Originally posted by Boltjolt
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2023 Official Roster Build Thread - The Initial 53 / Practice Squad
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With a QB like Mahomes you don't necessarily need prima donna WR's that want big contracts! You want steady hungry younger WR's that can make plays etc. that don't eat a large chunk of you cap space so you can address other areas on your team. Could that be a secret to their success!
With a QB like Herbert you don't necessarily need prima donna WR's that want big contracts! You want steady hungry younger WR's that can make plays etc. that don't eat a large chunk of your cap space so you can address other areas on your team. Also if they happen to get injured and miss let's say 7 games you're not screwed because you have to pay a WR a mega contract and your WR depth suffers. Could this be a secret to winning more than 1 playoff game, as opposed to losing regular season games and a big factor is having bad depth at the WR position because you put all your eggs in 2 baskets, IE KA and MW, and have a lower seed in the playoffs because of regular season losses?
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Originally posted by ghost View Post
It's called soft tissue breaking down. Next!
I guess we better not draft WR Jaxon Smith- Njigba (21)who missed most the college season with his and trade Parham (25) who missed most the season with his.
Research needs to be done by some of you.
I'll help
https://www.foxsports.com/stories/nf...sition-players
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Originally posted by Boltjolt View Post
We did exactly that in the playoffs. Didn't work too well.
Second half scoring was not good all year. The offense was much better in 2021 clearly because of injuries this year but I think replacing Lombo w/ Moore helps the most here.
Dallas hasn't won crap with the great OLs they had recently and ours doesn't suck. I'm not against a RT but not sure we need to use a first on one.
I'm for BPA in this draft.
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Originally posted by Boltjolt View Post
It's a pretty common injury actually.
I guess we better not draft WR Jaxon Smith- Njigba (21)who missed most the college season with his and trade Parham (25) who missed most the season with his.
Research needs to be done by some of you.
I'll help
https://www.foxsports.com/stories/nf...sition-players
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As far as I can tell, they have four choices for KA.
1. Do nothing and just ride with his current contract.
2. Release him.
3. Trade Him.
4. Restructure and/or Extend his current contract.
I really do not like any of these choices, but I don't see what else they can do.
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Originally posted by Boltjolt View Post
Well lots of info missing from this.
Miami had a 3rd string QB playing for three games and the playoffs as Tua and Bridgewater both were hurt.
Tyreek wanted big bucks and got it from Miami.
4 years 120 mil , 72 guaranteed. Keenan isnt close to taking this from us.
KC had no choice but to trade him. We have choices.
KC also had a great draft. Very good late rounders.
We need to do that at times as well.
Keenan also played 10 games not 7.
8 full games and 2 partials.
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Roster build, I don't know about the rest of you folks but last season we were supposed to see the duo of Mack/Bosa and it did not come to pass. I want them both brought back this season to fulfill that promise. Yes, the Chargers can afford it by cutting Keenan Allen, Gerald Everett, and Feiler. We have a replacement for Feiler in-house in Salyer and Chargers draft WR & TE and go with the youth movement on offense. Younger, faster, healthier, and cheaper.
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Originally posted by Boltjolt View Post
It's a pretty common injury actually, especially for WRs.
I guess we better not draft WR Jaxon Smith- Njigba (21)who missed most the college season with his and trade Parham (25) who missed most the season with his.
Research needs to be done by some of you.
I'll help
https://www.foxsports.com/stories/nf...sition-players
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Originally posted by electricgold View Post
You finally get it! Maybe, because Miami gave big money to Tyreek, other areas suffered like their Oline! Couldn't even keep their QB's standing! I stand corrected KA played in 11 games and could only muster 752 yards and 4 TD, and his hamstrings failed him! That's with an all world QB named Herbert passing to him also. I'm more than ready to move on from that for what he does to our cap and WR depth! For what he makes that's called stealing money!
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Originally posted by ghost View PostRoster build, I don't know about the rest of you folks but last season we were supposed to see the duo of Mack/Bosa and it did not come to pass. I want them both brought back this season to fulfill that promise. Yes, the Chargers can afford it by cutting Keenan Allen, Gerald Everett, and Feiler. We have a replacement for Feiler in-house in Salyer and Chargers draft WR & TE and go with the youth movement on offense. Younger, faster, healthier, and cheaper.
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Originally posted by electricgold View Post
I'm on the same page with you, its about winning games and doing whatever it takes even if that means saying goodbye to your so called star players when you finish like you did last season! The problem is there are to many fanboys following the Chargers and their players living in the past who don't mind being embarrassed like we were last season! Its about winning games, period! Not being loyal to KA who doesn't give one rip about the fans and always calls out the LA Chargers fans not being his home crowd!
