In and Out On Jalen Hurts
A little over 16 months ago, Nov 17, 2020. Jalen Hurts shocked the New Orleans Saints in his first NFL start, by leading the Philadelphia Eagles to a 24–21 win.
Once upon a time, everyone was “in” on Jalen Hurts. The future at the QB position seemed to be bright. The fan base was excited and energized.
That Eagles win over the Saints, mathematically, gave them an opportunity for a playoff run. The city was behind the Birds, and Jalen. The fans were ready to anoint Hurts the toast of the town. I would read tweets claiming “Hurts is my QB” “Hurts QB1” etc. The Eagles ended the 2020 season with optimism.
Most fans and radio talking heads couldn’t wait to get rid of Carson Wentz. When he was dealt away to the Colts, most everyone rejoiced. That lasted less than a year.
During the offseason the Eagles underwent a massive overhaul. A new head coach, new offensive coordinator, new defensive coordinator and many more new faces all over the organization. With the new faces came new philosophies, and new systems (Jalen’s 6th system in 6 years, all the way back to High School *stat per Reuben Franks).
At the start of 2021, and coming off a 4 win season, most fans didn’t think the Eagles would win more than 6 games. The understanding was that with new coaches, and a first year starting QB, comes a lot of growing pains.
Remember when newly drafted QB’s sat on the sidelines for 2 or more years and learned the playbook, the speed of the game, etc. Well, those days are over. Jalen was thrown into the fire right away.
Hurts took a team with 3 offensive rookies starting (DeVonta, Landon, Gainwell & Jalen was a first year starter) and lead them to a 9–8 record. The Eagles, and Jalen, exceeded all expectations. He lead the team to the playoffs with a very flawed roster. The fans, once again, were excited and energized about the future, right?
Well, not exactly.
By seasons end, lots of people were “out” on Jalen Hurts. Why? Because he didn’t play well in his first ever playoff game? (Neither did Kyler Murray) Or is it the plethora of other reasons I see on social media; “He can’t read a defense, He doesn’t have a strong arm, and He is only a running back” etc, etc. As if all of that were true. Or as if, he alone shoulders the blame for a roster of 53 losing a playoff game. You know what though, he would accept it. He always does.
What has he done to be such a polarizing figure? Ben Simmons quit on this city. Carson Wentz was resentful because the Eagles won without him. Hurts hasn’t done any of this.
Jalen Hurts is 23. He works hard, accepts every challenge, takes responsibility for his failures and has improved year over year. Are there things he needs to improve upon? Absolutely. Will and should the Eagles always to look improve the roster, including the QB position? Definitely. There are still many unknowns with Jalen. Including, what his ceiling is, and if hard work, film study and more reps can correct the issues he has struggled with. Everyone who knows him believes he will put in the work, and he has never shied away from the competition. If that doesn’t earn him an opportunity, it should at least earn him your respect.
Who knows how his 2022 season will go. Or IF he will be the starting QB. Nobody, outside of Lurie and Howie knows if they want him to be the starter moving forward.
What we do know is that his teammates are all in. Most every influential player in recent memory are all in too.
Merrill Reese has called 45 years of Philadelphia Eagle football games, and seen everything there is to see on a field. McNabb is arguably the greatest QB in franchise history. Randall revolutionized the position and has won a league MVP. They have earned the right to have an opinion. Brian Dawkins is a Hall of Fame legend, who has earned the right for his voice to be heard. Jason Kelce is coming back to risk his body one more season for a chance at another championship because he believes in this team, and Jalen Hurts. If they aren’t going “in and out” why do so many of you?
Look below at what each have had to say. If you still feel you don’t agree after reading the comments from all of this combined wealth of knowledge, that’s fine too. But if you are a fan of the Philadelphia Eagles, at the very least, you could still root for the QB of your team to succeed. Wishing for his downfall so that you can hop on your time line and “be right”, just seems wrong.
Jason Kelce on Jalen Hurts: ‘Somebody I want in my corner’
They were both doubted early in their career. People questioned whether they had the physical tools to get the job…www.nbcsports.com
Why Brian Dawkins is a big believer in Jalen Hurts
Eagles legend Brian Dawkins spoke with John Clark about Jalen Hurts and his ability to grow into a franchise…www.nbcsports.com
Donovan Mcnabb
Still Believe in Eagles’ Hurts? Donovan McNabb Preaches Patience
When some people watched Jalen Hurts struggle in the Eagles’ 31-15 loss to the Buccaneers in the wild card round, they…www.nbcphiladelphia.com
Randall Cunningham
Randall Cunningham explains why he’s ‘all-in’ on Jalen Hurts
Former NFL QB Randall Cunningham explains why he’s ‘all-in’ on Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts. This game…
Merrill Reese
By the way, Russell Wilson had a no trade clause and refused to waive that for a deal to the Eagles. The same can be said with DeShaun Watson. They did not look at Philadelphia as a viable option. They did not see enough talent to believe they could win with the Eagles as the team is currently constructed. So why is there an unrelenting desire to be wanted by them? When did this fan base want someone so bad, that didn’t want them back?
I hope we will be there for the players who want to be here. The ones who put their bodies on the line for this franchise. Not a couple prima donnas who were never going to want you back.
If Jalen has a bad 2022 campaign, and you no longer want to be “IN”, go back to exuding that west coast attitude we all used to despise. Maybe enjoy their famous burger joint as well, and be “OUT” again.

As always, thanks for reading
David
3/18/2022
Our Consensus Mocks Are Always Wrong. And What a Howie Draft Could Look Like
It is almost impossible right now to find an Eagles mock that doesn’t include the same players. One of the EDGEs – Jermaine Johnson, Travon Walker, David Ojabo, and George Karlaftis… a corner like Andrew Booth or Trent McDuffie or recently, a lot hopefully have Stingley falling to them… a LB like Devin Lloyd or Nakobe Dean… or a big-bodied receiver like Treylon Burks.
But what if a lot of these players are gone which is increasingly looking likely? Or what if the Eagles just have different plans? In 2020 we all collectively lost our minds at home as they went with the wrong receiver and a round 2 quarterback seemingly out of nowhere?
A look back at the Eagles top picks vs. expectations
Two sites that aggregate mock drafts to get the most commonly mocked players are Grinding The Mocks and NFL Mock Draft Database. Here are the Eagles most commonly mocked picks the past 3 years:
| Year | Round | Top Mocked Picks | Actual Pick |
| 2019 | 1 | CB DeAndre Baker OT Yodny Cajuste S Dionte Thompson | OT Andre Dillard |
| 2 | S Darnell Savage WR Marquise Brown S Chauncey Gardner | RB Miles Sanders | |
| 2020 | 1 | WR Justin Jefferson WR Henry Ruggs WR Tee Higgins | WR Jalen Reagor |
| 2 | CB Jeff Gladney WR KJ Hamler WR Brandon Aiyuk | QB Jalen Hurts | |
| 2021 | 1 | TE Kyle Pitts WR Jaylen Waddle WR DeVonta Smith | WR DeVonta Smith |
| 2 | LB Nick Bolton CB Asante Samuel Jr WR Terrace Marshall | IOL Landon Dickerson |
Of the first two rounds over the past 4 years, only once was a top three mocked player actually the pick – DeVonta in 2021. And that required a trade-up when draft day actually came. Two other times the right position was mocked: in 2019 tackle Yodny Cajuste was the second most frequently mocked player when Dillard was selected and in 2020 we all know what happened at pick 21… Half of these players weren’t even available at the Eagles pick (8 of the 16 commonly mocked players).
There are a few things I’ve learned and adjusted thinking on:
1. It really is about the trenches: David (only partially) jokes that you could mock only DL or OL and be right most of the time. In the Howie era, 7 of 13 R1 picks and 9 of 23 R1 and R2 picks have been on the lines.
2. Expect surprises: The Eagles always “surprise” the fans compared to the mocks and I’m talking about which positions are taken, not Reagor vs. Jefferson. Corner has been a top need and top mocked player each of the last 3 years and wasn’t taken. After Howie famously declared “are they healthy?” as one of his draft pillars in 2020, he drafts Landon Dickerson in 2021 (who I loved but wrongly wouldn’t mock because of this). Taking Hurts in 2020 after committing to Wentz. Goedert when we had Ertz.
3. Don’t ignore traits: I was one of many that wanted Terrace Marshall in the 2nd last year and Matt Alkire reminded me that the Eagles won’t take a WR that can’t block. Same with running backs. And for LBs and CBs, they better tackle. The Eagles have also consistently taken highly athletic prospects – just go search RAS for green and you will up your chances of picking their players. And lastly, character / culture is always important.
A very different but very Eagles 3 round mock
So what could we be wrong on this year? With three firsts, it is surprising how consistent the names mocked to the Eagles are right now. Both Grinding the Mocks and NFL Mock Draft Database show Eagles draft expectations in the 1st are heavily EDGEs (Jermaine Johnson, Ojabo, Karlaftis), LBs (Devin Lloyd and Nakobe Dean), C (Tyler Linderbaum even after Kelce announced his return), and CB (Andrew Booth).
This started for my own sanity – to think about a draft that isn’t what we are all thinking and prepare myself when I hated the picks. Which happens way more often that not. In the draft below, I try to think like Howie and get a draft where inthe first two days, no EDGEs and no linebackers are taken and an offensive line pick at a position without apparent need. But I could see Howie doing all of this. And strangely, I would actually walk away happy with these players. For each pick I did my best Howie impersonation, explaining each pick reflecting his philosophy and draft track record:
Day 1

The first round does not go well for those of us that want one of the EDGEs or CBs as both positions have runs ahead of us when QBs aren’t taken high. The following are off the board by the Eagles first pick:
- Five EDGEs – Hutchinson, Walker, Johnson, Thibodeaux, and Karlaftis
- Three CBs – Gardner, Stingley, and McDuffie
- Three OTs – Ekwonu, Neal, and Cross
- One DT – Jordan Davis
- One S – Kyle Hamilton
- One WR – Garrett Wilson
R1-15: DL Devonte Wyatt, UGA
Question: “At pick 15, there were a lot of great players available – what was the thought process when the Eagles were on the clock?”
Howie: “Last year I promised if the highest graded player sitting there was a linemen, we would take them and Devonte is a great example of that. We thought he would go in the top 10 and definitely thought he wouldn’t make it past Baltimore so it wasn’t a hard decision for our team when we were up. We see a lot of Fletch in Devonte and like Milton last year, he can affect play from multiple positions.”
Interesting fact: Asked at the Combine if he could play running back, Wyatt replied “Easily. If they put me back there I’d look like Derrick Henry.”
R1-16: OT/G Trevor Penning, Northern Iowa
Question: “Tackle wasn’t a top need going into the draft with Lane and Jordan, why did you see it as a need here?”
Howie: “We always say tackle is the second most important position behind quarterback and it’s a position we will always value highly. Unfortunately, almost every year we have seen the need to have quality depth as injuries happen. Trevor brings the flexibility to play tackle and guard which we value highly. And he is an amazing young man – a great leader, he plays incredibly hard, and our coaches fell in love with him at the Senior Bowl… if you watch him play, he’s a guy we frankly didn’t want to have to face on another team.”
Interesting fact: Trevor models his game after Lane Johnson and they share freakishly similar athletic profiles:

Two WRs come off the board at picks 17 and 18 with the Chargers taking Chris Olave and the Saints taking Jameson Williams.
R1 (trade down): S Lewis Cine, UGA
Question: “Safety is a position that the Eagles have never prioritized high before – what drives the change this year?”
Howie: “Well, for a lot of years we’ve been lucky to have some great players like Malcolm and Rodney at the position that allowed us to invest elsewhere. But safety is a bit different role now in Jonathan’s scheme – they are going to play deep a lot but it relies on safeties to be able to come in quickly against the run. It isn’t a free safety, strong safety world anymore and you need players that are athletes, have high-level play recognition, and understands how to work in coordination with the rest of the secondary. There wasn’t a player in college better at everything we need a safety to do than Lewis. And when you get to sit down and talk with him, you realize how much a student of the game he is, what type of leader he is even on a team filled with talent like Georgia was.”
Interesting fact: No other safety – not Hamilton, not Daxton, not Brisker, none – both played as many deep safety snaps (65% of snaps) while also being as productive in run support (11 run stops).
Day 2

