Wednesday, January 17, 2024

THE 2023 EAGLES; A FOOTBALL RAPTURE AND YOU

 YOUR EAGLES SEASON CRASHED AND BURNED AND NOW YOU DONT KNOW WHAT TO DO OR HOW TO FEEL. HERE ARE SOME THINGS TO CONSIDER BEFORE ACTING A FOOL.

TAMPA, FL –

               At the end of the evening, it was a feeling of relief as much as it was a feeling of annoyance or grief. The 2023 Eagles, mere shadows of their NFC Champion predecessors, were a chore from the opening kickoff in Foxborough if we’re honest. There was something just a little off from the start, culminating in the 2nd worst statistical (and the worst spiritual) loss in franchise postseason history, & unlike the last two off-season’s, there are more questions than answers as to how to fix things.

Even after a 10-1 start, it felt like we were trying to convince ourselves that they were great along with fending off the haters and whiners (typical). But then, the biggest haters and whiners of the bunch over the last calendar year came to town, the San Francisco 49ers, and instead of a hard-fought playoff preview we expected to see, the 49ers whooped the Eagles in a way they haven’t been whooped in quite some time. Just like that, as if they were raptured off the planet, the Eagles team we thought we had vanished, never to be seen again. It’s as if the heart, soul, and dignity of the 2023 Eagles, followed Big Dom up the tunnel on that rainy December Sunday evening, never to return. Here, I will give San Francisco their due, and only this once, they took on the embodiment we hoped the Eagles would have. They were the bullies, & showed resilience all year, not just the first 11 weeks, and earned everything they have to this point. They have their own business to finish now, but there is no question which of those two teams answered the expectations in 2023. For our Eagles, business starts now. There are a ton of questions, feelings, emotions, fand opinions, which I will strive here to quell the worst of each of those. 94.1 WIP is going to do what 94.1 WIP does, but if you’d like some analysis from someone who isn’t trying to always goad the worst out of you and your loved ones, keep reading.

 

WHO ORDERED THE CODE RED?

               How I see it, the single most important answer the Eagles need to evaluate, is who was directly behind the decision to remove Sean Desai from his role and insert Matt Patricia? For my money, it’s the single biggest overreaction in the 90-year history of this franchise. Was Desai perfect? No, in fact the argument was there to be made that his scheme had not only shown signs of weakness but was doomed from the start if you look at the trend of the “Fangio style” defenses dying on the vine around the league throughout the course of this season and the end of the 2022 season. But the truth about what happened here hasn’t been scrutinized enough. In the 13 games under Desai, the Eagles were 10-3, and had allowed 24.7 points per game (22.4 before SF & DAL games), 20th in the league at the time. Not great, but given the schedule they faced, the injuries they incurred and the overall record (as well as the little amount of time to implement large adjustments!), relieving Desai of his duties should’ve never entered the equation. Additionally, the Desai scheme produced 37 sacks (2.85 per game) in 13 games, 8 of those came against teams who finished in the top 12 in total offense. Well short of their record setting 72 sacks last season, but at the time the Eagles were 7th in sacks in the NFL.

In 5 games with Patricia at the helm, the Eagles defense caved in, allowing 29.8 points per game (worst in the NFL) and putting an incredible strain on the rest of the team. Additionally, after the change, the Eagles recorded just 10 sacks in 5 games, 4 of those coming while way behind in the playoff game against Tampa. Against three terrible offenses in the final four weeks of the regular season, the Patricia “scheme” forced just 6 total sacks, 2nd fewest in the league over that same stretch.

               Maybe the most damning piece of the equation, is just how lost and lifeless the defensive unit became. It wasn’t just that they were getting scored on, it was how. Big plays, previously few and far between under Desai, became common place. They forced just three turnovers in 5 games, also second fewest in the league, and simply could not get off the field, ever. No really, this might be the worst of them all. Patricia’s group forced 10 total punts in 5 games, only 6 of them while the game score was within 14 points, with the albatross of the bunch being a punt-less game against the hapless, long-since eliminated Arizona Cardinals, allowing 449 yards and 32 first downs along the way in a game where the Eagles had everything to play for and Arizona had nothing to play for.

               Desai might not have been the long-term answer, but replacing him during the season, while the team was still atop the standings, was simply a panicked move from a team with no reason to panic. It was a rescue flare for a group that didn’t need to be, nor was there even time to be rescued. You can trace back the entire season’s meltdown to that one decision. The Eagles had not allowed a game-losing touchdown drive in the final 2 minutes of a game since 2019, when current Eagle Julio Jones broke off a 54-yard TD after the 2-minute warning in a game in Atlanta. In Patricia’s first game as defensive play caller, they allowed career backup Drew Lock to go 92 yard in 92 seconds, with no timeouts to give up a game that the Eagles not only had to have but had securely in the bag by almost every previous similar situation. Patricia was wildly unqualified to be the replacement, he has failed miserably at every opportunity he’s ever had in pro football without working directly under the cloak of Bill Belichick, who called defensive plays for almost the entirety of Patricia’s time there. But to be fair, no one would’ve succeeded in the role he was asked to play. Fix and implement your own scheme on the fly with 4 weeks left before the playoffs, when the “scheme” you run is vastly different from the one the players currently work within? A disaster from the start.

