We should do a combined PR draft board, where we all develop a draft board based on consensus agreement. It would be pretty amazing.
Love that idea.For the Bucs, I like:BridgewaterClowneyManzielMatthewsBortlesBarrWatkinsMackDennardEbron
We should do a combined PR draft board, where we all develop a draft board based on consensus agreement. It would be pretty amazing.
I like that idea. You could create a thread for each position where you vote for your top guy and then do a thread where you vote for your preferred position to draft. Then combine those to form a draft board. Too much work for me though haha.
I'll be lead scout for UC Santa Cruz http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Im2p165N5uQ&sns=em
Watkins - total game changer, and will force opposing teams to gameplan. Electric, Explosive, and versite. Harvin 2.0Clowney - red flags perhaps, but one of 2 potential game changers.Matthews - not a sexy pick, but franchise LT are so hard to find.Bridgewater - not concerned with his size, and I prefer Manziel, but Teddy looks pro ready. Manziel - has the "it" but improv on the NFL level will be much different. I see allot of Garcia in him, and I like that. Would be happy if he was the pick.Barr - I would love a rangy long armed DE like Rice, but fear he is more 3-4 OLB than DEMack - who doesn't love a tough, mean, nasty LBer, but like Barr, can he put a hand in the dirt?Bortels - looks the part, but who wouldn't against Duke?
We should do a combined PR draft board, where we all develop a draft board based on consensus agreement. It would be pretty amazing.
Did you do the PR Mock draft a few years ago, with regular posters selecting a team and making that team's picks for the first round? That would be fun to do again.
1. Bridgewater2. Clowney3. Barr4. Matthews5. Watkins6. Mack7. Bortles
Watkins - total game changer, and will force opposing teams to gameplan. Electric, Explosive, and versite. Harvin 2.0Clowney - red flags perhaps, but one of 2 potential game changers.Matthews - not a sexy pick, but franchise LT are so hard to find.Bridgewater - not concerned with his size, and I prefer Manziel, but Teddy looks pro ready. Manziel - has the "it" but improv on the NFL level will be much different. I see allot of Garcia in him, and I like that. Would be happy if he was the pick.Barr - I would love a rangy long armed DE like Rice, but fear he is more 3-4 OLB than DEMack - who doesn't love a tough, mean, nasty LBer, but like Barr, can he put a hand in the dirt?Bortels - looks the part, but who wouldn't against Duke?
johnny football played Duke. Bortles played #6 Baylor.
Clowney :)
Bridgewater is overrated, small, and has a weak arm. I do nit think he will be the first QB taken. Wait until the combine. He is accurate and probably a WC QB only and is a good kid. Bortles would be the first QB on my board, but I bet the Texans take him if he comes out.This would be my draft board at 7:BortlesJFFClowneyWatkinsBarr Mathews Bridgewater
hahahahahahaha
Not sure why that is funny! Check this out. Remember Bortles and Bridgewater played in the same conference. I guess the coaches tat they competed against don't know anything.PROVIDENCE, R.I. – UCF quarterback Blake Bortles and Louisville defensive end Marcus Smith, who led their respective teams to 11-1 records in the regular season, have been named the American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year, respectively, by the league’s 10 head coaches. UCF coach George O’Leary, who led the Knights to the outright American Athletic Conference title and a berth in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, was the unanimous selection as Coach of the Year. Bortles was chosen as the American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year after he helped the Knights go 8-0 in conference play, a record that included four come-from-behind