Safety, linebacker, and EDGE dominate day 2 mocks for the Eagles right now and while Howie has widened the positions drafted in round 2, the positions drafted most often lean towards the premium positions and offensive weapons – 5 CBs, 3 WRs, 3 LBs, and 2 TEs.
R2-51: WR Christian Watson, North Dakota State
Question: “After missing out on receivers in free agency, did receiver become a more pressing need here?”
Howie: “We are confident in our receiver room right now but as we said earlier in the offseason, we want to continue to add skill players to the offense but won’t force a position or a style of receiver as that hasn’t worked in the past. When our pick came up, we saw a player that has such unique size and speed and does all the things you want – he runs, he blocks, he plays the way you want – we thought he could go in the first. Every year we see that it’s very hard to get receivers in free agency because everybody wants them, it’s just not sustainable to try to find them that way – when you have a player like Christian that falls to you, you have to take him.”
Interesting fact: Watson holds the 5th best (out of 2,557) Relative Athletic Score profile among receivers since 1987.
R3-83: CB Cam Taylor-Britt, Nebraska
Question: “You’ve been collecting a lot of young talent at corner, how does Cam fit in?”
Howie: “We love the guys we have in right now but you can never have too many corners. We got to meet Cam at the Senior Bowl and you just see a player that loves to play, plays hard all of the time, and has the high confidence you want. When you look at his time at Nebraska, he played both man and zone and at a high level, he understands the handoffs and communication needed in the secondary, and he was really good against the run. He’s a player we can see coming in and fitting this defense.”
Interesting fact: He is best in the Big Ten with 18 interceptions and PBUs over the past two seasons.
Hope you enjoyed this, it is meant to not be just another mock, but a different take looking at how consensus is rarely right, what could happen, and how I think Howie could approach the draft based on his history and philosophy.
A Look at the Eagles at the Start of Free Agency and What History Tells Us
It’s that time of year where all the free agency wishlist chatter on Eagles Twitter reads like a kid’s Christmas list – Marcus Williams and Allen Robinson and Chandler Jones and Bobby Wagner. But history shows – and I think we all know deep inside us – that the big free agency deals at best are not worth the money and at worst are giant mistakes.
History shows the mid-range market is the best value
PFF just published a look at all free agent signings comparing average dollars per year (APY) to the player’s Wins Above Replacement (how many wins a player generated vs. a “replacement” level player). Their data shows that the value a player brings vs. the cost is best in the mid-range ($5-10M APY). Higher-end deals generate more value but at a declining rate – a $20M APY player does not generate twice the value of a $10M APY player (on average, it is about 25% more).

From: NFL Free Agency: Historical Success for All 32 Teams
And when looking at which teams have gotten the most value in free agency compared to costs, the Eagles, pound-for-pound, are one of the best teams in the league with only the Patriots generating more value (below data is for 2013-2021). And Howie is squarely in the middle of the league in amount invested, which is largely their philosophy and partly that they have not had as much cap flexibility the past several years.

You can dig into any position and get a similar list with some successes and many more bad signings. But since a veteran WR2 is at the top of our wishlists, here is a look at the recent top-end WR free agency signings and their value:
| Year | Player | Age | APY | Performance |
| 2021 | Kenny Golladay (Giants) | 27 | $18.0M | 14 Gs, 37/76/521, 0 TDs, 63rd ranked WR |
| Corey Davis (Jets) | 26 | $12.5M | 9 Gs, 34/59/492, 4 TDs, 69th ranked WR | |
| Curtis Samuel (WFT) | 24 | $11.5M | 5 Gs, 6/9/27, 0 TDs, injured | |
| Nelson Agholor (Patriots) | 27 | $11.0M | 15 Gs, 37/64/473, 3 TDs, 79th ranked WR | |
| Will Fuller (Dolphins) | 27 | $10.6M | 2 Gs, 4/8/26, 0 TDs, injured | |
| 2020 | Emmanuel Sanders (Saints) | 33 | $12.0M | 14 Gs, 61/82/726, 5 TDs, 43rd ranked WR |
| Robby Anderson (Panthers) | 26 | $10.0M | 16 Gs, 95/136/1096, 3 TDs, 33rd ranked WR | |
| Randall Cobb (Texans) | 29 | $9.0M | 10 Gs, 38/48/441, 3 TDs, 51st ranked WR | |
| 2019 | Tyrell Williams (Raiders) | 27 | $11.1M | 14 Gs, 42/64/651, 6TDs, 71st ranked WR |
| Antonio Brown (Patriots) | 31 | $10.5M | 1 Gs, 4/8/56, 1 TD, released | |
| Devon Funchess (Colts) | 25 | $10.0M | 1 Gs, 3/5/32, 0 TDs, injured | |
| Jamison Crowder (Jets) | 25 | $9.5M | 16 Gs, 78/122/833, 6 TDs, 35th ranked WR | |
| Golden Tate (Giants) | 30 | $9.4M | 11 Gs, 49/85/676, 6 TDs, 39th ranked WR | |
| Adam Humphries (Titans) | 25 | $9.0M | 12 Gs, 37/47/374, 2 TDs, 44th ranked WR | |
| John Brown (Bills) | 27 | $9.0M | 15 Gs, 72/115/1060, 6 TDs, 34th ranked WR |
Out of these 15 top free agency wide receiver signings, the ones you would pick out as good signings are Robby Anderson ($10M), Jamison Crowder ($9.5M), John Brown ($9.0M), and maybe Emmanuel Sanders although he was released after that one season.
What can we expect on the Eagles salary cap?
The Eagles currently have $17M of cap space according to OverTheCap, right in the middle of the league. But their effective cap space, accounting for projected rookie draft pick signings and filling a 51-player roster, is only $8.6M. This will go up as there are some restructures that will make sense (Hargrave is the primary one), but I hope Howie does not overdo restructures and just burden future years with dead cap.
Many will say “the salary cap isn’t real” which is one of the statements that drives me most nuts. Of course deals can be structured to push money into future years and fit players into 2022, but the cap isn’t real until it is… teams pay now or pay later. If you pick right and bet on a player that won’t decline, you are good. But the Eagles are still burdened with over $14M in dead cap space in 2022 for Alshon and Malik Jackson. Last year the Eagles had over $20M in dead cap for players that were gone or injured NOT counting Wentz. So be careful celebrating when we see a restructure hit the news…
I would expect Howie to restructure selective deals and could free up another $8-12M, getting the Eagles effective cap space to around $20M for 2022.
My practical free agent wishlist
Compared to who most people put on their free agent Christmas wishlists, I look at mine and it feels like I am asking for socks for Christmas. I would have bet on Mike Williams but we knew he would re-sign with the Chargers (he publicly said he didn’t want to leave) but I won’t have the same names on my list.
Wide receiver:
Allen Robinson at an estimated $15M? Nope, he will be 29, noticeably declined last year, and even when good he is near the bottom of the league in separation (not what the Eagles need). I’d rather have:
- Jamison Crowder (29 years old, estimated $8.5M) who would be a definite slot upgrade
- Russel Gage (26, $8.5M) who averaged 70 yards per game after Ridley went out.
- If the Eagles did go to the higher end, Christian Kirk (25, estimated $13M year) who is one of the better slots available and young enough that pushing money into future years isn’t too dangerous. Kirk also played for Eagles WR coach Aaron Moorehead at Texas A&M.
Safety:
Marcus Williams at $16M? He is young and a very good safety, but it doesn’t make sense to use the majority of the free cap space on one safety. For me:
- The easiest is probably a one-year deal for McLeod (estimated at $2M).
- Jaquiski Tartt (30, $2.5M), a reliable zone-heavy safety that plays from depth and would fit what the Eagles probably want.
Linebacker:
Bobby Wagner is a surprising name to hit free agency but will probably get around $8M and noticeably declined. For me I’d rather look at:
- Josey Jewell (27, $6M), the 5th highest graded LB last season that can cover but coming off a torn pec.
- Kyzir White (26, $6M), more of a coverage linebacker but solid tackler and would be a solid addition to TJ Edwards and Davion Taylor.
Defensive Line:
This is one area the Eagles will invest in so I would not be surpised to see a higher-end guy here. I won’t speculate on which EDGE they may try for, but lot of interesting names like Haason Reddick (estimated $12M), Ogbonnia Okoronkwo ($3M), Justin Houston ($7M), Jerry Hughes ($6M) Uchenna Nwosu ($9M).
But one underappreciated area to improve is defensive tackle. Not a position often on Eagles fans’ wishlists but it is a position that doesn’t have great depth. I really can’t see the Eagles trading Fletcher Cox, but even without a move there they could use depth.
- Tim Settle (25, $4.25M), Settle is exactly the type of rotational DT Howie covets. The former Hokie and Washington Commanders tackle, Settle has not yet hit 400 snaps in his career but would be the 2nd best pass rusher (13.4% win rate) and highest graded run defender on the Eagles.
Knowing that the multi-year deals will push cap into the future, it is absolutely reasonable to have a free agent class of Crowder/Gage, Tartt, Jewell, Reddick/Ogbonnia, and Settle. The APY for all of them would total somewhere in the $25-35M range.
5 Mid To Late Round Players That Could Turn The Eagles Into Contenders
Below are the luxury picks, the WANTS. The Eagles may not need all of them right away, but they’re players that can elevate a good roster to a great one.
If the first half of the draft was defense centric, the back half is all about helping Hurts and the offense. The WANT to add depth on the Offensive line to keep the QB upright, while adding more weapons to assist in lighting up the score board.
Want a G/C:
Cole Strange Dohnovan West, Dylan Parham, James Empey, Cameron Jurgens
Want a RB:
Brian Robinson Jr, Hassan Haskins, Dameon Pierce
Want a TE:
Jeremy Ruckert, Cole Turner, Cade Otton, Lucas Krull
(Still) Want a S: Smoke Monday, Nick Cross, Bryan Cook, Kerby Joseph
Want a P, just for @GregHartPA
Jordan Stout or Matt Araiza (7th round)
Late Round Mock:
95- Brian Robinson Jr.- Brian picks up yards after contact, and is a punishing finisher. He uses his legs and his 6’1 225 lb frame to gain those tough short yardage when needed on 3rd and 4th and one. Would be a great rotational back and possibly Miles Sanders future replacement.
100- Cole Strange- Cole could groom for a year under Kelce, if the Eagles view him as a Center, while he spends 2022 as an all purpose back up along the O Line. Cole brings aggression, and the work ethic the Eagles demand from the position.
150- Cole Turner- The Eagles want another pass catching TE to pair with Goedert, and with project Tyree Jackson out for a large part of the season, they will probably be drafting one. Cole Turner has proven to be a pass catching wonder. Turner has good hands and ball tracking ability. At 6’6, he’s another big body who gets the separation needed to be a reliable target for Hurts.
160- Nick Cross- Cross, a former track star, has impressive speed and good ball skills for a safety. He would bring much-needed coverage ability from the S position, and give an immediate boost to the special teams.
220- Jordan Stout- 1 I don’t watch tape on punters like @GregHartPA, as he opined “I can picture how miserable you would be just holding a stopwatch, looking up into the sun, counting “One Mississippi…”
Special teams and flipping the field with a great punter is an often overlooked stat. I will let him make the case for Stout
Drafting a Punter Makes Analytical Sense… And Yes, This Year There is a Punt God – The Philly…
A look at the analytics of punting – what makes a good punter, does it make sense to draft a punter and where, and what…phillycovercorner.com
Again, I’m not speculating which teams Howie is trading with, and these picks are just approximate estimations.
Eagles current draft selections: 15, 16, 19, 51, 83, 123, 154, 162, 166, 205
For those keeping score, that would make the final draft haul
10 Picks:
15- Jermaine Johnson Edge
25- Nakobe Dean LB
33- Devonte Wyatt DT
53- Jalen Pitre S
90- Skyy Moore WR
95- Brian Robinson Jr. RB
100- Cole Strange OL
150- Cole Turner TE
160- Nick Cross S
220- Jordan Stout P
5 Defensive Players
4 Offensive Players
1 Special Teams
As always, thank you for reading
David
Follow me @PHLEagleNews
Follow Greg @GregHartPA
3/14/2022

What’s the Value of a Good Punt? (And Some More Jordan Stout)
Impact of touchbacks and downing inside the 20
And some Jordan Stout data and clips
I think this is my third article on punters which is probably approaching the football analytics equivalent of being the crazy cat person. But I remain undeterred…
A few weeks ago I wrote on why it makes sense to draft a punter, when in the draft, and why I think Penn State’s Jordan Stout may be not only the best in this draft class, but the best in several years.
“Drafting a Punter Makes Analytical Sense… And Yes, This Year There is a Punt God”
I also wrote on why the key measure used in analyzing football -Expected Points Added or EPA – is not a good indicator for evaluating a punt. The decision to punt and where on the field the punt is from outweigh anything a punter can do – for example, punting on 4th-and-1 in plus territory is going to be bad from an EPA perspective no matter how good of a punt occurs.
But we all hear about “flipping the field” and “pinning the opponent back” and I wanted to look into how a good (or bad) punt affects actual game scoring.
How “good” punts impact actual scoring
In the post mentioned above, I used what Puntalytics (@ThePuntRunts) created to value punts – an EPA+ measure, or the value of a punt above or below what the average historical punt from that same field position has generated. Using punt EPA+, you can categorize good, average, and bad punts and then see how they impacted scoring on the opponent’s next drive.

