Jump to content

Bills 2021 Draft - Overall Assessment


Bills 2021 Draft Grade  

404 members have voted

  1. 1. What is your initial overall grade of the Bills 2021 Draft?

    • A
      106
    • B
      210
    • C
      64
    • D
      7
    • F
      2
    • T (for trees). Just kidding. Had to go there!
      15


Recommended Posts

34 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

But here's the thing....you mentioned Moore because you think  "we didn’t add any playmakers that are going make significant game changing plays- something we really could have used on both sides of the ball".  But in order to allow him to make that difference, you would have to pull time from guys who actually DID make significant game changing plays for the Bills last year - Beasley and Davis.  WR, especially rookies, seldom make "game changing plays" when sprinkled in.  Very soon the lineup starts telegraphing, as in 2019 when teams saw McKenzie and said "there's that Jet Sweep or Reverse again!".  It  lost effectiveness until McKenzie developed the ability (and timing/same page thinking with Josh) to broaden his route vocabulary.

How do you know that Rousseau isn't going to be sprinkled in at certain times to get his feet wet and try to create big plays, and get more playing time the more he proves himself? 

 

I think what your argument comes down to is the Bills didn't draft the guy you wanted, and you don't like the guy they did draft.  But the truth is we have a lot of depth at WR ahead of Moore so he likely wouldn't have made a huge immediate contribution, and we have starters ahead of Rousseau.  Both would have had limited impact, and both would have had to be sprinkled in and earn playing time. 

 

But last year, our receiving corps was overall one of the best in the league, even with Brown missing significant time and not himself when active.  Our pass rush and ability to pressure the QB, OTOH, was NOT.

Well, you are correct that I didn’t want Rousseau...I did not think he was BPA...the way the board fell to us, I wanted one of:

 

JOK

Barmore 

Moore

Tryon

 

...or trade back...

Edited by JaCrispy
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, oldmanfan said:

Nope.  Moore doesn’t crack our top 4 WRs. A CB doesn’t add that much over Jackson or Wallace.  We all saw the Super Bowl.  We want to beat Mahomes we need pressure from up front.  We got two DEs to help there.

I’m not saying we don’t need a better pass rush, we do.   But Sanders at this stage in his career is a redundant piece to Cole.  He’s not going to be a deep threat.  A quality WR draft pick, especially a speedy outside one, would start.  The problem with Moore is that he’s probably a slot only WR and we need an X.  And those were available well into the 3rd round.

 

But it does bring up an interesting question: Do the Bills really need someone to take the top off of the defense?  Conventional wisdom says, yes, that it always helps the short and intermediate passing games as well as the run game.  The Bills didn’t have a very good run game last season, but they did very well in the short and intermediate passing games.  So maybe they’re focused solely on receivers who can separate (ie our current top 4 WRs) and aren’t that concerned with taking the top off the defense.  Something to think about.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, BarleyNY said:

I’m not saying we don’t need a better pass rush, we do.   But Sanders at this stage in his career is a redundant piece to Cole.  He’s not going to be a deep threat.  A quality WR draft pick, especially a speedy outside one, would start.  The problem with Moore is that he’s probably a slot only WR and we need an X.  And those were available well into the 3rd round.

 

But it does bring up an interesting question: Do the Bills really need someone to take the top off of the defense?  Conventional wisdom says, yes, that it always helps the short and intermediate passing games as well as the run game.  The Bills didn’t have a very good run game last season, but they did very well in the short and intermediate passing games.  So maybe they’re focused solely on receivers who can separate (ie our current top 4 WRs) and aren’t that concerned with taking the top off the defense.  Something to think about.

I think Sanders and Beasley don't play the same role.  You raise an interesting point about this.  I do think Davis can get deep and they can always send McKenzie deep as well (or the kid they drafted from Houston).    With our offense though I think separation is more pivotal.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, oldmanfan said:

I think Sanders and Beasley don't play the same role.  You raise an interesting point about this.  I do think Davis can get deep and they can always send McKenzie deep as well (or the kid they drafted from Houston).    With our offense though I think separation is more pivotal.