The mere idea of it is pathetic, and while the offense didn’t hold up it’s end of the bargain mostly (we’ll get to them), the straw that broke the camel’s back was this decision. Who made the decision should be held accountable. If it was Sirianni? He should be dismissed. If that was his answer to a two week stretch of adversity, he simply cannot be trusted to fix what have now become much bigger issues. Your leader cannot be someone who panics. What’s more is, the players saw it. The veterans saw that move and could only think that management was panicking, which is an environment that virtually no one can succeed in. If it came from above Nick? He should keep his job, and there needs to be serious re-evaluation of this team’s processes, specifically how much the executives get involved in day-to-day operations. This isn’t the first time that topic has come up. It was a huge theme during the last coaching change, indirectly blamed for the burnout of champion HC Doug Pederson, who had leaked before the disastrous 2020 season that he was considering taking a year off. Most thought it was crazy (me included), but after that season played out, it was clear that the micromanaging of Roseman and co. had taken its toll on the coach, relating to his decision to dig his heels in when asked to make further changes to his coaching staff, causing Jeffrey Lurie to fire him. If you don’t learn from your history, you’re doomed to repeat it, and it looks like the Eagles are doing just that to some degree. Only this time, it wasn’t a selfish QB undermining the foundation of the franchise, but their own decision making causing a promising season to crater and eventually disappear. Roseman won’t be dismissed over it, but significant changes within his circle and processes are needed to prevent this type of thing from ever happening again.

 

THE BLITZ, IT TOLLS FOR THEE

               This is where I get to address the “rUn ThE BaLL” folks for a minute. I’m flat out sick of it. Do you people even know what you’re saying anymore? Or are you just regurgitating what you hear from your radio or your old racist uncle and his idiot friends, who still celebrate Buddy Ryan like an unearned folk hero? In large part, I blame the most watched piece of coverage surrounding the team for continuing to perpetuate this nonsense. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, let me explain. “Eagles Post Game Live”, on NBC Sports Philadelphia, is by far the worst piece of content surrounding a football team that I’ve ever seen. It used to bring legit analysis to the table, in the days when it carried people like Ray Didinger, Vaughn Hebron, Brian Westbrook, etc. Now? It’s a hardo narrative gargle festival, made all the worse by the fact that TWO FORMER PLAYERS sit on its panel. One of them, is former QB Ron Jaworski, who while the game has certainly passed him by, enters each week with what I see as good intentions and a genuine effort at analyzing the game as best he can. The other, is Barrett Brooks, who’s tenure at this network and intrusion on my consciousness has endured far longer than it should have. Barrett, played in the NFL in this century, in a much closer version of the modern game we know today, and thus should have a better measured and intelligent insight on what goes on in a huddle. But you’d never be able to tell that if you came in flying blind. To hear him talk about football, you’d think he played in the 60’s, when guys had second jobs as plumbers in the offseason and concussions were something you couldn’t have enough of because it meant “you were tough!” Barrett and Jaws railed for the entire first segment the other night, about how had the Eagles simply run the ball more, all their problems would’ve been solved. Not only in the game that night, but all season. Even a slight glance at the film, something I assume Brooks hasn’t taken in years, would bear out a different story.

Football, in large part, is a game of math. Matchups, especially in the run game, are often based on numbers as much as individual talent disparities. A simple example would be, if you can see that a defense is in man coverage, and they have a safety playing near the line of scrimmage, you know that you have 1 on 1 matchups on the outside, which now depending on the talent gap, could directly dictate where you go with the ball. The example the Eagles saw on Monday night, and for a very large portion of the season, had to do with “men in the box”. In simple terms, “the box” in football refers to the area between the hash lines and from the line of scrimmage out to about 3-5 yards, depending on who your talking to. Basically, how many dudes do they have close to our dudes on the line. A “stacked” box refers to having as many as 6, 7, sometimes even 8 guys there. A “light box” refers to typically just the down defensive lineman (3 or 4 guys). Without changing personnel packages, an offense has 5 blockers on every down. When a team “stacks” the box, typically that leaves man to man coverage for the receivers. It also means that more than likely, they have 1 more guy in that area than you can block IF they all rush at the snap. Good defenses get tricky by dropping guys that look like they may be blitzing at the snap, causing confusion for the QB and receivers.

But simply put, when they show a look where more guys can come at you than you have dudes to block, it’s football suicide to just “RuN tHe BaLL!!” against that look. The Eagles faced that look on over 75% of their offensive snaps on Monday. They ran for over 200 yards at over 5 yards per carry the first time these two teams played back in September. There was simply NO WAY, Todd Bowles was going to willingly allow the Eagles to beat them that way again. Wasn’t going to happen. Anyone paying any attention knew that. Or at least should’ve, including the Eagles themselves. Which brings me to the real point.