This uses data from over 28,000 punts between 2010 to 2021 by field location (further to the right is punting closer to their own endzone and to the left is closer to the opponent’s). I only looked at punts outside the opponent’s 40 yardline for this as these extreme plus-field punts get messy (more on that next). The green dataset represent “average” punts (or the middle quintile), the orange dataset are “bad” punts (bottom quintile), and the blue are “good” punts (top quintile).
A few things stand out. Punt quality absolutely impacts the opponent’s ability to score on their next possession. This difference is greater near a punting team’s own endzone and gets smaller as they move into plus territory.
- Punting near your own endzone, top quintile (top 20%) punts suppress an opponent’s actual scoring by near 0.7 points vs. average punts and over 1.3 points vs. the bottom quintile (bad) punts.
- Punting near midfield, this difference is about half of the above with top punts suppressing opponent scoring by 0.3 points vs. average punts and almost 0.6 points vs. bad punts.
With an average of almost four punts per game in the NFL, a consistently good punter can impact the game by +1 to +3 points vs. average punters, depending on the field location. And if you have a bad punter, upgrading to a top punter can make a +3 to +5 point impact.
Note on subsequent drive impact: I was curious if good (or bad) punts had a carryover to the receiving team’s second or third drive after the punt or to the punting team’s next possession after the punt. There is a small positive impact to both the punting team’s next drive (+0.15 point difference between good and bad punts) and to the receiving team’s second drive after receiving (+0.12), but neither of these are statistically significant.
Impact of touchbacks and downing inside the 20
Coaches have learned that they should punt way less often when they are in plus territory, going for it on 4th down almost 20% more since 2010 when at midfield or better, with most of the improvement coming since 2015.

But when they do punt (still about 57% of the time), how much are short-field punts worth? Short-field punts (defined as a punt from midfield or closer) are much less common – in 2021, teams averaged 0.6 short-field punts per game. There is great variation among teams, though, with Arizona only kicking two short-field punts all season while Seattle had 19 (the Eagles were just above league average with 12).
Just like the above, short-field punts have an impact on the ability of the receiving team to score on that drive. Punters that put the ball into the endzone for a touchback give the receiving team an expected 1.49 points per drive. Downing between the 11-20 yardline is the same. But a punter that can consistently either down or coffin-corner a kick inside the 10 yard line suppresses an opponent’s scoring by 0.12 to 0.54 points.
| Punt Result | Avg Points Scored on Opponent’s Next Drive | Avg Points Scored on Punting Team’s Next Drive |
| Downed inside 5 yard line | 0.95 | 2.29 |
| Downed between 6-10 yard line | 1.37 | 2.20 |
| Downed between 11-20 yard line | 1.51 | 2.15 |
| Touchback (20 yard line start) | 1.49 | 1.82 |
But with short-field punts, there is also a carryover benefit to the punting team on their next possession after the receiving team’s possession. When pinning the receiving team inside the 10 or 20 yardline, a punting team, on average, has a quarter-point higher scoring rate on their next possession after the receiving team’s possession. This supports the “pin an opponent back” view.
And some Jordan Stout punting…
If you read my prior punting post, you know I believe Penn State’s Jordan Stout could be not only the best punter in this draft class, but the best punter to come out of college in several years.
He is the only draftable punter that projects to a positive EPA+. And he is one of four punters with above average short-field punting stats – in 2021, he had 37 punts downed inside the 20 vs. 3 touchbacks, an elite 12.3-to-1 ratio (the NFL average is just over 6-to-1).

And this is why Stout is so good…
Against Villanova Stout put all 4 of his punts inside the 20. Here he kicks from the Nova 46, into the corner, lands the ball at the 4 and has it die:

In one of his best games of the year against Illinois, 6 of his 8 punts were downed inside the 20 – this one goes 57 yards in the air from his own 39 and again lands and dies at the 4:

The PSU/Rutgers game may have been the punting Super Bowl last year, with Stout and Adam Korsak going head-to-head and punting a total of 18 times. Stout out-punted Korsak, putting 7 of his 8 punts inside the 20. This, one of my favorites, looks like a deep pass. Stout lofts the ball from the Rutgers 41 into the corner where 37 catches it on the fly at the 2.

Again against Rutgers, this time Stout with the hesi before hitting Keaton Ellis on the fly, another short-field punt that is downed at the 3.

And lastly against Michigan State, in the snow, Stout again puts all 3 of his punts inside the 20 – this one with another amazing effort by 37 on the assist to push it out of bounds at the 1.

In his 2021 season, Stout punted 67 times and had:
- 37 downed inside the 20 with 3 touchbacks (1st in the draft class)
- 47 total return yards (13th in the NCAA)
- 46.1 gross yardage (6th) and 44.6 net yardage (1st)
- 4.34 average hangtime (1st)
Eagles, go draft him.
5 Players The Philadelphia Eagles Need To Draft
The chances that the Eagles use all 3 of their first round picks would seem to be slim to none. Howie even eluded to that during the combine when he stated he didn’t NEED to use them all. That sounded like an open invitation to all buyers. With the intention of soliciting offers completed, the Eagles are open for business, as ususal.
I am not going to speculate which teams Howie makes a trade with, other than to say in the first round it will probably be one of the QB needy franchises. It seems likely the Eagles end up with an extra first in 2023 and an additional 2nd in 2022. This would still allow them to draft 5 of the first 83 players.
Need an EDGE:
Round One: Aidan Hutchinson, Kayvon Thibodeaux, Trevon Walker, Jermaine Johnson, David Ojabo, and George Karlaftis
Defensive End in the first round is a lock.
I want and edge rusher who has impressed at the Senior Bowl, the combine, and most importantly, on tape. Jermaine is a player rising up draft boards. I want Jermaine Johnson. I have been steadfast in Ojabo or Jermaine since Decemeber. I love both of them, but would lean Jermaine. Eagles seem to be smitten with Ojabo.
Tier Two: N/A, they have to make a day one selection. A Second day player would just be bonus depth. Ebikeite, Myjai Sanders, or GA DT Devonte Wyatt. Probable day 3 DE, Jeffrey Gunter and LB/Edge hybrid Jesse Luketa should both interest the Birds as well. I’d bet on the Eagles drafting 2 edge rushers or 1 edge 1 DT within the top 75 pics.
Need a S:
Round One: Kyle Hamilton, then everyone else. Daxton Hill
Tier Two: Lewis Cine, Jaquan Brisker, Jalen Pitre, or probable day 3 Leon O’Neal Jr.
If Hamilton isn’t one of the first five picks selected, I would move up and get him. Even at the expense of two firsts. He is that good. I think he is the best player in the 2022 NFL draft.
Need a LB:
Round One: Nakobe Dean or Devin Lloyd
Tier Two- Chad Muma, Quay Walker, Christian Harris, Channing Tindall
I have recently written of using the Eagles past tendencies to project their future actions. “When a team shows you who they are, believe them!”
What I Learned, Looking Back On My 2021 NFL Eagles Mock Draft
The good, the bad, the indifferentmedium.com
But this year, all bets are off! They have 3 first round picks, and an opportunity to move all around the board to select whatever they want.
LB position analysis: The Eagles really like TJ Edwards. So much so, that when Howie spoke about the position during the combine, TJ was the only LB he mentioned. The Eagles know they have a dire need at this position. They have seen the value of the position wearing a Cowboys uniform. I think this could be the year they finally take a LB in round one. Lloyd or Dean are both worthy, and both capable of changing the entire complexion of the position.
Need a CB:
Round One: Derek Stingley Jr., Ahmad Gardner, Trent McDuffie, Andrew Booth Jr., Kaiir Elam
Tier Two- Tariq Woolen, Kyler Gordon
If the Eagles are serious about fixing this position, Stingley Jr could be the pick. He may be there at 15, or only require a small move up. Gardner is great, but will probably be a top 10 pick. If Elam fell to a day two selection (ala Kevin King in 2017) the Eagles should pounce. He is only 20 years old and has a high ceiling. I have Kaiir ranked as a first round talent in the draft. I also really like later round option Tariq Woolen. It appears there is a lot of upside there to like. He could end up being a steal if he falls into the 3rd round.
Need a WR:
Top Tier- Treylon Burks. For me its Burks in the first round, or wait until later. The Eagles may see it differently. If so; Garrett Wilson Drake London, Chris Olave, Jameson Williams are all first rounders.
Tier Two- Jahan Dotson, David Bell, Skyy Moore, Erik Ezukanma, and Jalen Tolbert. If the Eagles don’t select a wide out in round one, Bell or Skyy in round 2 or Ezuk in the third or very early 4th makes a lot of sense.
The Eagles free agent plan will alter the draft in many ways. The front office could choose to accommodate DeVonta Smith by paying a wide receiver on the open market versus using a high value draft pick.
2022 Philadelphia Eagles Free Agent Wish List
The Eagles are heading into the 2022 NFL Draft loaded with 10 picks, including three first-rounders for the first time…medium.com
15- Jermaine Johnson, edge. need it.
25- Nakobe Dean (It’s time) I think everyone would be just as happy with Devin Lloyd as well. Dean would play the same role with the Eagles, Lloyd would have to adjust some. They’re both great. Get one!
33- Devonte Wyatt – Building through the lines is a core belief.
53- Jalen Pitre- They need a S in this defensive scheme, they get one.
90- Skyy Moore The Eagles are very high on Quez. I am too, but I would want to stockpile as many weapons as I could.
- Draft # selection is just an approx. Again, I am not trying to speculate who Howie trades with and where each exact pick ends up. Just a general range. Five of the first 100 picks should easily be attained.
Admittedly this is a defensive heavy mock, for a team that just doesn’t draft many defensive players this high. It also seems like a top heavy defensive draft in general. The value may be in the offensive players that fall in the 95–150 range.
OL’s Cole Strange, Cade Mays, James Empey, Cameron Jurgens
TE’s Jeremy Ruckert, Cade Otton, Cole Turner and Lucas Krull
RB’s Jerome Ford, Brian Robinson Jr., Dameon Pierce, Hassan Haskins
The Eagles like value, so maybe they play this draft the way it falls, and select a combination of best player available meets positional need.
Jermaine– The Eagles need an Edge, Jermaine is a good one to have.
Nakobe could be available in the early 20’s. If Howie reads the board that way, move down a couple spots and earn a higher 2nd or 3rd round selection.
Devonte Wyatt Would be able to contribute from day one. Possesses elite quickness for a 315 lb man. If he adds more strength and a bull rush to the aresenal, he will be an elite DT, period.
Jalen Pitre One of the better safety’s, not named Hamilton, in the draft. I have him ranked around 50th overall.
Skyy Moore Wide receiver is a bigger need than it should be, but if you’re looking at the position and seeing more than 2 starting caliber wideouts, I would disagree. They will probably have 5 WR’s on the final roster. Smith, Quez, and Reagor. JJaw could make the team for his special team efforts alone. I hope they draft a wideout in rounds 2–4 (Skyy or Ezukanma) AND add a veteran. DeVonta Smith has stated how invaluable it would be for him to learn from a seasoned pro. The Eagles should accomadate him.
The only caveat to this list for me would be if Stingley or Gardner fall to a level the Eagles feel comfortable moving up for. They could then address the LB position in the 50 range with Chad Muma or Christian Harris OR pick 83 with Quay Walker or Channing Tindall.
Five positions. Five players. A franchise altering draft awaits.
Let me know your thoughts and as always, thank you for reading.
David 3/10/2022
Follow me @PHLEagleNews
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Zimbalist Williams Has A Dream
“Life ain’t about how hard you hit. It’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward!” ~ Rocky
I had never heard of Zimbalist Williams until I received a DM from one of his fans. It took 5 minutes of research for me to become a fan. If you give me five minutes of your time, I am going to try and turn you into one as well.
The first thing that stood out to me about Williams was his perseverance. He has never given up on his dream and he’s never lost his love for the sport.
Despite the obstacles and challenges he has faced on this journey, Zimbalist keeps moving forward.
Is this not the type of person we all root for? Isn’t this a quality we all crave? Having, and chasing, a dream is what living is all about.
Zimbalist said his love for football started at an early age. “My dad put a ball in my hands since I started walking. I started (playing) at age 7. I haven’t missed a season ever since”
Through Pee Wee, Middle School, and High School, the positions he played changed. (Quarterback, Running Back and Linebacker etc.) His love of the game, and his determination to succeed in it, never wavered.
Williams played High School football for Juan Seguin in Arlington TX and Mansfield Legacy, in Mansfield TX where he earned a college scholarship.

