1. Texans: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
2. Bears: Will Anderson, EDGE, Alabama
This is a blog primarily dedicated to sports, but I will also talk about what is on my mind once in awhile. Also, two of my good friends, Paul and Alex, have an MLB blog. You guys should all go check it out at http://715sports.blogspot.com/
1. Texans: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
2. Bears: Will Anderson, EDGE, Alabama
This has been a bad performance this season by the Packers. There will be a lot of changes this offseason and the draft is a part of that. Here is my current Packers mock draft as of now:
1) Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern
This would be cool, as Peter’s grandfather Bob, was a guy cog on the
offensive line during the Lombardi years. The Packers may have found a right
tackle of the future in Yosh Njiman, but they very easily could want an
upgrade. Even if they do really like Yosh at right tackle, the team is in cap
hell next season at about $30 mil over the cap. David Bakhtiari is aging and
extremely expensive and could be a cap casualty. I see the Packers taking one
or two offensive linemen in the draft with one of the picks being high. Skoronski
is a big-time offensive tackle prospect and would be a starter from day one.
If the Packers can’t get Michael
Mayer, Darnell Washington is a good consolation prize. If only the Packers
could trade tight end rooms with Georgia. Green Bay also loves taking Georgia
guys, having taken Eric Stokes, Quay Walker and Devonte Wyatt in the first
round the past two seasons. He has a great combination of size and speed. While
he has potential as a pass catcher, he really will make his mark as a blocker.
As for the Packers tight end room, everyone is a free agent outside of Josiah
Deguara. I like Marcedes Lewis as a blocker, but he is old. Washington could
fit right in as a blocker. I like Big Bob Tonyan, but he is not really starting
caliber and his 2020 season looks more like a fluke. I do think he has a role
on this team if he wants to come back on the cheap, though. Washington could
come in and grow along with Christian Watson and Romeo Doubs and form a
formidable passing attack for the Green & Gold.
3) 3) Josh Downs, WR, North Carolina
The Packers could use another wide
receiver in addition to picking Washington. Green Bay drafted three receivers
last year—Christian Watson, Romeo Doubs and Samori Toure—all of whom have a future
on the team. Those three are also the only wide receivers under contract for
2023. While Aaron Rodgers may want both Allen Lazard and Randall Cobb back,
they don’t really move the needle and the organization may want to go in a
different direction. I think another year in the system for those three will be
huge, but they could use one more weapon. Due to his slight frame (5-10, 171),
he will likely be relegated to slot receiver in the NFL. Considering Watson and
Doubs are outside receivers, this makes sense. He is explosive and was very productive
at UNC. One downside would be his blocking would need to improve and the
Packers like to draft receivers who can block.
4) 4) Devon Achane, RB, Texas A&M
You might be thinking “why a
running back?” Well, despite being the best playmaker on a struggling Packers
offense, Aaron Jones may very easily be a cap casualty because they did his
contract where the team could easily move on from him after two years. With
Green Bay in cap hell, Jones very easily could be moved on from. If so, then
Achane would fill in as the lightning to AJ Dillon’s thunder. To quote the
remake of The Longest Yard, he’s so fast, he makes fast people look not fast.
He could find himself in day two territory, though, so this could be wishful
thinking.
5) 5) Ji'Ayir Brown, S, Penn State
Another possible wishful thinking
pick. Brown could come in and contribute right away. Green Bay’s safety play
this season has been so abysmal. Unfortunately, Darnell Savage’s fifth year
option was picked up and he has been awful this season and Adrian Amos’ play
has fallen off a cliff. Rudy Ford has been a savior of sorts at safety. He makes
plays every game. Still, a running mate for Ford (if he is a starter for the
future) because one is desperately needed.
7a) Trey Palmer, WR, Nebraska
Palmer, a transfer from LSU,
recently declared for the NFL Draft. He has a ton of talent and has had one of
the best seasons in Nebraska history at wide receiver. He does most of his
damage in the slot, which is what the Packers could use. All Green Bay has
under contract for next year are the three rookies from the 2021 draft class.