wins in the fourth quarter. Bortles completed 68.1 percent of his passes in the regular season, throwing for 3,280 yards and 22 touchdowns and adding five rushing touchdowns. He ranks ninth nationally in both completion percentage and pass efficiency rating (163.3). Smith was named American Athletic Conference Defensive Player of the Year for his performance on one of the nation’s most effective defenses. Smith registered 12.5 sacks, 15.5 tackles for loss, had three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries in the regular season, pacing a defense that allowed just 257.9 yards (second nationally) and 12.4 points per game (third nationally). He ranked second among all FBS players in sacks and was 17th nationally in tackles for loss. Ayers and Hornsey shared American Athletic Conference Special Teams Player of the Year accolades. Ayers led the conference with 884 yards on kickoff returns, averaging 26.8 yards per return with one touchdown. He finished the regular season with exactly 1,000 all-purpose yards. Hornsey, a finalist for the Ray Guy Award as the nation’s top punter, led The American in punting at 45.2 yards per kick, good for eighth nationally. He had 18 punts of 50 or more yards and saw 25 of his 55 punts downed inside the 20-yard line. O’Korn was named American Athletic Conference Rookie of the Year after he helped the Cougars to an 8-4 regular season as a true freshman. O’Korn stepped in as the Cougars’ starter in the third game of the season, after David Piland suffered a career-ending injury against Temple in the conference opener, and threw for 2,889 yards and 26 touchdowns with eight interceptions in the regular season. He ranked fifth in the conference in both passing yards (240.8 yards per game) and pass efficiency (138.2) and was fifth among FBS freshmen in passing yards. O’Leary is the first American Athletic Conference Coach of the Year after he led the Knights, who were picked fourth in the conference’s preseason media poll, to an 11-1 overall record, and 8-0 conference mark and the outright league championship. UCF is ranked No. 15 in the final Bowl Championship Series standings as well as both major national polls. One of eight finalists for the Eddie Robinson Award as national coach of the year, O’Leary was named his conference’s coach of the year for a sixth time in his 17-year head coaching career. He was a two-time ACC Coach of the Year at Georgia Tech and a three-time Conference USA Coach of the Year with UCF. In addition to the major award-winners, The American also named its first and second all-conference teams. UCF and Louisville had 11 players each named to the all-conference teams, while Cincinnati had nine players chosen. Cincinnati OT Eric Lefeld was the only unanimous selection to the all-conference team.2013 AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE FOOTBALL AWARDSAMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEARBlake Bortles, QB, UCF (Jr., Oveido, Fla.) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEARMarcus Smith, DE, Louisville (Sr., Columbus, Ga.) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYERS OF THE YEARDemarcus Ayers, RS, Houston (Fr., Lancaster, Texas)Tom Hornsey, P, Memphis (Sr., Geelong, Victoria, Australia) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE ROOKIE OF THE YEARJohn O’Korn, QB, Houston (Fr., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE COACH OF THE YEARGeorge O’Leary, UCF ALL-CONFERENCE FIRST TEAMOFFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolWR Deontay Greenberry Houston So. 6-3 198 Fresno, Calif./Washington UnionWR DeVante Parker Louisville Jr. 6-3 209 Louisville, Ky./BallardOT Eric Lefeld * Cincinnati Jr. 6-6 309 Coldwater, Ohio/ColdwaterOT Jamon Brown Louisville Jr. 6-6 350 Fern Creek, Ky./Fern CreekOG Jordan McCray UCF Sr. 6-3 310 Miami, Fla./SouthridgeOG Justin McCray UCF