“I signed on National signing day . Feb 10 2010 to play football at Lon Morris College(Juco) From there, after a semester, I earned the opportunity to transfer to McMurry University in Abilene. From there I moved on to Texas College and finished my college career there.”
Zimbalist played 3 years as a starter. He earned a 1st team all conference nod, and was Captain of his team.
Williams also coached some.
“I did graduate assisting coaching for spring of 2015 for Texas College football.”
He was doing everything he could to be around the game he loves. Including setting up a pro day at Texas Southern University, in Houston. His school, Texas College, didn’t have one. So as always, he found a way to make it work and keep pushing forward.
Zimbalist stated that there were approximately 25 teams there.
His 2015 pro day ended with him being selected to play in the arena league. He accepted the challenge and started putting in the work to get more of his brand of football, and plays on tape.
“I am always auditioning for the next opportunity.”
In 2017 he worked out for both the Green Bay Packers and the Cleveland Browns.
“It was the most exciting experience of my life.”
Even though those didn’t end with him getting an NFL contract, he continued on. He is seemingly never deterred, and always views the next game as one more platform and step to fulfilling his goals.
Zimbalist is currently signed to the WTX Warbirds and the Queretaro Pioneros.
Yes you read that correctly, 2 teams, 2 countries, simultaneously.
Always auditioning, always persevering.
“Every year, every week is a (potential) week of free agency. You might sign up come in and play, not have a great week and next week there are 2 DBs in there to replace you”
Some of the players in Mexican league are hunting for their first opportunity or are trying to get another opportunity.
Williams is looking for an opportunity to play in the USFL.
There aren’t many players invited as the league has a really small roster construction. Due to that, there are little to no camp battles. The tape he is putting out there week in and week out IS the battle AND the audition.
“If any of the coaches out there in the USFL see me as an opportunity to make their squad better, I just want the opportunity. Bring me in and let me show you what I can do. I would just like an opportunity to be in the draft, so my name is in the hat”
I hope he gets his name in that hat too!
Williams has poured his heart and soul into this.
“I have 2 kids and a wife. I have been the player stressing out, missing my family at home.”
I hope the USFL rewards him for everything he has sacrificed to get to this point, and more importantly because he has earned the chance with his play.
Zimbalist Williams brings this resume’ with him to play in the USFL.
He is 30 years old , 5’9” and 180 lbs. He has played for Professional Teams : Tx Revolution , Waco Tornadoes, Temple Demons, Chihuahua Caudillos. ProAm:NTX Bobcats and has had 2 NFL Workouts with the GB Packers and Cleveland Browns.
“My heart desires to play in this league. I’m putting it in Gods hands, it’s out of my hands.”
All he is asking for is an opportunity. A chance to continue on the path of achieving his dreams. To keep moving forward.
“That’s how winning is done!” ~ Rocky
Wishing you the best of luck!
David 3/8/2022
Follow me @PHLEagleNews
Trading Down: History of Trades and Who May Want to Trade Up With the Eagles
Not sure there is anybody, including Howie, that believes Howie will make all three picks in the 1st round this year. Many want to grab a 2023 1st to give the Eagles QB options after this year which makes sense. But what do trade-ups into the middle of the round where the Eagles are sitting look like, especially in a weak QB class?
Possible Eagles trade-down scenarios
History of 1st round trade-ups
Below lists all of the trade-ups over the past five years within several selections of the Eagles first and last pick (anywhere from 12 to 26).
2017 Draft Trade-Ups
I included this as it includes a future 1st and while 2022 isn’t looked at as a good QB class, QB-needy teams always reach for QBs. There are several needy teams and the Eagles mid-round picks could end up being valuable.
Houston moves up from 25 to 12 for a franchise QB
Houston trades up from 25 to 12 for QB Deshaun Watson. Cleveland receives 1-25 and a 2018 1st.
2018 Draft Trade-Ups

Several interesting trades in 2018 – two for LBs, a top corner, and a top DE that was falling. One includes a future 1st when Green Bay moved back to the back of the 1st.
New Orleans gets a top defensive end, moving up from 27 to 14
The Saints were thought to move up, but instead of taking Lamar Jackson, they move up and take Marcus Davenport, a highly athletic DE and who turned out to be the best from that class, at 1-14. They send 1-27, 5-147, and a 2019 1st to Green Bay.
Note that whether you believe in the draft value chart or not, all of the trades listed here are pretty close to balancing except this one – in a lopsided trade, New Orleans gave up 538 points for 325 points.
Green Bay deals again, moving up to 18 for a shutdown corner
The Packers send the just acquired 1-27 along with 3-76 and 6-186 to Seattle for 1-18 and 7-248 to take CB Jaire Alexander. After trading away CB Damarious Randall, this move up filled a position of need.
Buffalo moves up 22 to 16 for a LB
After trading up for Josh Allen, the Bills trade up again, getting pick 16 (LB Tremaine Edmunds) and 5-154 from Baltimore in exchange for 1-22 and 3-65. Buffalo had an extra 1st, 2nd, and 3rd in 2018 after the prior year KC trade-up for Mahomes and Sammy Watkins trade.
Another LB trade-up, Tennessee moves up from 25 to 22
The Titans move up for LB Rashaan Evans, sending 1-25 and 4-125 to Baltimore for 1-22 and 6-215.
2019 Draft Trade-Ups

Again, a couple of interesting trade ups – one for a top EDGE and another for a top safety. It is not crazy that five EDGEs could be taken by the Eagles pick and while the Eagles are clearly going to take an EDGE, there could be demand for one of their picks get one of the remaining ones.
Washington moves up 20 spots from the 2nd to grab a falling DE at 26
Washington had already taken Dwayne Haskins at 15, but trade back into the 1st, getting 1-26 to take DE Montez Sweat (Sweat was a projected top-10 pick who dropped due to a misdiagnosed heart condition). The Colts receive 2-46 and a 2020 2nd.
Moving up from 30 to 21 for the top safety
Green Bay trades up from 30 to 21 for S Darnell Savage, sending Seattle 1-30, 4-114, and 4-118.
The Eagles move up from 25 to 22 for Andre Dillard
A move we all know well, the Eagles send 1-25, 4-125, and 6-197 to Baltimore for 1-22 and select OT Andre Dillard.
2020 Draft Trade-Ups

This is the 3rd of 11 trade-ups that were for a LB… who woulda known? Maybe the Eagles will want a LB this year, but if not, the top two of Lloyd and Dean may very well be sitting there when the Eagles pick this year and be an attractive trade-up for teams that prioritize LBs.
The Chargers move up 14 spots from the 2nd to grab a LB
LA trades up from R2-37 to 23 for LB Kenneth Murray, sending New England 2-37, 3-71. LA had already taken Justin Herbert and trades back into R1 for one of their top needs and the 2nd rated LB in the draft.
The Niners move up to 25 as a run on WRs occurs
Five WRs had already been taken by pick 22 and SF trades up from 31 to 25 for WR Brandon Aiyuk. Minnesota gets 1-31, 4-117, 5-176. Kyle Shanahan said they considered taking Aiyuk at 13 and knew that Miami at 26 was looking at Aiyuk (Miami then traded out of their pick once SF took Aiyuk).
2021 Draft Trade-Ups

This year EDGEs, corners, and receivers could dominate the top half of the first giving OL-needy teams a reason to move up like the Jets did last year for players like Charles Cross, Tyler Linderbaum, Trevor Penning, Zion Johnson, and Kenyon Green in the middle of the 1st.
The Jets move up to 14 and get protection for their new QB
New York trade 1-23, 3-66, and 3-86 to Minnesota for 1-14 and 4-123 to take one of their top draft targets, OG Alijah Vera-Tucker, a player they had as a top-10 graded prospect.
Who could trade up in 2022?
As much criticism as Howie gets on draft picks, his trades have largely been good including the fleecing of Miami and Indy last year – over the last 5 years, the Eagles / Dolphins 1st round swap last year is the second most lopsided trade at +389 draft value points to Philly using the Rich Hill model (the most lopsided is the Miami / San Francisco trade last year when SF moved up for Trey Lance, +489 draft value points for Miami in that trade). But as the above shows, it isn’t common to turn a mid-round pick into a future 1st – most future 1sts involve picks in the top-10 and are for quarterbacks. But here are some scenarios:
Green Bay makes Aaron Rodgers happy

Needs: QB, OL/OT, CB
If you follow Packers draft Twitter, they are as tortured as we are in Philly. While WR is always a need and on the wish list, everybody fully expects them to keep taking somebody on the defensive line. This year could be, and should be, different. Will Aaron Rodgers leave? Most likely not, but the Packers need to keep him happy and how better to do that than with another receiver. There are a lot of teams that could go WR ahead of them – the Jets at 10, Browns at 13, Eagles at any of our picks, Chargers at 17, Broncos at 21, Raiders at 22, Bills at 25, and Tampa Bay at 27. Five WRs have expected draft positions higher than the Packers pick at 28 and if they want one of the top guys, they will need to move up.
What it could look like: PHI sends 1-19 and 4-121 (307 points) to GB for 1-28 and a 2023 2nd (estimated 330 points)
Chance of happening: I really like this one. Green Bay has been aggressive, trading up in each of 2018 (to 18), 2019 (to 21), and 2020 (to 26), has to keep Rodgers happy, and they need another WR even if they keep free agent Davante Adams. Any of the Eagles picks should be in a great position to get one of the top WRs as only a couple may be off the board by then.
Falcons / Broncos / Lions / Jets use their extra draft capital

Needs: Falcons WR, OL, DL, CB, QB(?) / Broncos QB, EDGE, CB, LB / Lions QB, WR, DB, LB / Jets WR, LB, DB
This would look like the Chargers 2020 trade up for Kenneth Murray. Each of these teams have multiple 2nd round picks (Detroit has 1-32 and 2-34 actually), each could use secondary help, three need a receiver, and three could use a QB. Could one of them use their extra capital to move back into the 1st and grab a player of need that they passed on earlier?
What it could look like: PHI sends 1-19 (278 points) in exchange for an early 2nd (DET at 34, NYJ at 36, ATL at 40, DEN at 41) and 2023 2nd (estimated 267-296 points).
Chance of happening: Probably my second favorite out of this list. QBs will always have demand and make teams do crazy things and corners and receivers are always priority positions to draft high. None of these are crazy move ups and each of the teams have the capital to do it if there is a player they really want.
Pittsburgh Steelers get their Ben replacement