The way to beat the blitz (stacked boxes), is the quick passing game. You throw slants, crossing routes, mesh concepts and seam routes until you either force them to change what they’re doing on defense, or you’re up 40. If a defense is stubborn enough, your QB should throw for 500 yards and pound them into submission, with the routes listed above. The problem for the Eagles, was that those routes didn’t exist. At least not in a volume commensurate to a high success rate. Go rewatch it for yourself. On a large majority of snaps where Tampa is showing pressure, the 3 or 4 Eagle pass catchers are working into routes 15+ yards down field. That doesn’t work, that’s setting up your QB to fail. Listen to Aikman, listen to the Manning brothers on their broadcast. Peyton Manning went as far as to say the Eagles coaches were “just plain stubborn” for continually asking Hurts to make impossible decisions. This wasn’t just against Tampa, they did it against SF, Dallas the 2nd time, even the Giants had success doing this against the Eagles in both of their meetings. It also doesn’t help that the Eagles use pre-snap motion less than any other team in football. Given the playmakers that offense has, that just seems plain stupid. How many jet sweeps for Devonta Smith did you see this year? How many cross motions into a Texas route did you see for A.J Brown? They ran a jet direct snap to Swift in the KC game that went for almost 40 yards, and then we didn’t see it again… People used to kill Doug Pederson for using Nelson Agholor in orbit motion 5 times per game, but honestly, I’d kill to see this group do that even once per game. They didn’t use a ton of motion last year either, but it was enough where the defense at least had to account for it. Stubborn doesn’t do that justice, that borders on malpractice. Simply screaming to run the ball into the void because you don’t understand any of the above, helps no one. But the Eagles offensive design de-evolved to a point where they flat out COULDN’T run the ball. They had no answers for the blitz, so why would teams let them out of that scenario? You can’t run 5 on 7, and you have no passing answers to relieve that pressure. By the end, it was a no-win scenario for a team with an MVP runner up QB, a 1,000 yard rusher and two 1,000 yard receivers, one of whom went over 1,400 yards for a 2nd consecutive year (the first time ANY Eagle has done that).

The playmakers are there, but the design was so poor you couldn’t even tell. That’s on the coaches. Whether it’s on Sirianni or Brian Johnson is to be determined, but either way both hold accountability. Yes, Johnson calls the plays, but at the end of the day it’s Sirianni’s offense. He brags constantly about it belonging to him. If neither of them has the correct answers, that’s a big problem. I pause to say they should be dismissed because there are other factors at play. We don’t know how injured Jalen Hurts truly was, or if some of the stubbornness falls to him, failing to check to different plays at the line in time. Also, good coaches, especially offensive minds like that, are harder to find than you think. Was this thing perfect? No, but they still were a top 10 offense. And keep in mind, NO ONE liked Shane Steichen after year 1. People weren’t calling for his job, but no one locally raved about him the way they did after year 2. Hell, there were many folks, even some inside the organization, that weren’t sure about Hurts still after seeing him in Steichen’s year 1 offense. By the end of year 2, all doubts were removed. Yes, Jalen improved his skillset, but the design of the offense also improved. Brian Johnson’s resume shows me he’s a good coach, I think it would be wise to see if he can play this out the same way Steichen did.

 

WHO COACHES THE COACH-ERS?

               The third and final piece of the puzzle to me is player development and coaching. It should’ve been discussed more, but the lack of production from the Eagles rookie and sophomore class this year was alarming. Like big loud nuclear bomb siren alarming. Too many valuable assets were used on players who either gave very little, faded hard down the stretch, or couldn’t even get on the field until their position was decimated with injury to call these last two classes anything but disappointing so far. Look around the league, there are rookies, some of whom late round picks, popping all over the place in the playoffs. Who was the Eagles best rookie this year, Jalen Carter right? He flashed early in the year, but in the back half of the season he too, vanished. Carter had 3.5 sacks in the first 5 games, making plays and disrupting teams plans virtually every time he was on the field. But in the last 13 games, he recorded just 2.5 sacks. He had just 9 tackles in the final 6 games of the year. A total non-factor, despite his snap count staying basically the same.

Some of that is a rookie hitting a wall in his first pro season. But some of that is also development. The ability for coaches and trainers to help a guy adapt to the season as it evolves. To continue to develop skills as the league sees and adjusts against him. Carter still had a fine rookie year overall, but what about next year? Unless he takes another step forward, the #9 pick in the 2023 draft will quickly become just another dude on a unit that is increasingly becoming just “a bunch of dudes”. Additionally, name one other Eagles rookie who exceeded expectations in year 1? Or even reached expectations in year 1? That’s the problem, there isn’t one. Nolan Smith barely played until the final couple weeks. Sydney Brown was injured, they played bad, then injured, then was forced into an impossible role, then suffered a brutal ACL tear that has his 2024 season in jeopardy. Steen was a depth pick, as were McKee and Ojomo. Kelee Ringo got a late start over a contract dispute (??) and then by the time they felt he was up to speed; he too was placed into the impossible defensive situation discussed earlier. Go back to 2022’s picks. Jordan Davis hasn’t produced nearly the way the Eagles had hoped (2.5 sacks, 5 total qb hits in 2 seasons, 0 of each this year after week 7). His raw skills are visible, yet he plays small. The Eagles don’t need him to get 10 sacks a year, but they need him and Carter to disrupt in the middle more than they are. They were both drafted as game wreckers, the force that makes teams re-think going for 4th and short. The kind that forces teams off schedule and into 2nd & 3rd and longs because you simply can’t send the ball their way.