It wouldn’t surprise me to see multiple receivers taken. He does need to correct
his drops, though, as he has a 14 percent drop way, which is obviously way too
high and will push him to day three. If that can be corrected, he could be a
really good receiver.
7b) Cory Durden, DL, North Carolina
State
Green Bay always takes a defensive
lineman at some point in the draft. You can never have too many defensive linemen.
They also need to find someone who can stop the run. I like Reed, but he is a
free agent. Devonte Wyatt will hopefully be better in year two. Kenny Clark should
be back to being the man.
7c) Sav'ell Smalls, EDGE,
Washington
The Packers should take an EDGE at
some point too. I like what I have seen from last year’s draft pick Kingsley
Enagbare and Rashan Gary emerged into one of the league’s best pass rushers
before his injury. He won’t be himself for a bit after coming back, so another
EDGE is a must. They could take one higher than the last pick in the draft, but
it will depend on how the board falls.
Bobby Hurley, Arizona State (160-120, 3 NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: HM
Anthony Grant, Dayton (295-162, 3 NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: HM
Kevin Willard, Maryland (270-210, 5 NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: 20
Ben Jacobsen, Northern Iowa (321-201, 4 NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: 19
Steve Alford, Nevada (557-309, 11 NCAA Tournament
appearances, 4 Sweet 16s)—previous: 18
Todd Golden, Florida (57-36, 1 NCAA Tournament appearance)—previous:
N/A
Fran McCaffery, Iowa (493-339, 11 NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: N/A
Dan Hurley, UConn (224-152, 3 NCAA Tournament appearances)—previous:
N/A
Leon Rice, Boise State (244-144, 3 NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: N/A
Penny Hardaway, Memphis (85-43, 1 NCAA Tournament
appearance)—previous: N/A
20. Matt McMahon, LSU (154-67, 3 NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: N/A
Matt McMahon is in his first year with LSU after coming over
from a successful stint at Murray State where he led the Racers to a 154-67
record with three trips to the NCAA Tournament, including twice making it to
the second round. He took over for Steve Prohm, who left for Iowa State, and
elevated the program even further. He is coming off a season in which he led
Murray State to 31 wins before being upset by giant killers St. Peter’s in the
second round. It will be interesting to see how he does down on the bayou. The
Tigers are coming off a season where they were a No. 6 seed in the NCAA
Tournament.
19. Steve Pikiell, Rutgers (290-247, three NCAA
Tournament appearances)—previous: 17
Perhaps it is a bit unfair to actually move Pikiell down
on this list since he led Rutgers to another really good season. After leading
Stony Brook to at least 20 wins in six of his last seven seasons and an NCAA
Tournament appearance, he came to a program that hadn’t been to the NCAA
Tournament since 1991. He had three below .500 seasons with Rutgers to start
his career, but then it all came together. Pikiell would have led the Knights
to three consecutive tournament berths if COVID hadn’t halted play in 2020,
which has not happened in program history. As a matter of fact, Rutgers had
only once made back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances (1975-76) before making
it the past two seasons.
18. Jamie Dixon, TCU (445-207, 13 NCAA Tournament
appearances, two Sweet 16s, one Elite 8)—previous: 15
It was tough moving Dixon as well, as he led TCU to a second-round
appearance, where the Horned Frogs nearly, and perhaps should have, upset
top-seeded Arizona. The dominant 69-42 win over Seton Hall in the first round
was the first victory in the Big Dance since 1987. He took over a dormant
program after Trent Johnson couldn’t win in his four years with the program. TCU
only had one winning season and was a combined 8-64 in conference play, never
finishing higher than ninth in the conference under Johnson. Prior to Dixon,
TCU had not made either the NCAA Tournament or NIT since 2005, and not made the
Big Dance this millennium. He has led his alma mater to four 20-win seasons
with two trips to the NCAA Tournament. One thing he does need to do, though, is
finish above .500 in the Big 12, something he has not done quite yet.