Needs: QB, OL/OT, CB
The Steelers are one of many QB-needy teams and sitting in a bad spot at 20 with four QB-needy teams ahead of them: CAR at 6, DEN at 9, WAS at 11, and NO at 18. Not all will take a QB and three of the four are ahead of the Eagles best pick anyway, but if the board falls right and the Steelers are worried about New Orleans taking whoever they are in love with, a small trade down could work.
What it could look like: PHI sends 1-16 (305 points) to PIT for 1-20 and 3-84 (320 points)
Chance of happening: Pretty low, like JJAW going 7/90 in a game. It takes the board falling right and the Steelers worrying about New Orleans instead of just waiting. Most likely the Steelers address QB via a trade – I wouldn’t be shocked to see PIT trade for Wentz actually.
Indianapolis bets on a young QB
Needs: QB, WR, OT, DL
It is all but certain that Indy will trade Wentz which puts them back in the market for a QB. Wouldn’t it be something to trade them back their 1st for another haul? Would Indy fall in love with a Matt Corrall or Sam Howell and they are there in the middle of the 1st?
What it could look like: PHI sends 1-19 (278 points) to IND for R5-174 and their 2023 1st (estimated 314 points)
Chance of happening: This would be so much fun to again get a 1st from Indy but think it has near zero chance – I just included it for the fun of it. First, I think Indy will sign or trade a QB and see what they have in 2023. Second, this is so far to move up. But the Colts have a good team that needs a QB – the Pro Bowl isn’t the be-all-end-all, but the Colts have seven going this year.
A trade-down mock
Given how Expected Draft Positions for top edges and corners are trending, I would not be surprised if Howie moves up from 15 and also trades down from 19. For this mock, five EDGEs and 3 CBs went before 15 taking a lot of commonly Eagles mocked players off the board. Below I made the following trade:
- Eagles trade down out of the 1st for 2023 draft capital, sending 1-19 to the Jets for 2-36, 4-108, and a 2023 2nd.
- The Jets, after taking Ekwonu and Ahmad Gardner with their first two picks, select WR Treylon Burks after moving up, filling one of their biggest needs
R1-15 EDGE Jermaine Johnson – <Insert> Eagles favorite edge rusher here, I will go with Johnson as he is the one with an EDP at 18
R1-16 CB Andrew Booth – I won’t pick a corner for the Eagles that isn’t a good zone corner that can help in run defense. Booth is one of three top CB prospects with a 70 or better grade in man, zone, and run defense (McDuffie and Gordon are the other two)
R2-36 S Lewis Cine – No other safety both played as many deep safety snaps (65% of snaps at a) while also being so productive in run support (11 run stops)
R2-51 DT Perrion Winfrey – An investment in the aging interior with somebody who basically confirmed a Philly fit when he said “I don’t like playing with people that accept mediocrity… I want to play with dogs.” We got dog mentality and hungry dogs. Oh and he has the 2nd best pass rush productivity of top DT prospects (Logan Hall)
R3-83 OL Jamaree Salyer – I don’t think he ends up higher than this but can’t pass him up and I would move up to get him. What’s not to like? Played all 5 OL positions, gave up 1 sack in 4 years in the SEC, and shut out Hutchinson / Ojabo / Enagbare this year.
R4-108 LB Troy Andersen – He’s like Davion but bigger – both athletic freaks (Combine numbers are weirdly identical) and both only played around 1400 snaps at LB.
R4-121 WR Reggie Roberson – A down year after his injury and betting on him now that he is healthy – he was over 4 yards per route run and averaging over 20 YPC prior to his injury.
R5-152 CB Akayleb Evans – Another dog: “I feel like I’m an underdog. A lot of people overlook me… But that’s ok, it’s better when you can sneak up on people.” Philly confirmed.
R5-160 RB Jerrion Ealy – 7th in college in yards after contact per attempt and the 5th best elusiveness rating.
R5-164 OT Luke Goedeke – A RT project that gives depth, he had the lowest pressure rate allowed in true pass sets in college this year.
R6-204 P Jordan Stout – My real punt god will be gone by here but whatever, I’m taking him. And he flew in his 40.
“Doctor” Strange Is A Marvel – The Evolution of Football Super Hero, Cole Strange
Watch out Marvel, “Doctor” Cole Strange doesn’t need sorcery to dominate mankind, he uses brute strength to impose his will upon opponents that dare to come in his path. His mission, to take over the NFL. When asked what he believes to be the most important skill set to being an offensive lineman, he replied
“Playing aggressive, and tough and mean”
Philly would love this guy!
“Dr Strange” was born Devin Cole Strange July 31, 1998. “I grew up in Lenoir City TN, I moved to Farragut (about 10 miles away) in middle school.”
Cole stated he comes from a close family. He has an older brother, Dylan and a younger sister, Anna. Neither of his parents played college sports, but he stated his father was close to playing for TN. “My dad coached me some in little league. He always preached about being self-motivated saying things like ‘you need to want to do this on your own.’ “
Those lessons have reverberated within him his whole life. Cole stated one of his most memorable football moments was when he was in the second round of the Pee Wee playoffs and they were “getting whooped 24–8”. He went to the team “The game’s not over until it’s over boys” Cole modestly stated he doesn’t believe that rallied troops, but they came back to tie the game in regulation, and won in overtime. The team went on to win the Pee Wee championship the following week.
That competitive, aggressive nature is in his DNA. When asked what sport he would play if it weren’t football he stated “I would wrestle or (engage) in some sort of combat sport. I was doing some Jiu Jitsu pre covid. There’s just something about the physicality and grit with those sports that are similar to football. Where you are imposing your will on another being”
Coles plays angry, and his actions do all the talking. “I’m not the ‘Ra-Ra’ guy, but I do see myself as a leader. I’m not too vocal, I’m more of a lead by example kind of player. (My teammates) would say that I’m a hard worker. Whether its in the weight room or on the field. I’m a reliable teammate”

Off the field Cole describes himself as a mild mannered homebody “One of my hobbies is that I collect records.” He continued “Lynyrd Skynyrd is one of my favorites. I also listen to guys like Metallica or Led Zeppelin. (And) I like reading”
The soon to be NFL lineman played HS football at Farragut High, 20 miles outside of Knoxville. It didn’t take long for him to make a name for himself on the field. Cole was an All-State selection as a senior at Farragut Academy, and was named KIL Defensive Player of the Year. The twice named team captain and two-time all-district also played in the Tennessee-Kentucky Border Bowl earning Defensive MVP & All-Bowl team. In addition to his football accolades, Cole was just as dominant in the classroom, as an Honor Roll student.
His hard work and determination was recognized throughout his High School journey, and he was rewarded with scholarship offers. Including one for an opportunity to play relatively close to home.
“I actually signed with the Air Force coming out of high school, but I ultimately decided to stay close to home and obtained a scholarship to Chattanooga.” UTC is about a 90 minute drive from his families home.
Choosing UTC ended up being the best decision for Cole, and he wasted no time proving it was the right decision for them too.
As a 5-year starter on the offensive line (using the COVID exception for a sixth-year of eligibility in 2021) Cole, astonishingly, only allowed one sack in his college career across 582 drop backs. His only sack came from when he slid over to LT. So, his 1 sack came at a position he never played before. Cole never gave one up at guard during his 44 career starts at UTC. (41 at LG, 2 playing LT and 1 at C)
His high level of play were a factor in elevating the production of two UTC RBs. (Tyrell Price and Ailym Ford) They gained an average of 2.25 yards more per rushing attempt and 1.4 yards more per rush BEFORE CONTACT when running to the right side (the stat excluded runs to the right end, but the yards before contact are about the same).
Cole was awarded the Jacobs Blocking Award, given to the conference’s best blocker. (Corey Levin, current OG for the Titans and past Chattanooga Moc, also previously won the award.) Strange’s eye opening play attracted the attention of Phil Savage, and he was invited to participate in the Reese’s Senior Bowl. Strange more than held his own during a very impressive week in Mobile Alabama, and the scouting reports all throughout the process were positive.

“He just walls off the linebackers, and anyone else in his path”
“This kid is a finisher. Cole doesn’t just play to the whistle, he plays through it”
“Cole has one of the nastiest grips I’ve ever seen. In fact, when I think of grip from now on, he may be my example.”
“Strange possesses a high football IQ, elite on field awareness, and great athleticism”
His performance during Senior Bowl week, coupled with the style of play and attitude he brings to the field are traits all NFL GM’s covet on their offensive line. Cole met with all 32 teams while at the Senior Bowl.
“We talked to every single NFL team, and it was kind of like a speed dating thing. We talked to 16 different teams for 15 minutes each on Monday, and then we did the other 16 team on Thursday.
His ascent to the National stage has only been surpassed by his rise up NFL draft boards.
Whichever franchise selects Cole will love his attitude, and the intangibles he brings to a team. “Someone who is going to add to their culture. If the culture that they want to have is mean and tough and playing aggressive and someone who is going to work as hard as anyone else in the locker room.”
This April, he will find out which team he will be playing for, with the hopes to elevate them to an NFL Championship. Selfishly, I hope that team is in Philadelphia.
Cole would fit perfectly into an immediate all purpose backup role with the Eagles, while receiving tutelage under Jeff Stoutland. Cole can play Center, Guard, or even LT if needed. He has already proven himself to be a fast study. Strange played defensive end all throughout high school, then transitioned to playing soley on the offensive line in college.
Playing on the offensive line, unlike any other position, seems to be defined more by an individuals makeup, character and personal drive. If those are the characteristics the Eagles are valuing, then Strange will be on their board. He appreciates, competing, aggression, toughness and current Eagles center Jason Kelce.
“He is one, if not the, best center in the league. I am absolutely a fan. He is someone I enjoy watching”
I can’t think of a better mentor for Cole anywhere else in the NFL.
During my conversation with Cole, his attitude reminded me of something Kelce famously said during the Eagles parade speech.

“There is a quote in the O-line room that has stayed on the wall for the last five years. ‘Hungry dogs run faster.’ THAT’S THIS TEAM!”
Cole, when asked what he thought his biggest achievement was “I am not very satisfied with what I’ve accomplished so far. It really helps drive me in order to achieve better things. I want to have done something that I can really be proud of” If that isn’t the very definition of a hungry dog, I don’t know what is.
At the Combine in Indianapolis, Cole further described his sadistic side while on the playing field, and how he likes to flip the proverbial switch.
“I look at it as it’s the only place you can just kind of be a dick head. You know, you can hurt somebody, you can bury somebody, you can kind of give an elbow in their neck. And people kind of revere you for that. And also, it’s just fun, you know? Yeah, I just enjoy that.”

The Eagles have already had one player who would flip a switch when they got on the football field. None other than NFL HOF legend Brian Dawkins. Cole described the evolution of his on field transformation “When I was younger, I remember my dad telling me to flip the switch on the football field. The place to be mean and aggressive, and off the field, you’re not that person.”
I showed Cole the video of Dawkins’ metamorphous into his on field persona, Weapon X .
“I love that!, I love him saying he’s Weapon X”

Philadelphia loves that too! And they’re ready for another Marvel Hero.
Cole does have a degree in psychology and I asked him if he had any plans after football to utilize it. He indicated that a future Dr Strange isn’t as far fetched as it seems.
“I have considered it, if I’m lucky enough to play a long time in the NFL, I would certainly consider that!”
Paging Dr Strange…