It’s not just these guys, truly, tell me about a guy on the roster this year who got better? Who by the end of the year, had a taken a huge step forward in his development into a quality NFL player? I can wait. Other than finally finding a punter and watching Britain Covey turn into a viable return option, I can’t think of one. Teams that win Super Bowls find contributors from all corners of the roster. Guys who were on the practice squad end up making plays along the way. The 2023 Eagles had none of that. That responsibility falls to the coaching staff, specifically the position group coaches. After losing both coordinators at the end of the 2022 season, the Eagles also needed to replace 3 key position coaches. Linebackers coach Nick Rallis followed Jonathan Gannon to Arizona to be his defensive coordinator. QB coach Brian Johnson was promoted to offensive coordinator following Steichen’s departure for Indianapolis. And defensive backs coach Dennard Wilson quit, after being passed up for the defensive coordinator spot, landing in Baltimore as their defensive backs coach (go look at their performance this year…). Replacing those 3 guys, were D.J Eliot, Alex Tanney and DK McDonald. All 3 had been in the organization the year prior, but as either assistants to the guys they replaced or at least in roles with much less responsibility. All 3 of those positions regressed and regressed hard. Two of them were so bad, Roseman had to go acquire outside pieces to fill holes (Byard and Leonard), which also failed because their performance was poor. In case anyone wasn’t sure, position coaches matter. They’re the guys in the room every single day with the players. They’re the ones tasked with turning weaknesses into strengths, and strengths into game-changing skills. With the lack of that occurring across the board for the Eagles this year, all of these roles, and some others as well, need to be upgraded. It’s not personal, im sure these guys are good dudes, but the job didn’t get done. Not even close. With at bare minimum a new defensive coordinator coming in, two of these will likely be replaced naturally (my vote would be for Wilson to get his shot now fwiw). But to think this didn’t factor in hugely to the Eagles demise is also foolish.

 

CLOSURE

I’ve gone on long enough. You should get the point by now. If you still don’t, I’ll sum it up nicely for you. The reasons for the 2023 Eagles promising campaign vanishing like a fart in the wind, are nuanced and detailed and complicated, and cannot be solved by any one specific thing you mouth breathers call into WIP and yell. No matter how many times, or how funny it is that Chuck from Mt. Airy tells Jack Frtiz to shut the fuck up, that doesn’t help the situation at all.

The biggest reason if you insist on summing it up to one solid one, is, ready? That FOOTBALL IS HARD. THE NFL IS HARD. There are 32 teams under the same exact constraints vying to win one final game at the end of the year, and the talent difference from the 5th guy to the 60th guys on any roster, across all rosters, are like less than 1%. It’s a crazy place, much different and more competitive from the one your granddaddy watched where guys smoked cigs and drank beers at halftime. Every single guy in that league is a killer, the best player his town has ever seen. And the job of predicting who’s going to be a star or not is a nearly impossible one. The fact that Howie Roseman has done as good a job as he has over the last decade plus is miraculous. This has been one of the most successful eras of Eagles football ever, and even if that isn’t satisfying to you as it should be, a measured pause and realization that we have a 25-year-old all pro QB and a roster full of talent should give you enough mental fortitude to not want to burn it all down.

I don’t know what they’re going to do. I wouldn’t be stunned if they let Sirianni go (see first section), but I’d be less surprised if he’s back with some new coaches and some different talent on defense and hopefully, some new ideas in the bag as well. They have a lot of work to do to get back to the league’s mountain top, but as frustrating as 2023 was, not all hope is lost. As Andy Dufrane once said, “Salvation lies within”, and if there’s salvation for the Eagles at all, that’s true. The fixes should be in house, it’s up to them to execute.

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

A Tribute To Our Favorite Coach

            How can you take a 57-day period and say it defines, who someone was at their core. It seems unfair on the surface. An impossible comparison, one ripe with inaccuracy. But for a friend, a mentor, a coach in so many aspects of life, the man affectionately known as “Hutch”, that 57-day stretch showed us directly the strength, character, guts and determination he lived with and instilled in the people he cared about, every day of his enigmatic, colorful and joyous life. Selfishly, I write this more for me. Expressing the emotion properly I’m afraid I won’t be able to do appropriately, so forgive the wordy obituary meant as a tribute.

I’ve known Bob Hutchings since I was 14 years old, a freshman at a high school where I knew no one. I had befriended his son, Ryan, soon to be a groomsman at my wedding. We were on the basketball team together. He, of local basketball legacy, me, a shaggy haired chubby kid from Bridgeton, who’d never stepped foot on a parquet floor prior to November try outs. In finding my way that year, I regularly found myself in conversation with him. “Work your ass off and be who you are”, maybe the most valuable words I heard from anyone, not just about basketball, but about life. It’s certainly cliché to some of you. It’s cheesy Disney script to some, but to me it helped find comfort in something so uncomfortable. When I was young, I wanted nothing more than to fit in. I wanted to be accepted, to belong, & yes on some level, be with the cool kids. Ryan helped me fit in on that team more than anyone else, & those brief conversations with his father, whether it be a pep talk in a hallway or barking like a dog at me from the top row as I walked to the dressing room, he always seemed to know just what you needed to make you feel okay. At my very foundation, I cannot explain how much that meant to me, both then and now.

As years went on, our relationship shifted. Ryan and I grew up together and he got to see it all, both the good and not so good. But any time we’d get together we were going to laugh, and if you paid close enough attention, you were going to learn something too. He always had something he was trying to teach you. A lot of it on the surface came off as lunacy, a circus act meant to entertain both us watching and the perpetual 2-year-old that lie beneath the grey hair, camp t-shirt and swishy pants himself. He was teacher but an artist. A pirate’s soul in a coach’s body. But there was truth in his words, as there were in his actions. Others close to him I’m sure could refute this, but I cannot remember a single time where he said he was going to do something for me and didn’t come through (Other than paying for dinner at Hoops Historians last year…). The people I’ve met, the places I’ve seen, because I knew him, are things I will hold dear with me the rest of my days. An unnamed fraternity that I am a part of, with friends I’ll have forever, I have because of him.

