All Episodes

March 23, 2024 81 mins

Ryan Wormeli, Scott Bogman, and Pat Fitzmaurice conduct a 3-round dynasty superflex rookie mock draft. They analyze each pick, from solid quarterbacks like Jayden Daniels and JJ McCarthy to potential sleeper wide receivers and running backs after the first round. Get exclusive tips on how to navigate your draft for both immediate impact players and long-term investments. 

Timestamps (may be off due to ads): 

Introduction - 0:00:01
1.01 - 0:01:37
1.02 - 0:02:56
1.03 - 0:05:37
1.04 - 0:07:14
1.05 - 0:11:46
1.06 - 0:13:15
1.07 - 0:14:40
1.08 - 0:16:11
1.09 - 0:19:23
1.10 - 0:21:05
1.11 - 0:22:07
1.12 - 0:24:49
Reality Sports Online - 0:28:38
2.01 - 0:29:39
2.02 - 0:32:30
2.03 - 0:34:22
2.04 - 0:37:55
2.05 - 0:40:06
2.06 - 0:43:24
2.07 - 0:46:16
2.08 - 0:49:28
2.09 - 0:51:15
2.10 - 0:55:24
2.11 - 0:57:15
2.12 - 0:57:56
Draft Simulator - 0:59:43
3.01 - 1:00:22
3.02 - 1:01:43
3.03 - 1:03:10
3.04 - 1:05:04
3.05 - 1:06:16
3.06 - 1:08:19
3.07 - 1:09:46
3.08 - 1:11:24
3.09 - 1:13:51
3.10 - 1:14:55
3.11 - 1:16:05
3.12 - 1:17:10
Takeaways - 1:19:05

Helpful Links:

Reality Sports Online - By now, most of you have probably heard of Reality Sports Online, the powerful Fantasy Sports platform where Owners get to build and manage their Fantasy team like an NFL General Manager. But, the question is, have you tried it? It’s time to go see what all the buzz in the dynasty community is about. If you like what you see, use the promo code "FANTASYPROS" to receive a 10% discount on your team or league today! Fantasy Just Got Real at RealitySportsOnline.com

Mock Draft Simulator - FantasyPros has the largest database of expert dynasty rankings for both startups and rookie drafts. Complete fast and FREE dynasty rookie mock drafts using our Mock Draft Simulator at fantasypros.com/simulator.

BettingPros Podcast – For advice on the best picks and props across both the NFL and college football each and every week, check out the BettingPros Podcast at bettingpros.com/podcast, our BettingPros YouTube channel at youtube.com/bettingpros, or wherever you listen to podcasts. 

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Hello, everybody, Welcome into another episode of the Fantasy Pros
Dynasty Football Podcast. I am Ryan Wormley, joined as always
by Pat fitz Morris and by Scott Bogman Fellas. We
are mock drafting today. It is my most fun type
of episode that we do. We are doing a Dynasty
Superflex rookie mock draft.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
This is two point zero fits.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
You actually missed the first one, which we do with
Cody Carpenter, who was you know, kind enough to join
Boggs and myself. Did you learn anything from listening to
the first one? Did you watch the tape to see
what types of picks we'd be making.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
I have been neglectful in scouting you guys, but I
actually scouted Cody. Oddly enough. Yesterday we joined Thor and
Deebro and myself joined three of the player profiler guys
for a six man mock draft. So that was interesting.
I have the book on Deebro and Thor, now I
just don't have it on you guys. So I guess

(00:54):
I'm gonna learn a lot today.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
I'm a wild card, okay, I'm little Finger and Game
of Thrones complete believer in chaos, so you really can't
learn anything from me. I'm gonna be one ladder from
the last one. Chaos is a ladder. Great line from
the show that wasn't actually in the books, by the way,
so you know, really good, good moment there.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
Just to let everybody know.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
All of our early twenty twenty four consensus rankings and
tiers can be found at fantasypros dot com slash rankings.
You can also navigate from there to our dynasty rankings
as well if you want to take a look at
where we have these guys ranked. Let's dive into the
mock and Bogman put together the sheet. He gave himself
the first overall pickie.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
Where are you starting to stow? Is it the obvious pick? Look?
I gave myself one because I struggle with one right now.
Maybe that'll change by the time the draft is over.
But I think Marvin Harrison Jr. Is such a lock.
But in a super flex mock, which is what we're
doing here today, I think it has to be Caleb Williams.

(01:58):
And you know, Patrick Holmes is what we want out
of Caleb Williams. Are we gonna get it? I don't
know that's a big ask. But Patty Mahomes is never
really QB one. He's very high. He's in the top
three constantly, but he hasn't been that like crazy overwhelming
number one QB. Maybe one year he has, but he's

(02:21):
always in that top three. Superflex is limited by the
amount of players. It's only thirty two right quarterbacks in
the NFL, so you know that is the number that
you have, which is really twenty eight or twenty nine,
because there's always a couple jobs that are in flux.
So to me, it still has to be the most
guaranteed product coming out. That's Caleb Williams. So I'm gonna

(02:43):
stick with Caleb Williams and pick him at one one.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
Fits just to confirm you would make the same choice, right,
I would.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
I would, And like I understand the temptation of Marvin
Harrison Junior there, but I would also take Caleb one
on one.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Yeah, that's a consensus, you know, unanimus across the board
for the three of us at least fits.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
Are you going with Harrison at number two?

Speaker 3 (03:02):
Then I am gonna take Harrison, And you know it
is super flex and Drake May and Jaden Daniels are tempting,
but man, I'm just totally sold on Harrison. And we've
talked about this worm. Like I live up in Big
ten Country. I've been watching Marvin Harrison Junior for a
while now, and I'm just like bowled over by how
good he is. I mean, he's he's got a Hall

(03:23):
of Fame dad, and Marvin Harrison is like bigger, faster,
you know, amazing ball skills, underrated route running ability. It's
not like he's any slouch there. I think he's just
gonna hit the ground running in September. And I mean
I think he's top ten for redrafts honestly or maybe
just out. I think I might have him as my

(03:44):
wide receiver eleven. But like he's gonna make an impact
right away, and I like him more than neighbors. Like
I don't think it's that close between those two neighbors
is really really good. But you know, I don't think
there's any argument that neighbor is better. I know that
there are reports that there are some NFL teams that

(04:04):
have neighbors ranked higher. Like if I was an owner
and I heard that, I would fire my entire scouting department.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Oh, I completely disagree with you. I one percent disagree.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
I neigh I was gonna I was gonna bring up
too deepro fits. And I taped with him just yesterday
on the main feed, not the Dynasty show, and he
had Neighbors ahead of Harrison in his rankings. Would you
go so far as to have that Bogman or you
just think it's a lot closer than I.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
I don't. I gotta be honest, I don't know, but
I put them so close to each other that it's
like if someone took Neighbors ahead of Harrison, I'd be like, Okay,
I get it, but I do have right now, I
have Harrison one. But it's just Malik Neighbors. Is that
they're both so good, and it's just like the stop

(04:51):
and start speed and the way that Neighbors breaks out
of his routes and doesn't slow down. It reminds me
so much of Antonio Brown, and I watch a lot
of it Tonio Brown, right, and I haven't seen many
guys like him. I think the thing that Antonio Brown
still has done better than anyone I've ever seen is
the hand usage. He and not getting flags for the

(05:12):
hand usage either is kind of crazy from him. So
that is a learned thing that you know maybe these
guys will develop, but I love Harrison. He's so much
of a guarantee. That's why I had him at one one.
But I also love Neighbors. It makes it. And this
is the real reason I put myself at one is
because I don't know what I want to do with
four depending on what you do at three, So I'm

(05:33):
like putting myself to the test in this mark.

Speaker 1 (05:35):
That's why I wanted to go one. Yeah, I think
I think three is actually really interesting. I think Kayley
Williams one and Marvin Harrison Junior two will be the
most common start to every rookie draft out there. There
will be some that maybe are slightly different, but I
think that will be the most common start. So three
as of right now, and I'm not sure if this
is going to change, even if the other guy goes

(05:56):
higher than him. On draft day, I'm gonna go with
Drake May over Jane Daniels. I know, given the running
ability that Daniels has become very popular as the number
three pick in sort of the early super flex rookie mocks.
I'm enamored with May. I think he would be a
very easy number one overall pick in other years where
there wasn't a Caleb Williams. I know that he didn't

(06:19):
have the greatest final season at UNC. I think he
was not given a lot to work with, both in
terms of the players around him and the offense he
was playing in.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
I think it natural ability is amazing.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
He reminds me a little bit of and I'm not
saying at all in terms of he's as good as
his player. He reminds me of CJ. Stroud in terms
of the narrative going into rookie drafts last year. Was
at the start of the season, he was up there.
It was like Bryce Young CJ. Stroud, and then as
the season went on, as draft season went on, he
started to fall. And you know, guy's like Anthony Richardson,
the uber athletic freak kind of overtook him. In a

(06:51):
lot of rookie drafts, you could get c J. Stroud
at like one oh four. I got him at one
oh six in a super flex draft last year. In
in terms of these rookie drafts, I see May starting
to follow a bit as well. He's not falling for me.
I really like him. Even if Daniels goes two overall
and Dre falls to three or four or wherever. I
think I was still like May better in terms of
my fantasy drafting.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
What do you think about that, Bogman? So in terms
of fantasy, I think I have I'm gonna have Jane
Daniels ahead of Drake May depending on the landing spot. Honestly,
whoever lands in Washington is going to be my two
because of Cliff Kingsbury in that system. So, but the
running up side is so big now He's not, you know,
guaranteed to be a hit like I thought Lamar was

(07:35):
because Lamar did it for multiple seasons, right, Jane Daniels
started for multiple seasons, but he only looked really good
when he got Brian Thomas and Malik Neighbors, and you know,
he was a big part of that, but so were
those guys. So I just think the rushing upside for
Daniels is too big, especially if he lands in Washington,
which is now I guess he's the betting favorite. But this, like,

