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DaJuan Mogan(NC State)Giants future safety?
Photo by Pack
Pride |
OSU's Vernon Gholston a Jet - NAH !
Photo by Getty Images |
After watching about five hours of
mostly boring baseball
between the Yanks and Boston,
then the Mets and Nationals, my mind began to wander. Surely,
there must
be something more exciting going on in the sports world. With the NBA
playoffs
still on the horizon, and little enough interest in that anyway, being
that the
Knicks and Nets have played themselves out of them, I suddenly
remembered that
the NFL Draft is April 26th, and, lo and behold, April 26th is next
Saturday!
I find myself totally unprepared. But I look forward with relish
to my
annual exercise of figuring out who my New York teams will select.
What do they need, will
they draft for need at all or will they select the best player
available?
Will they trade up, trade down, make a last-minute trade? Will
some of
our favorite players find themselves in a different uniform this
July?
What players were lost or acquired in the off-season through free
agency?
Surely, the Giants will just draft for need, the spanking of those
"best
team of all time" New England Patriots fresh in their minds. It's
a
good thing too, because the reward for their pluckiness is the 31st
pick, not a
position that would ordinarily yield a perennial All-Pro type of
player.
The Jets get the 6th pick, of course, for their alarming return to
mediocrity
or worse last season.
The Jets were truly deserving of their fate in 2007, it must be
said.
Mike Tanenbaum, the GM, destroyed the team's offensive line by playing
hard
ball with one of their best men in the trenches while Eric Mangini
tried to
disguise that stupidity by changing quarterbacks, implying that their
offensive
futility was due to less than inspiring play by Chad Pennington.
Of course, this was total nonsense, and I don't think Jets fans were
fooled. Nor was Woody Johnson, I suspect, because the Jets came
right out
of the box and picked up the best offensive lineman available in free
agency. In Alan Faneca, they now have one of the toughest, and
reportedly
meanest, guards in the NFL. That move alone buys that management
team
untold indulgences with me. In one fell swoop, they undid their
foolishness and more. Everyone in a green jersey, on the field
and in the
stands, appreciated that one.
Then, as if to convince Jets fans everywhere that Christmas was still
here,
they picked up a giant of a defensive tackle in the person of Kris
Jenkins, a
poor man's Ted Washington, a run stopper extraordinaire, thus plugging
up the
huge hole in their defensive front. But they weren't done
yet. They
spent even more money on Calvin Pace, a 6'4" 270 pound linebacker, who
should help stop the passing game as well.
With those moves, the Jets certainly
went a long way in
fixing their infrastructure, their core, if you will.
One other glaring weakness last year,
however, was at wide receiver. The Jets
made their one good wideout, Laveranues Coles, happy by guaranteeing
the last
years on his contract. That still leaves
Jeremy Cotchery as their only other decent wideout though, and I’ll be
hugely
disappointed if the Jets don’t get a couple of wide receiver prospects
in this
draft.
As the wide receiver prospects in this
draft are generally
not considered strong enough to warrant a number 6 pick, the Jets will
probably
try to make a move downward. They’ll
pick up some extra draft picks that way, and maybe land a few good
prospects. They’ll also relieve
themselves of another big salary obligation.
The Giants did lose a great safety in
Gibril Wilson to free
agency, and, despite their successes last year in the playoffs and the
Super
Bowl, they do not possess great speed at the linebacker position. Indeed, that they were able to beat Dallas and New England
with the existing linebacker group makes the play of that defensive
line all
the more remarkable.
The play of rookie TE Kevin Boss last
year may make Jeremy
Shockey expendable, thus either enabling a trade for a move up in the
pecking
order, or for the acquisition of additional picks.
Dealing from a position of strength can be a
wonderful thing.
Whatever position the Giants are able
to negotiate, it would
be hard to believe that they could draft better than they did last year. The Giants rookies were absolutely
instrumental in the incredible Giants playoff run last year.
WR Steve Smith made crucial catches in
just about every
game, showing an ability to get open and elusiveness after the catch. TE Kevin Boss showed a great mix of speed and
hands for a very big man. Number 1 pick
Aaron Ross was everything that could have been expected at the corner,
both in
coverage and tackling ability. Ahmad
Bradshaw added another dimension to the running game, Michael Johnson
ably
filled in at the safety spot and who can forget DL Jay Alford’s
crushing hit on
Tom Brady in the Super Bowl!
As the Giants got Bradshaw at the 250th
overall
pick, it’s hard to believe that position really matters that much for
what must
be a great group of scouts. Six of their
seven 2007 picks not only made the team but helped drive them to
victory in the
biggest game of them all.
With the injuries suffered by Plaxico
Burress all year and with
the age of Amani Toomer, the G-Men will also probably grab a wideout or
two. But I would expect the higher picks
to be spent on linebacker and safety spots.
One thing does worry me, though, and that would be the
possibility of making the big mistake.
The
Jets especially seem to have a talent for it. I
can still recall
their trading two Number 1’s for Johnny Lam Jones, a receiver who
couldn’t
catch.
That mistake could be in the form of
Chad Johnson, the very
mouthy but talented wide receiver from the Bengals.
Please, Jets geniuses, don’t make things any
worse.
