Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Medellin's Dream Mock Hnngggg / Cream Worthy


MedellinHeel

Recommended Posts

So, for a dream mock, you know a trade is coming. Sign Hardy long term and deal him to a team for a mid - late 1st and 2nd round pick. 

 

1st Round: CB Kyle Fuller 6'0 190 VT

 

hi-res-7723526_crop_exact_original_crop_

 

 

 

1st Round: WR Kelvin Benjamin 6'5 240 FSU

 

Doesn't get much bigger in terms of target. Here is your red zone target. 

 

USATSI_7658070_220956_lowres.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

2nd Round: OT Cyrus Kouandijo 6'7 322 BAMA

 

Assuming his knee checks out with doctors he could be a steal in the 2nd. There is a reason why Saban moved an all american T to guard in place for Cyrus. 

 

14028957-standard.jpg

 

 

 

 

2nd Round: WR Allen Robinson 6'2 220 PSU 

 

This guy is simply electric with the ball in his hands. Not too shaby catching it either with 1400 yards. 

 

Allen+Robinson+Northwestern+v+Penn+State

 

 

 

 

3rd Round: OT Billy Turner 6'5 315 NDSU

 

This guy turned heads at the Senior bowl. Quick with some agile feet. 

 

456-thumb.jpg

 

 

TBC...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4th Round: WR Brandon Coleman 6'6 225 RU

 

Another big target for Cam. 

 

c4s_auman110911b_198680a_8col.jpg

 

 

 

5th Round: CB Walt Aikens 6'1 205 LU

 

This guy was a blue chip recruit but had some issues and had to go to a mid major. Had a good showing at the Senor Bowl. 

 

petey.png

 

 

6th Round: FS Tre Boston 6'0 204 UNC

 

This guy is a play maker in the secondary. Can some times make you scratch your head though. 

 

jlowgem156.jpg

 

 

 

7th Round: TE Nick Jacobs 6'5 269 MSU

 

Another sleeper. Played for LSU before having to transfer to a small school. 

 

nic.jpg

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If we trade Hardy I am finished following this team and it's idiotic FO.

 

With CJ and the guys we got in the wings id trade Hardy in a split nano second for a 1st and 2nd round pick. 

 

I am not sure DG is gonna tie up that much money in 1 position. Bad cap management 101. Keep 1 elite DE on big contract and draft the bookend. Rinse and repeat. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Keep thinking that.

13 mil is a deal for elite REs and there is zero guarantee that we are gonna get an elite anything in return. Besides , he's gonna work out a deal that will free up some money.

We don't have too many holes that we cant fill them with the picks we have and only retards trade away top-3 defensive ends, especially when they are RE an can also line up at DT which Hardy does. Stupid any way you look at it.

Hardy is younger than CJ, so get rid of big money and use the reserves to fill his spot if that's what you want to do...or cut him if it's money that you are really worried about. If he's so replaceable that we have players already on the roster he isn't valuable enough to have placed the franchise tag on in the first place.