(07:58):
it's funny because I feel like we get more clear
after we get out of the top four or five
picks here in terms of how I would rank the players.
So to me, this top because it's so much talent.
They're all so good, and there's so many different opinions.
I mean, FITZI, you don't like Malik as much as
you like Marvin. There's a lot of people that have

(08:20):
that same mindset. But there's also a lot of people
that like Rome over both of them, which is kind
of crazy to me too, and I like Rome a lot,
so to me, this top is so interchangeable. It's so
close because I do think Drake May is more guaranteed
to come in and light the world on fire than
Jane Daniels. So that's why you know, if he lands

(08:42):
in Washington, I will have him over Daniels, even with
Daniels rushing upside, because the system fit is great. He
can run a little bit. He's gonna be throwing the
ball a ton in Washington. But if Daniels lands there,
I think I got to take the rushing upside. So
the landing spot is huge for those two guys, which
is kind of crazy because so good but fitsy. What
do you think of Drake May over Daniels.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
I agree with it, actually, And I think Drake May's
running ability is really undersold, Like he is an aggressive runner,
and I think he's got the body type that is
going to hold up better to NFL punishment, the sort
of punishment you get as a running quarterback in the NFL,
Whereas I'm kind of worried about Daniels and how long

(09:25):
and lanky he is and the overall sustainability of his
business model in the NFL, because if it is Jade
Daniels going to Washington, like I, you know, as a
Washington fan, I would not want to be seeing my
quarterback taking these big shots from Micah Parsons and Kevon
Thibodeau NonStop, you know, and like we saw too. Yeah,

(09:48):
and man, like, I forget who used the term. It
might have been one of the Ringer guys who uh
said that Jade Daniels says a little Johnny Knoxville in him,
Like he he is taking some bumps that you don't
want to see him take.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
So I think that might have been Nate Tice who said.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
That okay athletic, okay, yeah, so yeah that I get
it too. When you watch Jayden Daniels play like he
takes some shots that you don't want your quarterback taken.
May is also just so good on the deep ball.
I mean, I think he hit like a long pass
on like five point seven percent of his dropbacks last year.

(10:28):
Like he's really good with the arm, Like he can
make throws at every level of the field. Like I
think May is a terrific prospect who is getting maybe
a little overshadowed just because he's got company at the top,
But like any other year, most other years, he's he's
one on one.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
Yeah, if I'm an NFL franchise, May is my guy
over Daniels. Not real close, but for fantasy, it's get
that rushing upside. What if Daniels is in Washington and
May is in New England? Does that change your mind
at all? Or is it just take into what you
see on.

Speaker 3 (11:01):
I mean, I know the uh and it's so funny
to say this based on the Patriots past success, but
Washington does have a much better infrastructure for a quarterback
to walk into, There's no question about it. But I
would still prefer May even if he winds up in
New England.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
My dream scenario, and I don't know how likely it is,
and obviously it's not really what Thor and deebra are
predicting on the NFL Draft Show, but my dream scenario
is that Minnesota trades up and it's surprised not for McCarthy,
but it's for May instead.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
And I've you know, not gonn Home. I just want
to see Thor. You just want to see Thor get mad?
Is that what it is?

Speaker 1 (11:37):
Yes, that's that's an added added bonus here. So I'm
going May three, Bogman. That's kind of already established that.
You know, Daniels, you know, it's kind of the four
pick here. So if it's I'm curious at five the
guy that you're going to take, is he something that
you would have considered over May or Daniels or do
you think those two quarterbacks in whatever order, are the
right picks at three and four.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
I think they're the right picks of three or four.
And I'm gonna take Malik Neighbors here. And so just
because I think Marvin Harrison is better than Malik Neighbors
doesn't mean that I'm not super high on Neighbors. I
think he's a can't miss star. I just think, you know,
if I were assessing their Canton possibilities, I'd put Marvin

(12:21):
Harrison at like fifty to fifty and maybe Malik Neighbors
at thirty five sixty five or something like that.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
I think I think that's fair too. And look, you know,
Marvin Harrison is a stud. I'm not sitting here telling
you you shouldn't like Marvin. Marvin Harrison's amazing, you know.
I just think Malik is right up there with him,
that's all. And that's four is tough for me too,
because you have to take Daniels in super flex in
my opinion, Yeah, but I could. I love Malik, so

(12:48):
you know, just the logic to me says you've got
to lean quarterback in those scenarios. That's why I went
with Caleb and went with Jaden. But Malik is such
a good pick here. Now I think there's one more
pick and then it starts to open up.

Speaker 3 (13:01):
Yeah, I was gonna say, can we just remark about
the like, what a great year this is to be
picking like one O four, one O five, one oh six,
whereas most years like things start to get a little
old shakier after the first two or three.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
I include one O seven in that as well.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
And in fact, yeah, yeah, I would actually say, because
I'm up here at six, I think this is the
first spot in the draft where the landing spot actually
might flip the next two guys, because I think it's
very clearly one of brock Bauers, a Roma Dunsa and
I think if, like, if one of them goes to
Los Angeles and has paired up with Justin Herbert, and

(13:38):
the other one goes to New York and has paired
up with you know, to the Giants, and it's paired
up with Daniel Jones, that might be enough to kind
of flip who I prefer. I'm gonna go with Bowers
just because of the uniqueness of having sort of an
elite tight end. I know it didn't work out with
Kyle Pitts, but you know, I'm not gonna hold that
against the next kind of elite guy to come along,

(13:59):
and it does seem like he's very likely to end
up in a good spot. Maybe it's with you know,
Aaron Rodgers and the Jets, maybe it's with Herbert.

Speaker 2 (14:06):
Maybe it's somebody else.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
I don't know, but but I very very easily you
could ask me tomorrow and I might say Adunsay. I
am head over heels with Adunza as well. To me,
the top seven in this in this class is very
very clear. I think number eight is clear as well,
but he is a clear eight for me. But between
six and seven it's gonna be the way I kind
of see it is. I think one and two is
a tier. I think three, four, five is a tier,

(14:28):
and I think six and seven is a tier. You might,
you know, sort of, you know, bicker with me about
where those tier lines actually are, but either way, I
do think it's the top seven. I'm going with Bowers today.
I could easily go with with Odunzay tomorrow. I love
them both.

Speaker 2 (14:42):
It's funny that you mentioned that, because I mean, what
you'll get in your drafts if you are you know,
you're already in the league that's established, and you're drafting
in this spot six, seven, eight. It's really going to
depend on what the h the manager needs at this spot, right.
It's not You're never really gonna see a hard and

(15:02):
fast BPA. We can't all be the Baltimore Ravens right
and just sit and take the best player available, regardless
of whether he's a need on my team or not,
and just play him when you need him. Most people
want their points right now. They want their points right now,
so you're gonna see interchanging things here in this spot.
I am gonna take Roma Dunsa at seven, the wide

(15:25):
receiver out of Washington, over JJ McCarthy, even in a
super Flex, just because the landing spot is still way
up in the air for McCarthy. I mean, if the
Giants take him, and now Daniel Jones is the starter
but probably gonna end up being McCarthy at some point.
What happens if Daniel Jones is just good again after

(15:46):
coming off of this ACL and having some rest time,
and then obviously they would want to trade him the
next year because they don't really like him, it seems like,
But is McCarthy gonna get any playing time? I know,
Rome steps into wherever he goes and he starts to day,
So for that reason at seven, I'll go ahead and
take Roma Duneesa. But it is it is kind of

(16:07):
a tough choice for me, knowing the quarterbacks are worth
more to super Flex, so I'll let FITZI make that decision.
Next to where you going fits, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:15):
So I guess I have to take the Michigan quarterback
JJ McCarthy, you know, and like he's uh, he's been
a tough evaluation and it was last well, the fall
of twenty twenty two, where I kind of wonder to
myself if he was going to be considered a Day
one or Day two NFL prospect because he was used

(16:36):
so sparingly, you know, like if averaging twenty three to
twenty four pass attempts per game for a team that
had a great defense and a great running game. So
but yeah, like the tools are there. It's an NFL
caliber arm for sure. Andy's mobile and he's got you know,
pretty prototypical NFL size, So I totally get it. I

(16:58):
don't agree with Thor who likes him more than Drake May,
but I understand why he is a first round NFL
pick and pretty much a slam dunk to be taken
in the first what twelve picks?

Speaker 2 (17:12):
Yeah, yeah, I mean he at this point, he's definitely
going top ten.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
And I think it's super flex drafts too, Like he
he's going to be the eighth pick in a lot
of leagues, because I don't it'll be very hard to
make the case for him over those elite seven options.

Speaker 2 (17:27):
But in super flex, if he's a guy who's going.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
In the top twelve picks in the NFL draft, it's
there's such a drop off.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Then I think to the rest that I think it's
gonna be hard to pass on him.

Speaker 3 (17:35):
Well, let me ask you about that where I'm like, say,
you know Thor's wishes are granted, and JJ McCarthy does
wind up in Minnesota and now he's throwing to Jefferson
and Addison and eventually TJ. Hockinson like, you don't think
maybe he passes up hours and saying a lot of
drafts kid you not.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
I was about to ask you the exact same thing.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
Does he go higher than eight if he's throwing to
Justin Jefferson and Jorn Addison in Kevin O'Connell's offense.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
I think the answer is probably yes.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Like certainly in super flex, I think there will just
I think there's very likely to be teams that have
a need at quarterback and therefore what they're they're gonna
take him over like a brock Bowers, because they'll say, listen,
I just I it's super flexed. It's not tight end premium.
I need the QB, even with a tight end who's
as as talented as Bower. So I don't know that
he gets into light the top four picks in super

(18:28):
flex drafts, but but I do think he could go
in that seven, six, maybe even as high as five,
depending on how badly a quarterbacks needed.