I’m going to wait and see on Sanders.  He’s 34 and only started 5 games for NO last season.  I think he’ll be a guy we can go to for first downs but not one who is going to stretch the field.  It’ll probably be one of the younger WRs you mentioned lining up outside opposite Diggs. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, BarleyNY said:

I’m going to wait and see on Sanders.  He’s 34 and only started 5 games for NO last season.  I think he’ll be a guy we can go to for first downs but not one who is going to stretch the field.  It’ll probably be one of the younger WRs you mentioned lining up outside opposite Diggs. 

 

Sanders had 61 catches for 726 yards and 5 touchdowns last year. Just re-watched his highlights from last year and, while he did have plenty of catches finding short pockets, he actually killed teams in the intermediate-to-deep middle. He also was limited a bit by Brees' last-season-arm. I have high hopes for Sanders in this offense. 

 

This regime has coveted one trait above all others for WRs: separation.

 

Still, I think Diggs, Davis, McKenzie, and Stevenson all figure to contribute as deep threats here and there. 

  • Like (+1) 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

You have valid points about the Bills drafting for continuous improvement, not drafting Spiller-like splashy picks, but I don't think that's true that Brady was probably the only guy on TB who "was a star like Allen and Diggs".  You may not personally be aware of or follow their stars, but they're there.

 

He's been playing on a bad team, but Mike Evans has been in the league 7 years with QB the likes of Josh McCown, Mike Glennon, and Jamais Winston throwing to him.  He's got 7 - 1000+ yd seasons.  If he's not a "star", it's not because he doesn't deserve to be. 

 

Godwin had a Diggs like season last year and this year, with Brady throwing to him, his catch % was unreal

 

Gronk may be a fading star, but he's still a star

 

Lavonte David may be the best MLB in the game today.

 

Pierre-Paul may be a fading star, but still a star.  Devin White is a rising star.  Shaq Barrett is an impact player.

iInstead of "star" which has connotations of being a media figure who draws PR, let's use the term "significant impact player".

 

Tampa Bay had at least 7 significant impact players beyond Brady, 4 on offense counting Brady, 4 on defense.

I suspected I'd get this argument, and I thank you for making it.  It's not a point worth arguing about, and I hear what you're saying. 

 

I don't know David, but Evans is the only in that group that I'd consider trading taking in exchange for Diggs.   No way is Godwin in his class, nor Gronk today nor Pierre Paul today.  Those guys may be play makers but they aren't game changers.   Micah Hyde is a playmaker, but he isn't a star.  Hughes is a playmaker but not a star.  If the Bills had one the Super Bowl, people would have been talking about the plays those guys made.  If the Packers had beaten the Bucs, no one would be talking here about Godwin or Pierre-Paul (I don't say that to suggest that they aren't good players).  The Bucs were good, really good, because they collected a lot of talent and got themselves a great QB.  

 

My point was that you need good talent to win, but other than at QB, they don't need to be stars.  Aaron Donald doesn't make you a winner, Kahlil Mack doesn't, Budda Baker doesn't.  Heck, Mike Evans didn't until Brady showed up.  Hopkins doesn't make you a winner.  

 

It's a simple formula - collect talent and get a great QB.   It was the Patriots formula, it was the Packers formula, the Saints formula, the Chiefs formula, the Bucs formula.  And it's the Bills formula.  

 

What I like about what the Bills are doing is they're collecting talent, and talent is talent.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, dave mcbride said:

Another thing: they signed Sanders, who I expect will be good to very good this season. And literally every year now, the draft is LOADED with wide receiving talent. Next year will I’m sure feature a ton of Elijah Moores too. The passing game is not going to be the issue this season, so fix what needs fixing. There will always be good receivers to take given the nature of elite athlete sorting at the HS and college levels.