Sr. 6-3 310 Miami, Fla./SouthridgeC Jake Smith Louisville Jr. 6-4 312 Jacksonville, Ala./JacksonvilleTE Blake Annen Cincinnati Sr. 6-5 250 Upper Arlington, Ohio/Upper ArlingtonTE Tyler Kroft Rutgers So. 6-6 240 Downingtown, Pa./Downingtown EastQB Blake Bortles UCF Jr. 6-4 230 Oveido, Fla./OveidoRB Storm Johnson UCF Jr. 6-0 215 Loganville, Ga./Miami (Fla.)RB Paul James Rutgers So. 6-0 210 Glassboro, N.J./GlassboroK Jake Elliott Memphis Fr. 5-10 160 Western Springs, Ill./Lyons TownshipRS Ralph David Abernathy IV Cincinnati Jr. 5-7 161 Atlanta, Ga./Westminster SchoolRS Demarcus Ayers Houston Fr. 5-10 173 Lancaster, Texas/LancasterDEFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolDL Jordan Stepp Cincinnati Sr. 6-1 285 Indianapolis, Ind./Ben DavisDL Marcus Smith Louisville Sr. 6-3 252 Columbus, Ga./HardawayDL Martin Ifedi Memphis Jr. 6-3 265 Houston, Texas/WestsideDL Aaron Lynch USF So. 6-6 244 Cape Coral, Fla./Notre DameLB Terrance Plummer UCF Jr. 6-1 234 Orange Park, Fla./Orange ParkLB Yawin Smallwood UConn Jr. 6-4 236 Worcester, Mass./DohertyLB Tyler Matakevich Temple So. 6-1 230 Stratford, Conn./Milford AcademyCB Jacoby Glenn UCF Fr. 6-0 176 Prichard, Ala./VigorCB Charles Gaines Louisville So. 5-11 174 Miami, Fla./CentralS Calvin Pryor Louisville Jr. 6-2 208 Port St. Joe, Fla./Port St. JoeS Hakeem Smith Louisville Sr. 6-2 179 Jonesboro, Ga./RiverdaleP Tom Hornsey Memphis Sr. 6-3 210 Geelong, Victoria, Australia/St. Joseph’s College * unanimous selection ALL-CONFERENCE SECOND TEAMOFFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolWR Anthony McClung Cincinnati Sr. 6-0 177 Indianapolis, Ind./PikeWR J.J. Worton UCF Jr. 6-2 211 Homestead, Fla./South DadeWR Jeremy Johnson SMU Sr. 6-0 179 Tyler, Texas/John TylerOT Chris Martin UCF Sr. 6-5 303 Fort Walton Beach, Fla./ChoctawhatcheeOT DeAnthony Sims Houston Sr. 6-3 320 Houston, Texas/WestburyOG Sam Longo Cincinnati Sr. 6-5 305 Spring Valley, Ohio/Ohio StateOG John Miller Louisville Jr. 6-2 321 Miami, Fla./CentralC Betim Bujari Rutgers Jr. 6-4 295 Secaucus, N.J./SecaucusTE Mike McFarland USF Jr. 6-5 244 Tampa, Fla./FloridaQB Teddy Bridgewater Louisville Jr. 6-3 205 Miami, Fla./NorthwesternRB William Stanback UCF Fr. 5-11 205 Hempstead, N.Y./UniondaleRB Marcus Shaw USF Sr. 5-9 178 Arcadia, Fla./De SotoK Shawn Moffitt UCF Jr. 5-11 178 Orlando, Fla./Dr. PhillipsRS Janarion Grant Rutgers Fr. 5-11 170 Trilby, Fla./PascoDEFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolDL Silverberry Mouhon Cincinnati So. 6-4 248 Norcross, Ga./NorcrossDL Shamar Stephen UConn Sr. 6-5 313 Brookville, N.Y./Long Island LutheranDL Lorenzo Mauldin Louisville Jr. 6-4 243 Atlanta, Ga./Maynard JacksonDL Luke Sager USF Sr. 6-3 275 Niceville, Fla./NicevilleLB Greg Blair Cincinnati Sr. 6-2 252 Pittsburgh, Pa./Lackawanna CCLB Preston Brown Louisville Sr. 6-2 260 Cincinnati, Ohio/NorthwestLB DeDe Lattimore USF Sr. 6-1 237 Athens, Ga./Cedar ShoalsCB Deven Drane Cincinnati Sr. 5-11 187 Plantation, Fla./PlantationCB Zach McMillian Houston Sr. 5-10 178 Missouri City, Texas/DullesCB Kenneth Acker SMU Sr. 6-0 195 Portland, Ore./GrantS Clayton Geathers UCF Jr. 6-2 207 Georgetown, S.C./Carver’s BayS Trevon Stewart Houston So. 5-9 192 Patterson, La./PattersonP Richie Leone Houston Sr. 6-3 215 Roswell, Ga./RoswellRelated Headlines Jan 04, 2014 FootballHouston Faces Vanderbilt in BBVA Compass Bowl Jan 04, 2014 Women's BasketballWATCH NOW: UCF at Temple Women's Basketball Jan 04, 2014 Women's Basketball14 Players to Watch in 2014: UCF's Briahanna Jackson
Kinda surprised to see so many people willing to pull the trigger on Clowney.Man that guy scares me - my question is does he truly want to play football? Because sometimes it seems like he could care less about being on the field. Like he is too busy running around playing hollywood and not being an aggressive ass kicker like that position demands.
