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FBG Board Consensus 2010 Mock NFL Draft (1 Viewer)

What option do you think the Patriots will go with?

  • DE-OLB Brandon Graham

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • DE-OLB Sergio Kindle

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • DT Jared Odrick

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • DT Terrence Cody

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • DE-OLB Jerry Hughes

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • DE Everson Griffen

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • CB Kyle Wilson

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • TE Jermaine Gresham

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • C Maurkice Pouncey

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • OT Bruce Campbell

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • QB Tim Tebow

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other / Trade Down (explain)

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0

Faust

MVP
1.01 St. Louis Rams select QB Sam Bradford (83% of the vote)

1.02 Detroit Lions select DT Ndamukong Suh (59% of the vote)

1.03 Tampa Bay Buccaneers select DT Gerald McCoy (85% of the vote)

1.04 Washington Redskins select OT Russell Okung (73% of the vote)

1.05 Kansas City Chiefs select S Eric Berry (41% of the vote)

1.06 Seattle Seahawks select OT Trent Williams (41% of the vote)

1.07 Cleveland Browns select QB Jimmy Clausen (28% of the vote)

1.08 Oakland Raiders select OT Bryan Bulaga (23% of the vote)

1.09 Buffalo Bills select OT Anthony Davis (61% of the vote)

1.10 Jacksonville Jaguars select ILB Rolando McClain (30% of the vote)

1.11 Denver Broncos select DT Dan Williams (38% of the vote)

1.12 Miami Dolphins select WR Dez Bryant (47% of the vote)

1.13 San Francisco 49ers select CB Joe Haden (52% of the vote)

1.14 Seattle Seahawks select RB C.J. Spiller (45% of the vote)

1.15 New York Giants select OLB Sean Weatherspoon (37% of the vote)

1.16 Tennessee Titans select DE Derrick Morgan (46% of the vote)

1.17 San Francisco 49ers select CB/S Earl Thomas (26% of the vote)

1.18 Pittsburgh Steelers select G-OT Mike Iupati (40% of the vote)

1.19 Atlanta Falcons select DE-OLB Jason Pierre-Paul (42% of the vote)

1.20 Houston Texans select RB Ryan Matthews (49% of the vote)

1.21 Cincinnati Bengals select S Taylor Mays (38% of the vote)

New England Patriots

Positions of Need:

LB, DL, TE, OL, QB

Needs Analysis: The Patriots re-signed a number of their veteran players, but questions remain about the pass rush. The team needs to get someone who can come off the edge. New England also needs a five-technique defensive end, given the losses of Richard Seymour and Jarvis Green over the past couple years. A player like Penn State DE Jared Odrick would be a solid choice in the first round. As usual, the Patriots have multiple second round picks (three) and they should come away with two solid contributors, and maybe an experimental player like Florida's Tim Tebow. Bill Belichick is close friends with Gators coach Urban Meyer and Tebow's name had to come up in conversations between the two this spring.

 
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http://news.bostonherald.com/sports/footba...p;position=also

Patriots’ Mr. Versatile sees value in Tim Tebow

By Karen Guregian

By the end of this week, after the first two rounds of the NFL draft have been completed, we could have a much better idea if Bill Belichick is merely blowing smoke about Tim Tebow, or if there is legitimate interest in drafting the Florida quarterback.

The guess here is that it’s the former case, but there’s at least one former Belichick player who believes the Patriots coach isn’t working some kind of gambit to gain an edge in the draft. And given that Troy Brown possessed many of the qualities Tebow is said to have, the Patriots all-time leading receiver can offer some insight as to what Belichick may be thinking.

“I can definitely see (Tebow) being in a Patriot uniform,” Brown told the Herald last week.

Belichick employed Brown all over the football field - on offense, defense and special teams, so it’s not difficult for him to imagine that scenario playing out with Tebow.

“He’s shown he can be versatile, he’s shown he can lead a football team in many different ways. He can do things you really can’t teach players to do,” Brown said of Tebow, whom Belichick once again lavished with praise during his pre-draft press conference. “He’s proven he’s a winner. And Bill’s probably seen all that stuff. Then, on top of that, he has a great attitude. He’ll do anything the team asks him to do.