A BIG thank you to Cole for his time. I wish you well in the draft and during your career.
Follow Cole @ColeStrange2
As always, thank you for reading.
David 3/4/2022
Follow me @PhlEagleNews
What I Learned Looking Back On My 2021 NFL Eagles Mock Draft
When I revisited the 2021 draft for this article there were two things I learned that I hope to remember AND utilize before I finalize my 2022 mock in April.
One: Positions matter: When a team continually shows you who they are, believe them! Howie, nor the Eagles, have drafted a LB in the first round since Jerry Robinson in 1978. They haven’t drafted a Cornerback in round one since Lito Sheppard in 2002. Despite how much the fans want a top tier thumping LB or a clear cut shutdown first round corner, the Eagles have simply not invested draft capital into the position.
Ex: I mocked a CB in round 2 pick 37 (Eric Stokes) and a LB in rd 3 pick 70 (Jamin Davis) The Eagles selected Landon Dickerson in round two, and Milton Williams in round 3. Both picks stayed true to their overall core belief to build through the lines. Despite LB being perceived as a HUGE need, they didnt select a LB until the 7th rd in Patrick Johnson.
Two: Drafting a long term replacement is rarely their strategy: Drafting to fill an immediate need, yes. Drafting a long term answer for a position (like a C to replace Kelce) is not usually in the cards.
EX: The Eagles had an immediate need last year at WR, and drafted Devonta Smith round one. A long term replacement for Kelce, (I mocked C Jimmy Morrissey) was not addressed. Yet another perceived long term need, CB, wasn’t added until round 4, in Zech McPhearson.
Looking back on my projections, the rankings of the players weren’t bad. Picking the Eagles selections, was spotty at best. I was hoping to atleast be more accurate with the positions they drafted. Which brings me back to my intial statement. Positions matter. When someone shows you who they are time and time again, believe them.
So, I plan on taking all of the above into account going forward. The only problem in doing that this year, is that they have 3 first round picks. So if they were ever going to draft a LB or a CB in round one, this would be the year. Sadly, I will more than likely, disregard my own conclusions for this one unsual season. I will hope for a a corner to be drafted in round one, and I will hope for better success mocking their draft.
As always, thank you for reading
follow me @PHLEagleNews
My 2021 draft rankings for each position, and all Eagles mock, is below if you have interest.
3/1/22
Welcome to the 2021 NFL
April 4, 2021
Much like last year, the top end of the WR draft class includes two Alabama wide outs. Last year it was Ruggs and Jeudy, This draft it is DeVonta Smith and Jaylen Waddle. Waddle is explosive in everything he does and was outperforming DeVonta prior to his regular season ending injury. DeVonta, the Heisman trophy winner, had record breaking stats all season long, and was putting on a show in the Championship game prior to his injury that kept him out the second half. The biggest concern with Smith is his size and concern for his health during a full season. There is also Ja’Marr Chase out of LSU who lots of scouts are projecting to be a generational talent. The Eagles should try and move up for Chase, he changes the entire outlook at the position for years to come. Waddle and Smith are both really good, but will probably leave the Eagles still needing another WR within a year or two.
There are so many needs on the Eagles team that this season will be difficult to project which positions they draft, much less the actual the player. It is also challenging due to the team having a new head coach and all new coordinators. Defensively, does the new DC, run cover 2 and value LB more than the Eagles have? Does the new OC and Head Coach Sirianni run an offense similar to what they did in Indianapolis or does he draft to build the system that he wants to run?
CB, WR, LB, C, S, DT, OL, RB, TE -BOLD are players I feel underrated at each position
The positions aren’t in any order, but the prospects at each position are.
Offense:
QB- Trevor Lawrence, Zach Wilson, Justin Fields, Trey Lance, Mac Jones, mid round favorite Kellen Mond
WR — Ja’Marr Chase(possibly a generational talent, I would trade up for him), Jaylen Waddle, DeVonta Smith , Rashad Bateman, Kadarius Toney, Terrace Marshall Jr. , Elijah Moore, Rondale Moore, Amari Rodgers, Amon-Ra St Brown
RB- Najee Harris, Travis Etienne, Kenneth Gainwell (would be a great fit with Eagles), Javonte Williams, Trey Sermon, my mid round favorite Chuba Hubbard, Khalil Herbert, Michael Carter, Jermar Jefferson
TE- There is Kyle Pitts, then everyone else. Pat Freiermuth, Brevin Jordan, Tommy Tremble, Mason, Hunter Long and my late round favorite Cary Angeline
C- Creed Humphrey , Landon Dickerson, Josh Myers, Quinn Meinerz , Drake Jackson, Kendrick Green, Trey Hill, Michael Menet and late rounder Jimmy Morrissey(could be another 6th round C for the Eagles).
OG — Alijah Vera Tucker, Wyatt Davis Trey Smith, Ben Cleveland, Deonte, Brown, Mid Rd to late round favorites, Aaron Banks, Robert Hainsey and late round favorite Jack Anderson
OT- Penei Sewell and everyone else, Christian Darrisaw, Rashawn Slater, Teven Jenkins, Liam Eichenberg , Dillon Radunz, Samuel Cosmi, Alex Leatherwood, Jalen Mayfield
Defense:
CB — Caleb Farley, Jaycee Horn, Patrick Surtain II, Greg Newsome II , Elijah Molden, Eric Stokes, Kelvin Joseph, Ifeatu Melifonwu, Assante Samuel Jr. (I would trade up in round two to draft Jr.) , Tay Gowan, Zech McPhearson, Tyson Campbell and mid round favorite, Paulson Adebo
LB — Micah Parsons(Best LB in the draft, an argument could be made for the Eagles to draft him at 12, Howie would never), Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, Zaven Collin, Nick Bolton, Jabril Cox, Jamin Davis, Barron Browining, Chazz Surratt, Dylan Moses, Pete Werner, and later round favorite Tony Fields II
S — Richie Grant, Trevon Moehrig, Hamsah Nasirildeen, Javon Holland, Andre Cisco, Jamar Johnson, Talanoa Hufanga, Ar’Darius Washington, Caden Sterns, Jacoby Stevens and my favorite late rd choice, Paris Ford
DE — Kwity Paye, Azeez Ojulari , Gregory Rousseau, Jaelan Phillips, Jayson Oweh. Carlos Basham Jr. , Dayo Odeyingbo, Quincy Roche, Shaka Toney, and late rd Jonathan Cooper
DT — Christian Barmore, Levi Onwuzurike, Daviyon Nixon, Marlon Tuipulotu, Jay Tufele , Alim McNeill, Tommy Togiai, Milton Williams and Jaylen Twyman.
The Eagles, armed with 11draft picks, need to hit on a lot of players with upside and starting ability at many positions. I would be surprised if they end up using all 11 picks as I expect Howie to be active with trades, moving around the board. I think they end up using 9 of their 11 picks. This is a rebuild, re-tool year, but they also plan on competing and believe they could make a run at the division, or at the very least 9–10 wins with a playoff appearance.
Eagles Mock , without trades AKA Howie standing pat: (which he will not do)
***Indicates team and draft position***
RD1 12- Devonta Smith WR Alabama
***Drafted by Eagles, 10th overall
RD2 37- Eric Stokes CB Georgia
***Drafted by GB #29 overall
RD3 70- Jamin Davis LB Kentucky
***Drafted by Redskins 19th overall
RD3 84- Deonte Brown G Alabama
***Drafted by Panthers pick 193
RD4 123- Tay Gowan CB Central Fl (hard to rank draft pos, opted out 2020)
***Drafted by Cardinals with pick 223
Ended up on Eagles via trade with AZ for Z Ertz
RD5 150- Jaylen Twyman DT Pittsburgh
***Drafted by Vikings pick 199
RD6 189- Jimmy Morrissey C Pittsburgh
***Drafted by Texans pick 230
RD6 224-Jonathan Cooper DE Ohio State
***Drafted by Broncos pick 239
RD6 225- Tre Norwood S Oklahoma
***Drafted by Steelers Pick 245
RD7 234- Cary Angeline TE North Carolina State
*** Un Drafted
Signed off waivers by Eagles, since released
RD7 240- Khyiris Tonga DT BYU
***Drafted by Bears pick 250
David
Follow me @PHLEagleNews
Offseason Assumptions, a Mock, and What Howie May Look For
Just a quick final Eagles mock draft prior to the start of the NFL Combine this week and what I want to see from each of the picks.
First, here are 10 assumptions I am using on the Howie and the Eagles:
- The Eagles will be in the middle of the league in cap space. While much improved, assuming another $10-15M is freed up will only put them in the mid-to-upper $20Ms in effective cap.
- Linebackers and safeties will be the easiest, cheapest, and best positions to address in free agency.
- Conversely, wide receiver and cornerback will be the toughest, and most expensive, to address in free agency.
- Despite continued noise, the Eagles will go with Hurts and not make a splash trade for a QB like Wilson.
- Howie said they will “surround Hurts with really good players”. While he did not specifically say skill positions, we can expect they will be an investment area.
- Sirianni and Gannon returning will have some increased input into positional value
but it will not change Howie’s prioritization at the top of the draft (sorry, no Lloyd or Dean)and Howie begins looking at LBs with a higher priority (I was gladly wrong here originally and updated post Howie’s Combine comments) - While not an immediate need in 2022, interior defensive line and running back are emerging needs in 2023 due to age and cost.
- Howie will continue the trend of the past two years of drafting highly athletic players that test well.
- High character was a focus last year and the Eagles will continue to draft for leadership and character (unlike the Cowboys).
- While impossible to mock with any accuracy, Howie will always move picks and I am assuming he will try to turn one of the 1sts into added capital next year.
So, now the mock…
R1-15 EDGE Travon Walker Georgia

An Eagles need aligns with the deepest position in the draft. Four EDGEs have already been taking by 15 and when the actual draft comes, I don’t think Travon will last anywhere close to pick 15. He has all the talent but didn’t have gaudy stats at Georgia (13.8% true pass set win rate, 5 sacks and 34 pressures in 381 dropbacks). But he has all the talent and will light up the Combine – the clip of him running down Alabama’s Agiye Hall from across the field is all I needed to see. He did drop into coverage 26 times so if Gannon wants to keep dropping linemen, Travon can do it.
What I’m interested in at the Combine: Explosiveness and shuttle
I am more interested in how high Travon tests, not that I have any concern areas. And then, where he starts getting talked about in the draft.
R1-16 CB Trent McDuffie Washington

I continue to be higher on McDuffie than most Eagles fans but I will stop mocking him when he goes ahead of the Eagles picks.
Last year the Eagles took the highest graded zone corner in the draft (Zech) and McDuffie is one of the best in the draft with an 82.2 zone grade. And of the top 30 graded zone corners, he is the ONLY one also with a top man cover grade (also at 80.0). This scheme flexibility along with being the solid tackler the Eagles require makes him a great fit.
The only negative thing said about McDuffie is his size, but he is 5’11” (unofficially) and size doesn’t show up as an issue on film. He will be another testing freak with his 41.5 inch vertical jump last June being 96th percentile for corners.
What I’m interested in at the Combine: Overall RAS percentile
McDuffie could test well in everything and be a top percentile corner in everything but height.
Trade:
Eagles receive R1-28, R3-92, and a 2023 2nd
Green Bay receives R1-19 and R5-164
Green Bay selects WR Chris Olave.
Green Bay is one of the most active 1st round trade up teams, trading up in 2018, 2019, and 2020, and do so again to add offensive talent in an effort to keep Rodgers. And the Eagles get an extra day 2 pick this year and next.
R1-28: WR Jahan Dotson PSU

Dotson has the best drop rate in the draft and can be productive at any level, grading above 80 at each depth of target. Expected to run in the 4.3s, he is another highly athletic and reliable receiver that will, at worst, immediately upgrade the Eagles at slot receiver.
What I’m interested in at the Combine: Speed, vertical
Dotson will be fast and while 40 time is not a be-all-end-all, I am interested to see how fast he is. He also possesses the best high school long jump in the draft class and interested in what he does on vertical.
R2-51: S Lewis Cine Georgia

The coaching staff’s influence shows up and Gannon gets the safety he needs. Cine played deep safety on 65% of his snaps but has the recognition and closing speed to attack the run. Of safeties in this class, he is the only one to grade above 77 deep and in the box and above 80 against the run and in coverage.
What I’m interested in at the Combine: Positional drills
Cine won’t blow people away on his 40 time but his reaction skills could be elite (W drill, shuttle, 3 cone)
R3-81: LB Brian Asamoah Oklahoma

Maybe I’ll look foolish in April, but the Eagles aren’t taking Lloyd or Dean in the 1st – they like TJ and Davion and the LBs played better once TJ got more snaps and Davion has all the upside. But Asamoah in the 3rd is a steal. He is another that will test extremely well and I expect him to not be available at 81 after the Combine.
What I’m interested in the Combine: Agility
Asamoah is rumored to run in the 4.4s and if he shows off in agility drills, he will move up boards a lot form his current ADP.
R3-92: DT Neil Farrell LSU

The Eagles need to continue to invest on the interior as Cox is aging and Hargrave is entering the last year of his contract (I assume he will be extended). Farrell is one of only two interior defenders (Logan Hall is the other) to rank in the top five in both run stop rate (5th at 11.9%) and pressure rate (2nd at 10.5%).
What I’m interested in the Combine: Broad and vertical jump
Weight (surprisingly) is the most correlated Combine measurement with NFL success for IDL and Farrell will be in the 90th percentile at 325 lbs. For Farrell, it will be important to see how his power tests.
R4-121: OG/C Dylan Parham Memphis

Parham is a guy I liked but wouldn’t have put on a mock due to his weight (285 lbs) but then he shows up at the Senior Bowl at 313. One widely held view I hate is that the Eagles should try to replicate what Kelce was (undersized and mobile) – Kelce is the 9th best draft pick when looking at value over expected and you cannot try to replicate an outlier like that. The Eagles could and should be interested in Parham – he played LG, RT, and RG at Memphis, took snaps at center at the Senior Bowl, and has the 3rd best pass block grade among the projected prospects. He gives the Eagles depth at G and has time to develop into Kelce’s replacement if needed.
What I’m interested in the Combine: Overall RAS percentile
Parham maintaining power and agility with his new 30 pounds, which he looked to have done at the Senior Bowl, is important. An ex-TE and sprinter, he has the ability to test well.
R5-152 EDGE Jeffrey Gunter Coastal Carolina

In the late rounds, the Eagles draft more Edges, LBs, and DBs than any other position and they go back to Coastal for another highly athletic EDGE. And by athletic, I mean he could be an absolute freak.
What I’m interested in the Combine: Overall RAS percentile
He should test in the 90th percentile in explosion and strength tests
R5-160 RB Kennedy Brooks Oklahoma

I just wrote an article here on what college traits translate to the NFL for RBs and Brooks is one of my favorite day 3 RB options. He has the 7th best elusiveness rate and 2nd highest explosive rush rate among RB prospects. A bigger back that gives the Eagles some depth to develop in Sanders last contract year.
What I’m interested in the Combine: 3 cone and 40 time
Brooks isn’t going to be the best tester due to his size but does he hit the low 4.5s and how does he look on change of direction. We know he will be tougher to bring down.
R6-204: TE Charlie Kolar Iowa St