Bridgewater is overrated, small, and has a weak arm. I do nit think he will be the first QB taken. Wait until the combine. He is accurate and probably a WC QB only and is a good kid. Bortles would be the first QB on my board, but I bet the Texans take him if he comes out.This would be my draft board at 7:BortlesJFFClowneyWatkinsBarr Mathews Bridgewater
hahahahahahaha
Not sure why that is funny! Check this out. Remember Bortles and Bridgewater played in the same conference. I guess the coaches tat they competed against don't know anything.PROVIDENCE, R.I. – UCF quarterback Blake Bortles and Louisville defensive end Marcus Smith, who led their respective teams to 11-1 records in the regular season, have been named the American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year, respectively, by the league’s 10 head coaches. UCF coach George O’Leary, who led the Knights to the outright American Athletic Conference title and a berth in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, was the unanimous selection as Coach of the Year. Bortles was chosen as the American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year after he helped the Knights go 8-0 in conference play, a record that included four come-from-behind wins in the fourth quarter. Bortles completed 68.1 percent of his passes in the regular season, throwing for 3,280 yards and 22 touchdowns and adding five rushing touchdowns. He ranks ninth nationally in both completion percentage and pass efficiency rating (163.3). Smith was named American Athletic Conference Defensive Player of the Year for his performance on one of the nation’s most effective defenses. Smith registered 12.5 sacks, 15.5 tackles for loss, had three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries in the regular season, pacing a defense that allowed just 257.9 yards (second nationally) and 12.4 points per game (third nationally). He ranked second among all FBS players in sacks and was 17th nationally in tackles for loss. Ayers and Hornsey shared American Athletic Conference Special Teams Player of the Year accolades. Ayers led the conference with 884 yards on kickoff returns, averaging 26.8 yards per return with one touchdown. He finished the regular season with exactly 1,000 all-purpose yards. Hornsey, a finalist for the Ray Guy Award as the nation’s top punter, led The American in punting at 45.2 yards per kick, good for eighth nationally. He had 18 punts of 50 or more yards and saw 25 of his 55 punts downed inside the 20-yard line. O’Korn was named American Athletic Conference Rookie of the Year after he helped the Cougars to an 8-4 regular season as a true freshman. O’Korn stepped in as the Cougars’ starter in the third game of the season, after David Piland suffered a career-ending injury against Temple in the conference opener, and threw for 2,889 yards and 26 touchdowns with eight interceptions in the regular season. He ranked fifth in the conference in both passing yards (240.8 yards per game) and pass efficiency (138.2) and was fifth among FBS freshmen in passing yards. O’Leary is the first American Athletic Conference Coach of the Year after he led the Knights, who were picked fourth in the conference’s preseason media poll, to an 11-1 overall record, and 8-0 conference mark and the outright league championship. UCF is ranked No. 15 in the final Bowl Championship Series standings as well as both major national polls. One of eight finalists for the Eddie Robinson Award as national coach of the