While we're still waiting for Jimmy Clausen to prove he's recovered from toe surgery on April 9, the heart of Pro Day season ended last week. Dez Bryant disappointed, Colt McCoy drew mixed reviews, and Sam Bradford solidified himself as the No. 1 overall pick. Draft misinformation season will get into full swing over the next three weeks, but we're beginning to feel confident that the top-five picks will go as predicted here. Barring trades, the top defensive tackles will go second and third. Elite offensive linemen are likely to go off the board quickly. A run on cornerbacks figures to occur in the mid-teens to early-20s. With just 20 days before the 2010 NFL Draft, here is our third mock of the offseason: 1. St. Louis Rams - Oklahoma QB Sam Bradford A Redskins trade up into the No. 1 spot is out of the question following the Donovan McNabb deal. A perfect fit for St. Louis' West Coast offense due to his incredible accuracy, underrated athleticism, and off-the-charts intelligence, Bradford is clearly Rams G.M. Billy Devaney's top target. 2. Detroit Lions - Nebraska DT Ndamukong Suh With both Suh and Russell Okung bound to be available, draft-day debate is inevitable in Detroit's green room. Protecting 2008 No. 1 pick Matthew Stafford should be a priority in the early rounds, but Suh offers too much value for Lions G.M. Martin Mayhew to pass. Monday's acquisition of LG Rob Sims also decreases the likelihood that Okung would be Detroit's top pick. 3. Tampa Bay Buccaneers - Oklahoma DT Gerald McCoy The Bucs would likely prefer Suh's superior run-stopping ability, but McCoy will suffice as a consensus top-three player in the draft. He'd provide an immediate upgrade over incumbent three-technique tackle Ryan Sims, who managed one sack in 16 games last season. 4. Washington Redskins - Oklahoma State OT Russell Okung The Redskins' lone offensive line addition so far has been 31-year-old journeyman Artis Hicks, who is projected to play right guard. Stephon Heyer would be Washington's left tackle if the season began today, so Mike Shanahan would be smart to draft the best pass protector available. He'll need to keep McNabb upright for Sunday night's trade to be worth it. 5. Kansas City Chiefs - Iowa OT Bryan Bulaga Coming from Kirk Ferentz's pro-style system, Bulaga's NFL-ready skill set will appeal to the Chiefs as Matt Cassel enters a make-or-break year. He's due a $7.5 million option bonus in 2011, and G.M. Scott Pioli owes Cassel a chance to succeed with the best supporting cast possible. 6. Seattle Seahawks - Rutgers OT Anthony Davis C.J. Spiller is also believed to be on Seattle's radar at No. 6, but left tackle is easily Pete Carroll's biggest need on either side of the ball, thanks to ex-G.M. Tim Ruskell's misdoings. Though Davis' offseason has not been stellar, his game tape speaks for itself. 7. Cleveland Browns - Tennessee S Eric Berry Dez Bryant might have been a consideration for president Mike Holmgren's club had he delivered a strong Pro Day. Bryant didn't, so the Browns can solidify their secondary with one of the surest prospects in this year's draft class. 8. Oakland Raiders - Oklahoma OT Trent Williams Williams is a bit of a 'tweener left/right tackle, but he's ready to start on the strong side in year one, and owner Al Davis will love his measurables. Possessing the athleticism to excel on downfield blocks, Williams is also a sensible addition because the Raiders make heavy use of zone blocking. 9. Buffalo Bills - Tennessee DT Dan Williams Buffalo's installation of a 3-4 defense won't work without a two-gapping nose tackle to clog the middle and keep offensive guards from taking Paul Posluszny and Andra Davis out of plays. Williams has Vince Wilfork-type potential at 6'2/330 with plenty of quicks and power. 10. Jacksonville Jaguars - Georgia Tech DE Derrick Morgan The Jags' arguably ill-advised signing of Aaron Kampman shouldn't prevent them from taking another pass rusher early after finishing dead last in sack differential. Kampman is recovering from a torn ACL and Jacksonville's other end, Derrick Harvey, provides next to nothing as a pocket pusher. 11. Denver Broncos - Alabama LB Rolando McClain The Broncos have used the offseason to upgrade a front seven that collapsed to embarrassing levels during last year's second half, and should keep at it. Mario Haggan is currently slated to start at "Ted" linebacker, but McClain is much better in coverage with more play-making ability. 12. Miami Dolphins - Oklahoma State WR Dez Bryant Earl Thomas and Jason Pierre-Paul should be on G.M. Jeff Ireland's radar, but Bryant would fill a glaring need in addition to being the best player available. Bryant would replace Ted Ginn Jr. at split end, with Davone Bess, Brian Hartline, and Greg Camarillo fighting for scraps at flanker and slot receiver. 