Speaker 3 (18:36):
We're gonna see him go ahead of May in some drafts.
If May goes to New England's That's what I was.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
About to ask you fits, Yeah, like, well, let's flip
it though. Let's say May goes to Washington Jane Daniels
in New England where we know like he's gonna have
to do a lot himself because the wide receivers are
not great. Or do you want McCarthy and O'Connell's system.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
Man, I'm pretty I'm pretty steadfast in my ranking of
Caleb May, Jane Daniels, and JJ McCarthy. I'm not sure
landing spot could move me off that, okay, but I
will say New England versus Minnesota, Fort Daniels and McCarthy, Yeah,
that'll make me think twice about that.

Speaker 2 (19:18):
Yeah, all right, worm, you're up for the first. Uh,
non obvious.

Speaker 1 (19:22):
But I was gonna say, this is the reason why
I didn't want to be picking third is not because
of three and six.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
It's because of nine.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
And even with that, like Diet Tribe on what we
would do with McCarthy, Like I saw not one hundred
percent sure, I think just for I think I think
this is where it's gonna get really landing spot dependent, right. Sure,
for a while I have been very high on Troy Franklin.
I am not out on Troy Franklin, but I don't
I think, I don't know this early part of the

(19:50):
draft process has been that kind to him. We've seen,
you know, there's been a lot of like talk about
how Brian Thomas, like in a lot of people's eyes,
is the clear wide receiver for in this class. Obviously
Xavier Worthy, you know, broke the record running the forty
yard dash. You know, it's I'm not going to take
a running back here, and obviously this is not a
spot for quarterback or a tight end, you know, amongst

(20:11):
the guys who are left. So it's definitely gonna be
a wide receiver. And I think there's a strong case
to be made for like any of like five of them.
I'm just gonna take the speed and I'm gonna take
Worthy here. But really like Thomas, like ad and I
Troy Franklin, like Kean Coleman, like you could you could
convince me on a given day of the order being
different on a lot of those guys. I'm I'm going

(20:33):
to go with the speed and just take Worthy and
assume that he gets in a really nice landing spot
at the end of the first round with it with
a ready made quarterback and a team that is ready
to use him and win.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
Now, I obviously I love that pick of Xavier Yeah, Texas,
guy's going high. I like to see him going in
the first round. And NFL mock drafts, I like to
see him going first round and fantasy mock drafts. Fits.
Is that what you do is worthy of your guy here?
Or would you take somebody else?

Speaker 1 (21:01):
No?

Speaker 3 (21:02):
And I don't hate the pick, but I would have
taken someone else.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Okay, Uh? Is that guy the guy that I'm gonna
take here? Is that Brian Thomas from LSU?

Speaker 3 (21:13):
That is probably the direction I would have gone.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
I will say those were the two I was ultimately between,
was Thomas and Worthy.

Speaker 2 (21:21):
It's the size, man, You know that that is difference
here and the long, speed and landing spot is gonna
matter for all of these guys. You know, Xavier Worthy
in Kansas City is way different than Xavier Worthy in
New England, of course, you know, or Carolina or wherever.
You know, they struggle with QB play. But I think
that a lot of these guys might be QB proof.

(21:41):
I don't think they are. I don't think every guy
is going to be. And obviously there's going to be
a bust in here somewhere among all of these wide outs,
but it's hard to see where the bus is going
to be. There so much talent. So I think Brian Thomas,
Xavier Worthy at Night Mitchell I would throw in fits
I know would throw key On coleme in this group
as well. Not everybody would, but there's a lot of

(22:04):
wide receivers that are in this range here that are
very very good.

Speaker 3 (22:07):
Well you set me up nicely, bugs, because I am
going to go with Keon Coleman here, and yeah, there,
it is a very tough group. But I am a
Keon Coleman guy, and I know you've got my back
on this, Bogs, but I had to defend this when
I took Keon Coleman at maybe it was like one
ten in that draft that we did with the Player
Profiler guys yesterday. Deebro doesn't like Keon Coleman, and I

(22:30):
think Thor is sort of lukewarm on him, But look,
I realized he's not going to be an elite separator.
But he is the same kind of wide receiver that
Des Bryant was for the Cowboys, that Mike Evans has
been for the Buccaneers, maybe sort of that George Pickens
is right now for the Steelers. He is a guy
with extraordinary ball skills and size. I mean he is

(22:54):
a rebounder and he was literally a rebounder because he
played basketball for Tom Izzo at Michigan State in his
first two years in college before transferring to Florida State.
I know, the four six ' two he ran at
the combine is going to be off putting to some people,
but when the wide receivers were doing the gauntlet drill,

(23:17):
he had the top speed. He hit twenty point seven
miles an hour. No one, not even the Burners at
NI Mitchell xavior Worthy hit that speed and Coleman looked
silky smooth running that. This guy's got good hands. I mean,
he can just pluck balls outside the frame of his
body and he can't be that slow. Guys, because he
was returning ponts at Florida State. If you're worried about

(23:40):
a guy's speed, you're not putting him back there to
return ponts, and Kean Coleman was doing that for the
Seminoles at his final college season.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
He looks smooth with the ball in his hands, too, like,
and look, you know, there's plenty of guys that have
size and no speed and that doesn't translate to the NFL,
right like, but I think those guys are I think
I think Coleman is more of a Michael Pittman. He's
more of a Drake London. He's a big wide receiver
that has enough speed and you really don't even need

(24:09):
that speed at that size, right you have to have
the good catch radius, which he also has. So I'm
in on Kean Coleman as well. I think it's a
very very solid pick here Fits I like it.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
You know that Fits wasn't on the last mock draft
episode we did because I believe I got Kean Coleman
at like two oh five in that one, so he
would not.

Speaker 2 (24:28):
Have fallen there with Fits here.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
And really, like I said, I know, I was like
kind of hemming and hauling about my pick like worthy
Thomas Kean Coleman. If you if we just like put
those guys names in a hat and drew them out randomly,
and we just took that order instead. I'd be fine
with it, Like I really, they all bring something different
to the table. And again, I think landing spot's gonna
be really crucial with this whole stretch of receivers. I'm

(24:52):
gonna take another receiver wrapt things up. I'll take Ady
Mitchell and another Texas guy just you know, athletic freak,
you know, high upside play. I'll be really curious to
see where he lands. But this is still this is
the range where I might, if I really had a
strong need, think to myself, whoever I think RB one is,
maybe I would consider if I really needed it, you know,

(25:14):
in a real draft. But as a mock, I'm just
I don't think any of these running backs. As much
as I think some of them can be really nice
role players, I just don't think any of them are
worth taking over any of these, you know, stretch of
four or five Tier two wide receivers.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
So I'll go with Mitchell here.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
But again, you know, on a different day, it could
be one of these other couple of guys and I
wouldn't be upset about it. Let me give a quick
recap here of round one. Caleb Williams one oh one,
Marvin Harrison Junior one oh two, Drake May one O three,
Jane Daniels one O four, Milik Neighbors one oh five,
Brock Bauers one oh six, Roma Dunsay one oh seven,
JJ McCarthy one oh eight. Not a ton of shocks there,

(25:49):
and then at one o nine Xavier Worthy won ten,
Brian Thomas one eleven, key On Coleman one twelve eighty,
Mitchell bobbing. What are your quick thoughts on Mitchell?

Speaker 2 (25:58):
I mean, Mitchell, I like you, and I think Fitz
and I kind of had a fight over the Texas
guys too, because he couldn't believe I wasn't higher on
Worthy than Mitchell. But I think Mitchell is more ready
to go right now. I think Worthy's also ready to go, guys.
I don't think he's like gonna be a slouch or anything,
but I think Worthy has more upside. So if you're

(26:19):
playing for longer, you know, you maybe you're not gonna
win this year or the following year, but then year
three you're gonna start hitting your stride because you're rebuilding
or whatever. In that situation, I take Worthy if I
want to win today and again, landing spot will make
the difference between these two guys because you know, you're
a different player if you're in New England versus if
you're in Kansas City, Right. But I think Mitchell is

(26:43):
ready to go today. I think he's ready to score
touchdowns today. I think he's ready to be more than
you know a guy, because like they're gonna take Worthy
off on rundowns, Like if he goes to the Ravens,
you know he's not gonna see every snap. He's gonna
see a lot of snaps, but not every They're not
going to put him in a position to block every
single time. So it just depends on Landing spot between

(27:05):
those guys. But I think Mitchell is more ready to
play every single snap and do everything right now.

Speaker 1 (27:11):
So Mitchell, I like just a little bit more fits
Mitchell in the first round, even with the last pick.
Do you like it or pro con?

Speaker 3 (27:18):
Yeah? I like it. I mean I like both guys.
The only thing, like I'd push back on the idea
that Worthy is less ready to go. I think he's
more ready to go because he's the better route runner,
you know, Like it's Worthy is a really good route runner,
Like he totally reminds me of DeVante Smith as a
really slightly framed wide receiver who's just silky with the

(27:43):
route running and the ability to you know, separate and.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
Get off the line too, better than I remembered when
I went back and watched him. He is more ready
than I thought initially. But I still think that. I
just think, like, you know, of the downs, like you're
not gonna ask. It's like Mike Tomlin said, they asked
him a long time ago, are you gonna let Chris
Rainey block? He's like, usually you don't want to tell
your boat with your ferrari, you know what I mean. Like,

(28:10):
so they're not gonna make him block that much depending
on where he goes. If it's a team that runs
a lot and they need a player like Worthy to
stretch the field, you just can see the field less
than Mitchell.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
Yeah, and I get it, Like the weight is the way.
It's a little concerning. No one wants to draft Tevon
Austin the sequel, right.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
Right, yeah, or to two at well a more you
know recent reference there.