year, O’Leary was named his conference’s coach of the year for a sixth time in his 17-year head coaching career. He was a two-time ACC Coach of the Year at Georgia Tech and a three-time Conference USA Coach of the Year with UCF. In addition to the major award-winners, The American also named its first and second all-conference teams. UCF and Louisville had 11 players each named to the all-conference teams, while Cincinnati had nine players chosen. Cincinnati OT Eric Lefeld was the only unanimous selection to the all-conference team.2013 AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE FOOTBALL AWARDSAMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEARBlake Bortles, QB, UCF (Jr., Oveido, Fla.) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEARMarcus Smith, DE, Louisville (Sr., Columbus, Ga.) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYERS OF THE YEARDemarcus Ayers, RS, Houston (Fr., Lancaster, Texas)Tom Hornsey, P, Memphis (Sr., Geelong, Victoria, Australia) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE ROOKIE OF THE YEARJohn O’Korn, QB, Houston (Fr., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) AMERICAN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE COACH OF THE YEARGeorge O’Leary, UCF ALL-CONFERENCE FIRST TEAMOFFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolWR Deontay Greenberry Houston So. 6-3 198 Fresno, Calif./Washington UnionWR DeVante Parker Louisville Jr. 6-3 209 Louisville, Ky./BallardOT Eric Lefeld * Cincinnati Jr. 6-6 309 Coldwater, Ohio/ColdwaterOT Jamon Brown Louisville Jr. 6-6 350 Fern Creek, Ky./Fern CreekOG Jordan McCray UCF Sr. 6-3 310 Miami, Fla./SouthridgeOG Justin McCray UCF Sr. 6-3 310 Miami, Fla./SouthridgeC Jake Smith Louisville Jr. 6-4 312 Jacksonville, Ala./JacksonvilleTE Blake Annen Cincinnati Sr. 6-5 250 Upper Arlington, Ohio/Upper ArlingtonTE Tyler Kroft Rutgers So. 6-6 240 Downingtown, Pa./Downingtown EastQB Blake Bortles UCF Jr. 6-4 230 Oveido, Fla./OveidoRB Storm Johnson UCF Jr. 6-0 215 Loganville, Ga./Miami (Fla.)RB Paul James Rutgers So. 6-0 210 Glassboro, N.J./GlassboroK Jake Elliott Memphis Fr. 5-10 160 Western Springs, Ill./Lyons TownshipRS Ralph David Abernathy IV Cincinnati Jr. 5-7 161 Atlanta, Ga./Westminster SchoolRS Demarcus Ayers Houston Fr. 5-10 173 Lancaster, Texas/LancasterDEFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolDL Jordan Stepp Cincinnati Sr. 6-1 285 Indianapolis, Ind./Ben DavisDL Marcus Smith Louisville Sr. 6-3 252 Columbus, Ga./HardawayDL Martin Ifedi Memphis Jr. 6-3 265 Houston, Texas/WestsideDL Aaron Lynch USF So. 6-6 244 Cape Coral, Fla./Notre DameLB Terrance Plummer UCF Jr. 6-1 234 Orange Park, Fla./Orange ParkLB Yawin Smallwood UConn Jr. 6-4 236 Worcester, Mass./DohertyLB Tyler Matakevich Temple So. 6-1 230 Stratford, Conn./Milford AcademyCB Jacoby Glenn UCF Fr. 6-0 176 Prichard, Ala./VigorCB Charles Gaines Louisville So. 5-11 174 Miami, Fla./CentralS Calvin Pryor Louisville Jr. 6-2 208 Port St. Joe, Fla./Port St. JoeS Hakeem Smith Louisville Sr. 6-2 179 Jonesboro, Ga./RiverdaleP Tom Hornsey Memphis Sr. 6-3 210 Geelong, Victoria, Australia/St. Joseph’s College * unanimous selection ALL-CONFERENCE SECOND TEAMOFFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolWR Anthony McClung Cincinnati Sr. 6-0 177 Indianapolis, Ind./PikeWR J.J. Worton UCF Jr. 6-2 211 Homestead, Fla./South DadeWR Jeremy Johnson SMU Sr. 6-0 179 Tyler, Texas/John TylerOT Chris Martin UCF Sr. 6-5 303 Fort Walton Beach, Fla./ChoctawhatcheeOT DeAnthony Sims