We're absolutely fine at wr. We improved the #1 need which was young pass rushers. Next year I'm sure we'll target a fly route we along with a rb/te.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, JohnBonhamRocks said:

 

Sanders had 61 catches for 726 yards and 5 touchdowns last year. Just re-watched his highlights from last year and, while he did have plenty of catches finding short pockets, he actually killed teams in the intermediate-to-deep middle. He also was limited a bit by Brees' last-season-arm. I have high hopes for Sanders in this offense. 

 

This regime has coveted one trait above all others for WRs: separation.

 

Still, I think Diggs, Davis, McKenzie, and Stevenson all figure to contribute as deep threats here and there. 

I agree with you about Sanders.  He's a sneaky deep threat.   

 

Interesting comment about the Bills and separation.  I suppose it's true for all teams, but you're right.   Separation is the difference between Brown and Sanders.   Brown didn't create separation as much as he was good at taking advantage of opportunities the defense presented.   Sanders is a smarter route runner than that. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Shaw66 said:

I agree with you about Sanders.  He's a sneaky deep threat.   

 

Interesting comment about the Bills and separation.  I suppose it's true for all teams, but you're right.   Separation is the difference between Brown and Sanders.   Brown didn't create separation as much as he was good at taking advantage of opportunities the defense presented.   Sanders is a smarter route runner than that. 


Yeah, he’s definitely not what I’d call a “burner”, but his smart route running allows him to find open areas deep.

 

I think Diggs, Sanders, and Beasley have to be the best trio in the NFL in terms of route running and ability to create separation.
 

Brown seemed to be able to turn the respect DBs had to give his deep speed into separation moreso than technical route running, not that he’s bad at the latter. Edit: I think the decision to move on from him was more based on his injuries.
 

My guess is Stevenson is in the upper echelon for separation, too.

Edited by JohnBonhamRocks
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, BarleyNY said:

I’m not saying we don’t need a better pass rush, we do.   But Sanders at this stage in his career is a redundant piece to Cole.  He’s not going to be a deep threat.  A quality WR draft pick, especially a speedy outside one, would start.  The problem with Moore is that he’s probably a slot only WR and we need an X.  And those were available well into the 3rd round.

 

But it does bring up an interesting question: Do the Bills really need someone to take the top off of the defense?  Conventional wisdom says, yes, that it always helps the short and intermediate passing games as well as the run game.  The Bills didn’t have a very good run game last season, but they did very well in the short and intermediate passing games.  So maybe they’re focused solely on receivers who can separate (ie our current top 4 WRs) and aren’t that concerned with taking the top off the defense.  Something to think about.

 

Ah.  So.  I think the Bills do want to take the top off the defense (more in a minute).  But I don't think they view Sanders potentially redundant skillset to Cole as redundant in their scheme.

 

Here's what I saw, I could be wrong.  In games where we were struggling against a pretty strong pass rush or pressure (Pittsburgh, for example), we didn't have time for the deeper routes Diggs was running to open up.  Pitts. was doing a good job of bracketing Beasley and taking him away on the intermediate/deep routes.  So, what we did was rearrange the route tree and put Diggs on that shorter quicker stuff.  They couldn't take away both Beasley and Diggs, and Diggs slaughtered them in the 2nd half of the Pittsburgh game, including YAC (66 yds AC, roughly half his yardage totals).

 

What I think the Bills wanted is a 2nd guy who's just as hard to cover as Beasley, to free up Diggs to run those intermediate to deep routes.  I think the Bills wanted a sure bet they could get their hands on.  They looked at the FAs and the draft reports and decided that without selling out their draft picks, their surest path to getting that guy was to sign Sanders.

 

Where some here differ from the Bills is that it's sometimes asserted that he doesn't have true burner speed because of his 4.46 40-time.  But top speedsters in the NFL these days are clocked (by GPS in their uniforms) running at top speeds of 21.7-23 mph.  I can't find a list of what he hits on the football field, but I can tell you Diggs has posted videos of himself hitting 22.6, 22.8. 23 (!) mph doing speed training off season.  He's faster than people think.