“The thing I like about him is he wants to be good. He obviously wants to be a quarterback in the NFL, but I’m sure he’ll do whatever it takes to help his team win. So, yeah, I can definitely see him with the Patriots given that kind of attitude.”

Most observers are assuming Belichick’s open wooing of Tebow, who was in town several weeks ago and treated to dinner in the North End, is little more than a smokescreen. While the Tebow talk had died down prior to Belichick’s bouquet-tossing on Wednesday, Brown said he wouldn’t dismiss the courtship so quickly.

“It’s intriguing. I mean, can you tell me they have a proven backup (quarterback) on that roster,” he said. “The bottom line, is Bill just likes football players. And Tebow is a football player. If you put Tim Tebow on the roster as a backup quarterback, I’m sure he’d be on the field doing other things for that team.

“I think he has that kind of ability to do different things. He’s one of those guys he’ll do anything to help his team win. . . . Then you throw in his work ethic, someone who is going to work as hard as he is, wherever Bill puts him, I’m sure he’ll attack it with everything he has.”

That’s what made Brown so attractive to Belichick. He was a football player. He’d do whatever was needed for his team to win without complaint.

“I don’t think I’m telling you anything you don’t already know,” Brown said of Tebow. “Those are facts that are on the table. It’s hard to find, what he brings. You can’t replace that.”

Brown acknowledged the importance of this draft for the Patriots. With needs at defensive end, outside linebacker, tight end, wide receiver and elsewhere, do they take a flier on Tebow with one of their second-round picks if he’s still there? Brown certainly sounded like he wouldn’t be shy about pulling the trigger.

“They can work on his mechanics and teach him to reach defenses. He seems to be a pretty smart guy,” Brown said. “You can teach people like that. It’s hard to work with guys who don’t want to learn or do things the right way. He seems to be willing to prove everyone wrong.” . . .

Brown also weighed in on the recent revelation from Denver coach Josh McDaniels that he and Tom Brady went three weeks without speaking in 2005 when McDaniels was serving as Patriots quarterbacks coach and de facto offensive coordinator.

“I didn’t know about that one,” Brown said. “We just came to play. We didn’t get involved in that. Obviously, it’s an important relationship, quarterback and coach, but I didn’t notice anything going on. They’re both competitors. Obviously, it didn’t affect their focus or performance too much.”

With the draft on the horizon, Patriots players have recently been sharing some of their draft-day stories.

Backup quarterback Brian Hoyer had hoped to be drafted last April out of Michigan State. And with projections for him being taken at least by the seventh round, ESPN had cameras in his living room to record the moment. But it didn’t happen, and he ended up signing with the Patriots as an undrafted free agent.

“I had ESPN come to my house, so that was a long day. By the end of that day I just wanted to go and sit in my room,” Hoyer said. “But from the information that I had been given, from my agent and from ESPN themselves saying that we think you’re going to be a pick, I was like, ‘Well, if I could have this documented, then why not?’

“It went the wrong way, but I’m happy the way it ended up because I came here and if there was a team that I could pick that I wanted to go to, this is the team.”

Fellow undrafted free agent Gary Guyton was also happy where he ended up a year earler. But the Georgia Tech product will never forget not getting the call.

“It’s a big day for kids, the draft, because this is what you dream about every day,” Guyton said. “Will it affect me? No. Will it make or break me? Nah. But I’ll remember it. It’s OK, though.”

Kevin Faulk thought he was going in the first round in 1999, as most projections held. Only, he was taken in the second round.

“The team I love the most . . . told me we’ve got two picks in the first round, and we’re going to take you with one of them,” Faulk said, recalling his conversations with the Patriots. “Two picks came, and I wasn’t taken. But it’s like I said, it’s like a marriage. You’re mad one day, and then, it’s like, ‘OK, here I am. Here’s what I have to do.’ ”

Tweet, tweet

After Pro Bowl wide receiver Brandon Marshall landed with the Dolphins via trade from Denver last week, Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis wrote on his Twitter account: “Brandon Marshall to the Dolphins, huh. That’s a good look for them.”