Our friendship felt very one-sided. I have no idea what value he got from me or why he did what he did for me, outside of my friendship with Ryan. He gave much and took little. He didn’t need it; your friendship was enough. So as we bid adieu to our friend Bob, a.k.a Guru, Mr.Bob, Doodlebob, Hondo (you know the rest), I will do so with one more cliché. His years were not enough for us, but as the saying goes “It’s not the years in your life that count, it’s the life in your years”, and man if that doesn't sum him up I’m afraid I don’t have the words that will do. At least in some part, I will try to make my life even half as fulfilled as his seemed to be. Rest in power my old friend, & don’t worry, I’ll clean up the popcorn.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

NFL Mock Draft - One and only edition - Philthy In Philadelphia.

There are few things in sports that I love, and hate so much simultaneously, as the NFL Draft. It's an amazing display of randomness for an event that is so crucial to the future (and present) of every single franchise. It's awesome to see these kids, who have worked so hard and come from so many different backgrounds, and some who have overcome so much adversity, to finally reach the big show. To watch them live out their dreams of walking across the stage to meet the commissioner, in front of the entire country and receive the first jersey of their pro-football journey. It's a lot of fun to try and project who your favorite team will select, will they draft based on need? Or will they stay true to their "board"?

But the flip side of this is the ugly side. The part where every so called "analyst" and pundit, every ex-player and "draft guru" gives their hot take as to who should go number one, what position is worth taking at the top, who might trade up, what college-aged kid is going to carry a franchise and which one is going to fail. Most of you I bet have never thought of it like this. Imagine yourself at 21 years old, you've spent your entire life training for this moment. You're entire last (at least) 5 months have been focused solely, toward this week. Now imagine, in one of your brief periods of time during the day where you aren't busy. You turn on your television, and there's the likes of Bill Polian, who hasn't been involved in an NFL team since you were in 8th grade. Or Mel Kiper, who's football background (or lack thereof) has remained unnoticed for decades. They're saying to the world that they think you aren't good enough to play at that level, or you shouldn't be taken with a high pick because of something they feel to be the truth without ever having spoken with you.

Now, take that exact moment, and multiply it out starting over 100 days prior to the draft. The NFL Draft, has become big business for the likes of Mel Kiper, Todd McShay, Mike Mayock and a dozen other goobers who have basically carved a career, literally almost out of nothing. In fact, I'd be remiss if I didn't actually salute Kiper here, the Godfather of the Draft jargon business. He took something, that most people had relatively no interest in, and in a matter of years, made himself a millionaire by mostly just sounding like he knew what he was talking about. Do you know how many, out of 32 first round selections last year, trades included, that Mel got right? Four. A whopping 13%. You mean to tell me this is the chief "expert" on the NFL Draft? A guy who got 13% of the picks right? That just proves my point. No one, not even Mel "bobcat hairpiece" Kiper, knows what the hell they're talking about when it comes to the NFL Draft. It's all guesswork. Which is fine, I can enjoy that also. In fact, that's the point of this article, to show you my shot in the dark First Round NFL Mock Draft. Just remember, any time you hear anyone, even yourself say that "x-player is a lock to go to x-team at x-pick!!!"... They're probably wrong.

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ROUND 1
PICK     TEAM                            PLAYER, POS., SCHOOL
1    Cleveland                                Sam Darnold, QB, USC
2    NY Giants                               Josh Allen, QB, Wyoming
3    NY Jets                                   Baker Mayfield, QB, Oklahoma
4    Cleveland (via HOU)              Saquon Barkley, RB, Penn State
5    Denver                                    Bradley Chubb, EDGE, NC State
6    Indianapolis                            Quenton Nelson, OG, Notre Dame
7    Tampa Bay                              Denzel Ward, CB, Ohio State
8    Chicago                                   Josh Jackson, CB, Iowa
9    San Francisco                          Roquan Smith, LB, Georgia
10   Oakland                                  Minkah Fitzpatrick, S, Alabama
11   Miami                                     Vita Vea, DT, Washington
12   Buffalo (via CIN)                   Josh Rosen, QB, UCLA
13   Washington                            Tremaine Edmunds, LB, Virginia Tech
14   Green Bay                              Calvin Ridley, WR, Alabama
15   Arizona                                   Lamar Jackson, QB, Louisville
16   Baltimore                               Derwin James, S, Florida State
17   LA Chargers                           Da'Ron Payne, DT, Alabama
18   Seattle                                    Connor Williams, OT, Texas
19   Dallas                                     Courtland Sutton, WR, SMU
20   Detroit                                    Marcus Davenport, EDGE, UTSA
21   Cincinnati (via BUF)             Mike McGlinchey, OT, Notre Dame
22   Buffalo (via KC)                    Christian Kirk, WR, Texas A&M
23   New England (via LAR)        Isaiah Oliver, CB, Colorado
24   Carolina                                 Harold Landry, EDGE, Boston College
25   Tennessee                               Leighton Vander Esch, LB, Boise State
26   Atlanta                                    Taven Bryan, DT, Florida
27   New Orleans                           Hayden Hurst, TE, South Carolina
28   Pittsburgh                               Rashaan Evans, LB, Alabama
29   Jacksonville                            Kolton Miller, OT, UCLA
30   Minnesota                               Isaiah Wynn, OG, Georgia
31   New England                          Mason Rudolph, QB, Oklahoma State
32   Philadelphia                            Derrius Guice, RB, LSU

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Bracketology- FINAL BRACKET PROJECTION

Good afternoon all,

We're less than 2 hours away from the NCAA Selection Show on TBS, and with a slight adjustment after Davidson stuck their nose into the mix, we have your full and final, field of 68. I have to admit, this year has been the toughest year yet as far as being able to get a good read on the bubble. It's all going to come down to which column the Selection Committee values most. Is it really the Quadrant 1 and 2 records, or will it be RPI/BPI and SOS. All of these factors, including overall records and strength of victory, will play a role, but things could change drastically depending on which part the committee sees as the most important differentiating factor. So, here we go.