 

Which brings me back to the "top off the defense".  To my eyes, the problem with Brown as a deep threat was that he could be neutralized by good enough press man and "sticky" coverage, especially after he maybe struggled this season with injuries.  You mention we need an X, I imagine you know this but as one breakdown puts it "in most formations, the X receiver is tethered to the line of scrimmage.  He cannot go in motion, so  the cornerback can jam him at the line. So, your X receiver, he .... better have the quickness to get away from the corner, and he better be good coming off a press."  It's not a clear thing IMO that these guys in the 3rd round were going to translate on that immediately at the NFL level.  To be a speed guy at the NFL level, you got to be able to separate, too.

 

 

  • Agree 1
  • Awesome! (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, JohnBonhamRocks said:

Brown seemed to be able to turn the respect DBs had to give his deep speed into separation moreso than technical route running, not that he’s bad at the latter. Edit: I think the decision to move on from him was more based on his injuries.

 

I think the problem with Brown is that physical press man coverage has always been able to neutralize him to some extent.  Also, he's a good route-running technician, but I don't remember watching a Brown highlight where I was like "Smoke!!!! Have Mercy, that guy's got a family!"  which you can definitely find on Sanders and on Diggs without too much trouble. 

 

In addition to injury concerns, the plays where Brown was thrown the opportunity to swing the game (maybe not a perfect pass but a catchable one) and failed to put it away, were mounting up.

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Ah.  So.  I think the Bills do want to take the top off the defense (more in a minute).  But I don't think they view Sanders potentially redundant skillset to Cole as redundant in their scheme.

 

Here's what I saw, I could be wrong.  In games where we were struggling against a pretty strong pass rush or pressure (Pittsburgh, for example), we didn't have time for the deeper routes Diggs was running to open up.  Pitts. was doing a good job of bracketing Beasley and taking him away on the intermediate/deep routes.  So, what we did was rearrange the route tree and put Diggs on that shorter quicker stuff.  They couldn't take away both Beasley and Diggs, and Diggs slaughtered them in the 2nd half of the Pittsburgh game, including YAC (66 yds AC, roughly half his yardage totals).

 

What I think the Bills wanted is a 2nd guy who's just as hard to cover as Beasley, to free up Diggs to run those intermediate to deep routes.  I think the Bills wanted a sure bet they could get their hands on.  They looked at the FAs and the draft reports and decided that without selling out their draft picks, their surest path to getting that guy was to sign Sanders.

 

Where some here differ from the Bills is that it's sometimes asserted that he doesn't have true burner speed because of his 4.46 40-time.  But top speedsters in the NFL these days are clocked (by GPS in their uniforms) running at top speeds of 21.7-23 mph.  I can't find a list of what he hits on the football field, but I can tell you Diggs has posted videos of himself hitting 22.6, 22.8. 23 (!) mph doing speed training off season.  He's faster than people think.

 

Which brings me back to the "top off the defense".  To my eyes, the problem with Brown as a deep threat was that he could be neutralized by good enough press man and "sticky" coverage, especially after he maybe struggled this season with injuries.  You mention we need an X, I imagine you know this but as one breakdown puts it "in most formations, the X receiver is tethered to the line of scrimmage.  He cannot go in motion, so  the cornerback can jam him at the line. So, your X receiver, he .... better have the quickness to get away from the corner, and he better be good coming off a press."  It's not a clear thing IMO that these guys in the 3rd round were going to translate on that immediately at the NFL level.  To be a speed guy at the NFL level, you got to be able to separate, too.

 

 

Nice post.  I definitely see Sanders and Beasley in the field together too.  I didn’t mean to imply that ALL he would do is back up Cole, but I do think that Beasley getting injured and not having anyone to do his job played into it. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, BarleyNY said:

Nice post.  I definitely see Sanders and Beasley in the field together too.  I didn’t mean to imply that ALL he would do is back up Cole, but I do think that Beasley getting injured and not having anyone to do his job played into it. 