Speaking of tweets, cornerback Leigh Bodden is taking exception to those who believe the Pats have fallen from the top of the AFC East in light of all the Jets and Dolphins have done to improve their clubs. Here’s his Twitter response to the naysayers: “We won the division last year and they’re trying to get to where we’re at . . . but names don’t win. TEAMS DO!!!!” . . .

Holy Cross quarterback Dominic Randolph, the Patriot League’s Offensive Player of the Year the past two seasons, is eager to see how the draft plays out. Randolph, who threw for nearly 4,000 yards as a senior, has enjoyed the process. He’s had private workouts with the Cincinnati Bengals and New York Giants. The Patriots also worked him out following his appearance at the Boston College pro day.

“I’m excited. Sometimes you wonder what’s going to happen because you never know how the draft’s going to pan out,” Randolph said. “It’s certainly an exciting time. I’m just trying to enjoy the opportunity I have at hand.”

He visited the Giants last weekend, then shot over to Cincinnati Tuesday to meet with his hometown Bengals.

“Those went really well. It was fun (performing) in my hometown stadium,” Randolph said. “The visit to New York was also pretty exciting. I had a great time meeting the coaches. It was good to get those looks.”

Randolph will be at Holy Cross in Worcester awaiting word as the draft is held Thursday-Saturday.

 
I know Karen Guregian, and FWIW, she does not see the Pats taking Tebow. I would be shocked if they did, as he would have very little utility as a QB. If they somehow drafted him as a TE and then worked on him transitioning to QB down the road, then MAYBE they look at him in the second. But even then I don't see it as they now have a lot of holes to fill and more pressing needs.

 
Too many good choices here. Odrick, Kindle, Graham, Wilson, Hughes, Pouncey... I could pick one out of a hat here. Trade down a few spots, pick one and trade up to the folowing pick and take another one. There are some 3-4 defensive teams that will be smiling right about now.

 
http://www.boston.com/sports/football/patr...on_the_outside/

Thomas on the outside

Linebacker left in holding pattern

By Shalise Manza Young

HATTIESBURG, Miss. — Suffice it to say, this is not how Adalius Thomas thought his time in New England would go.

When he signed a five-year, $35 million contract on the first day of free agency in 2007, he seemed to be the ultimate Bill Belichick player — big, fast, and versatile. The assumption was he’d become a Swiss Army knife in the Patriots defense: lining up at outside linebacker, a Willie McGinest-type rush end, sometimes at inside linebacker, or even in the secondary, as he had done on occasion with Baltimore.

But how Thomas may have envisioned his Patriots’ tenure playing out and how it has three seasons in are starkly different.

Right now, Adalius Thomas is essentially a man without a team. The chances of him playing another down for New England seem incredibly slim.

Yet he remains on the roster.

He is in Hattiesburg for his annual football camp today at the University of Southern Mississippi, a free day for area boys to learn about the game and meet someone who has made it to the NFL, has been to the Super Bowl, has played in Pro Bowls.

Over breakfast at a Shoney’s just blocks from the campus, Thomas took the opportunity to give his side after nearly six months of being portrayed as a malcontent. He struggles to grasp where things went wrong.

“Anybody that knows me personally knows that I’m not a bad person. I haven’t had a problem in the 10 years I’ve been in the league; I haven’t had a run-in with any coach. That’s not me,’’ he said. “Am I a ‘yes’ person? That’s not me. I respect the coaches and I respect their position. If you have something that you want me doing, that’s fine. But coaches are going to do what’s best for the organization, or for them. At some point you have to look out for you, so the only person that’s going to do that is you.

“I’m not bitter. At all. But I guess it comes across . . . I don’t think anything I said is untrue, and if it’s not untrue, then why is there a problem?’’