17. Mike Brey, Notre Dame (571-311, 15 NCAA Tournament
appearances, one Sweet 16, two Elite 8s)—previous: 12
Another coach who was moved down despite a very successful
season. Brey’s Fighting Irish won 24 games, the most the program has won since
winning 26 in 2016-17. They also won an NCAA Tournament game for the first time
since that season as well, defeating Rutgers in double overtime in the First
Four and upsetting Alabama in the first round before falling to Texas Tech. Unfortunately,
in his 22 seasons in South Bend, he has advanced past the first weekend just
three times and time may be running out for him to get that elusive Final Four
appearance.
16. Mike White, Georgia (243-128, four NCAA Tournament
appearances, one Elite 8)—previous: 9
I think Mike White saw the writing on the wall that he was
in a do-or-die season at Florida, so he bolted to Georgia, a place where there
is no pressure because nobody really cares about basketball there. I mean,
their football team is the national champs and is off to a great start in 2022
as well, so that is understandable. After starting out his career with the
Gators with four consecutive seasons with at least 20 wins, he has yet to crack
that mark in his last three. He came from Louisiana Tech, where he found plenty
of success. In his final three years with Louisiana Tech, he led the Bulldogs
to 83 wins and a conference title all three years. However, he could not get
his team over the hump and into the Big Dance and had to settle for the NIT all
three seasons.
15. Randy Bennett, St. Mary’s (480-200, nine NCAA
Tournament appearances, one Sweet 16)—previous: 16
Bennett is kind of in an uphill climb to reach the Final
Four being at a school like St. Mary’s. He led the Gaels to a tremendous 26-8
season, reaching the second round of the tournament for the fourth time in his
tenure after destroying Indiana. He also led them to an upset of Gonzaga to
finish the regular season. Bennett took over a woeful St. Mary’s program and
has turned it into a powerful program, but I have a hard time seeing him take
St. Mary’s to the Final Four, so unless he goes to another program, I think he
may be on this list for awhile.
14. Ed Cooley, Providence (313-210, 6 NCAA Tournament
appearances, 1 Sweet 16)—previous: N/A
A new entrance to the list, Ed Cooley has done a masterful
job at Providence. After having a number of seasons of around 20 wins, Cooley
had his breakout season this past year, leading the Friars to a 27-8 record and
14-3 mark in conference play. In his first five tournament appearances, his
team only advanced past the first round once, but made it to the second weekend
in 2022 and put a scare into eventual national champion Kansas and actually had
the lead with under six minutes to play. Only time will tell if this was a
one-year wonder for Cooley or if he has something brewing.
13. Brian Dutcher, San Diego State (119-40, three NCAA
Tournament appearances)—previous: 13
Dutcher took over for Steve Fisher in 2017 and has not
skipped a beat. He has averaged nearly 24 wins a season in his five years but
has not yet made it past the first round. Granted, his team finished 30-2 with
Malachi Flynn in 2019-20, but the tournament was cancelled. But still, the team
was a No. 6 seed twice and a No. 8 seed in the NCAA Tournament and has still not
won a game in the Big Dance. You can never say never, but his at his age (62)
after being an assistant under Fisher for so many years at Michigan and SDSU,
it may be tough to reach the Final Four without taking another job. He was
rumored to be in the running for a job at his alma mater (Minnesota), but
ultimately Ben Johnson got that job.
12. Nate Oats, Alabama (157-79, five NCAA Tournament
appearances, one Sweet 16)—previous: 14
After a fantastic second season at Alabama, his third season
saw his team go just 19-14 and get bounced in the first round of the tournament
by Notre Dame. After leading Buffalo to 59 wins and two NCAA Tournament
appearances his final two seasons there, the Watertown, Wis., native, left for
Alabama, where he guided the Tide to the Sweet 16 in 2021 for the first time
since 2004. Still just 47 years old, he has a chance to make his way off this
list in the next several years.
11. Andy Enfeld, USC (224-146, 5 NCAA Tournament
appearances, one Sweet 16, one Elite 8)—previous: N/A
I admit, I did not like USC’s hire of Enfeld when he was
brought in by the Trojans in 2013. I thought he was just a product of one great,
lucky, run by Florida Gulf Coast. But he took over a program that had just 20
wins in the previous two seasons, but he got to work and turned the program around.