If you have read my other stuff, you know I would take punter Jordan Stout here but Howie won’t. I’m not sure Kolar is the right or best choice, but I am putting him here. First, Sirianni has connections to Iowa St. Second, Kolar is a big target with great hands and a decent blocker. Third, he is hysterical in interviews.
What I’m interested in the Combine: Speed, agility
If something holds him back it is his overall athleticism. Would love to see his agility and speed – neither will light up RAS, but testing better than expectations will do a lot for him.
Running Backs: Elusiveness, Explosiveness, and Potential Day 3 Gems
First, an article on punters and now running backs – the two positions the analytics community hates most. I’m definitely not part of the “running backs don’t matter” crowd and with the Eagles truly committing to the run this past season, I wanted to take a deeper look at running backs. Here I am taking a look at what college traits translate to NFL success for RBs and who could be later round finds with the following profiled:
Why EPA is misleading
First, some comments on EPA as I am not using it here. Last week I was in an interesting Twitter exchange about what RB metrics may matter that Connor LaPlante (@cplant_) started. We know traditional metrics like yards-per-attempt aren’t useful and you must be careful using EPA, the go-to analytical metric for almost everything, for evaluating individual players. EPA measures the value a play generated vs. what was expected based on the field position, down, and distance. Given this, the game situation in which a running play is called has a huge effect on a running back’s opportunity.
To show this, below is the per-rush EPA broken down for all rushes, “bad rushes” (rushes on 1st-and-10), and “good rushes” (short yardage, less than 3 yards-to-go). I included the league average as well as stats for Jonathan Taylor (one of the top backs last year and one of the highest use short-yardage backs in the league at almost 18% of rushes), Miles Sanders, and Dalvin Cook (two above average RBs that have much lower short yardage usage).
| Running Back | EPA Overall | EPA 1st-and-10 | EPA Short Yardage (<3 yds to go) |
| Average for all RBs | -0.060 | -0.095 | 0.049 |
| Jonathan Taylor | 0.069 | -0.097 | 0.218 |
| Miles Sanders | -0.038 | -0.093 | 0.016 |
| Dalvin Cook | -0.027 | -0.099 | 0.054 |
First, rushes on 1st-and-10 have a depressed EPA because the chance of picking up more yards than a pass is really low. But short-yardage runs have a much higher EPA because so many of these runs either result in a touchdown if near the goal line or a new set of downs, both of which EPA values highly. A back could run for 4 in both scenarios and have vastly different EPAs.
While Jonathan Taylor had the 3rd best EPA per rush in the league, he looks no different than other RBs on less favorable rushing situations (1st and 10) – his high short-yardage usage skews his overall EPA stats. Still a good back, but you see how this makes EPA problematic for evaluating a RB individually and against other RBs.
EPA is not a bad metric, it is just better at aggregate (season or game level) and evaluating game situation / decisions. Looking at individual players with EPA, especially on smaller sample sizes, just requires digging in for needed context.
The metrics that do matter
The two metrics that have been shown to be (1) most stable from college to pro and (2) most accurate in isolating a running back’s performance are:
- Elusiveness – PFF’s rating based on yards generated after contact and the number of tackles avoided or broken
- Explosiveness – the percentage of rushes that gained 15 or more yards
Elusiveness
By focusing on what a running back generates on their own – blocks avoided and yards after a defender makes contact – elusiveness attempts to isolate a back from the blocking they receive. And it has been shown to be a stable metric from college to pros, meaning if a back was elusive in college, you can expect them to be elusive in the NFL as well.
While not perfect (there is no perfect metric here), elusiveness is very helpful. The below shows RBs drafted over the past 5 years with their college elusiveness rating on the x-axis and their NFL rushing grade on the y-axis. While there are exceptions (Pollard and Jones have high ratings despite average elusiveness scores), a back’s elusive rating absolutely correlates with NFL success.

Explosiveness
I’ve written before about the value of explosive plays – a single explosive play triples the chance of a drive ending in a score (Gannon’s defense, while infuriating at times to watch, is rightly focused on limiting explosive plays). And explosiveness and elusiveness are obviously related – a back that can avoid or break tackles and gain more yards after contact has a better chance of creating an explosive rush.
Below shows the same drafted RBs over the past five years with their college explosive rush rate vs. their NFL rushing grade – again, their college performance is predictive of NFL success, although a bit less strongly correlated than elusiveness (explosive rush rate has an R2 of 0.24 vs a better 0.33 for elusiveness).

A quick look at the 2021 draft class
This is my ongoing “what were the Steelers thinking?” part of the post. While I am not a run game hater as I said, I think it is insanity to draft backs high or give them a second contract. Here is a look at the 2021 drafted running backs with their college elusiveness rating on the y-axis and college explosive rush rate on the x-axis.

When you look at the 2021 backs, the top four elusive backs also happen to be the top 4 run graded and 4 of the top 5 top EPA/rush backs in their rookie season. Kenny Gainwell was actually the highest EPA/rush rookie because he had 5 rushing touchdowns, one from the 1-yard line and the other four from 7 yards out or more, all of which are very highly valued and pushed his aggregate EPA up.

Again, any single number does not tell the whole story on a back, but it is interesting to look at where RBs were drafted vs. the rookie season performance. You do not need to get a starting-caliber back high which is a consistent story each year. Javonte Williams (pick 2-35), Michael Carter (R4-108), Rhamondre Stevenson (R4-121), Kenny Gainwell (R5-151), and Khalil Herbert (R6-218) all stand out among the rookies but are all over the draft board. I’ve posted data in the past that shows RBs are one of the best value positions (along with IOL, IDL, and kickers) to take in rounds 5-7.
Which day 3 backs in the 2022 class could be interesting?
The Eagles re-discovered the run game this past season, ending the season with the 3rd highest EPA per rush and top rushing success rate in the league. Hurts was a large part of this, but Sanders, Howard, and Scott all had above 70.0 run grades running behind the number two rated Run Block Win Rate (RBWR) offensive line.
Looking forward, I am assuming they will continue to prioritize the run and while Sanders is still the number 1 back, he is in the last year of his rookie deal and only played 12 games each of the past two seasons. There is a price that makes sense for everybody, but assuming what he will likely get, it makes no sense to re-sign him. Scott and Howard may also both be gone, and while Gainwell was drafted last year, the Eagles should look for depth this April. They won’t (shouldn’t) take a back high in this draft but like last year, finding a potential gem like Gainwell late in the draft, particularly a larger back, to prepare for the post Sanders era is smart.
Below shows the same graph I used above but for the 2022 running back draft class showing college elusiveness and explosive rush rate.

I am not going to spend time on the top backs – Breece Hall, Isaiah Spiller, Kenneth Walker, Kyren Williams – that will most likely go early but instead look at projected day 3 RBs that could shine.
Hitting on day 3 is tough, no matter the position, but since the Eagles are unlikely (or not) going to use a top pick on a back, I’ll highlight guys that have a better than average chance.
Dameon Pierce – Florida
| Measurables: | 5’10”, 215 lbs |
| ADP: | R4-131 |
| Elusive Rating: | 138.0 (4th) |
| Explosive Rush Rate: | 9.0% (9th) |
The top graded back in the NCAA, Dameon is a physical back that runs hard and caused missed tackles at the 2nd highest rate in college this year. One that is viewed as a power back but he is much more than that – he had the 9th highest explosive rush rate, 4th best elusive rush rate, and was the fastest player on the field at the Senior Bowl, hitting 20.66 mph (source @JimNagy_SB tweet here). He went for 69 yards on 9 rushes against Georgia and is an effective blocker. One of my favorites in this list and somebody that would be a great fit on the Eagles.
Tyler Allgeier – BYU
| Measurables: | 5’11”, 220 lbs |
| ADP: | R4-134 |
| Elusive Rating: | 111.4 (8th) |
| Explosive Rush Rate: | 7.3% (18th) |
Another big back in the class. Allgeier won’t quite give the same explosive rush rate as others on the list but he makes up for it in breaking tackles.
Zonovan Knight – NC State
| Measurables: | 5’11”, 210 lbs |
| ADP: | R6-180 |
| Elusive Rating: | 110.8 (9th of 29) |
| Explosive Rush Rate: | 7.9% (16th of 29) |
Zonovan is 3rd in the draft class, behind Walker and Spiller, in tackles avoided per attempt and is 2nd in the NCAA in yards per attempt when contacted behind the line of scrimmage. His fumble rate (7 fumbles in 3 years over 439 attempts) scares me away and his pass blocking needs to improve.
Jerrion Ealy – Ole Miss
| Measurables: | 5’8″, 190 lbs |
| ADP: | R6-197 |
| Elusive Rating: | 131.4 (5th) |
| Explosive Rush Rate: | 9.1% (8th) |
The smallest back in the list, Ealy is 4th in the draft class behind Zonovan Knight, Spiller, and Walker in tackles avoided per attempt and 7th in college in yards after contact per attempt. Like White above, Ealy needs to improve his pass-blocking but provides some kick return value.
ZaQuandre White – South Carolina
| Measurables: | 6’1″, 215 lbs |
| ADP: | R6-204 |
| Elusive Rating: | 153.6 (1st) |
| Explosive Rush Rate: | 11.2% (4th) |
White is another back I really like, especially where he is likely to be drafted. He only had 215 college rushing attempts but led the FBS in both yards after contact per attempt (4.61 yards) and yards per route run among running backs (2.17 yards) while playing in the SEC. He needs to greatly improve his pass blocking to get consistent time in the NFL.
Kennedy Brooks – Oklahoma
| Measurables: | 5’11”, 215 lbs |
| ADP: | R6-214 |
| Elusive Rating: | 118.9 (7th) |
| Explosive Rush Rate: | 12.7% (2nd) |
Another bigger back, I often see Kennedy projected as a short-yardage back but his traits say he is much more than that – as a comparison, his missed tackle rate generated is twice Jordan Howard‘s with the 2nd highest explosive rush rate among prospects. Brooks is my personal favorite on the list – he has the size the Eagles could use, had no fumbles over the past two seasons and only one in his college career. He showed up consistently all year, including 139 yards on 22 rushes and four that went 15 yards or more against Oklahoma State, the top college run defense last year in EPA allowed. He overlapped with Hurts at Oklahoma in 2019, which doesn’t matter but is interesting if nothing else.
A Look at the Eagles Pass Rush and Offseason Priorities
Let me put this out right at the beginning – what I am about to write is not a “the Eagles pass rush is great” article. That argument was going on last week and I do not want to anger Seth… But when you dig into the pass rush data, you see the story is more complicated. Yes, the Eagles need better pass rushers, but the data actually point to the back seven and scheme as well.
What affected the Eagles pass rush?
I had trouble reconciling the Eagles pass rush drop off with some of the deeper pass rush stats. Pass Rush Win Rate (PRWR) is a charting of how often defensive players beat their blocks within 2.5 seconds. In 2021, the Eagles:
- As a team were 7th in the league in PRWR at 49%
- Had a top 10 pass rusher in Javon Hargrave who was 7th with a 21.0% pass rush win rate and Josh Sweat who was 50th out of 200 at 14.5%
But the Eagles ability to win against blocks did not result in pressures. The Eagles were:
- 19th in total pressures and 15th in true pass set pressures
- 15th in QB hits
- 19th in hurries
- 31st in total sacks and 15th in true pass set sacks
Opposing QBs got rid of the ball fast
The average time to throw (TTT) for a QB across the league is 2.7 seconds but the Eagles opposing QBs threw the ball much, much quicker. Of their 17 games (I excluded the last regular season game against the Cowboys as starters did not play but included the wildcard game against Tampa), 13 times the opposing QB released the ball below the league average. Only Dak (first Dallas game), Darnold, Garrett Gilbert, and Mike Glennon were above the league average.

And not only did they throw quicker than the league average, 11 QBs threw quicker than their own average release time. And most threw significantly quicker than they did the rest of the season – 3 threw at their fastest rate of the season (Carr, Herbert, and Siemian), 2 threw at their 2nd fastest rate of the season (Mahomes and Zach Wilson), and 4 threw at their 3rd fastest rate (Brady, Daniel Jones, and Bridgewater).

There is obviously a strong correlation between time to throw and pressure across the league – as time to throw drops, so do pressures. Below are 2021 QB average time to throw vs. allowed pressure rate.

The Eagles saw largely the same effect. Below shows each QB they faced in 2021 with their time to throw vs the Eagles on the x-axis and the Eagles pressure rate on the y-axis. The league average TTT is drawn in as the grey vertical line.

The Eagles clearly had a statistical pass rush drop off from 2020 where they were 3rd in the league in pressure rate, 2nd in the league in sacks, 14th in hurries, and 5th in QB hits. But, in 2020 they had almost the same pass rush win rate (it was actually slightly lower at 48%). QBs threw quickly against the Eagles in 2020 and threw even quicker in 2021 as you can see with the leftward shift in 2021 (blue) dots below (left is quicker QB release).

