Category: NFL Draft (Page 93 of 102)

Revisit: One-Week Ago

A week ago tonight, the Houston Texans (gasp!) did the unthinkable! They passed on arguably the best college football prospect in Reggie Bush.

Put down the shock and mayhem for a second and take what the Houston Texans did at face value: they upgraded a defensive unit that was horrendous in 2005 with the selection of Mario Williams.

The Texans finished second to last in total defense, yards given up a game and finished with an average at best 37 total sacks in ’06. They had the number one pick for a reason and with so many glaring needs, the Texans’ brass did what they had to do: addressed at least one of them by getting an immediate starter.

Houston has loads of money tied up on the offensive side of the ball. Plus with new coach and offensive minded guru Gary Kubiak now on board, their O should be able to manufacture more scoring opportunities than last year.

And hey, even if Bush is the second coming of O.J. Simpson (the football player, not the accused murderer), the Texans might be on their way to playoff appearances based on their defense and not looking back at what could have been.

Were the Jets ever serious about Leinart or Bush?

Armed with the possibility of choosing either Heisman winner A) Reggie Bush, or Heisman winner B) Matt Leinart, the NY Jets decided to go with option C) Play it safe and go with D’Brick.

Oh boy, always quick to groan about first day draft selections, the Jets faithful had to be quick to put a sour note on this one.

Or not?

D’Brickashaw Ferguson, possibly the only “safe” prospect in the entire draft, will start immediately at one of the biggest holes the Jets had to fill last weekend: offensive tackle. Ferguson will most likely be a stud and go on to have a very productive career.

But what about Leinart or Bush? Leinart would have been the air apparent to Joe Namath for New York fans and Bush would have given the Jets a star the likes of Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter.

Was there ever a possibility that the Jets would have taken Leinart or traded up for Bush?

Tannenbaum confirmed that he talked to the Saints about trading up to the second spot, but he backed off because New Orleans demanded an Eli Manning-esque package that included two first-round picks.

The Jets were impressed with Leinart in a recent private workout, but not enough to allay their concerns about his arm strength and Hollywood image. He never was a serious consideration with the fourth pick.

The Jets had their sites on the big kid from Long Island and who could blame them with their pressing need at tackle? Actually, a lot of people could blame them if Leinart turns into the next Tom Brady and the first people in line will be fans.

Leinart thrilled to a Cardinal

Former USC Trojan Matt Leinart can’t wait to be a Cardinal; even though Arizona is normally the place for high draft picks go to rot.

The list of former first round draft picks who never panned out in Arizona is long and painful. Eric Swann: bust. Tom Knight: bust. Andre Wadsworth: mega bust. Jamir Miller, Leonard Davis and Ernest Dye: bust, bust, bust.

Even if the Cardinals selected a decent pick in the first round, they either were a lost talent in Arizona (David Boston) or prospered long after they donned the red and white (Thomas Jones, Simon Rice and Garrison Hearst).
However, with recent selections of players such as Larry Fitzgerald, Antrel Rolle and to a lesser extent Bryant Johnson, the Cardinals are starting to turn their luck around. Leinart will hopefully be no exception.

Coach Dennis Green called Leinart a “gift from heaven.”

“I have only said it a couple of other times to top football players and it was true,” Green said as he introduced Leinart at club headquarters. “The circumstances and the synergy and the stars get lined up just right, and then you really get something that you really needed.”

With excitement beaming out of his head coach and Cardinal staff members, Leinart is thrilled to be in Arizona where he has the chance to turn around a franchise in major need of a face lift.

Leinart will join an offense with a receiving group that is knee deep in talent. Anquan Boldin, Fitzgerald and Johnson will provide nice big targets for Leinart once he eventually reaches the field. Also, Edgerrin James will provide Arizona with the running game that they had hoped for when they drafted J.J. Arrington, Marcel Ship and Michael Pittman.