During the infamous Snow Day episode, when Thomas, Randy Moss, Gary Guyton, and Derrick Burgess were sent home for being late for an 8 a.m. team meeting because of winter weather conditions, Thomas’s quip to the media about not having a flying car like in the “The Jetsons’’ to float over the traffic was taken as flippant, though he said he was trying to be funny; his comment that “motivation is for kindergartners, and I’m not a kindergartner’’ was seen as disrespectful.

He acknowledged he could have expressed himself in another way, but his frustration was born in part out of an inconsistency in how such situations had been handled throughout the season.

It was just another event in a series of them, all of which caused cracks in the relationship between team and player.

Discuss

COMMENTS (91)

Thomas broke his right forearm early in a November game against the Bills in 2008. Initially, he told team doctors he wanted to delay X-rays until halftime; he returned to the field for two more series, and during the second he attempted a quick move on an opposing player. That’s when the bone snapped, with breaks in four places. His arm immediately swelled. His season was over.

There are now 12 screws and a plate in his arm. The Patriots sent him to a facility in Tampa for rehabilitation (Thomas has a home in Florida) in early 2009, but he said the woman he worked with was a massage therapist, not a physical therapist who specialized in helping him recover full range of motion in the arm.

Well over a year later, he said his wrist sometimes still bothers him. Next month, he will go on his own to a place in Pensacola, Fla., to try and get it back to normal.

He wondered why he was not directed toward proper therapy in the first place.

“I think that sent a hidden message to me because I don’t think certain people would get that same treatment. I don’t think you’d send somebody to rehab their shoulder with a massage therapist, or a knee to a massage therapist. She was a doctor, but the person responsible for my physical therapy was a massage therapist?’’ he paused, folding his arms on the table and running the fingers of his left hand along the damaged arm.

“All the things were right, [but] there was probably so much more I could have done. She did what she knew to do. It wasn’t her fault; she was doing a favor. The favor didn’t work out for me.’’

Last summer, Thomas got more news: In his words, he was told he was “not a good pass rusher’’ and that his role would be changing. He had not yet returned to the field from his arm injury, though at the time he was hurt, he had five sacks in 10 games.

“I look at it like this: There are only six [active] outside linebackers with 50-plus sacks. I’m one of them. To say after the injury that, ‘OK, you’re not a good enough pass rusher,’ I just can’t . . . I can’t buy that. I’m not saying I’m the best in the world or anything like that, but . . .’’

The worst was in Week 6 last season, when Thomas was benched for the Patriots’ game against Tennessee. The morning of the game, linebackers coach Matt Patricia — not Belichick — told him that he would not be playing. The staff thought he had performed poorly the previous week in a loss at Denver.

When the topic of his benching came up, Thomas’s voice dropped as he struggled to piece together the circumstances.

“The thing for me is, I got a game ball Atlanta week [in Game 3]. So, that’s what was so mind-boggling. You get a game ball two weeks before, you have a bad game against Denver, and then you get benched the next game. That’s really that’s interesting, for a lack of words. Because I know a lot of people that had more than one bad game. It was shocking. That was like a turn.’’

It isn’t clear why the Patriots haven’t released Thomas. Neither he nor his agent, Bus Cook, has had contact with club officials. The linebacker is not participating in the offseason workout program, but will attend mandatory minicamp in June if he is still on the roster.

He was asked if he believes he’s played his last down with the Patriots.

“I wish I really knew. And that’s the honest-to-God truth,’’ he said. “The only person that knows that would be Bill. I don’t have a clue what’s going to happen, what their plans are, so it’s kind of uncertain. It’s uncomfortable too, because you don’t really know where you’re going to be.

“I’ve had a great time — if this is the end, I’ve enjoyed myself. The fans have been great, it was fun playing there. If it’s not, I’m fine with coming back.’’It was just another event in a series of them, all of which caused cracks in the relationship between team and player.

Discuss

COMMENTS (91)

Thomas broke his right forearm early in a November game against the Bills in 2008. Initially, he told team doctors he wanted to delay X-rays until halftime; he returned to the field for two more series, and during the second he attempted a quick move on an opposing player. That’s when the bone snapped, with breaks in four places. His arm immediately swelled. His season was over.