13. San Francisco 49ers - Florida CB Joe Haden Haden vaulted his stock back into the top-15 range with a forty time in the mid-4.4s at the Gators' March 17 Pro Day. He would be an immediate starter opposite Shawntae Spencer in San Francisco, allowing Nate Clements to convert to safety and Tarell Brown to stay at nickel back. 14. Seattle Seahawks - Boise State CB Kyle Wilson Perhaps the draft's most NFL-ready corner as a four-year starter with the ability to play both zone and man coverage, Wilson won't get out of the top-19 picks. Currently, the Seahawks' only surefire starter in the secondary is CB Marcus Trufant, who's coming off an awful season. 15. New York Giants - Idaho OG Mike Iupati The Giants have a better roster than any team that went .500 or worse in 2009, but their front five declined sharply. Iupati's addition would deservedly push LG Rich Seubert to the bench with William Beatty taking over at left tackle and David Diehl replacing Kareem McKenzie on the right. 16. Tennessee Titans - South Florida DE Jason Pierre-Paul The consensus among evaluators at the Combine and Pierre-Paul's Pro Day was that his best position is end in a 4-3. He offers outrageous upside at 6'5/270 with 4.6 speed and a mammoth wingspan, and the Titans don't have a viable in-house replacement for Kyle Vanden Bosch. 17. San Francisco 49ers - Clemson RB C.J. Spiller Spiller deserves to go earlier, but top-15 selections are rarely used on tailbacks, let alone those that don't project to be every-down, 300-carry runners. Spiller would upgrade San Francisco's return units tremendously, and de facto G.M. Trent Baalke has publicly spoken of drafting him. 18. Pittsburgh Steelers - Alabama CB Kareem Jackson Jackson was overshadowed by Javier Arenas in Nick Saban's 3-4 defense, but started all three years and ran in the mid- to low-4.4s at the Scouting Combine. Jackson is squarely on the first-round radar, and Pittsburgh's biggest weakness is at cornerback. 19. Atlanta Falcons - Missouri LB Sean Weatherspoon The Falcons weren't pleased with Stephen Nicholas' play on the strong side last year, and weak-side 'backer Mike Peterson turns 34 in a couple of months. A tackle machine and proven play-maker, Weatherspoon would be an upgrade over either adjacent to Curtis Lofton. 20. Houston Texans - Fresno State RB Ryan Mathews Mathews' incredible combination of size, speed, balance, and power compares favorably to that of any running back in the draft. With tons of experience running behind zone blocks under Bulldogs coach Pat Hill, Mathews would also have a smooth transition into Gary Kubiak's scheme. 21. Cincinnati Bengals - Texas S Earl Thomas The Bengals are high on Taylor Mays, but a safety of Thomas' caliber will be more difficult to pass on if he falls out of the top 20. Thomas is superior to Mays in terms of ball skills, range, hip fluidity, and man-to-man cover ability.
22. New England Patriots - Georgia Tech WR Demaryius Thomas Not only do the Pats need receiver help this year, but Randy Moss is 33 years old, entering a contract season, and doesn't expect to re-sign with New England. Thomas, who averaged 25.1 yards per catch last year, is perhaps this draft's most dangerous vertical threat. 23. Green Bay Packers - USC OT Charles Brown G.M. Ted Thompson did well to re-sign Chad Clifton last month, but the longtime Packers left tackle turns 34 before the season and is highly unlikely to hold up for 16 games. Brown fits the mold of a Green Bay lineman with long arms and ideal athleticism for zone blocking. 24. Philadelphia Eagles - Florida State CB Patrick Robinson Philadelphia was highly dissatisfied with its 2009 secondary play, so much so that starting CBs Sheldon Brown and Asante Samuel were both made available for trade. With Brown now officially in Cleveland, Robinson would at least push for playing time in the nickel package, and perhaps start over Ellis Hobbs if he comes along quickly. 25. Baltimore Ravens - Penn State DE Jared Odrick New addition Cory Redding was initially billed as a likely starter in Baltimore, but the injury-prone underachiever would be better suited to coming off the bench. Odrick, the 2009 Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, has a better chance to make an impact as a two-gapping, five-technique end with the ability to collapse the pocket. 26. Arizona Cardinals - Oklahoma TE Jermaine Gresham The Cards figure to consider Sergio Kindle and Brandon Graham, but the former doesn't display ideal initial burst, and the latter is on the squatty side for a 3-4 edge rusher. With Arizona moving to a more run-oriented offense, a tight end like Gresham with in-line blocking experience and pro-ready pass-catching skills is needed. 27. Dallas Cowboys - Florida DE Carlos Dunlap The Cowboys assigned a mere original pick tender to restricted free agent Marcus Spears, confirming that they're not especially thrilled with the middling former first-rounder's performance. Dunlap needs a kick in the rear from time to time, but projects as a far superior pass rusher. 