Things are finally looking up for the Cardinals and Leinart seems to be soaking up the mountains of possibilities that await him.

Young to be groomed

Vince Young won’t have to be the Titans savor, at least not in his first year that is.

According to the Tennessean.com, Young will groom under a veteran quarterback for at least a year before his amazing athletic ability will be on full display.

“One of the challenges the staff faces is to be able to fight the temptation to play him,” Coach Jeff Fisher said. “What he can do as far as throwing the ball and running and doing those things, I haven’t seen anything like that before. “We are going to be facing the temptation to play him a lot sooner than we should. But we’re going to keep things in perspective and bring him along at a good pace.”
Young said he’s excited but is willing to wait his turn.

Which veteran quarterback Young studies under is still the primary issue as the draft is almost a week old now.

Steve McNair, the one time leader of the Titans, who advanced his squad to the Super Bowl just five seasons ago, is reportedly on his way out. McNair has been reported as saying that he has no interest in developing his future successor and would liked to be traded.

With McNair likely heading to Baltimore next season, the Titans may be forced to bring in another veteran to tutor Young. Or if no veteran were signed, Billy Volek, the 30-year-old backup who has been waiting patiently for his turn to play, would get the duties of watching over Young.

At first glance, Young going to the Titans seems to have been fairytale like. However, at further inspection, Young has just as many hurdles to jump over as any rookie QB. Young won’t learn from the best in McNair and maybe worse, has to deal with Volek.

Volek probably doesn’t like the idea of Young coming in either, since Volek has been waiting for this opportunity for a long time. How excited is Volek to have to teach a guy who eventually will send him back to backup purgatory?

N.O. celebrates as Houston reaches postmortem

As far as icons go, Reggie Bush is definitely Houston’s loss and New Orleans gain. And that’s not necessarily referring to the Texans and Saints.

As much as a city can possibly endure in one year, New Orleans has endured it. But as ESPN.com’s Len Pasquarelli reports, the city finally has a streak of light coming through the darkness, and Bush is holding the torch.

“In all my years of doing this,” said agent Joel Segal, “I’ve never seen anything like it. A standing ovation. People trying to get close to him. People chanting, ‘Reggie! Reggie!’ It was like we were at Yankee Stadium maybe 25 years ago. Man, wait until he actually gets on the field.”

The restaurant had to station an employee at Bush’s table so that he could finish his meal without fans milling around him. Lagasse came out from the kitchen to take his order (a New York strip steak, as usual) and welcome him. Bush joked that he might tell Saints officials that, as part of his contract, Emeril had to agree to be his private chef.

What’s interesting is that Mario Williams should be in this position; he should be a Saint. But would the city of New Orleans have taken the same openness with Williams?

Doubt it.

In some cases, this was meant to be and even if Bush rushes for 1,400 yards a season or 400, the city of New Orleans finally has something to celebrate again.

As for the city just one state away, they’re living in quite a different reality.

The passion a fan has for a team is hard to break. And if a team disappoints a fan, the passion is magnified. As Terrance Harris reports, for the Houston Texan fans that sat through the NFL draft, their passion turned into aggravation.

As the NFL season is coming to an end last year, fans do all but beg for the Texans to lose so they could get a shot at Bush. Then Texan fans get more acquainted with home town guy Vince Young.

Why not draft Young? David Carr hasn’t blossomed into the quarterback of their franchise, so take a shot on the electrifying Young. Young or Bush? Either way, Texan fans have reason for optimism. Then the news breaks that the Houston brass won’t take Young, because they feel they are set at QB. Okay, fine, Reggie Bush it is!

Not so fast.

Introduce: Mario Williams. Mario Williams? Mario Williams!

By far the best quote in Harris’ article was by a Houston fan named Husbaldo Artega:

“I was wondering what’s going on. Are we getting punk’d or something?” said Artega. “That’s what I thought we were getting — punk’d.”

Oh, if only Ashton Kutcher were that good.

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