Category: NFL Draft (Page 100 of 102)

Texans to Vince Young: No Thanks

Houston Texans’ general manager Charley Casserly still hasn’t decieded if his team will select Reggie Bush or Mario Williams with the first overall selection in this Saturday’s NFL Draft.

What Casserly has decieded on, however, is that his pick won’t be used on Vince Young.

“We came to the conclusion that to draft a quarterback, whether it be Vince Young, Matt Leinart or Jay Cutler, was not the best thing for this football team,” Casserly said. “The best thing for this football team was to use the first pick in this draft to add a premier player at another position.”

The fact that the Texans won’t give Young, the former Texas Longhorn, a nice homecoming isn’t all that surprising considering the new deal quarterback David Carr signed this offseason. What is somewhat surprising, however, is how Casserly has openly talked about getting out of the number one slot.

Casserly said part of the decision involved contacting other teams to see if they wanted to trade for the top pick.

“Right now we have nobody interested in that first pick, so we have gone ahead and begun negotiations with two players,” Casserly said.

For every NFL analyst and so-called guru who says Bush is a slam-dunk at No.1, might want to start rethinking his or her mock draft. How many teams actively try to get out of a draft slot when they’re sold on a player?

Not too much is guaranteed at this point with the draft a mere two days away. But at least one thing is for certain; Vince Young can stop doing all of those ad pieces saying:

“With the number one selection, the Houston Texans select, Vince Young!”

Williams over Bush?

One of the greatest debates in sports lies in the NFL draft. Even if one were to choose college play over NFL, or vice versa, nobody can argue the fun that takes place before every NFL draft. Who’s going first? Draft for need or draft the best player available? Is Mel Kiper’s hair real?

Nothing is more fun then watching the so-called experts announce their draft strategies. In Michael Smith’s case, he gives the Houston Texans a bit of advice: take N.C. State’s Mario Williams over Reggie Bush.

The Texans should take Williams because he plays the position with more impact, D-end. Good running backs come in all sizes, shapes and rounds. Great pass rushers are rare. That’s why backs don’t get paid what ends do. Look, money talks: The highest franchise and transition numbers (the average salaries of, respectively, the top five and 10 highest-paid players at each position) belong to quarterbacks, followed by ends, linebackers, offensive linemen, wide receivers and then running backs. You might even argue that cornerbacks have more value than running backs. Two years ago, Denver dealt two-time 1,500-yard rusher Clinton Portis (a second-round pick, by the way) to Washington for corner Champ Bailey. Running backs, which have the shortest career span of any position, seem to come and go, often because teams decide to let them. New Texans coach Gary Kubiak knows this, having served as offensive coordinator in Denver, where the system — the same one he’s brought with him to Houston — has produced five different 1,000-yard running backs (and a few yards short of two more last year) in Mike Shanahan’s 11 years as head coach. None of those backs was a first-rounder. So Kubiak should be able to get plenty of production, if not the home runs, out of Domanick Davis (3,195 yards in three seasons), Vernand Morency, or whomever.

Smith makes a strong case that you can find an adequate running back deep in the draft – there are plenty of examples of that. Terrell Davis, Jamal Anderson and even Willie Parker (as mentioned by Smith) have gotten their respective teams to Super Bowls.

Carolina Panther Head Coach John Fox was once criticized for taking an athletic half football, half basketball player by the name of Julius Peppers. Fox was thinking to first solidify his defense, and then get his star later. The move eventually landed Fox and the Panthers in the Super Bowl.

But that’s not to say the Texans will have the same success. And pass on Reggie Bush? Even with the recent allegations against Bush, his athletic ability alone could give opposing defensive coordinators nightmares.

Lets hope Michael Smith, err, the Houston Texans’ brass know what they’re doing.

Smoke and mirrors

Trust no one.

Fox Mulder would feel right at home as a GM in the NFL in the days leading up to the draft. Teams are pumping up players they don’t want and trying to drag down players they do. Take the Saints, who are bringing Matt Leinart in for a workout this week. Given the status of Drew Brees’ shoulder, it makes sense that they might use their #2 pick on Leinart as a backup plan. But Todd McShay has another theory [Insider subscription required]:

The Saints have been shopping their first-round pick since signing Brees, but they have not received the type of interest they had hoped for. With just two weeks left before the draft, they could be trying to drum up trade interest by courting Leinart. That would make Leinart’s workout for the Saints this week nothing more than a gigantic smokescreen to scare the Titans and Jets into trading up to get him.

The word out of Tennessee is that GM Floyd Reese’s opinion of Leinart differs with that of head coach Jeff Fisher and offensive coordinator Norm Chow. Reese appears to like Vince Young, while Fisher and Chow want Leinart. But is that all just a smokescreen as well? According to McShay, maybe:

Knowing all along that conventional wisdom would favor the Titans drafting Leinart because of his ties with Chow — USC’s offensive coordinator from 2001-04 — Reese could have expressed a preference for Young in order to throw off the Jets and keep them from cutting a deal with New Orleans to move up.

All of this posturing and out and out lying is what makes the draft so unpredictable. The Saints want to trade out of the #2 pick, but they still want OT D’Brickashaw Ferguson or DE Mario Williams, and they think they can get one of those players with the #3 or #4 pick. Whatever offers they’ve received thus aren’t up to snuff, so they bring in Leinart to get the Titans and Jets worried. The Titans, who probably want Leinart, know that the Saints probably aren’t going to take him and they want the Jets to believe that they might take Young instead, thinking that the Jets would be less likely to trade up if they thought Leinart would be there at #4.

Got that?

First round rumors

Over at ESPN.com’s Insider (subscription required), Mel Kiper has some thoughts on the early picks:

It looks like the Houston Texans will take USC running back Reggie Bush with the No. 1 overall pick. The hottest spot in the draft to make a trade will be with the New Orleans Saints and the second pick. The only team the Saints could make a trade with — and still get defensive end Mario Williams — is the New York Jets. New York could trade up from the fourth overall pick and take USC QB Matt Leinart. Tennessee, which has the third pick, would then take Texas QB Vince Young. From what I have been told, the Titans have a very high opinion of Young.

This should be a fun draft. Vince Young is the wild card. It will be very interesting to see who takes a chance on him.

Concerns about Vince Young

Phil Savage, the excellent GM of the Cleveland Browns, can speak candidly about Vince Young since the Browns are not in the market for a quarterback in the first round. Savage sums up nicely the concerns about Young’s ability to transition from the college game to the NFL game:

Savage raised some serious questions about Young’s ability to transfer his running and throwing ability to the NFL.

“I think the question on him, at least in my mind, is the fact he has operated in a shotgun offense with pretty vanilla reads, and if those reads weren’t there, he could take off and run with it,” he said. “You could do that in the NFL to a degree, but there does seem to be a little bit more structure in the league than in the college game.

“I think you would have to adjust your system, and if he came on your team you’d have to have two different offenses in a way, and I’m not sure you have time to prepare all of that. You have to be really convinced that’s what you want to do.”

He’s right on the money.

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