Thursday, April 30, 2020

2020 NFL Draft: Chances Are Patriots Take The First Night Off, Trade Down

Previously published on our sister blog, Mainely Patriots

April 23, 2020

If the New England Patriots actually use their first round draft pick, it's not going to be to try and replace the greatest quarterback of all time - rather, it is going to be to mend a run defense that proved to be their downfall in 2019.

In games late in the season and in their one playoff game, the Patriots had a tough time against power running teams, who attacked right up the middle where Danny Shelton was hit or miss, and was routinely pushed off his spot and washed out of plays. When the Patriots compensated by stacking the box, teams attacked the edges with only one man to block as New England didn't possess anyone with the requisite lateral speed to close gaps.

The one man that teams concentrated on taking out of their equation was Kyle Van Noy, who was outstanding setting the edge, but had no one to back him up when tackles and tight ends washed him up and around the play. The lone bright spot in that scenario was three-tech tackle Lawrence Guy, who took to crashing down the line of scrimmage to try and blow up running plays behind the line of scrimmage.

On the weak side, Jamie Collins disappeared on the edge, leaving inside linebackers to flow to the gaps, often arriving too late to fill the gap as teams routinely muddied the second level to disrupt their movement.

Besides Shelton leaving, his defensive line returns intact with two quality defensive tackles in Guy and Adam Butler, and defensive ends Chase Winovich and Rob Ninkovich clone John Simon, while both of his starting outside linebackers have gone to other teams.

So Linebacker becomes a priority as well and I fully expect that Belichick will address the second level with players who can set the edge and rush the quarterback - but with an elite secondary to anchor on, edge-setting will take priority over pass rush ability in any linebacker that he selects...

...and while the secondary is one of the best in football, the back end is getting old, especially Chung, who is showing obvious fragility, so I expect Belichick to select a box safety and probably also a free safety for elder statesman Devin McCourty to mentor, one with the sideline-to-sideline ability to replace what they lost in trading away Duron Harmon and to keep the three-safety, Big Nickle alignment in play.

Below, please find my updated Mock draft for the New England Patriots, which projects that Belichick will trade down into the second round and pick up a fourth-rounder in the process, then trade up from the sixth and seventh rounds to acquire a fifth round pick:

Projected Patriots Draft picks 2020:

First Round:

Traded away #23;

Second Round:

#37 Kyle Dugger, S, Lenoir-Rhyne - (pick from trading down from the first round)
Patrick Chung is growing old and fragile. In fact, I can't recall a game last season when he didn't have the training staff run onto the field to escort him off in pain - so the time to find a replacement is upon Belichick, and the best box safety in the draft is Dugger. Bigger, faster and stronger than Chung, he fills well in the running game and arrives with dark intent, and has the length and bulk to match up well with tight ends in the pattern, along with the speed to deal with running backs curling into the flat.

Third Round:

#71 - Adam Trautman, TE, Dayton - A tremendous value if he falls to the third round, as projected. Had he more experience at the position - he played quarterback and was a basketball star upon arrival at Dayton - he has all the tools to be a top-flight professional tight end. He is a willing in-line blocker and lined up all over the formation in the passing game, running routes not typically expected of a tight end. He possesses solid hands and a lot toughness and quickness, and tracks the ball well up the seam. Excellent prospect for a team that isn't tied to tradition.

#87 - Denzel Mims, WR, 6' 3", 205 - Baylor - One of the most versatile receivers in this draft, Mims did everything he was asked to do in college at a very high level. The issue with him coming into the NFL is that the routes he was asked to run in college represents only a small percentage of the route tree that professional receivers are tasked with. The upside is his deep speed, length and catch radius, which probably relegates him to a red zone target and occasional field-stretcher.

#98 - Lucas Niang, RT, Texas Christian University - Powerful hands and violent intent are the hallmarks of Niang, who comes from the same program that produced incumbent right tackle Marcus Cannon a decade ago. Like Cannon, his forte is run blocking, but he comes to the NFL with a more defined pass blocking package. His handwork is elite in both phases, but speed-to-power pass rushers will occasionally gain the edge of him in pass protection, as he relies more on strength and length to swallow up one-dimensional rushers. In the running game, he is a pancake maker with the ability to climb the ladder and erase linebackers. A tremendous value if he's still available in the third round, where the Patriots currently have three selections in their pocket.

#100 -  Anferneee Jennings, OLB, Alabama - A true edge-setter with impressive upper body power to knock tight ends and tackles back and hold the edge, funneling the play inside where bigger bodies await to make the play. While instinctive and explosive off the snap, his closing speed chasing quarterbacks isn't as focused as a pass rusher, but college coaches used him as a disruptor who cuts off escape routes for mobile passers.

Fourth Round:

#125 - Davon Hamilton, NT, 6' 4", 327 - Ohio State - A ture nose tackle in every sense of the word with tremendous lower body strength and quick, violent hands that routinely moved college centers off their mark, blowing up plays in the backfield, sometimes before they even got started. A gap eater who willingly takes on double teams to open up plays for his teammates.

#139  Jordyn Brooks, ILB, Texas Tech - (pick from trading Rob Gronkowski's rights to Tampa Bay) - A true four-down linebacker, the only knock on Brooks is that the defensive line has to keep him clean so that he doesn't get lost in traffic, so he would have to be mentored by experienced linebackers like Hightower in the nuances of playing inside - but once he cleans that up, he has the potential of being a violent interior linebacker who possesses coverage skills to handle backs and tight ends crossing the middle.

# Trevis Gipson, DE, 6' 4", 260 - Tulsa (pick from trading down from the first round) - Possesses a unique skill set that fits perfectly with Belichick's 3-4 alignment. He loves mixing things up with tackles and tight ends and rarely yields ground to them in the running game, setting a mean edge. Not an edge-bender in the pass rush, but is sheer terror when shading tackles to the inside as a five-technique end.

Fifth round: 

# Thaddeus Moss, TE, LSU (pick from trading up from sixth and seventh rounds #195, #235) - Unlike his Hall-of-Fame father, Randy's kid is an elite run blocker who also has the requisite speed and hands to handle safety valve duties in the passing game. He's built like a linebacker and has "H-Back" written all over him.

Sixth round:

#212 - James Proche, WR, SMU - Compared favorably to former-Patriots Danny Amendola, he excels from the slot and is twitchy off the line, with the ability to break in any direction and gain separation. Not big nor impressively fast, his hands and route running make him a perfect player to be mentored by Julian Edelman

#213 - Van Jefferson, WR,  Florida (pick from trading up from sixth and seventh rounds (#204, #241) - a precise route runner with excellent NFL blood lines who is possesses perhaps the most diverse skill set in the draft at the position. Gains separation from anywhere along the line. He's not a speedster like his father was, but his experience and excellence in route running is a young quarterback's best friend.

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