the crazy stalker Rodney C, the other was RFIP who was less stalkery but just as crazy about Watkins.
been dreaming of Davis to the Rams for over a year now, so nothing would make me happier than him falling to the Rams. Sadly, its nearly impossible. Not only is he a top player in this draft, but theres not a lot of WRs in this draft with high enough potential to justify drafting them over Davis, even without Davis working out all offseason.
I wouldn't take him there at 37 but I could see the Rams doing that. It's dangerous and a position you don't normally get year one return on, but he does have some very high upside/potential. I'm still suffering from Brian Quick's selection in round 2 though and it sure would be nice to find an impact year one guy there at that spot.
Sources: Dean Blandino to get TV job after leaving NFL officiating post
NEW YORK -- Officiating director Dean Blandino is leaving the NFL to spend more time with his family and explore other opportunities.
Blandino has been the league's vice president of officiating since 2013 and has overseen several changes in the way the game has been officiated, with an emphasis on player safety.
"Dean has done an outstanding job leading our officiating staff," NFL vice president Troy Vincent said in a memo to NFL executives, presidents, general managers and head coaches that was obtained by ESPN. "He's been a trusted colleague and a friend to so many of us around the league.
Dean's knowledge of the playing rules, his tireless commitment to improving the quality of NFL officiating, and his unquestioned dedication to his job has earned him the respect of the entire football community."
The memo said Blandino will remain with the NFL until at least the end of May, and a search for a successor has already begun.
The 45-year-old Blandino has young children and the demands of his job have limited the time he has spent with them and his wife. Sources told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter that Blandino is expected to go into broadcasting as a rules analyst and has had discussions with multiple networks.
Blandino joined the NFL in 1994 as an intern and moved through the ranks. He was an instant replay official from 1999-2003 and worked two Super Bowls and two conference championship games.
He managed the NFL's instant replay program from 2003-2009, and from 2007-2009 he was director of officiating, supervising day-to-day operations and the game officials' schedule under Mike Pereira.
He left the NFL in 2009 to form his own company, returned in 2012 and succeeded Carl Johnson as chief of officiating the next year.
During his three years away from the NFL, Blandino launched "Under the Hood," which provided training and evaluation for replay officials. His clients included the NFL and college conferences such as the Big Ten, Mid-American, Pac-12, Big 12, and Mountain West. He directed instant replay clinics for the NFL and NCAA and served as a liaison to the NFL's competition committee.
Blandino has been a strong voice on the powerful competition committee that suggests rules changes. Those changes have included eliminating chop blocks; decreasing the number of kickoff returns -- football's most dangerous play statistically -- by moving up the kickoff; and expansion of defenseless player parameters to include snappers and other players.
This season, the use of Surface tablets by referees for video replay will be instituted. Under Blandino, the NFL's central office in New York has conferred with referees on replay decisions since 2014. Now, that office, albeit without Blandino, will make the final call.
Blandino also been open with the teams, media and public when officiating errors have been made, while also staunchly defending his officials when their calls have been correct.
Among the other noteworthy moves by his officiating department was the hiring of line judge Sarah Thomas as the first full-time female NFL official in 2015.
Hopefully at least they will replace him with someone that does not party with Jerry Jones in public. Well Dean, don't let the door hit ya, where the good Lord split ya.