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(29:28):
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let's go into round two. Bogman, you are up at
the two to one.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
Yeah, I'm between three players here, but I'm gonna go
with the one I think is probably more of a
Lockport success than the other two. And that's Troy Franklin,
the wide receiver out of Oregon. And I know he
lost a little bit of stock because he wobbled in
his gauntlet drill, didn't run a straight line. But that's
also you're not catching six balls in one line when

(30:05):
you're playing a real football game, So you know, I
don't know. This is the part of the drills that
I'm not the biggest fan of at the combine because
we let one thing in the weight a little bit too.
He came in under size of one seventy six, but
he had the flu going in and he came into
his pro day eight pounds heavier at one eighty four.

(30:28):
So he is tall, he is skinny, I get it,
which maybe you know, pushes him off of the group
of you know, Ady and Xavier Worthy and all those guys.
But I still think Troy Franklin's a stud. I think
wherever he winds up, he's going to be everything that
you wanted out of Gabe Davis. I think you'll get
from Troy Franklin, and more so he is guaranteed here

(30:50):
wide receiver is deep. I don't necessarily want to take
a wide receiver, but he's the end of a tier
for me, so I'm gonna take him right here.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
Yeah, fits, I really like Troy Franklin. Like I said,
there was a time when I was taking him at
the one o nine. I could see myself getting back there,
you know, within the next month before actual rookie drafts
are coming.

Speaker 2 (31:07):
What do you think about the pick here?

Speaker 3 (31:09):
Not gonna lie. I dropped him quite a bit after
the combine. It just like didn't get what we were
hoping for from him in the forty and you know,
as I joked on this smock draft we did yesterday,
like on that gauntlet drill, he looked like me coming
out of the bars when I was an undergraduate at Wisconsin.

(31:29):
So yeah, like I'm I don't know, I'm not burying
him like I don't want to.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (31:36):
I've learned the lesson from the Kyne Williams combine of
a couple of years ago, where I don't want to
write off a guy just because he disappoints with his
forty time and drills, So don't want to write him off,
but yet like in such a wide receiver rich draft,
it just kind of that broke the tie for me.
Like after the top three guys and maybe Brot and

(32:00):
Thomas at four, like there were five or six or
seven guys I had really close together in the combine.
To help me sort those guys.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
Out fits, I want to go, you know, I want
credit for the fact that I did to make a
joke about you graduating from Wisconsin in the forties. So
I just want you to appreciate the kindness that I
was doing to you.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
But not not appreciate it. That what a kind guy. Yeah,
that's how I describe you when someone's like, how is
working with worm? And I'm like, just he's so kind.
Won't make jokes about how old you are at all? No,
not once fits. He's your next pick.

Speaker 3 (32:33):
It's gonna be Lad McConkie, the wide receiver from Georgia.
Just like a guy who really helped himself in the
postseason with his senior ball performance and his combine. Yeah,
I guess sort of the opposite of Troy Franklin in
that regard, but like McConkie, Yeah, I know, he's never
actually led the Georgia Bulldogs and receiving. But just you

(32:57):
can see how he's gonna fit in the NFL. He's
just such a smooth mover. His ability to quickly get
off the line and get separation is going to make
him pretty popular with whoever his quarterback is at the
next level. So, like, I think he's a pretty pretty
safe choice in the early second round.

Speaker 2 (33:15):
I like it a lot.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
He was going to be my pick if he went
one more you know spot here. He has done a
lot in this draft process that has risen him in
my estimation and in other estimations.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
I just I'm just very certain that he's going to
be a quality player.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
I don't know what he ends up being in the
long run in terms of how high the ceiling is.
I don't think it's a you know, so that low
of a ceiling, but I am very confident with the
floor I'm getting with his ability.

Speaker 2 (33:42):
Bogman, what do you think about mccacky. I like Lad mucaky.
He is my next ranked wide receiver after Troy Franklin,
so very very I mean, landing Spot's going to mean
a lot to him because he's floating in the waters
of like you know, he could either go to New
England or Carolina, or he could end up in Washington
where they're gonna pass the ball one hundred times a game,

(34:03):
you know. So landing spot means a lot for Lad,
probably more than some of those other guys. But he's
still he's gonna be good regardless of landing spot. Lad
is not the last wide receiver that I like. There's
certainly plenty more that I do, but he was the
last receiver that I needed to go off the board
before I considered taking a running back. I am gonna

(34:23):
finally break the seal on running backs. I'm gonna go
with Jonathan Brooks, similar to the last stretch of receiver.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
By the way, another Longhorn. I am crushing it with
drafting the Texas guys.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
And not me. Everybody, I didn't take one, you didn't
leave one for me. I cannot be the one to
take Jatavian Sanders. I need to. I need to break
this streak, so somebody else please do it.

Speaker 1 (34:44):
But no, I'm gonna. I'm gonna take Brooks. I think
if he didn't get hurt, he would have been the
RB one in the class. And there's no one else
who has sort of usurped that title, you know, in
his in his injury related absence.

Speaker 2 (34:56):
For however, you wanted to find that.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
There are other guys I like, There are other I'll
probably take, you know, throughout the course of this mock draft,
but Brooks for now is my RB one.

Speaker 2 (35:04):
We'll see where he ends up going in the actual
NFL draft.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
Again, landing spot's gonna really matter, especially in this running
back class where where there's so many kind of role
players more so than obvious workhorse, you know, three down backs.
There's a couple that could get there, but I'm gonna
go with Brooks. And like I said, it's not that
I don't like any of the other wide receivers. There's
a lot I like, but I think now's the time
to get a running back off the board fits.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
What do you make of that?

Speaker 3 (35:26):
Yeah, so that like, I just can't rank him as
my top running back because of the injury and knowing
that his first year in the NFL could be something
close to a red shirt year because he tore his
ACL in November, and you figure he's not gonna be
able to go through a full training camp like at
best side work, it's you know, gonna be non contact stuff.

(35:49):
He's not gonna play in preseason games, maybe starts the
season on the pup list, and if he misses training
camp then doesn't really get to fully process whatever system
he gets thrust into. Are they going to trust him
when he's like cleared in October or whenever that might be.
So I'm a little leery about that, And you know,
I just I don't know that it's a Beejeon Robinson

(36:12):
Breise Hall type skill set that even with the injury,
I'm putting him ahead of the other guys. So, yes,
he's one of these six or seven guys who I
think are in the running for top running back in
this class, but he would not be in my number one.

Speaker 1 (36:27):
Would you have gone with whoever your RB one is
in that spot or do you think it's still an
area where you go at a different position and continue
to kick the RB can down the road.

Speaker 3 (36:36):
I would not consider running back in the top fifteen.

Speaker 2 (36:40):
Okay, Okay, that's interesting. JB's my guy, by the way,
that is my number one running back. Obviously, I'm a
little bit of a Texas Homer, but I think with Brooks,
he's kind of the McCarthy of running packs right, like
he was just buried. He was behind road Shann, He's
behind Bejeon. So we just didn't see him until he
got work in twenty twenty three. And when he got

(37:01):
work he was awesome. He was so good. I wasn't
even sure as a Texas fan he's going to be
the starter going into the season because Texas brought in
Cedric Benson or I'm sorry Benson, not Benson, Cedric Baxter,
my bad. But with Baxter, he was a huge recruit.
He was a five star running back, right four star

(37:22):
running back. So it was like, is he gonna get it?
Is Brook's gonna get it because we hadn't seen a
lot of Brooks, and Brooks blew him out of the water.
He was so good. But the ACL entry all that stuff.
Look here, for me, this would be whoever the Cowboys
draft are running back, right, that is who I'd be
taking in this spot, but we have no idea who
that is. And their doctors, as Debro has mentioned many times,

(37:45):
are the ones that did the surgery for Jonathan Brooks.
They're the ones that announced that he's probably gonna be
ready for a little bit of training camp or he
has a possibility, a shot to be ready for training camp.
So I'm gonna skip running back here again and kick
that can down the road. Like Fit said he would,
I to take Michael Pennox Junior, the quarterback out of Washington,
because it's super flex. I think that I think he

(38:07):
has end spot of that second pick for the Raiders,
you know, that pick in the second round in the forties.
I think that is the lowest he could possibly go.
I think if he ends up in Vegas, his stocks
should be very high because it's Minshew behind him with
Aidan O'Connell. I think he can pass those guys up
pretty fast. Even though I know a lot of people

(38:29):
like Gardner Minshew, I'm not a huge Minshew fan, and
he has great targets if he ends up in Vegas. So,
you know, quarterbacks are still the king in a super
flex league. Their positional value makes them more valuable than
they probably should be. And for that reason, I'm gonna
take Michael Pennox right here. Yeah, Fits, is that the
right A? Is that the right quarterback to take?

Speaker 1 (38:49):
And B is this the right spot to take the
fourth or the fifth quarterback off the board?

Speaker 3 (38:54):
Yes and yes, And he's got me scrambling because that
was going to be my pick with this next one.
Like I say, for a guy with his arm talent,
and he's like, I'm pretty confident he's going to be
picked somewhere in the first round of the NFL draft.
So I think, like in drafts right now, Michael Pennix
is going to go somewhere in the second round, you know,
actual drafts that people do in dynasty leagues, the rare

(39:17):
leagues that do their rookie draft before the NFL Draft,
he's probably a second rounder. I think after the draft
he's going to start to move up into the late
first Like the arm talent is just so exquisite. I
know we're looking for that mobility dimension in quarterbacks nowadays,
but with Pennock's arm, like, there's no reason he can't

(39:41):
be just a rock solid QB two in fantasy for
years to come.

Speaker 1 (39:48):
So are you going to take sort of the last
quarterback here that would you know that a pick?

Speaker 2 (39:54):
Or not?