 

Agreed. 

 

McDermott's mouth said "we have full confidence in Isaiah McKenzie to take over for Cole" but when you play a guy with an actual broken leg in 3 playoff games over his backup, well, your actions speak loudly.

 

My point was I think they view Diggs and Sanders as more interchangeable than you might think, and I think they view having Sanders and Cole on the field together as a way to free Diggs to play deeper....but you're absolutely right that having a backup plan for Beasley's route-running vocabulary played into it.

 

 

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, JaCrispy said:

Well, you are correct that I didn’t want Rousseau...I did not think he was BPA...the way the board fell to us, I wanted one of:

 

JOK

Barmore 

Moore

Tryon

 

...or trade back...

 

Those are all top players.  I think it's a point that if you look at the way Zierlein grades for NFL.com, J-OK graded higher, but we now know there was a medical concern which pushed him down almost a round. 

 

The rest are pretty close together - within 0.2.  That means it's entirely plausible that while you didn't think he was BPA, the Bills talent evaluators did.

  • Thank you (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Agreed. 

 

McDermott's mouth said "we have full confidence in Isaiah McKenzie to take over for Cole" but when you play a guy with an actual broken leg in 3 playoff games over his backup, well, your actions speak loudly.

 

My point was I think they view Diggs and Sanders as more interchangeable than you might think, and I think they view having Sanders and Cole on the field together as a way to free Diggs to play deeper....but you're absolutely right that having a backup plan for Beasley's route-running vocabulary played into it.

 

 

Great posts about the receivers, Hap.   McKenzie has never impressed me as a receiving threat (it baffles me how he and Roberts can return the kicks the way they do and can't learn to be better receivers), and the point about McKenzie not taking over when Cole was injured is telling.   I'm sure McDermott is hoping Stevenson will be immediate competition for Isaiah - the Bills could use some flash, especially since Brown is gone, and I don't think McKenzie is the guy.    

Link to comment
Share on other sites

45 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Great posts about the receivers, Hap.   McKenzie has never impressed me as a receiving threat (it baffles me how he and Roberts can return the kicks the way they do and can't learn to be better receivers), and the point about McKenzie not taking over when Cole was injured is telling.   I'm sure McDermott is hoping Stevenson will be immediate competition for Isaiah - the Bills could use some flash, especially since Brown is gone, and I don't think McKenzie is the guy.    

 

Heh.  McKenzie's draft profile:

https://www.nfl.com/prospects/isaiah-mckenzie/32004d43-4b25-0948-8027-d3dafaef3cae

Quote

McKenzie's big play production is impressive on paper, but once you get into the tape, it becomes apparent that much of what he is able to accomplish is due to mismatched speed in space and packaged plays tailored towards his strengths. As a receiver, he is below the mark of what teams will expect from their slots in terms of route-running, but his explosive return ability could land him work right away.

 

I would say that McKenzie is one of those guys who basically was able to rely on his athleticism in college and never had to focus on polishing his abilities to fake DBs out of their cleats the way Diggs can, and probably never had a lot of coaching attention helping him develop. 

 

The interesting thing about McKenzie is that to my eyes, he is learning to be a better receiver - he got a TON better last season as a WR and it showed in how the Bills used him.  Yes, he was still running those Jet sweeps and reverses, but he was actually on the field running routes and succeeding with them at times.  Coaching matters.  The quality of the other WR you're training with matters.  As evidence, I offer you Week 17 of last season when he ran enough routes to be charted:

https://nextgenstats.nfl.com/charts/player/season/isaiah-mckenzie/MCK250948/2020/17/route

image.thumb.png.967d91afa61dbcbf4eb8a80ab02f9bfb.png

Just looking at the chart, you can see the difference.  Compare to say, Week 15 in 2018.  He's running actual routes now, and while he still has work to do, he's running them capably.   In fact looking at a couple of those, you could see the DB getting toasted.