There are now 12 screws and a plate in his arm. The Patriots sent him to a facility in Tampa for rehabilitation (Thomas has a home in Florida) in early 2009, but he said the woman he worked with was a massage therapist, not a physical therapist who specialized in helping him recover full range of motion in the arm.

Well over a year later, he said his wrist sometimes still bothers him. Next month, he will go on his own to a place in Pensacola, Fla., to try and get it back to normal.

He wondered why he was not directed toward proper therapy in the first place.

“I think that sent a hidden message to me because I don’t think certain people would get that same treatment. I don’t think you’d send somebody to rehab their shoulder with a massage therapist, or a knee to a massage therapist. She was a doctor, but the person responsible for my physical therapy was a massage therapist?’’ he paused, folding his arms on the table and running the fingers of his left hand along the damaged arm.

“All the things were right, [but] there was probably so much more I could have done. She did what she knew to do. It wasn’t her fault; she was doing a favor. The favor didn’t work out for me.’’

Last summer, Thomas got more news: In his words, he was told he was “not a good pass rusher’’ and that his role would be changing. He had not yet returned to the field from his arm injury, though at the time he was hurt, he had five sacks in 10 games.

“I look at it like this: There are only six [active] outside linebackers with 50-plus sacks. I’m one of them. To say after the injury that, ‘OK, you’re not a good enough pass rusher,’ I just can’t . . . I can’t buy that. I’m not saying I’m the best in the world or anything like that, but . . .’’

The worst was in Week 6 last season, when Thomas was benched for the Patriots’ game against Tennessee. The morning of the game, linebackers coach Matt Patricia — not Belichick — told him that he would not be playing. The staff thought he had performed poorly the previous week in a loss at Denver.

When the topic of his benching came up, Thomas’s voice dropped as he struggled to piece together the circumstances.

“The thing for me is, I got a game ball Atlanta week [in Game 3]. So, that’s what was so mind-boggling. You get a game ball two weeks before, you have a bad game against Denver, and then you get benched the next game. That’s really that’s interesting, for a lack of words. Because I know a lot of people that had more than one bad game. It was shocking. That was like a turn.’’

It isn’t clear why the Patriots haven’t released Thomas. Neither he nor his agent, Bus Cook, has had contact with club officials. The linebacker is not participating in the offseason workout program, but will attend mandatory minicamp in June if he is still on the roster.

He was asked if he believes he’s played his last down with the Patriots.

“I wish I really knew. And that’s the honest-to-God truth,’’ he said. “The only person that knows that would be Bill. I don’t have a clue what’s going to happen, what their plans are, so it’s kind of uncertain. It’s uncomfortable too, because you don’t really know where you’re going to be.

“I’ve had a great time — if this is the end, I’ve enjoyed myself. The fans have been great, it was fun playing there. If it’s not, I’m fine with coming back.’’

 
I know Karen Guregian, and FWIW, she does not see the Pats taking Tebow. I would be shocked if they did, as he would have very little utility as a QB. If they somehow drafted him as a TE and then worked on him transitioning to QB down the road, then MAYBE they look at him in the second. But even then I don't see it as they now have a lot of holes to fill and more pressing needs.
David,The interest in Tebow feels like a smokescreen, doesn't it?
 
I know Karen Guregian, and FWIW, she does not see the Pats taking Tebow. I would be shocked if they did, as he would have very little utility as a QB. If they somehow drafted him as a TE and then worked on him transitioning to QB down the road, then MAYBE they look at him in the second. But even then I don't see it as they now have a lot of holes to fill and more pressing needs.
David,The interest in Tebow feels like a smokescreen, doesn't it?
I would say yes, but it's starting to look like that is a minority position. I just can't see them burning an early pick on a QB at this point in time.
 