Speaker 3 (39:56):
Not? A fan of the guy we're talking about, man
like debating between a couple of the wide receivers who
I sort of like, uh, but I actually am going
to go with a running back in this spot. I'm
gonna go with my number one running back, Blake Korum
of Michigan, and I just think he's the best pure

(40:17):
runner in this class. Like, I know he's smaller, which
some people aren't gonna like. And I know he's a
little bit older as a prospect, which some people aren't
gonna like. But man, like this dude just has contact,
balance and vision and footwork and agility. And we saw
it against Washington in the National Championship game.

Speaker 2 (40:41):
Man, I don't even know if you mentioned the best
thing about him. The pile push. For a guy that's
the ball well and he gets into a pile, he
moves forward every time. It's unbelievable.

Speaker 3 (40:52):
Yeah, he is a mighty mouse. He did the bench
press at the combine twenty seven times. Unbelievable, dude, that's
he did twenty seven bench press reps at the combine.
So yeah, he is an impressive dude. And I've heard
comparisons to Ray Rice. I've heard comparisons to Doug Martin.
You know, I hope he turns out a little closer
to Ray Rice than Doug Martin, but you know, neither

(41:15):
comp that bad, So I kind of agree with those
comps like, I think Korm is terrific and you know,
mid mid second round, I'm pretty happy with him that.

Speaker 1 (41:25):
Well, you didn't mention the other best part of him,
which is that he's almost certainly going to be drafted
by a Greg Roman led offense that doesn't have a
lot of competition in the backfield.

Speaker 3 (41:35):
Doesn't that seem natural? Like would you Boggs? I know
you mentioned how glorious Dallas would be as a landing
spot for a rookie back and I totally agree. But
where do you think Korm would be more valuable? With
the Chargers or with the Cowboys?

Speaker 2 (41:50):
Probably with the Chargers because they're going to rebuild the
You know that this is what Harbad does. They run
the ball million times, So yeah, I mean probably he'd
probably fit better and not have the learning curve isn't
there for him, you know? So yeah, I think the
Chargers probably are the better landing spot for him. I'm
not convinced Dallas will pass him up though. You know,

(42:12):
if JB isn't ready to go, they need somebody. Rico
Daubdell is their number one right now because they just
resigned him like two days ago, so it's him and
Vaughn and everybody else has a running back pretty much
everybody else in the NFL, So it's them, you know,
I don't know where the next running back is going
to go. Was Philly before they signed Saquon. I don't

(42:34):
know where the next running back comes off the board.

Speaker 1 (42:36):
The one the one thing I would ask about, though,
quickly on that comparison with ray Rice fits is Korum
the pass catcher that Rice was, because that was a
big part of ray Rice's value was he was so
good on those checkdown passes from Joe Flack. He had
the famous like you know, fourth and twenty nine he
converted against the Chargers, but he was a pretty significant
part of their passing game.

Speaker 2 (42:57):
Has Korm really been that at Michigan?

Speaker 3 (43:00):
No, But like that's that hasn't been a big part
of that offense. So like it's one of those things
where maybe he's capable of doing it, but just wasn't
asked to do it a lot in college.

Speaker 1 (43:09):
Okay, just making sure I wasn't forgetting anything there. I
there's a wide receiver that I really like here, and
there's also a running back that I really like here,
and I am torn between the two. I think just
because there are so many other receivers that I will
like later. If this next guy doesn't fall to me again,
I'm gonna go at the running back. I'm gonna go
with Marshawn Lloyd, who I know DRO would be very

(43:32):
proud to see go off the board here. I mentioned
earlier that there's no you know, true like obvious three
down workhorse back in this in this draft, I think
Lloyd maybe he doesn't you know, get there in terms
of like you know, being you know, super stud or
you know, Bjon level or anything like that, but I
think he has a similar skill set in that there's
nothing that I believe he can't do well.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
I think he's a really well rounded player.

Speaker 1 (43:54):
I think that he was not maybe in the best
offense to showcase a skill set at USC.

Speaker 2 (43:59):
But I just think he's really talented. I'm a huge fan.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
I really liked what I saw from him, you know,
you know, with all the clips and stuff at the
Senior Bowl. Again, Deebro you know or Coworker is a
huge fan of Lloyd. I think he has him RB
one as well. I really like getting him in the
middle of the second round in these rookie drafts, and
I know he's not your w one obviously his quorum
is fits.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
But what do you think about Lloyd?

Speaker 3 (44:20):
Yeah, I mean I like him, tough kid. There was
some talk about that, like Theo Gremminger of Player Profiler
was somewhat familiar with Lloyd's high school career and had
some stories shit tell about that. Yeah, I like him
a lot. I mean he's a guy who like Deebro
and I have argued about several guys in this class,

(44:42):
but Deebro really kind of talked me into Marshaun Lloyd
and sort of opened my eyes to him so early
in the uh, you know, the rookie process. I had
him like toward the back of my top ten. Now
I've got him at like I think RB four, RB five,
So yeah, he's kind of winning me over.

Speaker 2 (45:01):
He's I was just.

Speaker 1 (45:03):
Gonna say quickly that I watched him a little in
high school too, because he went to high school five
minutes from the University of Maryland, and I was very
much hoping that he would be a turpend and he
was not.

Speaker 2 (45:12):
Sorry, go ahead, Bogan. So I'm lower on Lloyd, and
it's not because of his skill at all. I think
he's great. I mean you can watch him at USC.
You know, maybe he doesn't follow the block every single time,
but I mean he gets all the yards that he
possibly can on every play. So he is definitely a
good player. He's just had a little bit of an

(45:32):
injury history, so because of that, I wonder if the
light workload at USC was partially because of that, because
of his previous injury history. So he's a little bit
further down my board, but if he can stay on
the field, he can definitely be the best running back
in this class because it's a little bit of a
weaker class.

Speaker 1 (45:51):
The injury stuff is why I sort of stopped myself
from say he could be that three down workhorse just
just because of the durability. But I think skill set
is why I'm such a fan.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
Yeah, I mean he's the skill set is there, like
he is ready to be an NFL running back. It's
just availability is the best ability. Yeah, the old scouting trope.
So you know I have him at seven. All right,
bog Wan, here's your next guy. Look, you haters have
let this happen too much. Gimme Boonix the quarterback once again.

(46:24):
It's super flex poise we're taking. We're taking some later
wide receivers over a quarterback that is probably going to
start at some point in twenty twenty three or twenty
twenty four. Excuse me. And look, I saw in a
mock draft the other day and I ended up doing
it in my mock draft for itl in the war
room as well. I could see him going as early

(46:46):
as twelve to Denver because he fits the type of
stuff that Sean Payton likes to do, and he has
worked with quarterbacks with you know, maybe not a massive
arm that's gonna bomb everything. You know, bon Nicks can
still make the throws. He has mobility, and there's a
possibility that he starts pretty quickly in the NFL, and

(47:10):
quarterback is just a boosted value even for quarterbacks that
aren't very good but are starting. So for me, give
me bo Nicks in this spot because he's still on
the board and he could be a starter this year.
I don't know that he's really like falling.

Speaker 1 (47:26):
This seems like about the right range later He's mid
round two for a guy. I mean, I know it's
super flex, but like how much value is there and
having like the QB twenty four, like I just don't
know what kind of There's so many good quarterbacks in
the NFL right now that it's really hard for me
personally to make the case for Bnicks, being like, well,
top eighteen guy.

Speaker 2 (47:48):
Well, the thing is is that somebody is hoarding four
quarterbacks in your league, right That's that's really the thing.
Somebody is hoarding quarterbacks and wanting to, you know, bend
you over the ben Erld to trade him to you.
So sometimes you are forced to take one just because
you know, even though he's QB twenty four, he's going

(48:09):
to score more than wide receiver nine or ten a
lot of weeks. So you know, it's just the it's
the simple math. So the simple mass says he's probably
gonna be starting at some point in twenty four, specifically
if he's a first round pick. If he doesn't go
in the first round, he is gonna lose value, and
if he gets drafted behind someone established, he's gonna lose

(48:29):
a lot of value. So but right now there's a
little buzz of him possibly going to Denver, so I
think I got to take him. Here fits very quick
thoughts on Nicks, and then give me your pick here
at two.

Speaker 3 (48:41):
Eight Yeah, Like, I don't know if I can see
NFL star power with Bonnix, even if I squint really hard,
But there is something to be said for how much
playing experience he has under his belt in major college programs,
And there's something to be said for that. We saw
Rock Purdy who had played a lot in college, didn't

(49:05):
have draft capital and was still able to come in
and be a pretty effective NFL quarterback, maybe largely because
he played so much in college. So yeah, I mean, like,
I agree, this is probably around the spot in the
draft where Nicks should go, although if he is in
fact draft in the first round, we're probably gonna start
seeing him go in the top half of the second round.

Speaker 2 (49:26):
Of rookie drafts. And who are you taking next?

Speaker 3 (49:29):
I'm gonna take Ricky Piersall, And man, I don't know
if this guy was really like in my top fifteen
at rookie receiver before the postseason started, and like Piersaw,
good route runner and good ball skills, but man, he
just lit it up at the combine and I did

(49:49):
not see that coming. Ran a four to four to
one and had a forty two inch vertical jump forty
two inches like this guy is way more athletic than
I gave him credit for going into the off season,
and so now he's actually got me pretty excited. I know,
four really likes him. So a guy would not have

(50:11):
seen as a second round pick a couple months ago,
Now I think is a second round lock in most
rookie drafts.

Speaker 2 (50:17):
Fits.

Speaker 1 (50:18):
I legitimately like almost cursed when you said his name,
because I was I was so ready to take him.
I was with seeing Lloyd and Pearsall with the last pick,
and then I was like, oh, he might actually get
to be and I you know, I am a professional,
so of course I held you know, I bit my tongue,
but I starn it.