Ps...your mock draft sucks donkey balls and you should pick up a new hobby cause this is total waste of internet space.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Scott Fowler from observer   An excerpt  from larger article gotta say, i am not sure what Canales or Young were  thinking in the final 2 mins  they both looked like they have never a 2 mon drill in their lives    Unprepared   Let’s just throw and hope was the strategy  Add to it,why leggett, the most unreliable receiver, was targeted so much during that drive is beyond me      With a chance to be unforgettable, Panthers’ final drive was one to forget BY SCOTT FOWLER [email protected] 4 hrs ago The Carolina Panthers lost again Sunday, 27-22 to Arizona, but let’s at least give them some credit for their heartbreaking creativity. This, at least, was not a rout like Week 1. Yes, the Panthers (0-2) did a whole lot of nothing through the beginning of the third quarter against Arizona (2-0), falling behind, 27-3. Then they did a whole lot of something, scoring 19 unanswered points under the direction of quarterback Bryce Young. Then the special teams recovered an onside kick by punter Sam Martin to, quite remarkably, get the ball back, down only 27-22 with 1:55 and 51 yards left to snag the win. And one timeout, too. After finishing three straight possessions with touchdowns, the Panthers would need to do it a fourth time to pull off what statistically would have been the largest comeback in franchise history. But while there was no quit in this team Sunday, there was no comeback either, and nothing but nonsense in that last “march,” which ended 46 yards away from the goal line. Let’s go through a little of that final drive for the Panthers, shall we? Young, who had played a horrible first quarter and then a terrific second half, reverted to first-quarter form. He was 0-for-6 on the drive. He only targeted Tetairoa McMillan, the rookie that is clearly the team’s best receiver, one time. When all else was failing, the option of throwing a jump ball to T-Mac — drafted No. 8 overall for exactly this sort of situation — should have been utilized. It wasn’t. Head coach Dave Canales suggested that the Cardinals started shifting their coverage toward McMillan. Said the rookie afterward to reporters when asked what the Cardinals did to limit him on the last drive: “I’m not too sure. It looked like regular defense to me. That last drive only lasted as long as it did because of three defensive penalties on Arizona, which kept Carolina in the game (defensive holding to negate what would have been a Young turnover; roughing the passer; offsides).   Now it is true that the Panthers’ offensive line was threadbare by then, with two starters out. This made the degree of difficulty harder for Young and everyone else. But the Cardinals defense was also banged up, as their defensive backs had been going down like dominoes. So how do you solve Arizona’s suddenly fearsome pass rush? Screens. Quick hitters. Chuba Hubbard in the flat. Maybe even a shovel pass to a tight end. There was plenty of time — what there wasn’t was plenty of yardage, nor enough flexibility from Canales. One of Young’s six incompletions was a pass to Xavier Legette, who to me at that point shouldn’t have been in the game. That pass went incomplete of course, because Legette — the Panthers’ first-round draft pick in 2024 — had what was undoubtedly the worst statistical lines in Carolina history. Young targeted Legette eight times. Eight! I have no idea why. Legette caught one. One! And it went for minus-2 yards, meaning Legette entered the game with 10 yards receiving this season and left it with eight. Now to be fair, Young (35-55-328 yards, with three TDs) had gotten Carolina back into the thing. Hunter Renfrow had a breakout game at slot receiver, scoring twice. McMillan didn’t score, but had his first 100-yard receiving game. Tight end Ja’Tavion Sanders and wide receiver Brycen Tremayne were also very good. And the comeback happened after Young about lost the game for the Panthers in the first quarter, fumbling the ball away on a strip-sack that led directly to a return touchdown and then throwing an ill-advised pass under pressure that resulted in a wounded-duck interception and three more points. Said Canales after the game about Young: “Sometimes it ain’t the worst thing, if you’re in that situation, to take a sack. I also know he makes some magical plays.” We saw both on Sunday. Young held the ball too long sometimes, including on Carolina’s final offensive play (a fourth-down sack). He also made some magic, sometimes throwing between three guys at once, sometimes escaping a sack attempt and keeping his eyes downfield for a touchdown. So there were some things that were better Sunday. Carolina only scored 10 points in Week 1; this time the Panthers had 22. The run defense improved. Young, after playing the first five quarters of the season as if he didn’t belong in the NFL, finally looked like he did again for those three consecutive TD marches. But that final drive?! Listen, Arizona was ripe to be beaten at that point. NFL onside kicks didn’t succeed about 94% of the time in 2024, yet this one did after a Cardinal misplayed it. Arizona had lost 19 points of its 24-point lead at that point. The Panthers, who had never successfully come back from more than 17 points down before, were close to a signature win for both Canales and Young. And then… total letdown. Again, let’s emphasize, the clock was very little factor. Carolina didn’t have 15 seconds left to score; the Panthers had 115 seconds left. And a timeout. And only 51 yards to navigate. Momentum was firmly on the Panthers’ side. These were the moments where Drew Brees killed the Panthers, time and again, when he played for New Orleans. Three-step drops. Eight yards here. Twelve yards there. Right down the field. But for the Panthers, every play looked the same — Young on a deep drop. Scanning, scanning. The pocket breaking down. Then, either a heave, or some scurrying around and then a heave. Or a sack. All the blitz-killing plays that the Panthers have at their disposal — they didn’t run any of them, it seemed like, except a Hubbard run that netted 3 yards. The Panthers’ best plays were Arizona penalties. Other than that, it all went south. Carolina couldn’t adjust to the Arizona adjustments. Needing a touchdown, the Panthers never got closer than the Arizona 33. And so that was that.   At least there was some hope. At least the game was exciting in the final two minutes. But, as has happened so often in the past eight seasons, when it was winning time for Carolina, it turned into losing time.
    • Ditching XL is addition by subtraction. I 100% believe Thielen would tell him where to line up  every snap and explain his route. Through 2 games he has shown 0 comprehension of the play book. I’m not absolving Young at all but XL is  supposed to be his second read, but dude runs the wrong routes and gets boxed out by guys who are 4” shorter.  At least Coker has shown aptitude to be a real NFL receiver. 
    • I'm trying to be as pragmatic and as un reactionary as possible. And once again multiple things can be true  His draft last year was disastrously terrible. X looks like an absolute bust. Brooks hasn't played. Wallace looks like a miss. But demani needs more pt, cws is solid and Coker has shown promise This draft cannot be judged after 2 games esp with a dc who doesn't want to play them. But tmac looks legit. Princely has promise. The rest is a ?  Has he made mistakes? Undoubtedly.  Is the roster better than it was 2 years ago? I'd say yes. I'd say our biggest problems are still the ones we had 2 years ago - Bryce and evero.  And as I've said before, at least he hasn't traded any future picks. Yet.  So IMHO Morgan is a mixed bag but not a total bust. Yet.
×
×
  • Create New...