I know Karen Guregian, and FWIW, she does not see the Pats taking Tebow. I would be shocked if they did, as he would have very little utility as a QB. If they somehow drafted him as a TE and then worked on him transitioning to QB down the road, then MAYBE they look at him in the second. But even then I don't see it as they now have a lot of holes to fill and more pressing needs.
David,The interest in Tebow feels like a smokescreen, doesn't it?
I would say yes, but it's starting to look like that is a minority position. I just can't see them burning an early pick on a QB at this point in time.
Are they giving up on O'connell?
 
I know Karen Guregian, and FWIW, she does not see the Pats taking Tebow. I would be shocked if they did, as he would have very little utility as a QB. If they somehow drafted him as a TE and then worked on him transitioning to QB down the road, then MAYBE they look at him in the second. But even then I don't see it as they now have a lot of holes to fill and more pressing needs.
David,The interest in Tebow feels like a smokescreen, doesn't it?
I would say yes, but it's starting to look like that is a minority position. I just can't see them burning an early pick on a QB at this point in time.
Are they giving up on O'connell?
Kevin O'Connell is no longer a Patriot, he's a Jet. But I understand your point. I think they are pretty high on Brian Hoyer, who they picked up as a rookie FA last year. He was pretty impressive in limited appearances and I think they're comfortable with him as their developmental QB. I could see them adding a veteran FA or a QB late in the draft, but their top 2 seem to be pretty set at the position. Their premium picks will not be spent on Tebow unless they're convinced he can contribute at a different position (and he agrees to it).
 
I know Karen Guregian, and FWIW, she does not see the Pats taking Tebow. I would be shocked if they did, as he would have very little utility as a QB. If they somehow drafted him as a TE and then worked on him transitioning to QB down the road, then MAYBE they look at him in the second. But even then I don't see it as they now have a lot of holes to fill and more pressing needs.
David,The interest in Tebow feels like a smokescreen, doesn't it?
I would say yes, but it's starting to look like that is a minority position. I just can't see them burning an early pick on a QB at this point in time.
Are they giving up on O'connell?
Kevin O'Connell is no longer a Patriot, he's a Jet. But I understand your point. I think they are pretty high on Brian Hoyer, who they picked up as a rookie FA last year. He was pretty impressive in limited appearances and I think they're comfortable with him as their developmental QB. I could see them adding a veteran FA or a QB late in the draft, but their top 2 seem to be pretty set at the position. Their premium picks will not be spent on Tebow unless they're convinced he can contribute at a different position (and he agrees to it).
Oh wow...how did I miss that? They spent a 3rd on him right???
 
If the board looks like this, I'd fully expect the Pats to trade down. They love adding picks in future drafts, and if they could get another 2011 first rounder in exchange for this pick, they'd jump on that. The top need for the pats is clearly a pass rusher and Graham, Kindle, and Griffen would clearly help right away. But I think if Pouncey is on the board here, that would be too good to pass up. There's the obvious Florida pipeline, the versatility and ability of Pouncey, Belicheck's love of building in the trenches, and Koppen's contract is running down. Pouncey could start opposite of Mankins from Day 1 and slide into the center position in the future. I think there will be interesting OLB and 5-technique DTs available when the Pats pick in the 2nd round, so this would be a BPA pick.

 
If the board looks like this, I'd fully expect the Pats to trade down. They love adding picks in future drafts, and if they could get another 2011 first rounder in exchange for this pick, they'd jump on that. The top need for the pats is clearly a pass rusher and Graham, Kindle, and Griffen would clearly help right away. But I think if Pouncey is on the board here, that would be too good to pass up. There's the obvious Florida pipeline, the versatility and ability of Pouncey, Belicheck's love of building in the trenches, and Koppen's contract is running down. Pouncey could start opposite of Mankins from Day 1 and slide into the center position in the future. I think there will be interesting OLB and 5-technique DTs available when the Pats pick in the 2nd round, so this would be a BPA pick.
Initially I was down on Kindle and high on Pouncey. I still like the big physical center but Reiss pointed out in his Blog today that Pouncey scored pretty low on hos Wonderlic test which gives me some pause. Kindle looks to be the real deal; he can set the edge and could develop into a solid pass rusher. If the board did play out like this you would have to think they could trade down a bit and still land a very good player. Of course we don't know how they have these players rated on their board.
 
http://www.nepatriotsdraft.com/2010/04/pat...aft-trends.html

With four picks in the first two rounds of the 2010 NFL Draft, Patriot fans are desperately trying to figure out in what direction Bill Belichick and company are leaning, position-wise.