Houston Sr. 6-3 320 Houston, Texas/WestburyOG Sam Longo Cincinnati Sr. 6-5 305 Spring Valley, Ohio/Ohio StateOG John Miller Louisville Jr. 6-2 321 Miami, Fla./CentralC Betim Bujari Rutgers Jr. 6-4 295 Secaucus, N.J./SecaucusTE Mike McFarland USF Jr. 6-5 244 Tampa, Fla./FloridaQB Teddy Bridgewater Louisville Jr. 6-3 205 Miami, Fla./NorthwesternRB William Stanback UCF Fr. 5-11 205 Hempstead, N.Y./UniondaleRB Marcus Shaw USF Sr. 5-9 178 Arcadia, Fla./De SotoK Shawn Moffitt UCF Jr. 5-11 178 Orlando, Fla./Dr. PhillipsRS Janarion Grant Rutgers Fr. 5-11 170 Trilby, Fla./PascoDEFENSEPos. Player School Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Last SchoolDL Silverberry Mouhon Cincinnati So. 6-4 248 Norcross, Ga./NorcrossDL Shamar Stephen UConn Sr. 6-5 313 Brookville, N.Y./Long Island LutheranDL Lorenzo Mauldin Louisville Jr. 6-4 243 Atlanta, Ga./Maynard JacksonDL Luke Sager USF Sr. 6-3 275 Niceville, Fla./NicevilleLB Greg Blair Cincinnati Sr. 6-2 252 Pittsburgh, Pa./Lackawanna CCLB Preston Brown Louisville Sr. 6-2 260 Cincinnati, Ohio/NorthwestLB DeDe Lattimore USF Sr. 6-1 237 Athens, Ga./Cedar ShoalsCB Deven Drane Cincinnati Sr. 5-11 187 Plantation, Fla./PlantationCB Zach McMillian Houston Sr. 5-10 178 Missouri City, Texas/DullesCB Kenneth Acker SMU Sr. 6-0 195 Portland, Ore./GrantS Clayton Geathers UCF Jr. 6-2 207 Georgetown, S.C./Carver’s BayS Trevon Stewart Houston So. 5-9 192 Patterson, La./PattersonP Richie Leone Houston Sr. 6-3 215 Roswell, Ga./RoswellRelated Headlines Jan 04, 2014 FootballHouston Faces Vanderbilt in BBVA Compass Bowl Jan 04, 2014 Women's BasketballWATCH NOW: UCF at Temple Women's Basketball Jan 04, 2014 Women's Basketball14 Players to Watch in 2014: UCF's Briahanna Jackson
6 more TDs, 5 less INTs. Lit up a Florida defense last year that had two first round corners playing for it. I was more laughing at the "wait for the combine" thing.
Watkins - total game changer, and will force opposing teams to gameplan. Electric, Explosive, and versite. Harvin 2.0Clowney - red flags perhaps, but one of 2 potential game changers.Matthews - not a sexy pick, but franchise LT are so hard to find.Bridgewater - not concerned with his size, and I prefer Manziel, but Teddy looks pro ready. Manziel - has the "it" but improv on the NFL level will be much different. I see allot of Garcia in him, and I like that. Would be happy if he was the pick.Barr - I would love a rangy long armed DE like Rice, but fear he is more 3-4 OLB than DEMack - who doesn't love a tough, mean, nasty LBer, but like Barr, can he put a hand in the dirt?Bortels - looks the part, but who wouldn't against Duke?
johnny football played Duke. Bortles played #6 Baylor.
No way dude, you are wrong......J/k....I must still be on an egg nog high....I'll shut up now.....although my point was that Bortles hasn't had the toughest schedule....not a knock he is still in my top 8.
Bridgewater Manziel/Clowney (tough decision haha)Watkins MatthewsMackBarrEbron
1. QB Blake Bortles2. LT Jake Matthews3. OLB/DE Khalil Mack4. CB Darqueze Dennard4. OLB/DE Anthony Barr6. CB Justin Gilbert7. WR Sammy Watkins8. QB Johnny Manziel9. QB Teddy Bridgewater 10. DT/DE Aaron Donald
1. QB Blake Bortles2. LT Jake Matthews3. OLB/DE Khalil Mack4. CB Darqueze Dennard4. OLB/DE Anthony Barr6. CB Justin Gilbert7. WR Sammy Watkins8. QB Johnny Manziel9. QB Teddy Bridgewater 10. DT/DE Aaron Donald
Interesting- Do you feel our need at CB is that great or do you just feel those 2 guys are so good they shouldn't be passed over?