BRACKETOLOGY
3/11, 4:13PM

#1 seeds
Virginia
Villanova
Kansas
Xavier

Last Four In
Alabama
Texas
Kansas State
Western Kentucky

First Four Out
NC State
Arizona State
Marquette
Virginia Tech

Next Four Out
Oklahoma
Utah
Washington
Temple

SOUTH REGION (Atlanta, GA)
1. Virginia
2. Purdue
3. Tennessee
4. Gonzaga
5. Texas Tech
6. Rhode Island
7. Miami (FL)
8. Providence
9. Middle Tennessee
10. USC
11. Buffalo
12. New Mexico State
13. Murray State
14. Iona
15. Lipscomb
16. NC Central / Texas Southern

EAST REGION (Boston, MA)
1. Villanova
2. North Carolina
3. Michigan
4. Clemson
5. Kentucky
6. TCU
7. Arkansas
8. Ohio State
9. Alabama
10. Davidson
11. Syracuse
12. Loyola (IL)
13. UNC-Greensboro
14. Montana
15. Radford
16. LIU Brooklyn / Georgia State

MID-WEST REGION (Omaha, NE)
1. Kansas
2. Duke
3. Michigan State
4. Wichita State
5. Texas A&M
6. Florida
7. West Virginia
8. Creighton
9. Saint Mary's (CA)
10. Butler
11. UCLA / Texas
12. San Diego State
13. Charleston
14. Bucknell
15. UM-Baltimore County
16. Pennsylvania

WEST REGION (Los Angeles, CA)
1. Xavier
2. Cincinnati
3. Auburn
4. Arizona
5. Houston
6. Seton Hall
7. Nevada
8. Missouri
9. St.Bonaventure
10. Florida State
11. Kansas State / Western Kentucky
12. South Dakota State
13. Marshall
14. Wright State
15. Stephen F. Austin
16. CSU-Fullerton

Saturday, March 10, 2018

Bracketology #7 - THE DAY BEFORE

Hello folks,

We've got our 2nd to last update to the bracket. Today is a huge day, as the fate of the bubble lives and dies with almost every conference title game, and we have 14 of them today. With only 5 tomorrow, most of the bracket and bubble picture will be pretty clear by the end of the night tonight, but the following is where we stand as of now, Saturday morning.

BRACKETOLOGY
3/8
#1 seeds       
Virginia
Villanova
Kansas
Xavier

Last Four In
NC State
Alabama
Kansas State
Arizona State

First Four Out
Marquette
Virginia Tech
Washington
Oklahoma

Next Four Out
Utah
Temple
LSU
Notre Dame

SOUTH REGION (Atlanta, GA)
1. Virginia
2. Auburn
3. Michigan
4. Wichita State
5. Texas Tech
6. Seton Hall
7. Miami (FL)
8. Providence
9. Missouri
10. Middle Tennessee
11. Alabama / NC State
12. Buffalo
13. Louisiana-Lafayette
14. Bucknell
15. Wright State
16. Hampton / LIU-Brooklyn

EAST REGION (Boston, MA)
1. Villanova
2. North Carolina
3. Michigan State
4. TCU
5. Florida
6. Kentucky
7. West Virginia
8. St. Bonaventure
9. Florida State
10. UCLA
11. Texas
12. Loyola (IL)
13. Charleston
14. New Mexico
15. Radford
16. Southeastern Louisiana / Grambling

MID-WEST REGION (Omaha, NE)
1. Kansas
2. Purdue
3. Cincinnati
4. Clemson
5. Gonzaga
6. Texas A&M
7. Arkansas
8. Creighton
9. USC
10. Syracuse
11. Western Kentucky
12. South Dakota State
13. Vermont
14. Montana
15. Lipscomb
16. UC-Santa Barbara

WEST REGION (Los Angeles, CA)
1. Xavier
2. Duke
3. Tennessee
4. Arizona
5. Houston
6. Rhode Island
7. Nevada
8. Ohio State
9. Saint Mary's (CA)
10. Butler
11. Arizona State / Kansas State
12. Murray State
13. New Mexico State
14. UNC-Greensboro
15. Iona
16. Pennsylvania

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Bracketology #6 - Thursday of Championship Week

We're now t-minus 3 days until Selection Sunday, and 13 of the 32 automatic bids have already been decided. We've had a buzzer-beater in the Big South, #1 seeds knocked off in 3 smaller tournaments, leading to some Cinderella stories emerging. However, the overwhelming majority of those teams will not make it to the second weekend. Those teams are likely still playing, or will have their fate decided this weekend. This one, and the last couple posts will be short simply to keep up with the ever evolving bubble, so here we go