Speaker 2 (50:39):
I was very close to.

Speaker 1 (50:40):
Uh to letting loose with an expletive there, because I
really wanted Pearsall.

Speaker 2 (50:46):
That he's a great pick. Bobin, what do you think,
I love it? I mean Piersall, Uh, Piersall is kind
of the end of a tier to me too. Uh,
there's another wide receiver I like in this range. And
there's still a lot of wide receivers too like also,
but we're getting to the point where it's like, Okay,
some of these running backs need to start coming off
the board too, So uh, it just it depends on

(51:07):
what you like and where your head's at. So I think,
to me, I think he kind of opens up the
board for you don't need to be mad. Now you
can make a pick and it doesn't really matter.

Speaker 1 (51:17):
What's tricky for me here is there's still a lot
of names that I like, but it's a lot of
names where I feel like I should maybe be looking
at more and like the early third than I am
than I want to be looking at at like two
oh nine.

Speaker 2 (51:28):
So it's like, do I reach on a guy that
I like?

Speaker 1 (51:31):
I think you're right where peer salt to me was
kind of the end of a tier a bit. You know,
I was really high before the combine on Audric estimate,
but obviously he, you know, has fallen out of favor
after that experience. You know, somebody like Braylan Allen I
was really high on early in the process. And you know,
I know, I know Cody, our friend we've mentioned a
few times. You know, a carpeteer has is still very

(51:54):
high on Allen and he took him I think as
like the two to oh one or something. And when
he came on to do the rookie draft with us,
but it's just a lot of people who it's a
lot of players where I'm not walking away from this
pick being like wow, I have stoked that this guy
got to me, whereas I would have probably felt that
way with Piercel.

Speaker 2 (52:13):
I am just.

Speaker 1 (52:13):
Gonna go with Braylan Allen. I think he's a guy
who he could fill a role for an NFL team.
There might be more upside there if he stays a
little bit healthier. I know fits as a Wisconsin van
has talked about how he's a guy that kind of
just comes off the field a lot and gets dinged up,
you know, maybe more so than you would like from
a guy from his size, but just very young guy, which.

Speaker 2 (52:34):
I do really like, especially at the running back position.

Speaker 1 (52:36):
So because I'm not in love with anybody, in the
value of anybody at this point in the draft, and
again there's only been three running backs to come off
the board, I'll go ahead and take Braylan Allen here.

Speaker 3 (52:46):
Yeah, I mean, I don't hate it. Brahillan Allen is
like two thirty five, might play as big as like
two forty and actually moves really well, didn't run at
the combine and elected not to run it as pro dan.
I'm kind of surprised because I don't think he would
have ran a slow time. But yeah, he does get

(53:06):
dinged a little bit more often than you like, although
he hasn't ever had anything major missignificant time. I think
he's had more one hundred yard rushing games than any
other running back in this class. And you mentioned it worm.
Not only is he, I think the youngest running back
in this class, he might be one of the youngest
players at any position in this class. Like and man,

(53:30):
you're you're not bringing this dude down with an arm tackle.
But I guess the one reason why I'm not like
super head over heels in love with him more so
than you know, occasionally get nicked up a little bit
is just that I don't see much pass catching potential here.
And Wisconsin did involve him in the passing game a
little bit, and he's got decent hands, but he's just

(53:51):
not really fluid as a receiver. He doesn't, like, you know,
gather the ball on the move and quickly turn it
up field. He's just not the guy who's gonna win
open space. So dynasty leagues are PPR leagues typically, and
I think the PPR format is going to devalue Braylen
Allen slightly in fantasy football.

Speaker 2 (54:14):
Yeah, I think I think that's really fair bogging. What
do you think? Yeah? I think you know this is
the keyon Coleman of running backs, right. Some people really
like him, some people really don't like him. And to me,
the past catching, it's it's just like Fitz said with
korm it's just not something they asked him to do
a lot. I don't know if he could do it
or not because we just didn't see him do it

(54:35):
a lot. So you know, maybe we'll see him do
it more. But if he goes to the Chargers, right,
probably not gonna ask him to catch the ball a lot.
They're probably gonna run the ball a ton. So it
really depends. It's the speed for me. You know, if
you don't have speed in the league, you just can't
get there. So I just don't know if he has it.

(54:55):
He didn't run the forty times, and he has a
good reason. He said, Hey, look I didn't run. I
am one hundred percent, but I didn't have time to
train for this event, so I don't want to go
out there and put a bad time up. So you know,
I'm one hundred percent. Now, I'll just let my film
talk and I think that will smart for him. So
you know, he's still solidly above a lot of running

(55:17):
backs in this class for me. But I do have
him at like five, so you know, I'm just a
little lower on him than a lot of people are.
Bog when you're on the clock at two ten. Yeah,
give me Trey Benson. I'm not even the biggest Trey
Benson fan. You know. We talked, I think in the
last mock and I said, he runs a little upright.
I watched a little more. It's not as bad as

(55:38):
I thought. You know, I think sometimes there's a little
dancing there, but he's got the long speed. I think
he has enough bursts too. And if he ends up
in a good spot, I want to see him end
up somewhere where he could potentially take the job. I
don't want him in Tampa, you know. I don't want
him somewhere where he's definitely a number two. But if
he ends up in a spot where he can take

(56:00):
a job like put him on the Giants compete with
Devin Singletary, I think that's a winnable job. You know what,
I mean, so give him to Carolina. I think that's
a winnable job from Miles Sanders and Chewba Hubbard. So
if he ends up in one of those spots, I
think his value is going to be very high. But
if he ends up, you know, in Seattle and now
he's behind charbon Ay and Kenneth Walker or something, I

(56:21):
don't know when he sees the field. So landing spot
means a lot for Trey Benson. But I still think
he's top three or four on every team's board. So
I think he's going to go higher than a lot
of these other running backs, and he's going to be
prioritized to get the ball in his hands. So that's
why I have him in this spot. I like Benson.

Speaker 1 (56:41):
I could have made a case for him instead of
Alan taking a running back in that spot fits quick
thoughts on Benson.

Speaker 3 (56:47):
Yeah, boy, another guy I'm not quite sure what to
make of. I know Bogman has said he thinks sometimes
Benson goes down a little too easily. Maybe I've I've
seen a little bit of that too, But then again,
like there are times where you watch him planet it's like, yeah,
this is an NFL running back, So I'm a little

(57:08):
a little bit mixed on him. He's never been my one,
but like I could see the case for it.

Speaker 2 (57:15):
And who do you have next?

Speaker 3 (57:18):
Boy, It's funny. I despise the University of Michigan football program,
and I'm gonna take my third Michigan Wolverine. I'm gonna
take Roman Wilson, a good speed receiver and a guy
I think has helped himself in the off season process.
And yeah, maybe he's I don't know if the games

(57:38):
really compare, but maybe a guy who a La Nicocollins
comes in a little under the radar because you know,
the passing game is not prolific at the University of
Michigan and winds up being a terrific player. So maybe
Rum and Wilson could follow a similar path.

Speaker 1 (57:56):
I'm curious what you guys think of the pick I'm
about to make. I'm gonna say, Jalen Polk out of Washington.
I think he's a very good wide receiver who would
be getting more steam if he hadn't been kind of
overshadowed by an elite wide receiver prospect in Roma Dunsay
in Washington. The fact that he was the number two

(58:16):
on his own team in college is not a reason
to knock him when the number one is a guy
like a Dunsay.

Speaker 2 (58:21):
So I really like Polk.

Speaker 1 (58:22):
I think he's another guy who could land where he's
kind of being projected in mock drafts. I think he
can land in a pretty good spot and step in
and be a contributor right away. And again we're kind
of in the section of the draft where it's more
just kind of to each his own, like the you know, yeah,
pick the guy you like. I like Polk, so I'm
gonna happily take him here at the very end of
round two.

Speaker 2 (58:43):
Quick thoughts on Polk Bogman. Yeah, I like Polk.

Speaker 3 (58:46):
I do.

Speaker 2 (58:46):
I have two wide receivers ahead of him that are
left on the board, but he's definitely in a tier
of and this is what this tier that I have
here is what makes the wide receiver class deep. They're
still so much talent on the board, including Polk Lagette.
I mean, you know, we haven't even talked about Tess
Walker or Corley. You know, they're Baker Rice. I love

(59:12):
these guys. This is such a good class, and I
had him very high in the in that tier. So
I think that's a pretty solid pick here. What do
you think fits?

Speaker 3 (59:22):
Yeah, overshadowed somewhat by Aduns, you know, and really he's
not even the only other Washington wide receiver who's going
to be maybe a coveted fantasy asset. So yeah, I mean, like,
I think he's a really good player. No issues with
getting him here. I think this is about where he

(59:42):
should go.

Speaker 1 (59:43):
Quick recap of round two Troy Franklin went to A one,
then Lad McConkie, Jonathan Brooks, Michael Pennix, Junior, Blake Cora,
Marshawn Lloyd, bo Nicks, Ricky Piersoll, Braylan Allen, Trey Benson,
Roman Wilson, and Jalen Polk. I just want to quickly
mention as well before we move round three, if you've
got any dynasty drafts on the horizon or want to

(01:00:03):
see how the latest free agency moves affect fantasy football drafts.
Our mock draft simulator tool is now open at fantasypros
dot com Slash Simulator. It's a fast and freeway to
practice for any kind of draft, including dynasty, startup drafts,
and rookie drafts. Again, that's at fantasypros dot com. Slash simulator. Guys,
we've gone pretty long in the first two rounds, so

(01:00:25):
we'll maybe go a bit faster here on around three.

Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Start us off Bogs at the three to zero one.
Give me Jalen Wright, the running back from Tennessee, a
guy that has moved up. I think he moved started
moving up more when a lot of people started getting
to his tape. Right because you go through Braylen Allen,
there's a lot of buzz coming in Brooks and Benson
and Bucky Irving and guys like that. But Jalen Wright
is a three down back and landing spot is going

(01:00:50):
to mean a lot for the rest of the running
backs here. But I have moved him. I mean, I
love Bucky, Bucky is one of my favorite running backs here,
but I had moved him down with his abysmal performance
at the combine and he's small. Still. I still like
Bucky and I'm still going to invest in him, but
I have to put a physical power guy like Jalen

(01:01:12):
Wright ahead of him. And he's got a lot of
speed too. I mean, I think this guy can do
a little bit of everything. I'm really curious to see
where he ends up. And I think he's going to
go higher than this post draft because running back is
just a desperate position for people, even though wide receiver
is good. I think a lot of people are going
to need running back on their team. So I think

(01:01:32):
right is going to move way ahead of being picked
in this spot once we get there, especially if he
lands on a team where he can play. But I
think he needs to go right here. I think, if
not a little bit earlier.

Speaker 1 (01:01:44):
I considered him a few times with the earlier picks,
so I'm totally with you. There fits here on the clock.

Speaker 3 (01:01:50):
Ray Davis running back for Kentucky, favorite of mine. Just versatile, tough, resourceful.
I think he could play on any of the three downs,
just like reminds me a little bit of Josh Jacobs
stylistically and just how tough he can be running between

(01:02:11):
the tackles. And like Jacobs, was experienced homelessness as a
kid and maybe that sort of shaped him and lit
the fire under him as far as being a football
player and wanting to make that his profession. So I
like this guy a lot. Like whenever I watch Kentucky,
it was hard to take your eyes off Ray Davis.

Speaker 2 (01:02:28):
Bob and we talked a bit about Davis.

Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
I think Cody took him in the last month draft
we did what are your thoughts at this point in
the draft process.

Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
I mean motor, motor, motor, motor, motor, motor, and like
you know, Fitz said, it's it is what probably defines
him as a person, not a football player, but motivation.
This guy is motivated to get up and work and
get every single yard and every single blade of grass
that he can on every play and every snap. So

(01:02:58):
he gives his all in everything he does. And you
want players like that, and you root for players like that.
That's why he is a fan favorite already before he
has a landing spot, so hard not to cheer for
Ray Davis a great player.

Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
With the third pick in the third round, I'm gonna
continue the running back run here, I'm gonna take Estima.
I know he had a bad combine performance. I'm gonna
say when we're at the we're at this point in
your rookie draft, I'm just gonna trust what I saw
and I really enjoyed watching him play at Notre Dame,
and I think again, I think there's a role for
him at the NFL level. I would be happy if

(01:03:31):
the Ravens took him, you know, in the middle of
the draft to you know, pair up in that backfield
with the aging Derrick Henry. I just am a big
fan of his and I'm not gonna let a bad
couple of days at the combine at this point in
the rookie draft. Uh changed my estimation of Estima to
fit that she was not a pre playing fits.

Speaker 2 (01:03:51):
What do you think about Estime.

Speaker 3 (01:03:54):
Yeah, so kind of like Braylan Allen in a way
in that I don't see him playing on passing downs
in the end, but put him in the right situation
on a team that gives him goal line opportunities, not
inconceivable that he could score a dozen touchdowns.

Speaker 1 (01:04:08):
I was going to actually, you said the exact same
number I was going to say. I was going to say,
if the Ravens hadn't added Derrick Henry and instead they
drafted Estimate, I would absolutely be expecting him to step into.

Speaker 2 (01:04:17):
The Gus Edward. It's like a dozen rushing touchdowns.

Speaker 1 (01:04:19):
Sure, I think there's a couple of places where that
could be taking place. Bogs, I'm curious your opinion of Estima,
And also you're on the clock at two four.

Speaker 2 (01:04:27):
Yeah, I'm a higher on estimate. Of course, you know,
the combine didn't do him any favors. He looks slow
and all of that, but I don't know. You know
my opinion on this. It's ninety percent film and ten
percent combine. Sometimes it's reaffirming. Okay, this guy is slow.
That's what we were worried about, and that is what
happened with the estimate. But I think what he put

(01:04:49):
on film means he can do it. Running back is
an easily translatable position as well, so I think if
he lands in a good spot, we could see some
good numbers from him. But also he could be aj Dillon,
and I was very high on ag Dillon and that
did not work out. So he's more of a coin
flip than I like. That's all my pick here this one. Look,

(01:05:10):
I have to take one Texas player, so gimme Jatavian
Sanders here. The slide will stop for the second title.
I refuse to take him after I already took the
other three. I thought you were gonna take him here.
I kind of took right just to see if you
would take him at that spot. But look, you know,
tight end is deep. There's a lot of tight ends.

(01:05:30):
That's why he's gonna slip. But I think Sanders, if
he gets in the right system, you know, put him
in Washington behind zach Ertz, let him learn for a year,
and then become a downfield threat in Cliff Kingsbury's offense.
I think he is extremely valuable. A lot of people
didn't like Isaiah Likely coming in right, but he landed
in a good spot for him with a guy like
Lamar Jackson, and he can just you know, throw the

(01:05:52):
ball up in the air and let the tall guy
go get it right. So I think if Sanders ends
up in a good spot, he could be used really well.
There's also a chance he could be you know, behind
a stud tight end like David and Joku and end
up being Harrison Bryant, which is frustrating. So landing spot
is going to mean a lot for Sanders. But he
can catch the ball and he can run with it.

(01:06:13):
So I am excited to see where he ends up.

Speaker 3 (01:06:16):
Fits your up So Boggs clucked his tongue at us
earlier for not paying heed to the superflex format with
regard to bo Nick, So I better act now, and
I'm going to take Spencer Rattler, who I think has
got himself back onto the radar for NFL teams. Maybe
was never off, but like he had, you know, a

(01:06:37):
star crossed college experience for sure, for this guy who
came into the college ranks as a mega prospect and
just like didn't didn't pan out to the degree that
everyone thought. But I think he's really won people over
in the off season. He's absolutely got an NFL caliber arm,

(01:06:57):
which I don't think anyone questions, and like everyone who's
talked to him says, he's a mature kid who seems
like he's got a really good head on his shoulders.
And I think, you know, he could challenge for a
starting job in the NFL. Maybe not in year one,
but by year two.

Speaker 1 (01:07:16):
If he got to the end of this round, I
was gonna take him. There was no other quarterback I
was you know, considering at any point. But I I mean,
the pedigree has been there in the past, and I've
seen similar things what you're saying about, just in terms
of really good head on his shoulders, and there's some
degree of you know, of natural talent there too. Bogman,
what do you make of Rattler here in the middle

(01:07:37):
of the third. Yeah, I mean, I don't want to
like Rattler, right, Oklahoma guy. All that stuff was real
arrogant at Oklahoma when he was playing Texas too, But.

Speaker 2 (01:07:48):
I mean, what more do we want to see? We
know this guy can make every throw. He's matured a
ton from his you know, early Oklahoma days and his
you know QB show on Netflix days. He was eighteen.
Everyone's an idiot when they're eighteen, so you know, I
think he was branded by that a little bit. So
I think he's done a lot of work to disprove that,

(01:08:10):
and he has to me, so I'm glad Fitz took
him so I don't have to. But I do think
that he is going to go higher than we expect
in the draft.

Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
I am now on the clock and I'm going to
take Javon Baker, and I will tell you guys, I'm
not going to sit here and pretend that I have
like a detailed breakdown on him. The biggest reason is
trust in Debro, who just updated his rookie rankings. He
has some wide receiver six in the class, and that
is much higher than consensus if you check our rankings

(01:08:41):
on the Fantasy Pro site. So I mostly bring him
up because A, you know, I trust Deebro when it
comes to rookie evaluations, not much else. And B I
want to get your guys' opinion, and I'm assuming you
won't be quite a size.

Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
Debro is again wide receiver six in the class. But Bogan,
what do you make a Baker? I like Baker a lot,
and you know, I do think that he's a little
bit of a one trick pony now, you know, like
he's a speed guy, right, but you put the ball
in his hands and he flies. So it's a sexy

(01:09:14):
pick here. I definitely, I definitely like it. But a
landing spot again, is gonna mean a lot for it.
I mean, obviously will for everyone. I keep saying this,
but I just I'm curious to see where he lands.
I don't want him to go to a team with
a quarterback without a massive arm. He needs to go
to San Diego or San Diego to the Chargers with

(01:09:35):
Justin Herbert, right, he needs to go somewhere where the
QB has a monster rocket arm to put it on him.
So I'm curious of landing spot and see if he
can pare up with a QB with a big, big
rocket arm Bogman, you are up next, all right, give
me Bucky. I know the combine didn't do Bucky Irving

(01:09:56):
any favors. He looks slow, but just put on the film.
Just put on the tape and watch this dude play
for Oregon. He has burst, he follows a block well
he had. He makes a lot of tacklers miss as well.
So undersize not as athletic as we want for a

(01:10:17):
guy of his size. I get it, But I am
trusting what I saw with my eyes at Oregon, and
I'm gonna go with Bucky Irving in the spot because
I still think he's gonna be a valuable player, even
if it takes him a little bit more to develop
than we thought. So give me Bucky Irving fits. What
do you make a Bucky Man?

Speaker 3 (01:10:35):
I mean maybe, I guess he's got to be this
year's Kyron Williams. Really disappointing combine. Uh, just a guy
like for the game, he plays, a guy who profiles
as a third down back in the NFL. You just
would have liked to have seen more speed from him
at the combine, Like those were really disappointing. Forty ten

(01:10:56):
What was he like?

Speaker 2 (01:10:57):
Four to six yeah or something, buddh Yeah, not good. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:11:01):
So I mean, like that's definitely slower than you want
for a space back, a scat back. So that definitely
knocked him down my board. But on the field you
see it though, like you see him being a third
down back in the NFL. So I have no issues
with him here. I think he would have been going
in the second round if not for the disappointing combine.