There isn’t a clean answer on what caused the drop-off in 2021, QBs throwing quicker contributed but there were several other probably reasons:
- The Eagles faced slightly better pass blocking teams in 2021 than 2020 with a 1.5% higher pass block win rate among 2021 opponents.
- The defensive scheme clearly contributed – remember Fletcher Cox publicly complaining about dropping into coverage and the excessive CB cushions.
- And probably most significantly, losing Brandon Graham and having his over 400 snaps split up with Ryan Kerrigan, Derek Barnett, and Tarron Jackson. In 2020 BG was 2nd on the team in pass rush win rate at 17.4%, barely below Hargrave’s 17.8% win rate and that was nowhere near replaced.
Gannon’s scheme
I mentioned at the beginning that this was not a defense of the pass rush and it also pointed to other areas of the defense. And the scheme was part of it with Gannon’s defense focusing on a controlled, containing pass rush that creates pressure first. Gannon explained ““… I don’t think just measuring sacks is a good measure as far as how’s your defensive line affecting the game. So I think they’re doing a good job. Yeah, hopefully, we get some more production with sacking the quarterback at times and there’s a lot of different ways to do that.”
I’m not as negative on Gannon as many. The off coverage drove me nuts, he refuses to play dime even though our linebackers were so weak, and and the personnel was not always used to their strengths despite that being the core coaching philosophy entering the season. But the Eagles did limit explosive plays, 5th best in the league in allowed explosive play rate, and forced – by far – the lowest depth of target on pass plays. It is actually the lowest of any defense over the past 3 seasons. Just look at how much lower the Eagles average depth of target was than the rest of the league in 2021 – they aren’t even close to Seattle, the next lowest team:

This has value – the league is about limiting explosive plays. But the issue is that the Eagles were not good enough here. They were 8th worst in the league in EPA allowed on passes less than 5 yards, 8th worst against RB in the passing game, and 2nd worst against TEs. Yes, the pass rush needs to be better, but poor LBs are allowing QBs to just work around the rush. The average time to throw against the Eagles in 2021 was 2.58 seconds – at that pace, no pass rush is going to consistently get there.
Just for fun as a comparison, the Steelers, who have one of the best and most productive pass rushes in the league, face an average time to throw of 2.68 seconds, a full tenth of a second longer than the Eagles and almost at the league average. And when the Steelers face quicker release times, (Burrow, Cousins, Rodgers, Carr), their pressure and sack rates both drop.

Mocking the off-season
Free agents:
The Eagles have $22M of cap and we can assume it gets to $30-35M after some (hopefully selective) restructures. They will need an estimated $8.6M to sign their draft picks, leaving them in the low to mid $20Ms to work with – better than last year, but middle of the league and not an amount that means they will sign massive FAs. The below moves would chew up between $16-20M depending on the WR signed.
- Re-sign S Rodney McLeod (1 yr / $2M) – Epps earned a starting spot, Andrew Harris will depart and it is tough to lose both starters in the same offseason. McLeod will be back on an affordable 1-year.
- Sign LB Josey Jewell (1 yr / $6M) – I refuse to believe Howie will go after Devin Lloyd or Nakobe Dean so let’s forget that when we get to the draft. Denver has two good LBs, both recovering from torn pecs, and most likely won’t keep both. Solid in coverage and run defense, pairing Jewell with TJ solidifies the LBs and does not put the entire burden on Davion or a rookie.
- Sign DT Tim Settle (1 yr / $4.25M) – There won’t be a ton of snaps available on the interior as long as Cox and Hargrave are around, but Settle is exactly the type of rotational DT Howie covets. The former Hokie and team-with-no-name tackle, Settle has not yet hit 400 snaps in his career but would be the 2nd best pass rusher (13.4% win rate) and highest graded run defender on the Eagles.
- Sign a veteran WR – Target Russell Gage (4 yrs / $30M) or Jamison Crowder (1 yr / $4.5M). I would go after Mike Williams but I don’t see him leaving the Chargers and the Eagles aren’t going to sign a Davante or Godwin. I’m not as high on Allen Robinson as many as he bottom of the league in separation which is not what Hurts needs.
The draft:
R1-15: EDGE Travon Walker UGA
What this entire article is about. He doesn’t have the stats in college (only a 13.8% true pass set win rate) but his athleticism is nuts. A solid run defender, he has work to do on pass rush but will have the time to do so behind BG and Sweat.
R1-16: WR Traylon Burks Arkansas
Yep another 1st round receiver but sunk cost and all… also Howie said he is going to surround Hurts will skill. He’s big, will test crazy (he hit 22.6 mph on the field this year), and plays everywhere – he’s one of my favorite players in the draft. Not sure Burks makes it to 16, depends on how others like Cleveland rank the WRs but he is here and I am taking him.
R1-19: CB Trent McDuffie Washington
The Eagles need a Nelson replacement and while they have not invested in corner high in the past, they will this year. Most have McDuffie lower than I do, but I keep re-watching him trying to find what I don’t like and the only knock is size. He will be another freak tester and is probably the best corner fit for the Eagles scheme. Probably my other favorite in the draft with Burks.
R2-51: DT Devonte Wyatt UGA
Ok, this is the point where most will officially hate this mock as I still haven’t taken a LB or S. But this makes sense. First, Howie prioritizes the line and, second, DT is becoming an urgent need. Hargrave is only under contract for 2022 and Cox is aging. Milton Williams was taken last year but there is nothing behind him. Another freak for his size from Georgia, Wyatt is the only SEC DT that graded above 80 against both the rush and pass and had a 21.8% true pass set win rate. Surprised he was here at 51 but no hesitation with this pick.
R3-83: S Bryan Cook Cincinnati
Sirianni and Gannon’s influence shows up here as the Eagles haven’t taken a safety this high since 2011. The 5th highest graded safety in the FBS, Cook does what the Eagles need – he plays all over but can play deep and still be effective coming in against the run.
R4-121: OG Cole Strange Chattanooga
One of David’s favorites with a recent article here and he has me won over. 1 sack allowed in his entire college career, Strange is a guard that showed some center at the Senior Bowl.
R5-152: RB Hassan Haskins Michigan
If the Eagles are going to be a run-heavy offense, get another RB as I have Boston Scott and Jordan Howard leaving (I’d look to return Howard if he doesn’t get picked up elsewhere). Haskins is a bigger back that had one of the higher rushing yards over expected this year.
R5-160: OT Andrew Stueber Michigan
Back-to-back Wolverines with Stueber, another big (6’7″ 338 lb) developmental RT that only allowed 2 sacks in 785 career dropbacks. He probably moves inside in the NFL but gives the Eagles time to see if he can develop as an eventual RT.
R5-164: WR Velus Jones Jr. Tennessee
It’s always interesting to look at potential draft inefficiencies and one this year could be the 5 or 6 year Covid-related rookies that many teams will pass on for age alone. Jones will be 25 by the start of the season but is fast, hitting 21.75 mph at the Senior Bowl. A good sized receiver at 6’0″ 200 lbs, he is one of the best kick returners in college, something the Eagles have never solved. With the Eagles WR depth chart, there is room to roster him if he can contribute on returns.
R6-204: P Jordan Stout PSU
I wrote here about the Eagles need for a punter, why it makes sense to draft one, and why Stout is the best punter in the draft class, headlines be damned. Do I think Howie will draft him? No. Is Howie wrong? Yes.
All of the above fills some the needed holes on both sides while not being crazy on the salary cap:
Defense:
DL: Cox, Hargrave, Sweat, BG, Milton, Tarron, Tim Settle, Devonte Wyatt, Travon Walker
LB: TJ, Josey Jewell, Davion, Singleton, Johnson, Bradley, Johnson
CB: Slay, Maddox, Trent McDuffie, Zech, Tay
S: McLeod, Epps, K’Von, Bryan Cook
Offense:
WR: Devonte, Quez, Gage or Crowder, Traylon Burks, Reagor, Velus Jones
RB: Sanders, Gainwell, Haskins, Huntley
OL: Mailata, Dickerson, Kelce, Seumalo, Lane, Driscoll, Herbig, Toth, Cole Strange, Andrew Stueber
TE: Goedert, Stoll, Tyree
QB: Hurts
Specialists:
K: Jake Elliott
P: Jordan Stout
Returners: Huntley, Velus Jones
2022 NFL Eagles Mock Draft and FA Targets
Pre Combine, Post Senior Bowl, Eagles Only Mock with 2 Free Agents
Round One:
15– CB Derek Stingley Jr.
If Stingley doesn’t fall to pick 15, Kaiir Elam or Trent McDuffie will. I would address the need of CB in round one and get someone to pair with Slay.

16– WR Treylon Burks
He is the best WR in the draft for what the Eagles need. At 6’3 225, he creates separation and has HUGE hand. Burks is also a very physical run blocker, which is something Philly wide outs are asked to do often.

19– DE Jermaine Johnson
Had a fantastic, eye opening, week during the Senior bowl. Jermaine is also very versatile, having played standing up, hand in the dirt, right side, left side, as well as LB.

Round Two:
51– S Jalen Pitre
Could fit into the hybrid role Malcolm Jenkins used to play. He is always mixing it up, and plays with an attitude he backs up with his on field aggression.
Round Three:
83– LB Channing Tindall
If the Eagles are not going to take a LB in the first 2 rounds, Channing is one of the best still on the board. He plays with speed, and brings violence that is not expected from his size. He would bring a much needed flair to the position.

Round Four:
123– OG/C Cole Strange
Cole could groom for a year under Kelce, if the Eagles see him as a Center, while he spends 2022 as an all purpose back up along the O Line. Cole brings aggression, and the work ethic the Eagles demand from the position.
Round Five:
154– RB Brian Robinson Jr.
Brian picks up yards after contact and is a punishing finisher. He uses his legs and his 6’1 225 lb frame to pick up the tough short yardage needed on 3rd and 4th an one. Would be a great rotational back.

162– TE Cole Turner
The Eagles want another pass catching TE to pair with Goedert, and with project Tyree Jackson out for a large part of the season, they will probably be drafting one. Cole Turner has proven to be a pass catching wonder. Turner has good hands and ball tracking ability. At 6’6, he’s another big body who gets the separation needed to be a reliable target for Hurts.

166– DT Otito Ogbonni
The former playmaking Bruin had such a good Senior bowl week that he very well may not last this long in the draft. Ogbonni has a very strong lower body and is a solid tackler. He also muscles his way through gaps and never gives up on plays.

Round Six:
205– S Nick Cross
Cross, a former track star, has impressive speed and good ball skills for a safety. He would bring much needed coverage ability from the S position, in a back up or as the third S in dime coverage. If the Eagles play it under Gannon.

The Haul
Defense: CB- DE- (2)S- LB- DT
Offense: WR- OG/C- RB- TE
I do not believe for one minute that these ten selections will remain in this draft order. I expect Howie to be active trading picks, and moving all over the board. (including possibly moving a first to 2023 or trading for a QB)
2022 Free Agent Wish List:
The Williams Duo
Marcus Williams
The Saints free safety is reaching what should be the prime of his career, at 26 years old. If the Eagles are willing to spend some money at the position, he is likely one of the safer bets as he hasn’t been injured in his NFL career. He may never get over being the player exposed in the playoff game that sent the Vikings to Philly (on the Eagles way to their first Super Bowl win) but he will command a four- or five-year contract worth $15 million a year.

Mike Williams
He isn’t the quickest player, but he does have the size the Eagles are missing from the wide receiver core. He would be a good red zone threat to pair with Dallas Goedert. His injury history makes it hard to project his value. He played well in 2021, but most guys do in a contract year. The Eagles will have interest, but at what cost is anyones guess. Howie is always creative, and if he wants him he will find a way.

As always, Thank You for reading!
Follow me @PHLEagleNews
David
2/22/2022
Cole Strange Appreciates Aggression and Toughness, you will appreciate him
Cole Strange is rising up draft boards after his performance during Senior Bowl week, and with good reason. The style of play and attitude he brings to the field are traits all NFL teams covet on their offensive line.
When asked what he believes to be the most important skill set to being an offensive lineman
“Playing aggressive, and tough and mean”
Philly would love this guy!
Cole can play Center or Guard and has taken practice reps at every position along the line. He would fit perfectly into an immediate all purpose backup role with the Eagles, while receiving tutelage under Jeff Stoutland. At 6’4 300 lbs, he is a mauler and a fast study. A defensive end in high school, he never played on the offensive line until college. Cole would be a great player for now and the future.
Check out some clips:
Every scout, and scouting report, raves about his strong grip.
Great vision and football acumen. He diagnoses plays quickly and effectively.
More than held his own during Senior Bowl week. Opened a lot of eyes. (played Center in the game)
He gets to the second level easily, looking for someone else to hit.
A finisher. Cole doesn’t just play to the whistle, he plays through it.
He has had this mentality since he was a kid. Cole stated one of his most memorable football moments that stuck out more than any other was when he was in the second round of the Pee Wee playoffs and they were “getting whooped 24–8”. He went to the team “The games not over until it’s over boys” Cole modestly stated he doesn’t believe that rallied troops, but they came back to tie the game in regulation, and won in overtime. The team went on to win the Pee Wee championship the following week. Winner mentality.
Has proven to be a very coachable, willing learner. Hungry to learn more. Cole prides himself on not losing the same way twice.
Stats and Facts:
Graduated in December of 2020 with a degree in Psychology.
44 career starts. 41 at LG, 2 playing LT and 1 at C.
First-team All-Southern Conference selection.
Played in a very run heavy scheme at Chattanooga.
He is a player on the rise, and one to watch during the draft.
As always, thanks for reading.
Follow me @PhlEagleNews
Follow Matt at @MattAlkire
David 2/16/22