BRACKETOLOGY
3/8
#1 seeds       
Virginia
Villanova
Xavier
Kansas

Last Four In
Washington
Arizona State
Oklahoma
Virginia Tech

First Four Out
LSU
Utah
Alabama
Boise State

Next Four Out
Kansas State
Temple
Louisville
Baylor

SOUTH REGION (Atlanta, GA)
1. Virginia
2. Auburn
3. Michigan State
4. Wichita State
5. Texas Tech
6. Texas A&M
7. St. Bonaventure
8. Missouri
9. Butler
10. Middle Tennessee
11. NC State
12. Marquette
13. South Dakota St
14. Bucknell
15. Wright State
16. Grambling State / Hampton

EAST REGION (Boston, MA)
1. Villanova
2. Cincinnati
3. Michigan
4. Arizona
5. Kentucky
6. Rhode Island
7. Miami (FL)
8. West Virginia
9. Florida State
10. Saint Mary's
11. Syracuse
12. Loyola (IL)
13. Charleston
14. UC-Davis
15. Montana
16. Nicholls State / LIU-Brooklyn

MID-WEST REGION (Omaha, NE)
1. Xavier
2. Purdue
3. North Carolina
4. Clemson
5. TCU
6. Florida
7. Arkansas
8. Creighton
9. USC
10. Arizona State / Virginia Tech
11. Buffalo
12. New Mexico State
13. Murray State
14. UNC-Greensboro
15. Lipscomb
16. Radford

WEST REGION (Los Angeles, CA)
1. Kansas
2. Duke
3. Tennessee
4. Gonzaga
5. Houston
6. Seton Hall
7. Nevada
8. Ohio State
9. Providence
10. Texas
11. Washington / Oklahoma
12. UCLA
13. Vermont
14. Louisiana
15. Iona
16. Pennsylvania

Sunday, March 4, 2018

Bracketology #5, Champ Week 1/2

It's the second most exciting week of the pre-tournament season folks, Championship Week part I. By the end of the day today we'll have 5 automatic bids decided, and the true aura of Champ Week begins. In today's Bracketology, we have a special guest preview the Big East tournament, I give ESPN a piece of my mind, and I hand out some hardware.


Big East Tournament Preview (by Dustin Graiff)
When: March 7-10
Where: Madison Square Garden

The Big East tournament starts this week and shapes up to be the most competitive since the new Big East was formed. The conference is stacked offensively with 6 teams in the top 50 in points per game and 5 teams in the top 50 in field goal percentage (Division 1 basketball). Much of the conference is led by experienced players that have played in this tournament multiple times.

Two teams have led the regular season standings from the beginning. The conference is led by regular season champion Xavier. The team, led by senior and Naismith finalist Trevon Bluiett, is setup not only for a Big East tournament run, but a Final Four run as well. With a very strong supporting cast of J.P. Macura and Naji Marshall, this team has the depth and star power to go on a run. Chris Mack will either need to hope Villanova doesn’t make it to Saturday or find a way to beat Jay Wright’s team as they have lost both match-ups by 16 and 24. Next up is last year’s regular season and tournament champion as well as the favorite to win the tournament, Villanova Wildcats. With an eight man rotation and six players playing the majority of the minutes, depth has been an issue for the team dropping three of their last seven. They often live by the three but one off game (i.e. St. John’s, Providence), can lead to their exit. They need to find balance getting to the rim and shooting the three to withstand an off night from behind the arc.

Now that the tier one teams have been covered, let’s talk about the rest of the conference. With how competitive this tournament has been in the past, I believe there are 7 teams that can get hot and take home the trophy. Georgetown is still too young to compete, while St. John’s has been banged up all year, and Depaul just simply does not have the talent. Each of the remaining teams have leaders that can get hot and lead their respective teams to a Big East championship: Creighton (Marcus Foster), Seton Hall (Khadeen Carrington), Butler (Kelan Martin), and Marquette (Markus Howard). Providence does not have a star player they can hang their hat on, but instead three seniors that have played a lot of basketball together and proven they can beat the best.

Prediction: Give me the field
Although Xavier and Villanova have run away with the regular season, I think one of the star players in tier two will take over the tournament. The Big East is known for this sort of tournament: Kemba Walker in 2011, Peyton Siva in 2012 (no asterisk needed), Isaiah Whitehead in 2016. My prediction would be Markus Howard with Marquette or Kelan Martin with Butler. I believe we will see at least one Big East team in the Final Four as well. 

ESPN is scum
     In a day and age where the "media", as we know it, is so sensationalized and headline driven, it's in incredibly poor taste for ESPN analysts to infer that athletes should "boycott the NCAA Tournament". Jay Williams and Jalen Rose, who both did participate in the NCAA, when given the chance, have called for players in the wake of the Yahoo! report about the FBI's investigation into corruption and illegal tampering by agents, to boycott the NCAA Tournament, in hope, I guess, to bring change to the NCAA's rules on athlete's receiving compensation. Rose even took steps toward comparing the need for change in the NCAA to other current social issues and movements. "In the climate of so many things that are changing. So many discussions that have now come to the forefront that have been closeted for so very long.. I wish NCAA players would exercise that power by boycotting the NCAA Tournament", said Rose, in his best MLK impersonation. I joke, but it's no worse a joke than either of these guys' stance. Give me a break ESPN, you would never allow your talking heads to spew this nonsense if you held the TV rights to the tournament. But since Turner Sports and CBS do, they allow their own to continue to stir the pot on this controversy. Yes, there needs to be change in the way the NCAA polices student athlete's ability to make money while playing. But as of now, it doesn't appear that any player, or program, is in danger of receiving any real punishment. So again, what is the issue? Telling kids to boycott an event that they've waited their whole life, and prepared for a long time to play in, when you yourself, Jalen Rose, Jay Williams, didn't have the "courage" to do so, is incredibly irresponsible.