After two subpar seasons to begin his tenure, he has won at least 20 games in
six of his last seven seasons, including a combined 51 his past two seasons. He
led the Trojans to the Elite 8 in 2021, losing to UCLA. As a No. 10 seed this
past season, his team was bounced by Miami by two. His program was close in
2021, so I wouldn’t put it past him to take a step further sometime.
10. Juwan Howard, Michigan (61-32, two NCAA Tournament
appearances, one Sweet 16, one Elite 8)—previous: 7
Mike Tyson…..errrr…..Juwan Howard led his team to the Sweet
16 as a No. 11 seed. He led the Wolverines a conference championship and trip
to the Elite 8 in 2021, but that is the only season in his three coached that his
team finished higher than seventh in the Big Ten standings. Taking over for a
legend in Jon Beilein is no easy task. Hunter Dickinson comes back, which will
help him. It will be interesting to see if he has another season like he had in
2020-21 if he decides to stay at his alma mater or if he takes his talent to
the NBA.
9. Buzz Williams, Texas A&M (300-192, eight NCAA
Tournament appearances, three Sweet 16s, one Elite 8)—previous: 6
Following two subpar seasons in his first two years in
College Station, his team finally broke out last year. While his team didn’t
make the tournament, his team did finish 27-13 and probably should have made
the dance. With Virginia Tech, he led the Hokies to the Sweet 16 for the first
time since 1966-67 and nearly knocked off Duke. Before Virginia Tech, he
averaged more than 23 wins per season with Marquette and made the Sweet 16
twice and an Elite 8. The former Mike McConathy assistant certainly has the
Aggies on the right track and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him reach the
Final Four at some point.
8. Tommy Lloyd, Arizona (33-4, one NCAA Tournament
appearance, one Sweet 16)—previous: N/A
I put Tommy this high since he led Arizona to a No. 1 seed
and a Sweet 16 appearance in his first season. I “only” put him at No. 8
because it is his first season and he’ll need a few more good seasons to show
this was not a fluke. With that being said, the program was in a bit of turmoil
when Sean Miller was fired. All Tommy Lloyd did was lead the Wildcats to a conference
regular season and tournament title and a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. He
was looked at as a rising star in the coaching profession at Gonzaga and the
possible heir apparent once Mark Few retired. It just seems like it is a matter
of time before he reaches the Final Four. I will say, though, I said that about
Sean Miller a number of times, so we’ll see.
7. Greg Gard, Wisconsin (144-78, five NCAA Tournament
appearances, two Sweet 16s)—previous: 10
For the second time in three seasons, Greg Gard led the
Wisconsin Badgers to a regular season Big Ten championship. This time, it was
on an incredible banked in 3-pointer from Chucky Hepburn. Unfortunately, the
NCAA Tournament success hasn’t followed. After Hepburn got hurt against Iowa
State, Wisconsin lost in the second round of the tournament. However, if he
keeps having regular season success, the postseason success will eventually
come. I mean, his predecessor Bo Ryan didn’t go to the Final Four until 2014
and he had been coaching at UW since 2001-02. Most of the time, the Badgers
didn’t even advance to the second weekend. It will be interesting to see how
the Badgers perform without First Team All-American and Big Ten Player of the
Year Johnny Davis.
6. Brad Underwood, Illinois (203-93, six NCAA Tournament
appearances)—previous: 8
It was another successful regular season for Underwood, leading
Illinois to a conference regular season title, tying with Wisconsin, after
earning the conference tournament crown in 2021. But unfortunately, like most
of his buddies from the Big Ten, fell short in the NCAA Tournament, as Illinois
lost in the second round for the second consecutive season. After an incredible
run at Stephen F. Austin in which he led the Lumberjacks to an 89-14 record and
an incredible 53-1 conference record, he led the Oklahoma State Cowboys to the
tournament in 2017. It feels like just a matter of time for Underwood to break
through, although I say it with a lot of the coaches on this list. It will be a
bit more difficult without All-American Kofi Cockburn.