The Kansas City Chiefs won the Super Bowl for many reasons and leaned heavily on a rookie class after trading Tyreek Hill. They showed that trading away a superstar and allocating new resources and freed up money to replace said superstar and add to other areas of the team can win the season's ultimate prize.
That philosophy is now proven to be one of the many ways to construct a Super Bowl-winning club in today's NFL.
Here's a look at 2023 NFL Draft prospects who could perform similar tasks to those carried out by Chiefs stars and vital role-players en route to winning the Lombardi Trophy for the second time in four years. It's a list other teams should be taking a look at to copy the Chiefs through the draft.
Before I begin, Patrick Mahomes will not be featured in this column. He's already tracking toward becoming one of the best players in NFL history. And yes, he started as a prospect like everyone else, a young player whom no one wanted to put too lofty of a comparison. If I thought there was the next Mahomes in this draft class, I'd say so. Spoiler: There isn't.
Overwhelmingly big left tackle- For Chiefs: Orlando Brown
- 2023 prospects to fit this role: Ohio State's Dawand Jones, Tennessee's Darnell Wright* (*TPB Forum is on their game and sang their praises today)
The Brown trade was the first in some highly polarizing moves from Chiefs general manager Brett Veach, and while the former Ravens third-round pick hasn't been a dominant blocker, he certainly upgraded the vital position blocking one of the edges for Mahomes.
Now, at nearly 6-foot-8 and 345 pounds, Brown-sized blockers who are actually top 100-caliber prospects don't come around often. Jones fits the bill. He measured in at 6-8 and 375 pounds at the Senior Bowl, and his film is damn good. He has balance, power, and utilizes his length outstandingly, just like he did at Oklahoma.
Wright isn't quite as big as Jones or Brown, but at 6-5 and 342 pounds with a wingspan close to 83 inches, he's a mountain of a man, too. And he plays with deceptive athleticism and NFL veteran-caliber hand work when battling edge defenders.
Thick, super-experienced center- For Chiefs: Creed Humphrey
- 2023 prospects to fit this role: Minnesota's John Michael Schmitz, Michigan's Olusegun Oluwatimi, Arkansas' Ricky Stromberg
Schmitz from Minnesota probably won't test quite as amazingly as Humphrey did in 2021 but will actually be more experienced playing the center position at a Power 5 school. Humphrey logged more than 2,400 snaps with the Sooners from 2018 to 2020. Schmitz was right under 2,500 for the Gophers. Oluwatimi has Humphrey-esque balance blocking for the run and pass. He's unshakeable. Plenty to like about how he wins the leverage and angle games on a routine basis. Stromberg's film is a little messier than the two centers from the Big Ten, but he often just gets the job done against big nose tackles or quick under tackles alike.
Lightning-charged, later-round running back- For Chiefs: Isiah Pacheco
- 2023 prospects to fit this role: Tulane's Tyjae Spears, East Carolina's Keaton Mitchell, Pittsburgh's Israel Abanikanda
Much of the same is true for Mitchell, who's a touch smaller and initially projects to a secondary back role in the NFL. However, one cut and he's gone if there's space. Abanikanda, as an underclassmen, hasn't gotten much buzz. Yet. He snuck through small spaces to find daylight and hit a plethora of long runs during his illustrious career at Pittsburgh. He'll probably be available on Day 3 but absolutely can be a RB1 on a high-powered offense as a rookie.
Long, disruptive, athletic defensive tackle- For Chiefs: Chris Jones
- 2023 prospects to fit this role: Georgia's Jalen Carter, Bowling Green's Karl Brooks, Texas' Moro Ojomo, Oklahoma's Jalen Redmond
I made the Carter-Jones comparison last week. It's too perfect. And it's only relevant for probably the clubs picking in the top 5. Carter moves like a defensive end but is powerful like a nose tackle and has a Jones-type long frame. Later in the draft -- remember, Jones was a second-round pick -- I love the upside of Brooks from Bowling Green, a 6-3, 303-pound hybrid who mainly won with great regularity as a stand-up rusher over the past two seasons. There is major juice to his game, and he deploys his hands like a sensei.
Ojomo is that crazy-long, inside-out rusher who prides himself on getting into blockers frames first then utilizing Jones-esque pass-rushing moves to win into the backfield. Redmond was asked to eat blockers more than anyone else in this group but flashed serious pass-rush ability because of his twitchiness when given an opportunity. - CBSSport NFL analyst Chris Trapasso
That's a plan to better last season.
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