We're going to take a look at the trends to see what positions the Patriots have favored over the last decade in the first three rounds.

Offense - 13 picks

RB - 1 time (Maroney '06)

WR - 4 times (Tate '09, Jackson '06, Johnson '03, Branch '02)

TE - 3 times (Thomas '06, Watson '04, Graham '02)

OL - 4 times (Vollmer, '09, Mankins '05, Kaczur '05, Light '01)

QB - 1 time (O'Connell, '08)

Defense - 17 picks

DL - 5 times (Brace '09, Wilfork '04, Hill '04, Warren '03, Seymour '01)

LB - 3 times (McKenzie '09, Mayo '08, Crable '08)

DB - 8 times (Chung '09, Butler '09, Wheatley '08, Meriweather '07, Hobbs '05, Scott '04, Wilson '03, Williams '01)

What conclusions can be drawn?

1. The Patriots will probably draft a defensive back somewhere in the first three rounds of the draft. There is already some good depth at the position, but save for the top two on the depth chart (Butler, Bodden), nobody should feel too secure in their job for 2010.

2. We won't be shocked if the Patriots draft Tim Tebow. The drafting of Kevin O'Connell and Rohan Davey (4th round '02) show that the Patriots don't mind spending a high pick to improve parts of their team where they are already set.

3. The Patriots will take at least one offensive and one defensive player. After 30 picks in the first three rounds, the results are pretty evenly split from an offense/defense standpoint. Only once in the last decade (excluding years with only one top pick) did the Patriots spend all of their top picks on one side of the ball, the ill-fated 2006 NFL Draft where they took Maroney, Chad Jackson, and David Thomas.

 
http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/draft/players...w;pageContainer

04/06/2010 - Kindle would be a perfect fit in New England's system. He is an instinctive and athletic playmaker who would be at his best playing outside linebacker in New England's base 3-4 defense, but he also has experience at defensive end. His versatility would definitely be a plus for the Patriots, as coach Bill Belichick oftentimes asks his players to play multiple positions. The fact that he has experience playing on special teams is also important. The Patriots need help improving their pass rush and Kindle could help solve that problem. Kindle wreaked havoc in the offensive backfield over his final two seasons at Texas, recording a combined 34.5 tackles for a loss. He was a leader on the Longhorns defense both on the field and in the locker room. He competed against high-level competition, which is also important. He has good speed and size, and he hits hard, which is everything the Patriots are looking for in an outside linebacker. He does have off-the-field issues, however, which is why he may still be around by the time the Pats make their first pick. His mother disappeared when he was young and he's had behavior issues since. He was given a DUI in 2007 and got a concussion driving while texting, which led to him running into an apartment building. Even so, this type of player could be hard to ignore if he is still on the board at 22. - Robert Lee, Providence Journal News

Mike Mayock has stated that he feels that Kindle is more polished entering the league then Brian Orakpo was when he came in.

http://blogs.palmbeachpost.com/thedailydol...o-for-dolphins/

“I’m hearing a lot of people talking about McClain versus an outside linebacker, etc.,” Mayock said Tuesday during a national conference call leading up to this week’s scouting combine. “To me, in that 3-4 defense the outside linebacker is more important. So if Sergio Kindle was there at No. 12, I’d pull the trigger.”

“I think Kindle’s a better player. And I think he’s a fit for that team.”

Mayock rates Kindle as the No. 7 player in the draft, while McClain is No. 17.

Mayock said Kindle is farther ahead at this stage than Brian Orakpo, who was the No. 13 selection in 2009 by the Redskins and made the Pro Bowl as a rookie.

Looks like a solid choice for the Patriots in our FBG Consensus draft

 

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