5. Chris Holtmann, Ohio State (221-141, seven NCAA
Tournament appearances, one Sweet 16)—previous: 4
Holtmann makes it three straight from the Big Ten. Holtmann
has always had good seasons with the Buckeyes, but not many standout seasons.
His OSU team was a No. 2 seed, despite going just 21-10, in 2021 and lost to
Oral Roberts in the first round. Under his watch, the Buckeyes have only won
more than 21 games once, and that was his first season (he has coached five at
OSU). He came to the Buckeyes from Butler, where he was hired to take over for
a Butler legend in Brad Stevens. Holtmann was 70-31 in three seasons and
reached the Sweet 16 in 2017. His overall record is a little deceiving, as he
turned around a Gardner-Webb program that had not had a winning record since
2005-06. In his first two seasons with the Runnin’ Bulldogs, they went 23-41
and did not finish higher than ninth in the Big South. However, in his third
season, he led them to a 21-13 record and a berth in the CIT.
4. Leonard Hamilton, Florida State (617-452, 11 NCAA
Tournament appearances, four Sweet 16s, one Elite 8)—previous: 3
After five really good seasons at Florida State, he had a
bit of a down year, one in which the Seminoles were just 17-14 and came in
eighth place in the ACC. But this doesn’t take away from what he has
accomplished in the past five years. The
Seminoles made it to the second weekend the three NCAA Tournaments prior to 2021-22.
At 74, he is the oldest coach on the list and it seems like he is getting
better with age. His head coaching career began in 1986 with Oklahoma State,
and he lasted four seasons with a 47 percent winning percentage. He went to
Miami for 10 years, turning around the program, and making the NCAA Tournament
his final three seasons with the Hurricanes. In 2002-03, he went to Tallahassee
and turned things around. In 2018, he led them to their first Elite 8 in 25
years. One must wonder how many years he has left in him.
3. Eric Musselman, Arkansas (183-62, five NCAA Tournament
appearances, one Sweet 16, two Elite 8s)—previous: 5
Musselman has improved every year he has been Arkansas. This
past season, he led the Razorbacks to a 28-9 record and trip to the Elite 8 for
the second straight season, falling to top-seeded Duke. Musselman came to
Fayetteville after beginning his collegiate head coaching career at Nevada. In
his first season there, he rebuilt the Wolfpack after a 9-22 season. He led
Nevada to a 15-win increase in 2015-16 and a CBI championship. In his next
three seasons, he led them to three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances and
a berth in the Sweet 16 in 2018. Musselman has proven he is worthy of this job
and may exit this list sooner rather than later.
2. Matt Painter, Purdue (409-197, 14 NCAA Tournament
appearances, five Sweet 16s, one Elite 8)—previous: 2
At some point Matt Painter will lead his Boilermakers to a
Final Four, right? In 2022, everything seemed to be rolling his way. In his
bracket, No. 2 Kentucky lost in the first round, No. 1 Baylor lost in the
second round and No. 4 UCLA lost in the Sweet 16. The Boilers had to beat No.
15 St. Peter’s and No. 8 North Carolina to reach the elusive Final Four. But
Purdue was upset by three against St. Peter’s. Everything seemed to be there
for them and the Boilers blew it. But on the bright side, people thought the
same about Tony Bennett after his Cavaliers lost blowing a double-digit lead to
Syracuse in the Elite 8 in 2016. Three years later, the Cavs won it all. People
were saying the same stuff about Bennett that they’re saying about Painter
right now. His time will eventually come.