Speaker 2 (01:11:24):
You got next.

Speaker 3 (01:11:25):
Yeah, so I'm up at three oh eight and this
guy would not have been available to me if Thor
were in this. I'm gonna go with Kamani Videll, a
running back from Troy, and it's it looks like videal,
like Vidal Sassoon, but it's actually Videll I think. So
he was super productive at Troy. I think he is

(01:11:46):
the school's all time leading rusher, ran for like what
like sixteen hundred yards last year. Really tough, hard nos runner,
great vision and like you're not bring this guy down
with an arm tackle, even though he's slightly smaller, and
like Thor and I thought he was gonna run like
a four to six at the combine. He ran a

(01:12:08):
four to four seven and tested really well. So that
was a pleasant surprise. And I think that, unfortunately, unfortunately,
is going to put him on the radar of some
dynasty people, because I think he probably would have been
like a fourth rounder if he had run the four
to six' one that we were expecting him to run.
But with that good time at the forty like that,

(01:12:30):
just in addition to all of the good stuff he
put on tape, like, he's become an appealing guy. And
I think for Thor, Thor's gonna have him like top five.
I think in his running back rankings, maybe just outside
the top five, but not very like he's not going
past RBS seven in Thor's running back rankings.

Speaker 2 (01:12:48):
I know that what do you make of him? Bugs?
I love Idell. I mean, he makes so many tacklers miss,
he runs through arm tackles. He's got some wiggled too.
He's a little bit of a right but you know,
and he went to a smaller school. So I think
I think this a lot of the stuff that we've

(01:13:09):
been hearing about. Why why I just blank a lot
of the stuff that we've been hearing about Quorum. I
think we might hear about Videll if he played at
a bigger school. Obviously the competition was lower two and
that is why he needs to go later. But I
think there's uh, there's some quorum nishes in uh Kamani
Videll strong little back with some speed, so I love

(01:13:32):
watching him play. I am now up.

Speaker 1 (01:13:36):
There's like three or four reis he is stressing. I'm
just like it. I feel like I could go. I
feel like I was saying this for the whole second
half of the draft, but it's like there's like three
or four guys here that I think you could make
a really interesting case for I want to go with
a receiver. I think I'll just go with leget Xavier

(01:13:58):
Legett and just the pure kind of athletics is in play.
Like not my favorite guy, but again, late third round
in a rookie draft, I'm happy to kind of just say, like,
this guy is very, very athletic and maybe gets with
an NFL team that uses him well, and you know,
kind of like a poor man's DK Metcalf. Not that
he's that good, but so I'll go with Lagett here

(01:14:19):
at the three h nine.

Speaker 2 (01:14:20):
Love Logett. That was gonna be my pick here, that's
you totally sniped me worre him so great, great work.
I think a little bit is being overblown about his
Senior Bowl performance. Also the combine he didn't really help himself,
but another guy where Yes, he wasn't great in the
ramp up to the draft. But if you watch the film,

(01:14:41):
very good wide receiver, very very good wide receiver, and
you know the debo compas because they both played at
South Carolina, and he sounds like one of my cousins.
So if you all have heard him talk at all,
But so i'm i'm he's endearing himself to me a
little bit more. He already feels like one of the family.
Give me for my last pick. Here, Malachi Corley, a
wide receiver out of Western Kentucky. I know maybe I

(01:15:03):
sniped Fits on this spot. I was gonna take Leaguet
to let you have Corley, but then Wormy sniped.

Speaker 1 (01:15:09):
Me Courley was I was gonna maybe take, and then
I picked Lagett, so they both would have been gone regardless.
I mean, the debo comp is there for Corley too, right,
And you know we talk about and Fitz has made
this point a lot, and I think Fitz has drilled
this into my brain too.

Speaker 2 (01:15:24):
It's uh the Ohio State game man. When he was
going up against the best competition he was gonna see
all year, he played his butt off. He was great.
So there's a lot to like on Malachi Corley's tape.
Route running, isn't it. But you want the ball in
his hands? Uh, probably a guy for an offense that
doesn't have a quarterback with a strong arm. You know,

(01:15:46):
put him in uh, put him in Vegas with Gardner
Minshew or Aidan O'Connell there and you know, let them
throw the ball short. Put the ball in his hands
and take it and run. That's what we want to
see Corley do. And I'm excited to see where he
ends up.

Speaker 3 (01:16:02):
Yeah, Corley would have been the pick there, so that
was a nice one. And Legette probably would have been
the pick if you know so. But I do have
one more wide receiver up my sleeve, Devon Tees Walker
tes Walker of North Carolina, size speed prospect six too
and really fast and like has some interesting ball skills

(01:16:22):
and made some plays for Drake. May like developmental guy.
I don't see him coming in and making a big
splash as a rookie, but I think a guy who
could maybe develop into a pretty decent starting NFL receiver
with big play potential by like his second or third year.

Speaker 2 (01:16:40):
What do you think about tes Bagman? Yeah, I mean
this is you know, uh he he hasn't had a
lot of playing time recently, right, obviously he had the
big thing with NC double, a bad performance at the
Senior Bowl. So he's moving down boards. But there's a
lot of that. There's a lot of clay to to,
you know, fix this sculpture out of So I think,

(01:17:04):
you know, if he gets in, he gets coached up,
he's going to be really good. So I like that pick.
There's a lot of potential there.

Speaker 1 (01:17:10):
I'm going to wrap us up with a guy that
I think I played my flag on in the first
you know iteration of this draft. Malik Washington, wide receiver
at a UVA. He is short, he is really fun
to watch. He breaks a ton of tackles. He's explosive,
like probably limited to this lot because of the size,
but I mean last year he had one hundred and
ten catches, fourteen hundred yards, nine touchdowns at UVA. I

(01:17:32):
just think he's he's a really fun guy to watch
and I'm excited to see him go hopefully to an
NFL team that will utilize him, you know in a
really interesting, you know way.

Speaker 2 (01:17:41):
What do you think about that pick? Fits?

Speaker 3 (01:17:43):
Yeah, very ultra productive. I know that pick drew some
oohs and ohs when we had the mock draft with
the player profiler guys. UVA could have used him on
the basketball court the other night because they had trouble
putting points.

Speaker 2 (01:17:56):
They could have used the media on the basketball court
the other.

Speaker 3 (01:18:01):
Yeah. So I like the pick. I think that's great
value at three twelve.

Speaker 2 (01:18:07):
When classes so deep, worm you know that the guys
that perform well are gonna move way up boards. That's
why you know Washington would have been close to tes
Walker going into this process in you know, early January,
late December, whatever you want to call it, when people
really start shifting their focus to the draft. These guys
would not have been close. But this is what the

(01:18:28):
process does, right. It raises guys like Washington, lowers guys
like Walker, and they're picked right next to each other
in a draft like this. So we'll see how the
real NFL draft works. But Malik Washington is getting drafted.
His performances in everything leading up to the draft have
made him a very draftable player. Quick recap of Round three,
Starting at three zero one, we had Jalen Wright, Ray Davis, Audrick, Estime,

(01:18:52):
Jitavian Sanders, Spencer Rattler, Javon Baker, Bucky Irving, Kimbaie videll Is,
Davier Leaguett Corley, Devontes Walker or Tes Walker, and Malik Washington.
We've already run very long in this episode, so we'll
go a little bit longer because I want to ask
you fits was there anybody you were surprised didn't get

(01:19:13):
drafted that you thought maybe you should have or would
have or any other kind of main takeaways from this
mock draft.

Speaker 3 (01:19:20):
No, I mean there's some other guys who could have
been drafted, But I mean Will Shipley kind of comes
to mind. I think with his I don't know, ready
made passing down back skill sets, I think he's probably
gonna go in the top three rounds of most twelve
team leagues. That's about it. Like, nothing really shocked me here,

(01:19:46):
you know. I know, deebro we did a mock where
Debro took Troy Franklin ninth overall and got some cat calls,
including from me, But like there was there was nothing
that nothing egregious here.

Speaker 2 (01:19:58):
Today, I thought, what did you think, Bogman? Any main takeaways? Yeah,
I mean I completely agree that there's some guys, you know,
maybe I just there's so much talent, right so, but
there's only one other quarterback like Michael Pratt. Maybe you
could have knuck in here if you like him at
running back. I like guys like Corendo and Isaiah Davis.

(01:20:18):
And there's so many wide receivers you could interchange at
the end with a couple of those last ones that
I think we did a really good job here. I
don't think there's a lot missing.

Speaker 1 (01:20:27):
Only two tight ends off the board, and I don't right,
I don't think anybody else, even really like I would
have even considered.

Speaker 2 (01:20:34):
I like Jeam Bell kind of.

Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
I think he's an interesting player, but like I never
would have taken him over these receivers.

Speaker 2 (01:20:39):
I think that's the most correct thing that happened in
this draft. There's only two tight ends going. I think
that's probably exactly how it's going to go in most so.

Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
Yeah, all right, well, I appreciate everybody sticking with us
for this. You know, jam Packed Supersized episode. It was
super fun there's nothing quite as fun as getting to
do mock drafts, especially with these two guys.

Speaker 2 (01:20:58):
Hopefully it was informative and I know.

Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
I learned a couple of things. Hopefully everybody else did
as well. Thank you everybody for tuning in. We will
be back next week for Bogman and Fitz.

Speaker 2 (01:21:07):
I'm Ryan. We'll see you next time.

Speaker 1 (01:21:09):
Thanks for listening to the Fantasy Pros Dynasty Football Podcast.
If you love the show, the best freeway to support
us is by leaving a positive review on Apple Podcasts
or Spotify. Follow us on x, Instagram, and TikTok at
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dot com slash Fantasy Pros
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