28. San Diego Chargers - Alabama DT Terrence Cody San Diego's most glaring need is at tailback, but G.M. A.J. Smith is unlikely to deem one worthy of this pick barring an unexpected slide by Spiller or Mathews. Nose tackle is next up on the Bolts' list of weaknesses, and Cody is a monster in the middle at 6'4/350. 29. New York Jets - Texas DE Sergio Kindle Kindle's times in the ten-yard split (1.65, 1.70) leave something to be desired, but his versatility will particularly appeal to hybrid defensive teams like the Jets. Kindle was productive throughout his career and has experience at defensive end, multiple linebacker positions, and on special teams. 30. Minnesota Vikings - Notre Dame QB Jimmy Clausen We're holding firm to our prediction that Clausen – deservedly, or undeservedly -- is in for a draft-day slide. Minnesota would be an ideal situation if he does last until the 30s, however, as a year on the bench behind Brett Favre would humble Clausen and set him up to take over in 2011. 31. Indianapolis Colts - Michigan DE Brandon Graham Unlike teams that use the 3-4 defense, the Colts are bigger on production than measurables when it comes to pass rushers. Graham's short arms and sub-6'2" height won't turn off club president Bill Polian, who witnessed in the Super Bowl how thin his team is becoming at defensive end. 32. New Orleans Saints - USC DE Everson Griffen Griffen is being criticized as a workout wonder after managing just eight sacks in 2009 before dominating drills at the Combine and his Pro Day. However, Griffen did pace USC in the statistic, and last year's 9-4 Trojans failed to generate as many pass-rushing opportunities as usual. Just Missed: TCU DE Jerry Hughes, UCLA DT Brian Price, Rutgers CB Devin McCourty, USC S Taylor Mays, Notre Dame WR Golden Tate, Virginia CB Chris Cook, Florida C Maurkice Pouncey, Northwestern DE Corey Wootton, Cal RB Jahvid Best, TCU LB Daryl Washington, Illinois WR Arrelious Benn, UMass OT Vladimir Ducasse, Iowa CB Amari Spievey, USC WR Damian Williams, Maryland OT Bruce Campbell, Georgia Tech RB Jonathan Dwyer, Clemson DE Ricky Sapp, Arizona TE Rob Gronkowski, LSU S Chad Jones, Cincinnati WR Mardy Gilyard, Florida TE Aaron Hernandez, Texas QB Colt McCoy Many interesting picks.Especially, Anthony Davis at #6 ,Dan Williams to Buffalo over Clausen, and Jets going Kindle over Graham. Very Interesting Draft though.
Anthony Davis a #6 is embarrassingly stupid. the rest is fine. what I've learned every year is that no matter what mock drafts say, they are never correct on draft day. The "final mocks" the night before never get the top 5 right.
It's not that stupid. A ton of scouts are incredibly high on Anthony Davis. He's arguably the best all-around tackle in this draft. The only thing holding him back is his attitude. After Okung and Bulaga, I can definitely see Davis being the next tackle drafted. If this kid gets his head on straight, he'll be the best tackle in this class.
Aside from the Skins, those top 7 teams are "high character" teams. Davis is probably off their board if they do pick that high. The Raiders, however, would take Davis. He's their kind of guy.
Yeah really dont understand that either? I mean i guess there saying Graham's short arms are whats driving the Jets away and maybe there not Rutgers fans but Robinson and Jackson have no where near the potential McCourty has. The Pats getting Thomas scares the shit out of me. He'd be exceptional within a few years in that Patriot Offense with Brady throwing too him
Kindle would be a terrific pick. Not sure that we would have taken him over Graham, though. When TF did Kareem Jackson become a top-20 pick??
I would love to see Clausen fall to our spot. Should make it easy for us to trade back, I'm sure more than one team would try to prevent him from going to Minn.
The thought of Clausen falling and putting us in a possible trade down scenario is crazy. No one saw this coming 2 months ago.( If he gets past Buffalo, watch out)
Does anyone actually think Clausen could plummet to 30? If Kindle and Graham were both available at our pick I'd be flabbergasted. Either would be nice, but I'd prefer Graham.
I thought it could happen 2 months ago and was laughed at by some guru's. Shanahan is a pretty good judge of QB talent and basically just took a pass on building his club around Clausen.
They just gave up 3 picks, have to give McNabb a new deal(his contract is up this year),desperately need a Oline help and still have Jason Campbell, who quietly had a good 2nd half of the season. Don't see it happening.
Campbell is a RFA that hasn't signed his tender yet I can see them rescinding that now or trading him. And it was 2 picks a 2nd this year and conditional (3 or 4) next year. Though I agree they should go for Oline but Shanahan might want someone to develop.