1. 1. Sean Miller, Xavier (278-133, nine NCAA Tournament appearances, three Sweet 16s, one Elite 8)—previous: N/A
From 2017-20, Sean Miller took home the top spot on this
list. After not coaching last year, he relinquished the top spot. Now, after he
is back with Xavier, he re-claims the dubious top spot on this list. Before being
fired by Arizona, he was a monster there, going 302-109 in 12 seasons, winning
at least 30 games four times. It seems like he is snake bit, however. Going to
four Elite 8s and not winning one will make it seem that way. It does not help
that two of the best teams Miller has had ran into Frank Kaminsky in the Elite
8. At some point, though, Miller will break through, you’d think. It is a
mystery how he has yet to reach the Final Four. I know I have been saying this
for awhile, but it is just a matter of time for him, but it became tougher at a
program like Xavier than it was at Arizona.
I have not done one since last season and since we are done with the first few waves of free agency and the Green Bay Packers have been able to re-sign key pieces (Rasul Douglas, DeVondre Campbell) and of course, made the big trade of Devonte Adams to Las Vegas. So here we go, my Packers mock draft, which will without a doubt be way off…
1a. Chris Olave, WR, Ohio State
Green Bay’s need for a wide receiver has been
well-documented, as has its tendency to shy away from taking that position in
round one. The last time the Packers took a wide receiver in the first round
was Javon Walker in 2002. But they are in desperate need of some weapons
without Adams. As of right now, they have Randall Cobb, Allen Lazard and Amari
Rodgers…..and then not much else. While the Packers won’t reach to grab one
just to grab one, I do expect them to take at least one with their four top 60
picks….and maybe two.
Chris Olave would be a big-time get at No. 22 for the
Packers. He had a tremendous combine and had a great career at Ohio State. He
is a good athlete who is a great route runner. Olave had 936 yards receiving with
13 touchdowns.
1b. David Ojabo, EDGE, Michigan
One big question would be….would an Ohio State and Michigan co-exist
if they were each first round picks by Green Bay? All kidding aside, with the
release of Za’darius Smith and retirement of Whitney Mercilus, the Packers are
in desperate need of an edge rusher. If Rashan Gary or Preston Smith were to
get hurt, they would be screwed. One could argue that the team’s biggest need
is an edge rusher.
Ojabo was a top 10 pick before he suffered a torn Achilles
last month at Michigan’s pro day. He comes with a major risk, but the upside at
the back end of the first would be too good to pass up. The last Michigan edge
rusher they drafted has turned out pretty well, eh?
2a. George Pickens, WR, Georgia
I admit, they would have to trade up for him or draft him at
28. His draft stock has gained a lot of steam recently and could very easily go
in the first round. But he would be a perfect player for the Packers to draft. If
the Packers drafted two wide receivers early, it would not shock me. Going into
the season with Olave, Pickens, Cobb, Rodgers and Lazard would make me feel
more comfortable about the position than I do now.
I am a HUGE fan of Pickens and think he could end up becoming
the best wide receiver in the draft class. Early in the 2021 practices, he
suffered an ACL tear, but he came back to play in the final few games of the
season, including making a huge impact in the championship game win over
Alabama. He is a physical receiver who can high-point the ball effectively and
could be a huge weapon for the reigning MVP.
2b. DeMarvin Leal, DL, Texas A&M
Leal is another guy who may not be available late in the
second, but I would love it if he is. For as long as I can remember, everybody
has be shouting from the rooftops to get Kenny Clark some help. TJ Slaton, last
year’s mid-rounder, came on at the end of last season and has become a solid
rotational piece.
With the signing of Jarran Reed, the Packers have Clark,
Reed, Slaton and Lowry, but no one outside of Clark really strikes fear into
the hearts of opponents. Leal could make this one scary defense, even more than
it already is. He has a ton of talent and the Packers could try to reach in and
try and turn him into a star and finally get a stud next to Kenny.
3. Isaiah Likely, TE, Coastal Carolina
The Packers have tried and tried to find a tight end, both
via the draft and free agency. Jimmy Graham and Jace Sternberger flopped.
Josiah Deguara hasn’t developed as much as the Packers would hop, granted some
of that is due to injury. Robert Tonyan is coming off an ACL tear and will likely
miss some action early in the season. Even with him, they re-signed him to a
1-year deal. The Packers have some depth at the position, but no “alpha dog” on
the team and they haven’t one of those at the position since Jermichael Finley.