 

The question is, will he continue to develop or has he reached a plateau?

 

McKenzie's Instagram feed is chock full of shots of him working out hard, and his athleticism is just off the charts.  He had one of him doing 48" box jumps then like 36" box jumps - one legged and holding a medicine ball.  He's only 68" tall.  On and on, he's just a Dawg for training.

 

Now, a guy's insta feed doesn't necessarily show a good picture of what he's doing, but in contrast, Diggs insta feed is full of him working on those sudden cuts and changes of direction - basically honing the muscle memories and skills he uses to de-cleat professional NFL athletes on a regular basis.

 

It makes me wish McKenzie would go train at the same place Diggs uses, which is "Receiver Factory".  Motto: "Won't get you Stronger, won't get you Faster, Will get you Open".  (Of course Diggs works on the Stronger and Faster parts too). 

 

Unfortunately for McKenzie, he's apparently a big-ass trash talker ("small man syndrome", Addison said) and I think he may put some people's back up a bit where they're still helpful, but a little bit less inclined to take him under their wing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Heh.  McKenzie's draft profile:

https://www.nfl.com/prospects/isaiah-mckenzie/32004d43-4b25-0948-8027-d3dafaef3cae

 

I would say that McKenzie is one of those guys who basically was able to rely on his athleticism in college and never had to focus on polishing his abilities to fake DBs out of their cleats the way Diggs can, and probably never had a lot of coaching attention helping him develop. 

 

The interesting thing about McKenzie is that to my eyes, he got a TON better last season as a WR and it showed in how the Bills used him.  Yes, he was still running those Jet sweeps and reverses, but he was actually on the field running routes and succeeding with them.  Coaching matters.  The quality of the other WR you're training with matters.

 

McKenzie's Instagram feed is chock full of shots of him working out hard, and his athleticism is just off the charts.  He had one of him doing 48" box jumps then like 36" box jumps - one legged and holding a medicine ball.  He's only 68" tall.  On and on, he's just a Dawg for training.

 

Now, a guy's insta feed doesn't necessarily show a good picture of what he's doing, but in contrast, Diggs insta feed is full of him working on those sudden cuts and changes of direction - basically honing the muscle memories and skills he uses to de-cleat professional NFL athletes on a regular basis.

 

It makes me wish McKenzie would go train at the same place Diggs uses, which is "Receiver Factory".  Motto: "Won't get you Stronger, won't get you Faster, Will get you Open".  (Of course Diggs works on the Stronger and Faster parts too)

Thanks.  I agree about all of this.  Incredible that his draft profile nailed it like that.   Perfect. 

 

And I agree about last season.   He made plays as a receiver I hadn't seen in earlier seasons.  

 

And your comments about his workouts dovetail with main.   How does a guy with those natural skills not learn the things he needs to do with the natural skills to become a weapon?   He may be trying and just can't do it.   Or maybe he isn't getting the right advice.  I mean, someone told Spencer Brown to work out with Joe Staley; what's McKenzie doing. 

 

A bit out of left field, but related.  I heard JJ Redick interviewed one time.  He said when he was in high school, he didn't think he was going to play in college, and then he became a bigtime recruit.  Then, in his junior year in college he was looking at business schools, because he thought his career was over, and then the NBA called.   When he made it as a rookie, he surprised himself.   During his rookie season, he sought out a current or former veteran and asked him what Redick needed to do to stay in the league.   The guy said work out every off season, but don't just work out.   Learn to do something knew every off-season, something you can incorporate into your game that will make you a better and different player.   Redick said in the interview that that is exactly what he's done.   He's added skills, year after year.  

 

It would be great if McKenzie took another step this season.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, JaCrispy said:

Well, you are correct that I didn’t want Rousseau...I did not think he was BPA...the way the board fell to us, I wanted one of:

 

JOK

Barmore 

Moore

Tryon

 

...or trade back...

 

Whereas Moore or Tryon at #30 would have had me scratching my skin off....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...