Regular Season Awards
     Roll out the red carpet, and drum-roll please.

Naismith Player of the Year- Jalen Brunson, Villanova
     There are other deserving candidates, but Brunson has been the best player in the country all season long

Coach of the Year - Mark Few, Gonzaga
     To lose as much as he lost to graduation and the NBA, and still be a legit Sweet 16 caliber team, is nothing short of incredible

Freshman of the Year - Deandre Ayton, Arizona
     He's had an interested couple of weeks, but Ayton is the best rookie in the country, and likely, the #1 pick in the NBA Draft in June

Six Man of the Year - Duncan Robinson, Michigan
     Sort of embodies Michigan's whole attitude and approach as a team. Hard working kid who openly accepted his bench role, and has Michigan rolling into the tourney.

Defensive Player of the Year - Isaiah Wilkins, Virginia
     Simple. The best defensive player on the best defensive team in the country.

Most Improved Player of the Year - Keita Bates-Diop, Ohio State
     The kid has taken a major step forward after suffering a severe leg injury last year, and while he won't win it here, he has already won the Big Ten player of the year.

Bob Cousy Award (top PG) - Jalen Brunson, Villanova
     Man the finalist list for this award was really, really, really strong. Honorable mentions include Joel Berry, Javon Carter, Trae Young, Devonte Graham, Jordan McLaughlin, just to name a few

Jerry West Award (top SG) - Marcus Foster, Creighton
     The Junior has averaged 20 pts, 4 rebounds and 3 assists, shooting 42% from 3.

Julius Erving Award (top SF) - Miles Bridges, Michigan State
     Another really deep pool of candidates, but the best player on the Big Ten regular season champs earns it.

Karl Malone Award (top PF) - Marvin Bagley III, Duke
     He's missed some time here at the end of the season with a knee injury, but he's the best player on the floor almost every night he's out there.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award (top C) - Jock Landale, Saint Mary's (CA)
     The Gaels senior has had his best year ever, averaging a double-double and leading Saint Mary's to likely a top 6 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Big Ten Player of the Year - Miles Bridges, Michigan State

ACC Player of the Year - Marvin Bagley, Duke

Big East Player of the Year - Jalen Brunson, Villanova

SEC Player of the Year - Grant Williams, Tennessee

Big XII Player of the Year - Devonte Graham, Kansas

Pac-12 Player of the Year - DeAndre Ayton, Arizona

Atlantic 10 Player of the Year - Jaylen Adams, St.Bonaventure

American Athletic Player of the Year - Rob Gray, Houston

1st Team All-Americans
Jalen Brunson, Villanova
Marcus Foster, Creighton
Miles Bridges, Michigan State
Marvin Bagley III, Duke
Jock Landale, Saint Mary's (CA)

2nd Team All-Americans
Devonte Graham, Kansas
E.C Matthews, Rhode Island
Mikal Bridges, Villanova
Wendell Carter Jr, Duke
DeAndre Ayton, Arizona

Honorable Mentions
Allonzo Trier, Arizona
Grant Williams, Tennessee
Trae Young, Oklahoma
Keita Bates-Diop, Ohio State
Mortiz Wagner, Michigan
Yante Maten, Georgia
Luke Maye, North Carolina
Carsen Edwards, Purdue
Isaiah Wilkins, Virginia
Tyus Battle, Syracuse
Chimeze Metu, USC
Bryce Brown, Auburn
Kevin Knox, Kentucky


BRACKETOLOGY
3/4
#1 seeds       
Virginia
Villanova
Xavier
Kansas

Last Four In
USC
NC State
Marquette
Louisville

First Four Out
UCLA
Temple
Syracuse
Utah

Next Four Out
Baylor
Notre Dame
Penn State
LSU

SOUTH REGION (Atlanta, GA)
1. Virginia
2. Cincinnati
3. Arizona
4. Michigan
5. Rhode Island
6. Seton Hall
7. Arkansas
8. Missouri
9. Providence
10. Florida State
11. Buffalo
12. Vermont
13. Louisiana-Lafayette
14. Charleston
15. UC-Davis
16. Radford / Bethune-Cookman

EAST REGION (Boston, MA)
1. Villanova
2. Michigan State
3. North Carolina
4. Kentucky
5. Nevada
6. Saint Mary's
7. Houston
8. Texas Tech
9. Florida
10. Virginia Tech
11. Washington
12. New Mexico State
13. Loyola (IL)
14. Montana
15. Northern Kentucky
16. Nicholls State / Grambling State

MID-WEST REGION (Omaha, NE)
1. Xavier
2. Auburn
3. Purdue
4. Wichita State
5. Clemson
6. TCU
7. Miami (FL)
8. St. Bonaventure
9. West Virginia
10. Oklahoma
11. USC / NC State
12. Alabama
13. South Dakota St
14. UNC-Greensboro
15. Iona
16. Pennsylvania

WEST REGION (Los Angeles, CA)
1. Kansas
2. Duke
3. Tennessee
4. Gonzaga
5. Texas A&M
6. Ohio State
7. Creighton
8. Middle Tennessee
9. Butler
10. Arizona State
11. Texas
12. Louisville / Marquette
13. Murray State
14. Bucknell
15. Wagner
16. Lipscomb