He is a good athlete and is a very good receiving tight end,
as evidenced by his 59 catches for 912 yards and 12 scores for the Chanticleers.
4a. Dominique Robinson, EDGE, Miami (OH)
The Packers will need to come away with multiple wide
receivers and multiple edge rushers in the draft. If both pan out, fantastic.
You can never have too many edge rushers. Another thing is that Ojabo might not
be full strength quite yet with the Achilles injury. Like I mentioned under
Ojabo, if Rashan Gary or Preston Smith were to get hurt, they would be screwed.
More edge rushers the merrier.
Robinson is a developmental prospect, as he was a wide receiver
as recent as 2019. But with development, he could become a major threat rushing
the passer. He is a tremendous athlete, so he has good measurables to work
with, which could help him become a terrific edge.
4b. Rasheed Walker, OT, Penn State
The Packers are in need of an offensive tackle. Right now,
Green Bay has a major hole at right tackle with the release of Billy Turner.
They could still bring back Dennis Kelly, but they have not as of this moment.
Also, David Bakhtiari is coming back from a torn ACL suffered late in the 2020
season and if he can’t come back to All-Pro Dave, they will need a left tackle.
Offensive tackle is right up there with edge rusher and wide receiver as the
team’s biggest need. Fortunately, this is a deep tackle class.
He would likely stay at right tackle or move inside to play
guard in the NFL. If they take him here, they’d want him to play tackle. Even
though they let Lucas Patrick walk, they have drafted a number of interior
linemen the past two drafts to take his place.
5. Matt Henningsen, DL, Wisconsin
You just knew I would have the Packers taking a former
Badger, didn’t you? Just like you can never have too many edge rushers, you can
never have too many defensive linemen as well. Henningsen is super strong and
athletic, not to mention is tremendous against the run. On the third day, he has
upside to come in and be a rotational piece on the defensive line. A rotation
of Clark, Lowry, Leal, Reed Lancaster and Henningsen had the potential to be a
weapon.
7a. Cobie Durant, CB, South Carolina State
Yet another position that you can never have enough of is
cornerback. I admit, I love this dude’s name, but he is also a very talented prospect.
The Packers have depth at the position after retaining Rasul Douglas. With
Douglas, Jaire Alexander and Eric Stokes, the Packers have depth at the
position. However, with the departure of Chandon Sullivan to Minnesota, Green
Bay needs a slot cornerback. Jaire can play it, but they prefer him on the
outside. He is a small cornerback, which probably would relegates him to slot
duties in the NFL and push him into the later rounds. Cobie is also an older
prospect, which the Packers don’t necessarily pick often. Durant is versatile,
having played both cornerback and safety and played…..wait for it……all throughout
special teams for SCSU. He has terrific athleticism, instincts and ball skills.
He could be a steal at this point.
7b. Tyler Goodson, RB, Iowa
It would not surprise me to see Green Bay take a running
back and maybe stash him on the practice squad for a year or maybe play him for
a bit while Kylin Hill recovers from his injury. Also, I don’t anticipate Aaron
Jones being on the team in 2023, so picking a player to help replace him would be
such a Packers-type move. He is a talented back who could stand to sit a year
to refine his skillset at the position, but he does have the tools.
7c. Aqeel Glass, QB, Alabama State
Green Bay should always go back to the Ron Wolf strategy of
taking a quarterback every year. Doing that, he drafted solid starters or
quality backups like Ty Detmer (1992), Mark Brunell (1993), Matt Hasselbeck
(1998) and Aaron Brooks (1999), all of whom were drafted in the fourth round or
later. Even with Aaron Rodgers and Jordan Love, it is never bad to keep a
developmental quarterback on the roster. I like Kurt Benkert, but he’ll be 27
by the time the new season rolls around and has his limitations. Glass has
ideal measurements as a quarterback and has a big, strong arm. One thing that
could keep the Packers from drafting him is his hand size since they like quarterbacks
with big hands to be able to grip the ball in the cold…..and Glass’ hands definitely
do not fit that mold.